^ Tt o PAUY T exan ^ ¿ i l xi *sy-nyg-------- a liiiio unfjodDiM The siuden e spape o Univ rsity of 1 *xas at Austin Monday,Marché, 19&3 Twenty-Fivecents — /ql 6 First EPA chief may be reinstated United Press International W A SH IN G TO N — W illiam Ruck- elshaus fle w S un day to W ash in g to n , where White House aides said Presi­ dent R eagan m ay an n o u n ce as early as M o n d ay his n om ination to take o v er the troubled Environ m en tal Protection A g en cy . laun ched R uckelshaus, w h o the agency d urin g the N ixon ad m in istra­ tion as its first a d m in istrator, left his M ed in a, W ash , h om e and b oarded a plane at the Seattle airp ort for W ash ­ in gton . A top E P A official said th ere "co u ld still be a h itch” as the W h ite H ouse an d R uckelshaus w ork out h ow stron g a hand he will be given to run th e ag e n cv and how to h an d le cases th at affect his cu rrent em p loy er, the tim ber g ian t W ey erh aeu ser C o. S o u rce s said if R u ck elsh au s is n o m i­ n ated , it ap p ears certain all political the ag en cy w ould be a p p o in te e s at a sk ed to su bm it th eir resig n atio n s and so m e w ou ld be accep ted B efo re R u ck elsh au s left hom e, his w ife, Jill, said, " H e 's at the d e cisio n ­ m ak in g s ta g e ." A fam ily frien d , Bill O liv e r, said , " I think h e 's still think ing a b o u t it.” R u ck elsh au s, 50, had rese rv a tio n s at th e Je ffe rs o n H o tel, several blo ck s from th e W h ite H ouse, fo r S u n d ay night. is W h ite H ouse aid e s said R eagan a n x io u s to nam e a s u c c e s -o r to A n n e B urford as ad m in istrato r i he e m b a t­ tled EPA and an a n n o u n ce m e n t could c o m e as early as M o n d ay . R eagan , retu rn in g th e W hite H o u se from a w eek en d at C am p D a­ I II st*e vid. M d ., d eclined co m m e n t to y o u in a few d a y s ," he told rep orters, referring to a planned n ew s confer­ en ce. A source close to Ruckelshaus told U nited Press International Frid ay night the form er E P A chief p lanned to decide on w h eth er to accep t the p ost by Sun­ d ay. Burford resigned as EPA ad m inistra­ to r M arch 9 u nder fire. Joh n H ern an ­ d e z w as n am ed actin g ad m inistrator but R eagan m ust n am e a perm an en t su cce sso r, an ap pointm en t requiring S en ate confirm ation. T h e ag e n cy is facin g in v estig atio n s by six co n g re ssio n al su b co m m ittees an d th e FBI o f its m a n a g em en t of the $ 1 .6 billio n Su p erfu n d toxic w aste cle a n u p program . Sev eral top officials h av e resig n ed or been d ism issed . O n e , Rita Lavelle, in ten d s to defv a su b p o e n a seek in g h e r testim o n y M o n ­ d ay b e fo re a H ouse su b co m m ittee , her la w y e r said Su nd ay . L avelle, fired bv R eagan in February from h e r job as h ead of toxic w aste p ro g ram s, w as to be q u e stio n e d about her ties to W hite h o u s e c o u n se lo r Edw in M e e se, R ea­ gan s N o. 1 aide R u ck e lsh a u s, se n io r vice presiden t o f th e W ey erh a e u ser Co. o f T acom a, VNash.. w as EPA a d m in istrato r from 1970 to 1973. He a lso served as acting FBI d ire cto r, and resign ed as deputy atto rn e y g en eral in th e W a terg ate " S a t ­ u rday N ight M a s sa cre ." R eactio n to p o ssib le a p p o in tm en t o f R u ck e lsh a u s ha s been g en erally favor­ a b le from critics of the EPA But they said m uch d ep en d s o n how m uch a u ­ th o rity R eagan gives R u ck elsh au s. White names exes to Board of Regents By PAUL D£ LA GARZA Dai y Texan Staff G ov M ark W h ite 's ap p o in tm en ts last w eek o f tw o L T alu m n i to the L T S y s te m Board of R eg en ts w ill co n sti­ tu te a fin e ad d ition to the b o a r d ," R e­ g e n t H ow ard R ichard s said Sundax a M ario \ z a g u irre 63 vear-oid B row n sv ille p h arm acist, w as nam ed Friday to rep lace s an A ntonio b u s i ­ n e ssm a n S u n B arsh op while 4P-\ear- old A u stin ite R obert Baldw in III was a p p o in ted to rep lace H ila n D oran w h o serxed as a top aid e to form er Go\ Bill C le m en ts 'T h e y re both and 1 th in k the\ 11 be a tin e ad d itio n to the b o ard . R k hards said I think M ario a n d B ald w in will m ake o u tsta n d in g m e m b e rs of the board is a R ich ard s, w ho B ro w n sv ille native said the two new b o ard m e m b e r s will brin g new ideas to U T Sy stem policym akin g like Y /a g u irre fin e peo p le E x-reg en t Jane B lu m berg said s u n ­ d a e sh e ag rees w ith R ich ard s a s s e s s ­ m en t o f W h ite 's L I reg en t ap p o in t­ m e n ts. S h e added h o w e v e r, that sh e b e lie v e s anv ap p o in tee s w ho m akes it th ro u g h the co n firm ation p ro cess will h a v e a co m m itm en t to d o the job — th e best jo b for the e n tire Sy stem said a p p r o x e s of W h ite 's d ecision to ap p o in t a M exican- A m e rica n to the bo ard , a d d in g that sh e d o e s not believe Y z a g u irre 's e th n ic b ack g ro u n d will bias h is d ecision s. " I 'm su re w hen he s on the board his a c tio n s will be in th e best interest o f th e S y s te m ," she said. B lu m b erg sh e Y zag u irre said Sundax h e regards h is a p p o in tm en t to th e board as 'a g re a t h o n o r" for h im self an d for the p e o p le o f So u th T e x a s. H e added he is p lea sed to have b een ap p o in ted to the Board of R egen ts d u ring th e L I ce n ­ ten n ia l year The a p p o in tm en t " g o e s beyo n d m y d ream s, he said. It co n firm ed bv the S e n a te , Yza- guirre said, he hopes " to serv e as a role m od el for \<>ung p eo p le in g en eral, but e sp e cially for H ispam os.' H e added he w ould like to stim u late the interest of H isp a n ic x o u t h s in h ig h er ed ucation and esp ecially in L T S y ste m in stitu ­ tio n s. Y za g u irre, w ho receiv ed his bach e­ lor s d eg ree from the U n iv ersity in 1943 and w ho later atten d ed th e I niversi- ty s p h arm acy co lleg e, said he believes th e L T S\ stem is o n e of th e fin est" unix ersitx sx stem s in the country L ike Y zag u irre, B ald w in w as an u n ­ d erg ra d u a te at L i A u stin , receiving his b ach elo r s d egree in b u sin ess ad ­ m in istratio n in 1967 Baldw in could not be reach ed for co m m en t Sundax T h e tw o a p p o in tm e n ts Friday leave W h ite w ith on e a p p o in tm e n t vet to m ak e to the L F board T he third em pty se at is th e result of B arsh op s failure T hu rsd ay to garner en o u g h votes in th e state S e n a te to confirm h is a p p o in t­ m e n t to th e board bv C le m e n ts. C le m e n ts' o th er tw o "la m e -d u ck " a p p o in tm e n ts to the board, D oran and fo rm e r G ov. Joh n C o n n aliv , w ere re­ called bv th e S e n ate in Ja n u ary . A lth o u g h W hite had ask ed the S e n ­ ate in January to recall all o f C lem en ts' m ore lam e-d u ck ap p o in t­ m en ts, the S e n ate voted to recall only 59 o f the a p p o in tm e n ts. than 100 D u rin g th at vote, th e S e n a te voted to recall the a p p o in tm e n ts of D oran and C o n n a liv fo r W h ite's review . T h e S e n ­ ate did not recall the n am e o f Barshop at th at tim e. An uphill battle A ustinite Rick Brauer finds the Capitol 10,000 race Sunday to be uphill work. S pectators cheered as he com pleted the hilly course between Lam ar and Exposition boulevards and began to climb Enfield Road. He finished fifth in the wheelchair category, with a time of 42:51 Story on page 15. -;,:TT I Ken Ryall. Daily Texan Stab TDC assigns Yarbrough to protective cell B y T . JIMMY MUNOZ Daily Texan Staff Fo rm er T exas S u p re m e C o u rt Ju stice D on Yarbrough , se rv in g a five-y ear sen ten ce for ag g rav ated p erju rv in a T exa s D ep artm en t o f C o rre ctio n s facili­ ty in H u ntsv ille, has b e e n assig n e d to a sin gle p ro tectiv e private cell, TD C sp o k e sm a n Jay Byrd said Su n d a y . Byrd said in m ate s w h o w ere in ­ v olved in law en fo rcem en t o r w h o had a p o litical" backg rou n d u su ally are k ep t in a p rivate cell a s "sta n d a rd p ro­ c e d u re ." Y arb ro u g h , w ho w as co n v icted of ly­ ing to a T rav is C o u n ty g ran d ju ry co n ­ cern in g the forgery of a car title, fled to the Caribbean island o f G ren ada in 1980 to avoid serving a five-year prison sen ten ce. W hile on the M arxist-co n - trolled island, Yarbrough escap ed ex­ tradition efforts by Travis C o u n ty and federal officials and enrolled in a m edi­ cal school. H e w as arrested W ed n e sd ay on St. V incent, an island n e a r G ren ad a with th e United close diplom atic ties S tates. H e then w as tran sferred to St. e xtrad itio n h earin g s, T h o m as w hich w ere atten ded by rep resen ta­ tives of the Justice D epartment an d the T ravis C o u n ty district attorney's office. fo r to Y arb rou gh w as flow n to H untsville Friday after arriving a t A u stin 's Rags­ dale A irport. Y arb ro u g h ignored q uestion s from rep o rters as he w alked in handcuffs from a jet in to a T ravis C o u n tv sh eriff's veh icle bu t said , "F e lla s , its g o o d to be back. I'd ra th e r be co m in g from a d if­ feren t d ir e c tio n ." B efo re b e in g driven to a D ep artm en t of P ublic Safety plane th at w ou ld take him to H u n tsville, Y arbro u g h said , "I'll h av e a sta tem en t at so m e o th e r tim e ." H o w e v er, Byrd said S u n d a y that Y arb ro u g h w ould not b e a v ailab le for co m m e n t for about six w e e k s as he g o es th ro u g h a "d ia g n o stic p r o c e s s ." Byrd said Y arbrough w ill u nd ergo the p riso n 's orientation p ro cess and will take a test that will ch eck into his familiy h istory and his m edical and p sychological background. Byrd said Y arbrough told TD C o ffi­ cials w h en he arrived in H untsville he required n o "im m ed iate m edical atten ­ tio n ." Before leaving St. T h o m as, Y ar­ b rough com plained of sev ere chest pains. th e D u rin g e xtrad itio n h earin g T h u rsd ay, Yarbrough said th at his ar­ rest by U .S. m arshals in St. V incen t vi­ olated his constitutional rights b ecause he had been "k id n a p p e d " from St. V incent. U .S . D istrict Judge D avid O 'Brien p resided o v er the extrad ition h earing and gave Yarbrough a co n tin u an ce to p resen t his ca se Friday. D u rin g th e Friday h earin g , Y ar­ brou gh clu tch ed his ch e st and co m ­ p lained o f ch e st p ain s, say in g his fam i­ ly h as a h isto ry o f h e art d isease. O 'B rie n d en ied Y a rb ro u g h 's appeal. " T h e orig in al plan w as to co m e here (bring Y arb ro u g h to A u stin ) b e cau se it w as o u r in terp retatio n of the law that he n eed ed to co m e to co u rt o n e last tim e ," Travis C o u n ty D istrict A tto rn ey R onald E arle said w h e n ask ed w hy Y arbro u g h w as n o t flow n d irectly to H u ntsv ille. " T h a t w as d eterm in ed to be u n n e c e ssa ry , ho w ev er, afte r the last tran sm issio n w ith the a irp la n e ." " H e h as alread y b e e n se n ten ce d , and it's u n n e cessa ry for th at (se n te n c­ ing) to h ap p en a g a in ," E arle said. Bill W illm s, assistant district atto r­ ney, said S un day atto rn ey s have not discu ssed w h eth er they will file addi­ tional ch arg es again st Y arb rou gh co n ­ cerning his jum ping of a $ 5 ,0 0 0 bail in 1981. Fo r failing to ap p ear in co u rt for sen ten cing on the perjury conviction, Yarbrough could receive an additional two to 10 y ears in prison an d an oth er $5,000 fine. Lawmakers say bill useless, economy will create new jobs United Press International W A S H IN G T O N — U nd er in ten se political p re ssu re , C o n g re ss this w eek is e x p e cte d to p ass an em erg en cy bill to p ro v id e jo b s and recession relief that m o st law m ak ers on both sid es o f the issu e a g ree w ill d o little good. M a n y m em b ers b elieve the reco v er­ jobs in g e co n o m y will provide m ore th an th e bill d o es, and at no co st to the taxp ay ers. M em b ers of the H o u se and S e n ate A p p ro p ria tio n s C o m m itte e s m e et M o n d ay for w hat should be a quick resolution of the differences betw een their tw o multibillion-dollar bills, and P residen t R eagan is likely to sign the ev en tu al com p rom ise. M an y m em bers believe the bill actu ­ ally will create too few jobs, will c o n ­ cen trate the jobs it d oes create in heavy in d u stry , w hich em p loys alm ost no w o m en , and will sq uan der too m uch m o n ey on pork barrel projects. A nd d espite the political u rg en cy of creatin g new jobs, the C ongressional B u d get Office estim ates 40 percen t of th em will not be available until 1985 at the earliest. Sen. G ary H art, D -C olo., voted for the bill b ecau se he said so m e quick jobs are n e ed ed , but, " it d o e s n o t even ad d ress an y of the u n d erly in g cau ses for ou r d ep ressio n -lev el double-d igit u n e m p lo y m e n t." No on e know s how m anv job s will be created bv the p ro je cts in the bill, but best estim ates are b e tw e e n 200,000 is d isa g re e ­ and 5 0 0 ,tXX). T h ere also m en t ov er the price tag: the H ouse bill cam e in at $4.9 billion an d th e Se n a te bill at $4 billion But the Se n ate voted for an a d d i­ tional qu arterly rev e n u e sh arin g p a y ­ m e n t to the states in A pril w orth $ 1 ,2 billion that theo retically will hav e to be m ad e up in the future. S e n . Slad e G o r­ ton, R -W ash ., voted re lu ctan tly for the bill, calling it "o n e o f th e m o st p a ro ch i­ al vo tes I have had to m a k e " b e cau se it w ould sen d a high p ro p o rtio n of th e m on ey to his state. T h e m em b ers o f th e c o n fe re n ce c o m ­ m ittee that will w rite th e compromise v ersio n will be w ork in g a g a in st a d e a d ­ line to p re v en t 27 sta tes, th e D istrict o f C olu m b ia and the V irg in Islan d s from ru n n in g ou t o f u n e m p lo y m e n t b e n e ­ fits. Don Yarbrough ... Fellas, it’s good to be back. I’d rather be from a different direc­ comin tion.’ Page 2/The DaHy Texan/Monday, on SUNSETS, DOGS, GOOD Bring your next roll of color print filrtvto-^ nearby Foromor Srore a lo n g wirh the coupon below. Order ©ur Professional CUS­ TOM SERIES STYLE PRINTS and w e ll givELybto o second set for o $ 1.00 • Save fro m 50% ro 64% . This offer is dlSd good for friends, silly faces, parties, an d cats Bring rhis c o u s in gpd a roll of color print film ro Qny>átficiporing FOTO- MAT STORE, aid er dcir PROFESSIONAL CUSTOM SEftfÉS, jhrtid w e ll give you a second ser of prints for o $1.00. PRINTS CWtefc|kpires 4 -2-63 L im it a rt* coupon p e t ro ll F O TO M MENSTRUAL Do you experience pain whefi you hove your ttjjifing to keep menstrual period? Would you a diary concerning houu a new /rid^cation affects your pain for ON€ menstrual mm* physical examination, pop smear ond laboratory tests will ore interested, be done free of charge. If please coll biom edical R esearch O roeft 411-7179 I T vr 8 BUY, M U , « IN T , TRADE. . W ANT A O S ...471-5244 COVERED PARKING IN CONCRETE PARKING GARAGE a 459-3209 WHAT IS THE DALLAS MET? D A LLA S iE DIET IS A SIMPLE A N D EASY W AY TO .OSE WEIGHT. ALL YOU NEED TO DO IS TAKE A DALLAS DIET BAR TWICE A DAY A N D EAT A "N O R M A L" THIRD MEAL. • No calones to count • No measunng • N o dnnlu to mix • No shots or drugs • The diet plan for today's demanding lifestyle SAFE, SATISFYING, EASY A DELICIOUS SAFE— Because it is nu tritio n a lly b a l­ anced with fiber odded SATISFYING— Because it and provides you with a b l e meals each day tastes g re a t th ree c K e w - EASY— Because ient N o measunng or mixing C arry it it's simple ond conven­ in your pocket DELICIOUS— Because it is form ulated to satisfy the sweet tooth in all o f us For additional inform ation contoct 0 0 4 W. «Ni M raat M l 470-2X01 •r 327-9293 ------ I ! I I I I I I I I 6 0 4 West 24th 474-2417 M ajor Alterations / £ Minor Repairs * WE M A K E * | iC< Skirts : - r Blouses * * Evening and party dresses Dresses Vests " < * . ¡BELL P e o p le Id e e — ■■ j j | p ------------------------------------------------------------------------- You've got your diploma, we've got the G et off to a growing one of the most rapidly growing fast experience you need. food systems arryWhére.j|l^^ Manager, you'll put your education to w ork right away— ahd'wSB'Xvith us. Let's talk. Ask your Plac Bell, a subsidiary of Pepsi at (S 1 7 ) « 2 S - 4 2 I I . ce for more information about T aco . or call our P erso n n el M anager INTERVNQPING ON CAMPUS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3 0 SIGN UP A t The Equal O pp ortunity O ffice An M e K Managing EdRors . . . Lynn Eattoy, Edfrt Psrkint, Davtd Woodruff PaMdn. Rogor Worthington News Edior.................... David Undosy A M O Q M HOW S c O H O r ............................ M R 9 Gototon Nows Amgnmmto EdOor . . . Dé Am NiMgaaEdNor Am tola knagaa EdNor MarttMahonay Cal SportiEdNor Am m MM Sports Ertt a S unm alB eM S e * CampbaN Photo EdMor........................... KanAyO David AaaHtant Photo EdMor Spragua Faaairw üdNor................. KaRaBmka C N O B anr. . . . . . WWamBwdaBa ral aportara.................... CoNaan Hobba. Paul da la Oarza, Laura Rahar. Nohard SIuHm Sartor SportawrNara.........................Ed Oomba. MAa BtactnmR. Brad Townaand. - BW » J M r M M MUE STAFF Graphics Editor Ronny Sports Assistants . Alan Waldrop. Goins Jim Hankins, Make-up Editor . Herb Benenson, Sarah Barnes Newswriters Annie Atwood T. Jimmy Munoz. Mark Barron, Wire Editor................ MikeAlexieff Julie Beck, Kelley Shannon Copy Editors Deiia qe Lafuente, Sylvia Lathrop A r t is t s .................................Sam Hurt Entertainment E d ito r................Ray Photographers.....................Travis Spradling, Guy Reynolds John Bradshaw Editorial Assistant Sports Make-up Editor Ydoyaga Nancy Gay TEXAN ADVERTISWG STAFF Tarry Berk, Tom Bielefeldt, Calise Burchett, Laura Dickerson, Debtxe Fletcher, Robert Fowler, Claudia Graves, Ken Grays. Carolyn Mangold, Greg Payne. Jane Porter. Marla Press. Doug Rapier, Heidi Reinberg, Jeanette Sigler, James Sweeney T he Deity Te«an. a aludan* newspaper at The University ot Texes at Austin is published by Texas Student PuH cabons. Drawer D. University Station. Austin. TX 78712-7209 The Daxly Texan is pub­ Thursday and Friday except holiday and exam periods Second lished Monday. Tueaday. ' d a t a postaos paid at Austin. T X 78710 l e y . News contributions win be accepted by telephone (471-4591). at the «ditona! office (Texas Student Inquines Publications ButMing 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 136) ooneeming daSvery and classified advertising should be made in TS P BuHding 3 200 (471-5244) The national advertising representative ot The Daily Texan Is Communications and Advertising Servi- oea to Students. 1633 W est Central Street. Evanston. Illinois 60201 C M PS 1680 North Vine Suite 900 Hollywood. CA 90028. American Passage. 500 Third Avenue West. Seattle. WA 98119 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New Yorti Times News Service The Texan is a member ot the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Oaky Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association Columbia Scholastic Press Association Copyright 1983 Texas Student Publications THE DAILY TEXAN SU B SC R IPTIO N RATES One Semester (Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fait and Spring) Summer Session O ne Year (Fak. Spring and Summer) j j , gg ¿g gg 15 6c gg gg Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications. P O Box D Austin TX 78712 PUB NO 146440 7208, or to TS P Building C 3.2 00 CARRY A BIGGER ■ ■ ¡ ^ H L O A D LIGHTWEIGHT • STRO NG e BLACKBURN FRONT CARRIERS Top Rider 1 Reg 2445 ONLY 1 6 95 Low Rider 2 Reg 35s1 ONLY 2 6 “ Fund may aid East Austin residents By T.JORIY MUNOZ Daily Texan Staff City officials and a private developer will create a non-profit organization that will monitor construction of homes for residents displaced by UT expansion. David Bodenman, a representative of Trammel Crow Co., the nation's largest commercial construction com­ pany, said Sunday his company is working with Austin officials to devel­ op a non-profit corporation that will borrow money from federal communi­ ty block grant funds to build low cost housing units for East Austin residents displaced by UT expansion. However, Bodi vanan said two hur­ dles will have to be overcome if the project is to be successful. Bodenman, a former City Planning Commission chairman, said the Uni­ versity will have to sell homes it owns in East Austin for "next to nothing." Another hurdle he said the project faces is that the city must find an alter­ native to a policy written into the city's charter which forces Austin to sell city- owned land to the highest bidder. On March 10 the City Council passed a resolution calling for the city's legal department to examine possible legal loopholes that would release the dty from being ^íMfcgafed to sefl laid to the highest bidder of • given piece of land. Trammels Crow's proposal calls for the dty to sell U rim Renewal prop­ veloper even when erty to a private a developer is tot the highest bidder on that property. I ' G Charles Franklin, UT vice presi­ dent for business affairs, said Sunday that during his last communication with dty off ids Is he learned that the dty was not ready to sign such an agreement. campus news in brief The deadfcie for submitting items to Campus News in Brief is 1 p.m. the day before pubfica- tion. No exceptions w i be made. ANNOUNCEMENTS RASSULeaming Services will hold registration for Study Techniques, Reducing Test Anxiety, Stop Procrastinating! and College Reading Skills classes from 9 a m to 5 p.m. M onday through Friday in Jester Center A 332 For more infor­ mation call 471-3614. The Career Center will hold a resume critique lab at 9:30 a.m . Tuesday in Jester Center A 223 The Department of Music will present the New England Conservatory Choir at 8 p.m. Monday in Bates Recital Hall. Recreational Sports Outdoor Program will hold Rock Climbing I from 8 a m to 6 p.m. Saturday near Enchanted Rock. For more information call 471 -10 93 The Department of Drama will stage a concert of works from repertory as well as works in prog­ ress at 8 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union Ball­ room Texas Union Informal Classes will begin Monday unless otherwise specified The Department of Drama will hold a weekend conservatory on stress reduction from 10 to 11 a.m. Saturday in Winship Drama Building. Student Volunteer Service# needs volunteers to work a telethon Saturday and Sunday. For more information call 471 -3065. The Department of Drama wilt hold a weekend conservatory of dance for children, teens and adults For more information call 471-7544 The Texae Union Chicano Culture Committee will present: "The State of Chicano Art" from noon to 1 30 p.m Monday in Texas Union Chi­ cano Culture Room The Texas Union Recreation Committee will hold UT Runaround registration from 9 a m to 5 p.m. Monday in Texas Union Building 4.300 Counseing, Learning and Career Services will sponsor a workshop "Humor: Chasing the Blues Away from noon to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union Eastwoods Room LECTURES The American Marketing Association will present a lecture on career opportunities from 8 to 10 p.m. M onday in Texas Union Stahrles Room The Brazifian Studies Committee will sponsor a lecture W om en and the Struggle for Social Justice m Northeast Brazil at noon Monday in Sid Richardson Hall 1 313 The Center for Asian Studtes end the Depart­ ment of Redte TstevWon flm wd aponoor a lecture: “The Communications Planning Experi­ ence in India: Lessons lor the Future” at 730 p.m Monday m Jesse H Jooes Communication Center 3.124. The Daportnont of Spantah and Portuguese w i present a lecture: “Ortega y la Teoria da la Novela at 7 p.m. Monday in Buwnasa Sco- nomics Building 155. The UT R atal and Cntrepreneurid AaoocMMon will sponsor a lecture on careers in a consulting firm at 7 p.m. Monday m Taxes Union East­ woods Room. Tho Department of S p an tti « id Portuguese w i sponsor a lecture: "Conversación sobre la novela española contsmporanea" at noon Tuesday in Batts Hak 201. rite Committee of Kurdetan’s Supporters and Iranian Students Association w i hotd a New Year's caiebration at 6 p.m. Monday m Educa­ tion Budding 104. The CommMoe m SoM vtty WMi the People of B Si vador w i meet at 7:30 p.m Monday m Busmess-Economws Building 359 ABed HeaNh Organization w i meet from 4 to 5:30 p m. Monday in Taxes Union Board of Directors Room JOB OPPORTUNITIES The Department of the N a v y Rep­ resentatives will be on campus M arch 2 2 9am -4pm interviewing in Engineering and for positions other technical fields. Starting sala­ Interviewing ries up to $ 2 7 ,5 0 0 . schedule sign-up at ECJ Placement Office. U.S. citizens to age 2 ó 1/*. For immediate information call 1- 8 0 0 -2 9 2 - 5 0 4 8 Mon.-Thurs. 9 -4 . Garnett Lewis Cleaners Va PRICE DRY CLEANING th rv M a rch 2 6 Good on Regular Dry Cleaning Only 4807 Burnet 907 W. 12th 8610 N. Lomar 12006 Research ONi MGAl PflOBUM* CRN RUIN V0UR DRV. *DWI, lease deposit, hot check, collision liability, divorce, etc KIM BROWN Attorney at Law Free initial consultation, 474-7379 the most precious BEADS to own in every gemtone & even more... comes in: white fuchsia purple red orange green black It. blue navy blue yellow on-the-drag at 2406 Guadalupe European nations fail to realign currencies! United Press International BRUSSELS, Belgium — European nations failed for the second day Sunday to realign imbalanced exchange rates and prepared to tackle another equally ticklish question, how to head off a loom ing trade war with the United States. Official European exchange markets Monday are expected to be paralyzed because of the eight-nation European M one­ tary System's lack of agreement on realigning currencies, pushed out of line by recent European election results. Speculation, sparked partially by conservative W est Ger­ man Chancellor Helmut Kohl's victory in elections two w eeks ago and French P resident Francois Mitterrand's loss­ es, drove the W est German mark u p and the French franc and other weaker currencies down. Britain and Greece are the only m em bers of the C om m on M arket w hose currencies are not included in the EMS, w hich links currencies of m em ber states w ithin narrow fluctuation m argins and in a joint float against non-m em ber currencies such as the dollar. It was set up to create a zone of m onetary stability' in Europe, gi\ ing ad d ed ad vantage to trade. "T om orrow there will be no official fixing of parities on our exchange m arkets and m andatory su p p o rt for the EMS currencies by central banks is tem porarily lifted," said G er­ hard Stoltenberg, the W est G erm an m inister w ho presided over 13 hou rs of talks. S toltenberg proposed a com prom ise calling for probably France and several o th er countries to devalue an d for other ♦ nations to join W est G erm any in revaluing their currencies. We can agree w ith a slightly asym m etrical realignm ent in |w hich the re\a!u ah o n s w ould be slightly bigger than the ♦ devaluations, he said after m inisters broke up the m eeting to consult their g o vernm ents on the com prom ise ■ French m inister Jacques Deiors, heading back to Pans, said he was optim istic about the chances of reaching an ¡agreem ent M onda c v\ hen the talks are scheduled to resum e. ♦ West G erm any called for countries w ith w eak currencies ,to devalue and im prove their econom ies. ; France said G erm any should m ake the biggest step and •French devaluation should be followed bv o th er currencies .including the Belgium -Luxem bourg franc, the Italian lire, ¡the Insh p u n t and the D anish kroner. W e still are determ ined to m aintain the p an tv of the Bel- ,gian franc, ->aid Belgian m inister Willy De Clercq. "It is ¡possible this causes problem s for som e people but we cannot ¡accept the problem s of oth ers that are shoved onto our sh o u ld ers.' ; Luxem bourg Prim e M inister Pierre W erner indicated if the ■mark w as revalued ten.) m uch, the L uxem bourg franc m ight have to revalue slightly to maintain the balance of currencies within the European Monetary System. A lso on Monday, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatch­ er, Mitterrand, Kohl and their seven other head-of-govem - ment colleagues will begin a two-day summit. Fears of a farm price war with the United States are ex­ pected to eclipse all other topics at the meeting, community officials said. European countries have been selling heavily subsidized produce without competition to many Third World coun­ tries. But the United States has decided to com pete for those markets to give more outlets to its farmers. The farm trade controversy was sparked in January this year w hen Washington decided to subsidize the export of one million tons of wheat flour to Egypt, a traditional Euro­ pean market. Europe and the United States — the world's tw o major food producers — have held talks at various levels since the deal was announced, but with little progress reported so far. The A m ericans have blam ed the E uropean system of guar­ anteed farm pnces for encouragin g surpluses, the export of w hich are then subsidized. The A m ericans claim this has d ep n v ed their farm ers of potential export m arkets. The E uropeans have m aintained their farm exports are legal u n d e r the G eneral A greem ent on Tariffs and Trade rules an d they have not taken an unfair share of th e world m arket. Farm product surpluses in Europe could threaten the com ­ m unity w ith bankruptcy by the end of the year unless politi­ cally u n p o p u lar changes are m ade alm ost im m ediately, Brit­ ish officials said. In Paris, m eanw hile, French Foreign T rade M inister Mi­ chel Jobert resigned saying his m andate w as "ill-defined” after the losses suffered by M itterrand 's leftist coalition in recent nationw ide m unicipal elections. Jobert's resignation p ro m p ted M itterrand to call a senes of high-level m eetings and intensified speculation ab out a m a­ jor governm ent reshuffle. The outspoken Jobert, one of the five senior m inisters of state in M itterrand's Socialist-led governm ent, w as one of the m inisters expected to be o usted in an effort bv M itter­ rand to im prove his im age and com bat sen o u s economic problem s. E uropean leaders also will devote time to rising u n em ­ ploym ent in E urope — th e highest since World W ar II. In view of the sum m it m eeting of m ajor w estern industrialized nations at W illiamsburg, Va., May 29-30, the leaders are ex­ pected to draw up a com m on front on proposals to revive the w orld econom v. United Press international The perils of protesters Three nuclear arms protesters kneel on railroad tracks in Fort Collins. Colo, as a train believed to be carrying over 100 nuclear warheads slowly ap­ proaches. The train, bound from the Pantex Corp. in Amarillo to a Trident submarine base in Bangor, Wash., was expected to run into protest vigils Sunday and Monday throughout the Northwest. Police removed and arrest­ ed the three protesters. Reagan ready for summit United Press International LO N D O N — P resident Reagan is p repared to discuss concrete issues at a sum m it this vear w ith Soviet leader Yuri A ndropov, and is optim istic of progress soon in his M iddle East peace plan, L ondon's S u n d a y Tim es said Sunday. Reagan, in an exclusive interview w ith the n ew sp ap er's retiring corre­ said he sp o n d en t H enrv Brandon, could foresee a m eeting betw een A n­ dropov and him self som etim e in 1983 even tho u g h there are no im m ediate plans for one. Reagan said, how ever, he w ould re­ sist a sim ple "get-acquainted m eeting because I think that such a m eeting raises people's expectations so high that then w e ’d just be able to sav, 'Well, w e got acquainted and said hel­ lo,' and not have any results." D uring the interview in th e Uval Office Fnday, Reagan said his govern­ m ent was in constant touch w ith the Soviet leadership "seekin g areas of dis­ cussions for a m eeting that could be beneficial to both sid es." The president also said he w as m ak­ ing no pre-conditions for a possible sum m it. "You can onlv determ ine in advance the subjects that sho uld be discussed, to be certain there will be som e signifi­ cant results," he said. Reagan said his recent highlv-criti- cized speech in O rlando, Fla., com par­ ing relations betw een th e U nited States and the Soviet Union as a confronta­ tion betw een good a n d evil had been m isinterpreted. He said he w as not in ten ding to im­ ply an inevitability of w ar but "a recog­ nition and a w illingness to face up to w hat these differences are v iew s... to be realistic ab out it." in our Reagan said he w as optim istic nego­ tiations w ould begin soon on his Mid­ dle East peace plan, w hich calls tor a Palestinian entity in th e Israeli-occu­ pied W est Bank and Gaza Strip in co­ operation with Jordan. "I think w e've m ade som e progress tow ard the first step th at w-e believe is absolutely necessary an d that is the w ithdraw al of all foreign forces ... from Lebanon. I think that is absolutely \i- tal." Reagan said he believed once that w as accom plished, Jo rd a n 's King H ussein w ould "offer him selt as the negotiator to continue th e peace nego­ tiations involving all the other Middle East problem s " Former staff members victims of EPA ‘hit list, ’ sources say U nited Press International W ASHINGTON — A ides to form er E nvironm ental Protec­ tion Agency chief A nne Burford com piled a color-coded "hit list' in late 1981 targeting 25 to 50 veteran agency m anagers for firing, EPA sources said Sundav. Several sources w ho saw' the list said a nu m ber of the Senior Executive Service officials nam ed w ere d em oted or given u n w an ted transfers to o th er cities last year, resulting in their dism issals or resignations. M anv of those targeted w ere view ed as D em ocrats or strong environm entalists, thev said. D avid T underm an, an EPA policy veteran, w as ordered transfered to a job as a laboratory chief although he said he had taken only a college freshm an chem istry course and the job required a medical degree. T underm an, w h o quit EPA, now practices law in Salt Lake City. Sheila Prinderville, w ho w as dep u ty regional ad m in istra­ tor in San Francisco, said she was told her job was being elim inated and w as fired w h en she declined a transfer to W ashington. Before sh e left, a new dep u ty chief w as nam ed. A form er enforcem ent division chief in EPA's Chicago off­ ice, S andra G ardebring, w as similarly fired w hen she refused to accept a transfer to W ashington to a job she says had "n o particular responsibilities." All three said they had been told or heard rumors their names were on the "hit list." Burford resigned March 9 in the face of investigations of the EPA by six congressional subcom m ittees an d the FBI. Past an d present EPA officials said they w ere told the list w as largely com piled by Jam es Sanderson, a D enver attor­ ney and form er close adviser to Burford; W. Clifton Miller, a C olorado resident w hom Sanderson reportedly bro u ght to EPA's W ashington office; B urford's chief of staff, John Dan­ iel; and tw o other form er aides to Sanderson, Seth H unt and W arren W ood. Sanderson is u n d er Justice D epartm ent investigation be­ cause of alleged conflicts of interest in his represen tation of ind ustry legal clients w hile serving as an E P A consultant. An agency law yer said Miller, a special assistant to B u r ford, "prom inently d isp lay ed " the hit list on a board in his office. "It's all blatantly in violation of the civil service law s," the official said. "T hey sh o w ed it to people!" The attorney said B urford's aides seem ed to feel "they had a m andate" to m ake m ajor personnel changes despite civil service laws. Rep. Jam es Scheuer, D -N.Y ., w hose H ouse subcom m ittee is investigating w idesp read reports of personnel abuses at EPA, called the disclosures "fu rth e r evidence of the perva­ sive political m anipulation of this agency." "Scores of dedicated a n d effective mid-level m anagers w ere driven from EPA by M rs. Burford and her fellow a p ­ p o intees," Scheuer said. "T h e new adm in istrato r m ust get a firm pledge from the W hite H ouse that this course of con­ du ct will not be rep eated .... " Experts disagree on freeze issue United Press International nuclear defenses. WASHINGTON — A debate on the nuclear freeze issue show ed sharp dis­ agreement Sunday betw een a retired U.S. admiral and a State Department official over whether nuclear w eapons enhance U.S. security. Adm. N oel Gayler, former U.S. com­ mander in the Pacific and now head of one of several groups urging Congress to endorse a U.S.-Soviet freeze on new nuclear w eapons, declared that his ex­ perience convinced him nuclear weap­ ons are "unusable." H e said a preoccu­ pation with nuclear w eapons is drain­ ing resources from more effective non­ Assistant Secretary of State Richard Burt did not dispute the fact that nucle­ ar weapons have little battlefield use­ fulness but said if they are not sup­ plied to the allies by the United States the western defense alliance will fall apart. Both men were questioned on NBC's interview program, "Meet the Press." said Burt the American people should be encouraged that the Reagan administration is trying to go beyond the SALT II treaty, which has never been ratified. But he said the president is using the fear of such w eapons to force the Sovi­ ets to reduce their m issiles by threaten- ing "incentive" deploym ent of new nuclear m issiles in western Europe. "I know President Reagan shares those concerns and he shares those fears," Burt said. "This is one reason that the Reagan adminstration has come forward with the boldest, most far-reaching arms control program in the history of the post war period.” Burt said ratification of Salt II would have left the Soviets with an advan­ tage, and, "This administration has not sought easy agreements, agreements which simply codify the arms race." ^ unneo rre s s iniernaiiona* Technology takes over J)r. Mitchell Bush (c), veterinarian at the National Zoo in Washington D.C., prepares the panda, Ling-Ling, for artificial insemination. Ling-Ling and her jn a te , Hsing-Hsing, managed to consummate their stormy eight-year rela­ tionship Friday, but apparently were not thrilled enough to repeat the per­ form ance Saturday or Sunday. The panda is only fertile three days a year. t Taxing rule stirs conflict jkJmted Press International £ W ASHINGTON — Born ot the gov­ e r n m e n t's desperate need for more Jinoney, the autom atic w ithholding of ta x e s from interest p aym ents has be- jcom e the m ost controversial of several íh a n g e s in the tax law that go into ef- Ject this year * O ne idea behind the change is that la x cheating can be reduced by having tank and savings institutions, and bro- erage firms in som e cases, withhold $ 0 percent of interest and dividends ¡Jjaid — much as tax withholding is im­ p o s e d on peoples' paychecks. £ As simple as it sounds, the plan has ¡provoked a strong reaction and even ¡¡threatened to snarl Senate passage of a $>ig jobs bill last week. ¡* A louder protest had been expected 'Irom Wall Street, since the new' law — S e t to take effect July 1 — requires ¡Stockbrokers to report sales of all Stocks and bonds to the government Tor the first time, as well as withhold 10 percent in terest. from dividend pay­ m en ts and doing so far m ore often th an required of banks. W hile Wall Street accepted the new rules w ith hardly an objection, trade g ro u p s for banks, savings an d loans a n d credit unions set off a cam paign th at triggered a blizzard of angry mail to C apitol Hill. The effort quickly built majorities in both the Senate and the H ouse in favor of repealing the objectionable part of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibili­ ty Act of 1982. A major argument against the with­ holding plan is that it would cost banks so much they would be forced to cut services to despositors, or reduce inter­ est paid on accounts. Another charge is that many elderly people w ould sud­ denly find checks they count on m ys­ teriously reduced. The rules, however, allow the elder­ ly and others to file for exemptions from the withholding requirement. The exem ption form may be filed at .anytime. news in brief From Texan news services c h a n tin g 25,000 march on U.S. air base near Madrid MADRID, Spain — A bout 25,000 p e o p le "Y an k ee s o u t" m arched on a U.S. Air Force base n ear M adrid S unday in support of d em an d s to dism antle the facility and pull Spain out of NA IO. Military and national p o ­ lice tu rn ed back 1,000 protesters w ho split from the main group of m archers and approached too close to the base, eight m iles outside the capital, officials said. T here w ere no reports of arrests or said. The march w as organized bv the "A ntiN A - TO C om m ittee' and received su p p o rt from the Spanish C om m unist party an d o th e r leftist groups. incidents, authorities Soviets rearm Syria DAMASCUS, Syria — The Soviet U nion h a s replaced all the Syrian arm y e q u ip m en t destroyed by Israel in the invasion of Lebanon and has rebuilt Syria's ruin ed air defense system , ac­ cording to w estern m ilitary analy sts here. Because the new eq u ip m en t is m ore m odern, the analysts say, the im ­ pro vem ents have m ade the Syrian arm y stronger than it w as before the Israeli invasion last June. The R ussians have co ntin ued their 2-year-old p ro ­ gram of m odernizing S yria's a rm a ­ m ents, they said. Israel rejects PLO offer LEI, AVIV , Israel — Israel has reject­ ed an offer bv the Palestine Liberation O rganization to release eigh t Israeli soldiers, an aide to Prime M inister Me- nachem Begin said in an interview pub lished Sunday. Khalil al W azir, the top PLO military strategist, said in n interview broadcast Saturday that the Israelis w ould be released if prisoner to 3,7 C of-w ar statu s w as granted P alestinians held in Israeli jails B< >;i. sp okesm an , Uri Porath, said in an u terview in the ferusahwn Post n ew sp per, " A m o n e belonging i to such crim inal organization cannot enjoy flu privileges ot a prisoner-of-w ar." C arrier arri ve s in Japat* SASEBO, Japan The 7},700-ton nuclear-pow 'ered aircraft carrier ! S' E nterprise steam ed Sundav tow aid Sasebo and a threatened mas . an ti-n u ­ clear p ro test by Japanese dem onstra tors. Strong securit\ m easures will bi in effect w hen the Enterprise arrives in Sasebo in southw estern Japan Mon day. O pposition political parties labor u n io n s an ti-n u c le a r g ro u p s planned to stage a ifpjor dem onstra tion w ith 10,000 people to p rotest the rep o rted presence of nuclear w eapon , aboard the 1,102-foot long flattop. and U.S. spies in danger W A SH IN G TO N The U nited States has abo ut DO intelligence tech n id aits in C entral \m erica tracking So­ viet an d C uban aid to guerrillas in 1 I Salvador, it w¿r- reported Sundav. The Veu ) ork Iirny- said the undercove netw o rk of U.S. spu-s w as in addition to the ^5-person limit for m ilitan tram ers. Senior Reagan adm inistration oft» cials w ere quoted as saving the intelli­ gence g atherers, som e of w hom con d u ct km altitudt f l i g h t s over guerrilla territory, w ere in greater d an g er than the military trainers based in El S a b e ­ dor. th e spy netw ork was put in p lan in J981 b\ the Reagan adm inistration, th e report said. Record tax hikes sough* W ASHINGTON state legislatures in 43 states are considering record ter increases this vear totalling m ore than S12 billion a vear the lax Foundation says in a new n port. ' Both the n um her of states looking for new revenue' and the dollar am ounts being sought are unp reced ented ' it said Fhe foun ­ dation, a non-profit research group has exi ted since 1937 and has collected this series of figures since 1962. Thirt\ states raised taxes In a total of $5 bi! lion the biggest previous round ot increases, Elsie W atters, foundation research director, said in 1971, Eastern to resume talks MIAMI talks Mondav After a week of an n o u n c e ­ m ents that further negotiations w en "fu tile," Eastern Airlines agreed to re ­ in W ashington sum e w ith its largest union to avert a p o te n ­ tially dev astating strike The "final" co ntract winch Eastern offered the 13,500-m ember International A ssocia­ tion of M achinists was resoun ding ly rejected bv the union Saturday, d esp ite w arnings from the airline th at no fu r­ ther offers w ould be m ade. Following the vote count, Eastern P resident Frank Borman softened his stance an d said the airline w ould resum e n ego tia­ tions "in good faith Page 4/The Daily TexanMonday, March 21,1983 O pinions expressed in The Daily Tasan are those ot the editor or the writer of the article and are not necessarily those o« the Univeraity adrt nisuation i' e B >ar,i of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees viewpoint Nipping the toxic bud Times Beach and Love Canal should tell us that states cannot rely on the federal government to earnestly regu­ late chemical companies that dispose hazardous wastes. In Texas, which has more chemical waste dumps than any other state, the need to mind our own backyard is especially great. O ne of the best ways to keep our own backyard free of toxic chemicals is to prevent the siting of such disposal facilities in sensitive regions. Presently, companies can get a permit to discharge their wastes in almost any area as long as they meet certain engineering design specifica­ tions. A new bill being proposed in the Texas House would change this by expanding siting criteria to include consideration of flood hazards, aquifer recharge and soil conditions. The bill, HB 487, presented by Rep. Ed Watson, D- Deer Park and nine other legislators, is both necessary and timely. With the Environmental Protection Agency bogged down in politics, the burden is on the states to manage hazardous waste disposal. The current EPA has abdicated its duties and simply cannot be trusted. It is up to the state to restore our confidence that we are being protected from the dangers of hazardous wastes. The state's existing regulatory program lacks teeth. The state can only "ad v ise" permit applicants and is unable to force compliance with its "g u id elines." The new bill would give the state the authority to establish "ru les." If the applicant fails to comply with these rules, the state could refuse to grant a permit. The rules, instead of requiring merely engineering specifications, would attempt to establish broader crite­ ria T hey would place the burden on the applicant to prove that the proposed site is not "unsuitable," that is, it doesn't contain permeable soils, isn't on a flood plain or isn't on top of an aquifer. The bill also proposes to expand the foundation of knowledge upon which decisions regarding hazardous wastes are made. It requires the Texas Department of Health and the Texas Department of W ater Resources to tap the cerebral resevoirs of other state agencies, such as the Soil and W ater Conservation Board, in developing rules governing the management of hazardous wastes. Not surprisingly, the Texas Chemical Council opposes the bill, claiming that it would force many companies to ;o out of business. This bill, they imply, would handcuff ee enterprise. But, if Adam Smith were around today to see the atroc­ ities perpetrated in the name of free enterprise, he too would agree that the "Invisible H and" needs a great big invisible handcuff. He would see that voluntarism and pollution go hand in hand. And he would agree that any activity that tended to the lowering of collective well­ being is a political issue and therefore demands a political solution. HB 487 is a necessary, even if only an interim, political solution. Landfills are not the final answer. Even Rea­ gan's pro-business EPA claims that there is no such thing as a "secure" landfill. Ultimately we will have to both reduce our volume of wastes generated and develop methods to recycle or detoxify those wastes that remain. In the meantime, it is good to see that a few Texas politicians are beginning to recognize that their duty to serve people logically includes protecting the environ­ ment, too. Roger Worthington For better evaluations It is rare that a proposal com es around that serves the interests of the students, faculty and administration all at the same time. But the Kellev-Stice proposal for teacher evaluations is just such a proposal. Under this proposal, which will go before the Universi­ ty Council Monday, administrators would have available for their use in making promotion decisions the results of questions concerning overall teaching effectiveness and general assessm ents of courses. By requiring that all fac­ ulte members anonymously administer evaluations per­ iodically the plan answers the faculty's complaint that professors are compared to a skewed sample, since cur­ rently the best teachers are the ones most likely to admin­ ister evaluations. But best of all, the student part of the proposal would be taken out of the hands of faculty and administrators and put directly under student control. The plan would allow students to evaluate all of their instructors (com­ pared to the 12 percent evaluated last spring) during preregistration. The results would then become property of the Students' Association, which would publish them. This proposal is truly a breakthrough after months and months of negotiations among students, faculty and ad­ ministrators. We strongly urge the University Council to adopt it. Lisa Beyer GOP up to the same old tricks Paying college Republicans to infil­ trate anti-w ar groups and snitch on dope smokers was one of the G O P s sleazier pursuits in 1972. Such dirty tricks eventually brought campaign disgrace to the party. N onetheless, a decade later, some members of the GOP's youngest wing are behaving as if W atergate never happened. Operating out of the Re­ publican National Committee's head­ quarters in Washington, D .C., the Col­ lege Republicans have undertaken a campaign to immobilize a no-less legiti­ mate organization, Ralph Nader's cam­ Interest Research pus-based Public Group (PIRG). Established 13 years ago to inspire comsumer advocacy in college stu­ dents, PIRGs now operate on 160 cam­ puses in 26 states. For the most part, their members are idealistic students who function in the highest tradition of do-gooders Among other things, they report on tam pus consumer prices, in­ vestigate toxic waste dumps and fight activities which few for recycling can labe l subversive Like organiza­ tions on most campuses, PIRGs are supported by student activity fees Sen ( harles Percy of Illinois, speak­ ing for many Republicans, com m end­ ed PIRGSs in 1979 "for their valuable contributions." Yet sue h a perspective was absent in a lengthy memo introducing the anti- PIRG (am paign, known as "Project In­ form ," several weeks ago. In his mes- maxwell glen and cody shearer here and now sage to College Republican chapters, group chairman Jack Abramoff said the project intended to "defeat PIRGs and to make sure they never get started." According to Steve Baldwin, the project's 25-year-old mastermind and chief strategist, PIRGs "lobby on gay rights, for a nuclear freeze, against draft registration and are anti-busi­ ... Many work hand-in-hand ness with various disobedience groups such as the Committee Against Registration and the Draft (CARD) and Marxist groups such as the United States Stu­ dent Association (U SSA )." insists While Baldwin that his group's aim is simple, to end easy PIRG access to college activity money, the facts tell a different story. For one, on most campuses students can already file for a refund of the share of their sem ester's fees that goes to the local PIRG (usually $2 or $3). Where PIRGs don't operate, it recom ­ mends a pre-emptive strategy of w arn­ ing college officials about possible suits by PIRGs and tangles with the local business community. Those who need legal assistance in fighting PIRGs are urged to contact the to College Republicans, who claim have connections with several conserv­ ative legal foundations "interested in fighting PIRGs in co u rt." College Re­ publican chapters that "rid their state of this pestilence" are eligible for "ce r­ tificates of recognition." It's easy to understand why the col­ lege Republicans would want to do all this. Some PIRG chapters often antago­ likely GOP constituencies — nize chemical waste price-gougers and for example. Moreoever, dumpers, PIRGs have always been an easy target for better financed partisans — the Re­ publican National Committee provides more than half of the College Republi­ cans' budget. Yet if their program succeeds, w am s PIRG godfather Ralph Nader, "it will reimpose the further disenfranchise­ ment of thousands of students" for whom consum er issues are particularly relevant. Ten years ago, then-Republican Na­ tional Committee Chairman George Bush chastised those College Republi­ cans who made an early career of dirty tricks. One w onders how he would re­ act to the current effort to destabilize one of the embattled consum er move­ ment's remaining legacies. ° 1983 Field Enterprises Inc. Reagan endorses Big Brother Henry Kissenger plans to discuss the Vietnam W ar in a class at Georgetown University. Before he does, he has to show his lecture notes to officials at the State Department, the Defense Depart­ ment, the Central Intelligence Agency and the White House and delete any thoughts they decide are secret. Or, 10 years from now, Gen. Edward Rowny writes a book criticizing the arms control agreem ent signed by President Reagan in 1983 over Rowny's objections. Before he even shows the manuscript to a publisher, he has to get it cleared by a half-dozen agencies — and the process takes two years. Scenarios of that kind will be the re­ sult of an executive order just issued by Reagan. It is, I think, the most dan­ gerous executive order in many years: dangerous to the American system of democratic control over public policy. It is also, so far, dangerously misun­ derstood. When the White House issued the order — on Friday afternoon, to mini­ mize public notice — some of the press focused on a colorful but relatively un­ important provision. It tells govern­ ment employees that they must agree to take lie detector tests when leaks are being investigated, or face "adverse consequences." The main point of the Reagan order is far more sweeping, more revolution­ ary. It extends to hundreds of thou­ sands of men and women throughout government a system of prior censor­ ship used until now only by the CIA and other super-secret intelligence ser­ vices. Anyone who has seen sensitive in­ formation will be covered by the cen­ sorship system even after he leaves government service — for the rest of abroad at home his life. He will have to get official ap­ proval before writing or saying any­ thing about subjects he dealt with in government. Lawyers at the Justice Department, which shaped the order, said it would apply not only to memoirs of former officials but to speeches, book reviews, scholarly papers and even fiction — novels and short stories. It covers not just Secretary of State Shultz and other Cabinet members but diplomats, sol­ diers and civil servants of all kinds. The censorship system is not nar­ rowly limited, as some people mistak­ enly believe, to making former officials submit classified material for clearance before they use it. They have to submit everything, however inocuous, and let government censors decide what can be said or published. And experience has shown that the censors spend most of their time trying to supress embar­ rassing facts, not true secrets. An agency veteran, Ralph W. McGehee, has just published "Deadly Deceits: My 25 Years in the C .I.A ." In an appendix to the book he describes the draining, tortuous negotiations he had to go through to get his m anu­ script cleared. They lasted two years. Officials demanded that McGehee delete from his manuscript critical pas­ sages that he was sure he used no clas­ sified material. W hen he showed them that the facts had already appeared in books generally supporting the agency — by such former officials as Allen Dulles and William Colby — they with­ drew. Then others would renew the objection. The sheer bureaucratic impact of the Reagan order staggers the imagination. The CIA, with a centralized system, ties people up for months and years over manuscripts. How will it work when a former official needs clearances from several agencies before he can consult with a business or write a newspaper article? The point is that this country has re­ lied heavily on those who have been inside the governm ent to inform us on the decision-making process how works. They are going to be discour­ aged now from trying. So the Reagan order may fundamentally affect the information available for quality of public discussion of government poli­ cy. In a way the order is not surprising. Reagan's attorney general, William French Smith, has worked zealously to suppress information about govern­ ment from the moment he took office. But the audacity of it is still breath­ taking. Here is an administration that tned the courts for making law without waiting for Congress to act. Yet it now tries to transform what has been a premise of the American system since James Madison: that informed public discussion is essential to wise policy And it does so without asking Con­ gress, without giving any reason. c 1983 The New York Times When is more more than enough? Why does President Reagan link supporters of a nuclear freeze to "those who would place the United States in a position of military and moral inferiority?" Why does he suggest that the freeze m ovem ent is bent on "sim ple-m ind­ ed appeasement or wishful thinking about our adversaries" that will result in "th e betrayal of our past and the squander­ ing of our freedom ?" Freeze supporters are not, after all, advocating any kind of inferiority for the United States. They are not calling for unilateral disarmament. They specify that any freeze on test­ ing, production or deployment of w eapons must be mutual and verifiable. There's nothing "sim ple-m inded" about that, and if there's any "wishful thinking" going on it's Reagan's belief that he can somehow regain nuclear superiority for the United States by stacking warhead on top of warhead. The issue here is not patriotism or appeasement. It is w hether national security and world peace will be better served by 1) a negotiated halt to the arm s race and continu­ ing efforts to reduce arsenals on both sides, as called for in the freeze resolution; or by 2) a further huge and costly nu­ clear buildup, together with the START negotiations, as Rea­ gan w ants. The president's shrill attacks on the motives of freeze supporters suggest that he's beginning to feel the heat of this debate. The freeze movement is not alone in the belief that more weapons don't necessarily increase security. A new North Atlantic Treaty Organization report, for example, has urged the United States to cut down or even eliminate its stockpile of more than 5,000 battlefield nuclear w eapons in Europe. The weapons are outmoded and militarily vulnerable, the report says; they are also "effectively unusable" on the bat­ tlefield, since most have extremely short ranges and relative­ ly high yields. If NATO does downgrade its reliance on battlefield nukes, that will lend credence to those who have been calling for a NATO policy of "n o first u se" of nuclear weapons. Opposi­ tion to such a policy has been based primarily on the view that NATO conventional forces could not halt a conventional Soviet attack on w estern Europe and would have to make a nuclear response in the relatively early stages of such an attack. Where such a response would lead has been bluntly stated by Gen. Bernard Rogers, the com m ander of U.S. forces in Europe. "W e are not going to contain a nuclear war in west­ ern E u rop e," he told a House committee on March 9. Such a war, he said, "is going to escalate to a strategic exchange" between the United States and the Soviet Union — the best reason for less reliance on nuclear weapons in Europe. in the nation The emphasis on more and bigger may sound tough and impressive, but it can't necessarily stand analysis. A distin­ guished former diplomat has pointed out in a letter to me, for example, that the United States now has 10 Trident sub­ marines in operation, in sea trials or under construction; each will have 24 missiles carrying 8 to 10 nuclear warheads of 100 kilotons explosive power. Simple arithmetic discloses that this fleet's 1,920 warheads (eight on each of the 240 missiles) would have a destructive potential of 192,000 kilo­ tons. This would be the equivalent of 14,769 bombs of the 13- kiloton size dropped on Hiroshima in World W ar II. But Jerome Wiesner, President Kennedy's science adviser, has written that only 100 nuclear bombs would "effectively de­ stroy" either the United States or the Soviet Union. A ssum ­ ing these 100 were of the 100-kiloton size carried by Trident submarines, my correspondent calculated that the Soviet Union could be "effectively destroyed" by only 5.2 percent of the Trident fleet's warheads. "Either this is m adness," he wrote, "o r I am mad, or my arithmetic is wholly faulty ... How, I would ask, can the government go in for such nightmarish absurdities without’ arousing questions, protests and demands for explanation, on the part of the press and the media? What is going into these submarines is, after all, only one part of what we haVe in one leg of the triad. Should the government not be asked to tell us just how many times over they are planning to destroy the Soviet Union, and why, or, if this striking force suffices for one such destruction, what they propose to do with the remaining 94.8 percent?" That is the kind of question more and more Americans are beginning to ask. Reagan can impugn their patriotism or call them appeasers, but the only way he can silence them is with what he has not so far provided — a convincing an­ swer. ° 1983 The New York Times I DONfT UK % EVEBEAM- THERE'S ! 1 TAKING SOME TIME I ^ ■ G E T SITUATED. tyS.41. f i r i n r i G m a ■ w i n y h i K ? ■ong picture Dear Editor: Why did you use a photograph of a woman dressed in "male” attire (coat, tie, cigar in pocket) to illustrate an arti­ cle concerning an association of top- (Texan, ranking businesswomen March 10, "These Women Mean Busi­ ness )? Although the first sentence of the article states that this group "defies stereotyping," the photograph sup­ ports the stereotype that positions of leadership and power in business are domains. Such stereotypes impede the progress of women who possess executive cap acities and po­ tential. male I applaud your attention the achievements of women in business. I regret your perpetuation of this stereo­ typed image in the use of this photo­ graph. to Cynthia J. Swindell Counseling psychology Whose rights? Mr. Eisenberg, I can only assume that what brought you to your extremely logical assum p­ tion (Firing Line, March 11) that ail people have the right to use another's assets to their advantage was your upbringing. The question is not w hether w om en's sexuality is titillating to men, but whether it should be used to sell Budweiser. I agree with you that a singer is not ' exploited when she or he uses their voice. But you are talking about a total­ ly different issue when you try to ap­ ply that analogy to sexuality. We don't mate in the streets; just as a stranger has no nght to stop you on the street and feel vour crotch, so should no ad­ vertising com pany stoop to the use of a strange w om an's breasts to sell BEER. I wouldn't worn,' if thev were selling sex, at least that's an honest wav to make a living (oldest profession and all that), but using w om en's sexualitv to sell a product to men is merely relegat­ ing wom en to the dutv usuallv re­ served for 36 point bold. To get to the point — a woman in a skimpv bathing suit (that you have never met, mind vou) beckoning you to dnnk a certain beer reeks a bit highlv of mind-fucking (pardon the expression). You are right to say that equality of the sexes exists in the definition, and being a pre-med student, you no doubt are aware ot the differences between men and women We can't use stand- up unnals. But 1 think that in this case, you have stretched the definition to fit your beliefs — which is com pletely via­ ble — but not the issue We aren t talk­ ing about the "n g h t” of men to drool over the female form. We re talking about the nght of Budweiser Beer Inc. to turn that "n g h t" against you to sell you their product It planet boredom will spare me from Padre Island and Budweiser Beer and wm m m m m m m m m m am m m McDonald's and Spring Break, not to mention the adds that tiy to convince me how to "be a real woman," buy me two tickets. I think I'll take my mother. Lotte Stavenhagen Fine arts Capitalism w orks In her guest column (The Daily Tex­ an, March 11), Julia Toxey states sever­ al correct observations in an attempt to defend communism. What she does not realize, however, is that she is ac­ tually pointing out the reason for the failure of this system. Ms. Toxey claims "The truth is that man is greedy." This is a correct statement. Man is by nature greedy, and therefore, any successful economic or political system must be structured with this basic knowledge in mind. The Marxist philosophy is depend­ ent on the honesty and goodness of all men. Therefore it fails. A system must be designed to take into account the fact that, as Ms. Toxey puts it, man is "ev il" and "g reed y ." Such a system must fairly and justly channel these unquestionable qualities of man into constructive incentive for the progress of all. This system is capitalism. Grant­ ed, communism is an admirable con­ cept, however, due to the inherent na­ ture of man, its effective application is impossible. Until we can find a way to alter these innate qualities of man, we must simply do the best with what we have. Charles Sommer Business administration Fees, fines, apathy l wanted to run for student govern­ m ent last sem ester so I paid my $5 ap­ plication fee and a $15 "o b ed ien ce" de­ posit. A mistake on mv application caused my name to be stricken from the ballot, and, for w hich, my deposit was to be returned. That check is still floating around the UT accounting sys­ tem. This sem ester I again paid mv $5 fee and $15 deposit and won. Since I was the only one running from my school and didn't particularly care where my nam e appeared on the ballot, I missed the candidates m eeting and went hom e to read all 11 pages of the elec­ tion code on mv own time. No where in that code does it say that missing a m eeting will cost you SI 5. Also, being the only one on the ballot enabled me to elim inate any cam paign expenses. Since I didn't bother to file a financial statem ent (two zeros and a notarized signature), I now owe student govern­ m ent a $10 fine. 1 didn't give anvone in student governm ent the pow er to exe­ cute punishm ent when I voted last year. However, 1 do have the nght to an appeal bv filing seven copies (at 5 cents each) of my life history with the Judicial Com m ission. If I sound apathetic, then I am only representing my constituency who elected a candidate with not much more than one vote 4 - mine. If I sound angry, then you understand that 1 will spend at least $50 to get elected to a position no one else wants. If I sound concerned, then you can imagine what might happen if this monster gets any real authority over student life. William F. Heinze Graduate School of Business Do unto ethors Reading The Daily Texan's Firing like watching a merry-go- Line is round: the same paint-chipped chari­ ots of age-old controversies return again and again. Now it's creationism versus Darwinism with numerous supporters on both sides of the issue giving their reasons for belief or disbelief in one of the above ideologies; that is, with the exception of one individual — Steve Bratteng. I have had the misfortune of catching three of his disdainful letters to Firing Line (the last one on March 10) in which he viciously ridicules sup­ porters of creationism through various dexterous uses of rhetoric. Though I also cannot see eye to eye with the creationists, I find it unnerv­ ing when someone like Mr. Bratteng can't defend a particular credo and at the same time give due respect to an­ other7 s; i.e. without swinging a verbal bat. If one explores why such a person is driven to revile his opponents, one would probably find that individual in­ secure in his or her own beliefs, imma­ ture and possibly emotionally unstable (hello, Senator McCarthy, Adolf and the Brown Berets). The Daily Texan would do better to pass up such letters w rought from the id and not the intel­ lect. Chris Coleman Special studies Chicano art Libertad! They shout. They whisper. All teach, making even the sleepiest of conscience wake with alarming real­ ism . That is the difference between Californian M alaquias M ontova's art and that of mainstream artists. It epito­ mizes the Chicano m ovem ent. It edu­ cates. And no, there aren't any rifle barrels bearing down on you in his art. W ith artillery like M ontoya's talent, no one has to force you to look. Is it radi­ cal? O nly if you consider wanting jus­ tice radical. M alaquias M ontoya will be here to­ day along with an exhibit of his work in the Chicano culture room (Texas Un­ ion, room 4.206). He will speak on the state of Chicano art and the role of the Chicano artist. The conversation be­ gins at noon and will run until 1:30 p.m . Additional pieces by Montoya are also being exhibited at Las M anitas Av­ enue Cafe at 211 Congress Ave. Jesus M d e la Torre Advertising * TURN UNUSED ITEMS INTO CASH FOR ONLY... O r | (THRU MARCH 3 1 1 ) 1 with a Classified Ad in Th e Da ily Texan USE THIS COUPON TODAY AND SAVE OVER $5! (Expires Thurs. Mar. 31,1983) 15 Limited to items under $500 for sale ONLY. Price of item m ust appear in ad. Paym ent m ay be Name made by cash, check or A d d r e s s credit card only. W o rd s D ays D ays S 3 5 (Additional words, 4* per day per word) ....................................... .. d I m i a * S S .......................................Phone......... M a a City • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • State* • • «Zip* •••••••• 1 3 ............... 6 11 16 21 2 T 15 17 22 6 13 T5 22 TT T9 W n TT 55 55 PLACI CRKI CARD A M RY PH O N i AT 471-5344 □ C a s h Enclosed A cct#------ Exp. Dates. □ V IS A Signature. □ M asterCard Classified Ads P.O. Box D Austin, TX 78712 or bring to Texan Want-Ad Counter, 25th A Whitis Spring break: fish and philosophy W hat did you do over spring break? Probably, you spent your break either lying in the sun, that eternal rejuvenator, working on what will eventually coalesce into a very nice bum ; or you frittered your week away w atching re-runs of "G illigan's Island ." With much em barrassm ent, I have to admit to being one of the latter. W hen one's bank account could not buy out the local gumball machine, one has to face alternatives to the cruise to Majorca and reconcile oneself to angling with my little brother Craig at 'T h e Fishing Place", a made-to-order fishing hole which the ow ners stock with trout every two days. I hate fishing, how ever, and because I do and because I never catch anything, to keep my mind off the line sitting m otionless in the w ater, I contemplate. W hat were the ori­ gins of the spring break? W hy not Fall Break? Or Solstice Break? W hy not Ides of M arch Break? I asked a couple of guys sitting next to me how they thought it started. Amaz­ ingly enough, they were historians on leave from North Tex­ as State, and they had been arguing the point them selves. O ne was a professor of Greek history, and the other was a professor emeritus who had just written a book called "O ri­ gins of Obscure Holidays and W hether O ne Can Get Off Work For T hem " ( O ld 'Stuff Press, $23.95). I considered myself fortunate to be sitting next to them. The first professor said that in ancient G reece, a man named Theom opoulus approached an unruly crowd of workers tired of working 18-hour days without time-and-a- half. Theom opoulus, a veteran politician and accomplished orator, spoke to the crowd from a pedestal and said, "Fellow citizens, fear not that you work in vain. In return for the minor inconveniences of stone buildings, your place in his­ tory is assured. Much time will pass and your labors will remain com mem orating the greatness that is G reece!" O ne voice thundered out from the masses. "T heom o­ pou lu s!", the voice cried, " Is it not bad enough that we work all the week lifting blocks of marble and at the end of the day the only entertainm ent is Socrates three nights a week at the Coliseum ? We are tired and we are bored and will not work again until we get a decent philosopher!" Theom opoulus thought for a moment and, savvy politi­ cian that he was, said, "G ood people of Greece, I propose a daily texan columnist week of rest in reward for the fine job you are doing. How­ ever, I cannot let all of you off; therefore, I propose that the students be the beneficiaries of this vacation. After all, they do need it just as much as anybody else ." This was a masterful stroke by the politician, because he knew that the majority of the crowd was restless students who, like their parents, were sick of Socrates, but had to see him six days a week because he ran the only school in town. The majority of the crowd cheered Theom opoulus's plan and each person packed a bottle of lotion and headed for South Crete. The remainder of the crowd stormed the pedes­ tal torturing him until he consented to replace Socrates with a lounge singer from Toledo. The next explanation was a bit more ludicrous than the first, saying that divine mandate ordered the origin of spring break. It seem s that God sent word to the dean of students at Yale in 1822 that unless there was a week off w'ithin the next month, there would be a terrible holocaust. Of course the dean gave his pupils a week off, but it was rumored later that the V o k e of God was actually an adept display of ventri­ loquism by a theology major. "Pshaw '!", 1 said to both explanations; (pshaw being a word that I believed history professors to exclaim all the time). T h e real origin of spring break is -" , and then my line bJgged. I pulled on the reel, but instead of stopping the line, the line sped on, ignoring my frantic turning of the reel handle. My little brother, the two professors and I watched as the line played itself out and off the reel, disappearing into the depths along with the fish. Disgusted, I left. Spnng break, 1 had ascertained in those last few m om ents, was just a week off in the middle of the sem ester. Some get pleasant tans out on the beach, others get utterly blitzed every night and a very few of the rest get to go fishing and contem plate. D u rfee is a s o p h o m o r e Plan II stu d en t IRA Accounts 9.50% 10.109% Annual Yield New Account Bonus: 15% rate from date opened throu gh first full calen d ar m onth. Variable Rate D eposit A ccount— $100 m inim um . 18 Month Fixed Rate Certificate— $500 m inim um . — A L o o k a t In d iv id u al R e tir e m e n t A ccou nts— UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION 4 76-4670 Campus Branch Texas Union 9 — 4, Mon. —Fri. Co-Op Branch Co-Op Bookstore 9 - 4 , Mon. - Fri. Main Office 30th and Cedar 9 — 4, Mon. - F r i. 9 - 7 , Thurs. Serving UT faculty, staff and full-tim e graduate students All accounts insured to *1 0 0 <><><) hi N< I A j I s t.ovem m cnl Agent\ ® NCUA | Paga 6/Th« Daily Texan/Monday, March 21,1983 i¡ip ¡p PBCTTAHTTHINCH ^ PLASTIC TUMBLERS B E E R MUQS & HOLDERS * t * '¿ M MUCH, MUCH MORE! ^ ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦1 SHÓE SHOP Wa moka and rapair boots baits ih o a i laothar goods Rugs SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF .M O D U S. INOUSHWISTWN CALL YOUR SCHOOL REP: 452-1055 * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ * Capitol Saddlery C E 478-9309 Austin, Taxas 1614 Lavaca Doggett’s two-year Senate seat determined by customary draw By MARK BARRON Daily Texan Staff The luck of the Irish failed to bless state Sen. Lloyd Dog- gett Thursday on St. Patrick's Day. As is done every 10 years, the 31-mem ber Senate last week drew lots to determine which 15 senators will serve two-year terms and which 16 senators will serve four-year terms. Doggett, D-Austin, drew a two-year term. Before lots were drawn, Doggett had said he wanted a four-year term that would enable him to run against U.S. Sen. John Tower in 1984 and still have a Texas Senate seat to return to if unsuccessful. He now must choose between running for a seat in the U.S. Senate or the Texas Senate. Democrats considering running for Doggett's seat include Travis County Attorney Margaret Moore; Austin developer J.B. Joodwin; Austin banker Jerry Angerman; state Rep. Gonzalo Barrientos, D-Austin; Austin school board presi­ dent Ed Small; and Austin attorney Joe Longley. Republicans considering running for the seat include Pat McNamara, who lost to Doggett in last year's race, and Travis County Republican Chairman Richard Box. The Texas Constitution requires the lottery after redistrict- ing so that senators will have staggered terms. Senators postponed the drawing three times this session while the state tried to settle a redistricting lawsuit. If Doggett runs for the U.S. Senate next year, eight Senate hopefuls have said they either will run or are considering running for D oggett's state Spnaf*» cpaf The Justice Department and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational League challenged the senatorial districts approved for Bexar and Harris counties. Fee bill could hinder education, Begala says By PAUL DELA GARZA D aily Texan S taff UT Students' A ssociation President Paul Begala joined members of the Texas Student Lobby in expressing opposi­ tion to proposed legislation that could lead to a 100 percent increase in tuition at state colleges and universities. At a Texas H ouse Appropriations Com m ittee hearing last week, Begala told legislators he believes passage of the bill, authored by com m ittee Chairman Bill Fresnal, D-Bryan, would have "a perm anent and detrim ental impact on higher education in this state .” If passed, the bill would permit the Legislature to increase state fees — including tuition and fees at state universities — in the form o f riders attached to the general appropriations bill. At present, proposals to increase state fees mav be con ­ sidered only as separate legislation. If a fee increase could be added as a rider to the appropria­ tions bill, according to a recent state attorney general's opin­ ion, the governor would have to veto the entire appropria­ tions bill to veto the fee increase. The Presnal m easure, HB 894, would allow fees to be in­ creased bv as much as 100 percent between now and August 1985. After that date, fees could be increased as necessary to recover increases in the state's cost of providing certain s e r ­ vices. The bill's provisions for large-scale tuition and fee hikes, Begala said, could end up putting higher education out of the reach of manv poor and middle incom e students. "O v er a third of our students are on som e sort of financial a id ," Begala said, adding that state tuition increases, in the aftermath of the Reagan adm inistration's financial aid cuts, could keep those students out of state colleges and universi­ ties. "A t a time when those essential student loans and grants are dying of 'R eagaM ortis,'" he said, "it's just not right to hit students with the double-whamm v of an increase in tuition at the same time that their financial aid is being cu t." TSL Chairm an Jim McCormack third-vear law student, added the bill threatens the welfare not only of students but of all Texans as well. M cCormack, along with TSL mem bers Rob Dollars and Catherine M auzv, criticized the rider mechanism because there is no provision for public input on riders Unlike indi­ vidual rate-hike bills D o lla rs s a id , rate-hike riders easily could be enacted without ever being discussed in formal hearings. Presnal said the bill was not directed specifically at tuition, but it would cover all f e e s , including tuition, not sot bv the state Constitution ★ FOR ENTIRE M E N U REFER TO THE STUDENT DIRECTORY - \ ' T : ♦ Super-Bert QUARTER POUNDER "O n Whole W h eat" FOR $2.49 5 a v $ 1 . 0 9 COUPON REDEEMED IN STORE ONLY 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily • 3303 N. Lamar • 4 5 2 -2 3 1 7 M ai T W i 11 a j a . -11 m m h i. A Sat 11 a m -1 m m 1914 Guodoliip» > 1 I I I I I l I I I I l I sun-sational sundresses J9.99 Wow! We've got so many new styles, we can hardly "bare" it! Flounces, florals, polka dots, stnpes, bnghts — the prettiest dresses under the sun Cool and comfortable cottons and poly/cotton blends, all in sizes 3-13, all at great savings right now! ask about our new MN1GO'<¡ CHbRCe We give instant credit* ‘ Sub/ect to credit approval MNIGO'S for fashion savvy HIGHLAND • HANCOCK your Margo's Charge, M aster Charge or Visa Card, American Express, Carte Blanche or Diners Club Ron Mullen ■ ¡ ¡ ^ ^ ■ ■ F o r Mayor A LEADER WHO WORKS FOR AUSTIN • He has consistently supported pro­ grams to assist women, such as the City/County day care program he and Ann Richards co-sponsored, and con­ tinued financial support for the Center for Battered Women, the Rape Crisis Center, and the Commission on the Status of Women, and the Women’s Center. i • His Home Mortgage Bond Program lowered interest rates for first-time home buyers, and did not cost tax­ payers a cent. • Ron Mullen has sponsored and passed more environmental programs and or­ dinances than any two members of the Council combined. • In addition to supporting needed new roads, Ron Mullen is working on establishing shuttle service downtown and reducing the noise impact of road­ ways of neighborhoods. • Ron Mullen took the lead on the Coun­ cil to replace the failing affirmative action program with a stronger plan to increase city employment of women and minorities. • He has pledged to issue bonds only after the voters have approved them. He passed the ordinance which insures that bond funds of the city will be spent only in areas authorized by the voters. • The Barton Creek ordinance and or­ dinances to protect Lake Austin and the watersheds above the Edwards Aquifer were sponsored or supported by Ron Mullen. • He has introduced needed reforms and improvements in City services. He im­ plemented budget reforms that saved the City 1.25 million dollars and established the 911 emergency system which reduces response time of Police, Fire, and EMS services. OPEN GOVERNMENT Ron Mullen A COMMITMENT TO For Mayor Pol. adv. pd. for by Ron Mullen For Mayor Committee, Joan Higgins, Treasurer, 1501 Lavaca, Austin, Texas 78701 The Daily Texan/Monday, March 21,196&Page 7 ^ O w r ^ o u ^ w n ^ H CABLE TV STEREO KIT I HEAR HBO . .. M T V . . .CINEMAX •;'■'! ■ IN STEREO H U Í N S T A L L K I T - - 1 Y E A ^ G U A R A N T E E ( The Video Store ) 459-5433 ANDERSON LN. @ MOPAC I Senate votes to tighten laws on DWI, eliminate ‘loophole’ By PAUL DELA GARZA Daily Texan Staff State Sen. Bill Sarpalius says that with cooperation from the House and Gov. Mark White, his bill designed to toughen punishments for drunk driv­ ers should eliminate cases in which first-time offenders have convictions erased from their records after serving probation. The Texas Senate overwhelmingly voted Tuesday to toughen penalties for those convicted of driving while intoxi­ cated by eliminating what proponents call a "loophole" in state law that al­ lows convictions to be removed from criminal records of those offenders who complete probation. The bill passed the Senate by a 28-1 vote. The measure now will go to the House. "W e've got a lot of support in the House," Sarpalius, D-Amarillo, said last week. "1 just hope we can get the governor's desk something on without any amendments to wrater it dow n." If passed, the bill would do away with deferred adjudication, a judicial process under which a final conviction in a DWI case is delayed during a pro­ bationary period. If probation is com­ pleted to the satisfaction of the presid­ ing judge, first-time drunk-driving convictions are not entered on a driv­ er's record. "It's very important you have a bill that has a deterrent," Sarpalius said. "Deferred adjudication just doesn't work." In Alabama, Sarpalius said, convic­ tions increased 88 percent the first year deferred adjudication was eliminated. In Iowa, deaths caused by drunk driv­ ers plunged 51 percent when the provi­ sion was dropped, he said. The senator said he was "pleased" that the proposal escaped the Senate floor without two proposed am end­ ments he said would have substantial­ ly reduced the bill’s effectiveness. "We m ust have the tools to convict drunk drivers," he said. Sarpalius' bill w’ould penalize first­ time offenders with fines of $100 to $2,000 and a jail term of 72 hours to one vear. The jail term for a first of­ fense could be probated, he said, but the fine could not be probated. Sarpalius said second-time offenders would receive a $300 to $2,000 fine and a jail term of 72 hours to one year; con­ viction of a third DWI charge would result in a $500 to $2,000 fine and a maximum two years in jail. Drivers convicted four or more times could be assessed five years in jail. The lone opposing vote was cast by Sen. Craig W ashington, ,D-Houston, who said drunk driving is a social problem and tougher penalties will not stop people from driving while intoxi­ cated. "All we're doing is putting a Band- Aid on top of a Band-Aid on top of a cancer," he said. Washington said the bill passed the Senate floor because DWI is a hot issue now for the press and entertainment media. T T r . i M - PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS while u wait PHOTOS-COLOR Special 19* ALL THE NEWS THAT'S FIT TO WEAR! If it's news this spring in fashion (men's or women's) you'll read a bou t it in the Texan's Photo Fashion Proviow ■ WW Coming Wednesday. M arch 23 B U Y , SELL, RENT, TRADE... W ANT ADS...471 -5 2 4 4 ¿ Uf !/ J J j y * 1*1» _> 13 / v d * 1 f <3! ^ n : u L j £ c / u c q / t o n S L978 EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS A URS COMPANY Pool SBtS user tim © S j prices polce report Page 8/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 21,1983 Bell raises long distance rates By KELLEY SHANNON Daily Texan Staff Beginning Monday, Southwestern Bell will charge more for some long distance calls, a company representa­ tive said Sunday. The cost of calls up to 41 miles from the origination of a call will increase 1 cent per m inute, said Jim Goodwin, public relations manager for Bell's Cen­ tral Texas region. The increase, approved Friday by a hearing examiner for the Public Utility Commission, will be implemented on a temporary basis, Goodwin said. The rate increase is subject to approval by the full commission. Also included in the hearing examin­ er's ruling was an increase of 2 cents for the first minute of calls 23 to 28 miles away from where the calls are placed. Goodwin said he would not specu­ late about w hether the PUC will ap­ prove the new rates. "They (commis­ sioners) usually go along with their hearing examiner, but there have been cases when they haven't," he said. Although Bell will be charging more for some long distance calls, the com­ pany soon may refund about $29 mil­ lion to its customers. District Judge Harley Clark of Austin ruled Friday that Bell m ust refund the rate the company began charging last October w ithout PUC ap­ increases proval. The PUC eventually ruled against the increased rates. "There were a couple of months there when we were charging too much," Goodwin said. Southwestern Bell implemented the increased rates under bond, a proce­ dure that allows the company to in­ crease its rates and then refund them if the PUC does not approve the in­ crease. The court ruling Friday dealt with Bell's request for a temporary injunc­ tion preventing the company from re­ funding rates not approved by the commission. By LAURA FISHER Daily Texan Staff The aqua-green waters of Barton Springs were re-opened for spring over the weekend, but the public will have to shell out some of their green to be admitted. The swimming pool will be open from 10 a.m. to dusk on weekends and from noon to dusk on weekdays. Toward the end of April, spring hours will be replaced by summer hours, which are from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. Admission to the swimming area is $1.25 for adults, 50 cents for children age 12 through high school and 25 cents for children 11 years old and un­ der. Minors m ust provide some proof of their age, such as a school ID, and an adult must accompany all children 11 and under. On w eekends $1.50 will be charged per automobile to drive through Zilker Park. However, beginning March 26 a shuttle bus will make trips from the park's entrance to any point in the park. Riders may park their vehicles under the MoPac bridge at Stratford Drive on the south side of Town Lake, where the bus route begins. The shuttle bus will run every 15 minutes from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Satur­ days, Sundays and holidays. The Austin Police Department re­ ported the following incidents involv­ ing UT students and employees due- * ing spring break: Shoplifting: A 20-year-old education junior was arrested for shoplifting W ednesday afternoon at Joske's d e­ partm ent store, 5901 Airport Blvd. Store security personnel told police thfc.- student attem pted to steal a $25 Izod'ü shirt and a pair of $34 Sasson jeans. Driving while intoxicated: A 40: year-old UT employee was arrested for driving while intoxicated early Friday- morning in the 2200 block of Airport' Boulevard. 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It’s the b o t ¡ ! n imu h .mil g uz/l m to w n Ami : t Jt tin Ix st pt 111 ( It : i*spit i I w ith cou- ■ ¡M a y 27, IVX.l I I pon at all I imans li Hums .■ a itli , H O W W E M A K E IT M A K E S IT G R E A T . 2m *» (fU.KÍ.ilupth ,iiid 2ntun Inr PHOENIX a a traderrttrk licensed by Cenlun, Inc _ P o H M T M f K S T E R . competition ^ S1Q OR 9 I U a 9 u ElReg $15:95 M H O FOB * 25.00 Less $2.00 Rebate Final Cost $ 2 3 .0 0 per pair fm ptvpk ufcn fdarfirt o m a o r s M U S K : IS MUSIC and MORE! BARTON CREEK SQUARE 3274035 Album And Tape Prices Good Thru April 10th, Other Items March 3 1st ■ monday sports ■ punal The Daily Texan/Monday, March 21,19t3^*aga9 Longhorn Roger Clemens leaps in triumph after becoming the first pitcher to shut out No. 15 Arizona State in 55 games. Clemens allowed six hits in Texas’ 6-0 win, completing a two-game sweep of the Sun Devils. T ra vis S p ra d lin g , D a ily T e x a n S ta ff Longhorns sweep twin-bill from Texas Wesleyan By ED COMBS Daily Texan Staff The Texas Longhorns had a relative­ ly successful spring break Around midweek, regained the Longhorns C ollegiate Baseball's No. 1 ranking. Then, they won both games of a rain-shortened series against the for­ mer No. 1 team, Arizona State. And Sundav, Texas swept a double- header against Texas W esleyan C ol­ lege, 4-3 and 7-0. Most coaches would be prettv hap­ py, but not Texas' Cliff Gustafson "W e haven't played real consistent­ ly ," he said after the first game with Texas Wesleyan. "T h at's pretty much the result of shuffling lineup W e’ve still got a lot ot areas to improve on. We re not hitting real well, and that concerns me going into conference play against Arkansas (Friday)." first gam e, Texas (27-5) jumped out to a 1-0 lead when Bryan the the In Burrows led oft the third inning with a tnple and scored on Mike Brum lev's groundout The Longhorns increased the lead to 3-0 with two runs in the sixth inning. "I never really was confident, not even ahead, 3 -0," Gustafson said. As it turned out, he had little reason to be confident Texas appeared to be cruising with starting pitcher Calvin Schiraldi stretching the Longhorns' string of consecutive scoreless innings to 22. But then Schiraldi ran into trou­ ble. Schiraldi held Texas W esleyan (17- 11) to three hits through the first six innings, but TW C broke through for three runs in the seventh to send the game into extra innings. Designated hitter Jo Pat Sim s led off w'lth a walk and moved to third on Frank Thom as' double. Both runners scored on a single by Kevin Hill, and pinch-runner Blake Franke scored on a double bv Brvan Berndt. After a TWC fly ball and a walk, Schiraldi was re­ moved for Kirk killingsw orth, who fin­ ished the game to record his fifth win against one loss. The second game didn't pro\ ide nearly as much excitem ent. The Long­ horns scored all of their runs in the fourth inning on three hits and five consecutive walks by TWC starter Da­ vid Fitzhugh, whose record dropped to 2- 1. Texas W esleyan managed just one serious threat against Mike Capel, who improved his record to 4-1. After retir­ ing the first two batters in the sixth in­ ning, Capel loaded the bases on walks before striking out clean-up hitter Frank Thom as on three pitches. Texas plays TW C in another double- header at 3 p.m. Monday at Disch-Falk Field. Gustafson said freshmen W'ade Phillips and Eric Boudreaux will pitch for the Longhorns. Stokes’ Uhited Press Internationa LOUISVILLE, Kv — Center Greg Stokes scored 22 points to lead Iowa to a 77-63 upset of No. 12 Missoun Sun­ day to advance to the NCAA Midwest semifinals against No. 11 Villanova Fn- day night. Iowa, 21-9, took the lead for good with b 29 left in the first half and used a pesky zone defense to hold Missoun, 26-8, scoreless for the rest of the penod and take a 32-20 halftime lead. Senior guard John Sundvold scored 19 of Missouri's 21 points in the first 10 minutes of the second half, and center Steve Stipanovich hit a jumper with 8:45 left to cut Iow a's lead to 50-43, the closest the Tigers would come. Sunvold ended with a game-high 29 points on 14-of-24 shooting from the floor and one-of-tw o from the foul line. Stipanovich, a senior also ending his college playing career, ended the game with just six points. Memphis St. 66, Georgetown 57 •LOUISVILLE, Ky. — All-America for­ ward Keith Lee had 28 points and 15 rebounds to lead 17th-ranked Memphis State to a 66-57 victory over No. 20 Georgetown in the Midwest Regionals. Memphis State, which now advances top- to Friday's semifinals against ranked Houston in Kansas City, raced to a 30-25 halftime lead, as guard Phillip Haynes scored nine of his 13 points be­ fore intermission. Memphis State went ahead, 21-20, at 7:11 of the first half on a free throw by Andre Turner, and the Tigers extended thieir lead to 26-20 on a layup and four free throws by Lee. The Tigers, 23-7, scored the first eight points of the sec­ ond half to lead, 38-25, behind four points each by Lee and Haynes. Irkfiana 63, Oklahoma 49 combined EVANSVILLE, Ind. — Fifth-ranked long-range Indiana shooting of Randy Wittman with a ball- control offense to trounce Oklahoma, 63-49. the The victory, the Hoosiers' 24th in 29 games, moves the Big Ten champions into the Mideast Regional at Knoxville next Thursday against arch-rival Ken­ tucky. Wittman scored 22 points, 12 in the first half, when the Hoosiers built a 34- 22 advantage. Freshman sensation Wayman Tisdale 22 points helps Iowa upset Missouri NCAA men’s basketball tournament First Round Second Round Regional Final Regional Semifinals Final Four Final Four Regional Final Regional Semifinals Second Round First Round Tenn -Chat Maryland Alcorn St Georgetown Alabama Lamar Iowa Utah St Tennessee Marquette Rob Morris Purdue__ Illinois St Ohio U Maryland (52-511 Houston 160 501 Georgetown 68-63’ Memphis St Lamar (73-50) _ Memphis St (66-57| Villanova (60-58 ■ MIDWEST Kansas City. Kan. March 25-27 Iowa (64-59) Missouri Iowa (77-63) Tennessee (57-56) Louisville ______ Purdue (5 5 -5 3 )__ Arkansas________ Ohio U. (51-49) Louisville 70-57 Arkansas (78-681 Kentucky (57-40) Oklahoma * * * * * * Ala-Birm ’ OWahomaj71-63)_ Indiana Indiana (63-49)____ MIDEAST KnoxvWe, Ken. Mar. 24-26 CHAMPION Albuquerque, NM April 4 V jr g in . a j^ g j Boston Col 51 -42 Wash St (62-52) | Virginia Princeton (56-53) Boston Col NC State (69-67) NC State (71-70) j y^|_y Utah (67-61) Utah (52-49) UCLA Wash. St. -J Weber St. Princeton i Okla. St. NC State Pepperdine Illinois_____ ’ Utah_______ WEST Ogden, Utah March 24-26 Rutgers (60-53) J31W Louisiana St. John s (66-55) I gt John s L R u l e r s Georgia (56-54) I Georgia Va. Cwlth (75-67) Syracuse (74-59) Ohio St (79-74) Ohio St Va Cmmwlth Syracuse Morehead St J Madison (57-50) w Virginia N Carolina (68-49) f Tiorth Carolina i J Madison EAST Syracuse, NY March 25-27 paced the Sooners with 14 points, 11 under his season average, as the Hoo­ siers' tough man-to-man defense pre­ vented Oklahoma from getting the ball to its star center. N.C. State 71, UNLV 70 CORVALLIS, Ore. — Thurl Bailey scored 25 points, including a lay-in with three seconds to play, to give North Carolina State a 71-70 come- from-behind victory over No. 6 Neva- da-Las Vegas in the W est Regionals. The winning points came after Dereck Whittenburg of North Carolina State missed a 20-foot jumper. Bailey grabbed the rebound and scored to give the Wolfpack their fifth straight close playoff victory. The Wolfpack jumped to a 12-4 lead to start the game, but Nevada-Las Vegas battled back go ahead 33-27 at halftime. St. John’s 66, Rutgers 55 HARTFORD, Conn. — Sophomore guard Chris Mullin, the Big East Player of the Year, scored 14 of his game-high 24 points in the second half to power No. 3 St. John's to a 66-55 victory over Rutgers. St. John's, the Big East champion, ad­ vances to the Eastern semifinals next weekend at the Syracuse University Carrier Dome against Georgia. Trailing, 26-19, St. John's used a 10-2 run to take a 29-28 halftime lead. Bill Wennington scored at the buzzer to give the 28-4 Redmen the one-point edge. Ohio St. 79, Syracuse 74 HARTFORD, Conn. — Larry Hug­ gins scored two baskets to trigger a 12-0 spurt midway through the second half that sparked Ohio State to a 79-74 victo- ry over Syracuse in the East Regionals. With the Buckeyes trailing, 45-41, Huggins had a pair of field goals to ig­ nite a 12-0 run that propelled Ohio State to a 53-45 lead with 9:56 left in the game. Granville Waiters, who scored 10 of his 12 points during the second half, gave the Buckeyes the lead for good, 47-45, with 12:29 remaining. Louisville 70, Tennessee 57 EVANSVILLE, Ind. — Lancaster Gordon scored 18 points to lead four players in double figures, and second- ranked Louisville used an effective full- court press to defeat Tennessee, 70-57, in the second round of the NCAA Mideast Regional. to The Cardinals, 30-3, advanced next week's Mideast Regional at Knox­ ville, Tenn., and will play Arkansas. Tennessee, which ended the season 20-12, missed an opportunity to play on its home court in the next round. Boston College 51, Princeton 42 CO RVALLIS, Ore. — Boston Col­ lege thumped Princeton, 51-42, in the W est Regional. Boston College, 25-6, led 24-23 at halftime and then held Princeton with­ out a field goal until 5:23 left in the game. At that point, the Eagles were ahead, 41-30. Jay M urphy led Boston College with 17 points, and Princeton's Gordon En- derle also scored 17. Boston College coach Garv Williams said: "In the second half we did a bet­ ter job defensively. We rebounded bet­ ter and didn't allow them the second s h o t." Boston College will play Virginia at O gden, Utah, Thursday. See box scores in sportsrecord, page 16. t Maryland’s stall fails to hold back No. 1 Houston United Press International H O USTON — With the absence of a shot clock, the Maryland Terrapins did som ething no team in 23 games had been able to do to the No. 1-ranked H ouston Cougars. The Terrapins, acting the part of a sorority' house mother, kept a lid on H ouston's planned "Phi Slamma 1am- m a" fraternity partv bv using stalling tactics. But in the end, the Midwest Region­ al second-round game in the NCAA Tournam ent had the same result as the previous 22 Houston gam es and the Cougars v\ent away from The Summit happv, it not satisfied, with a 60-50 vic­ tory Saturday. It was H ouston's 23rd consecutive win. During plav early in the second half, the predominantly Houston crowd chanted "boring, boring, boring." "W hen you get in the NCAA tourna­ ment, all gam es are going to be in the 50s and 60s (total points) until you get a shot clock," said Maryland coach Lef­ ty Driesell, w hose team plays in the Atlantic Coast Conference. "I want a shot clock." coaches Both veteran said the the difference. C o u g a r s ' poise was Houston will advance to the semifinal round ot the M idwest Regional against M emphis State. "I imagine other teams will do that," Cougar coach Guv Lewis said. "W e like to run up and down the court and score, but we're not going to panic. Doing that (stalling) is how these great defensive coaches get their great re­ cords H onestly, I'll fake a win any way I can get it." Asked to com pare Houston with some of the Top 20 teams the Terps have plaved, Driesell said the Cougars didn't impress him as being any better. "T h ey're a strong physical team and when thev had to get it done, they got it d o n e," he said. H ouston's front line of Akeem Ola- |uwon, Larry Micheaux and Clyde Drexler contributed ll-for-14 shooting second half that steadily put Maryland further and further in the hole. to an At one point, with Houston leading by five, Lewis sent the Cougars into a stall. Pao» 10/Tht Daily Texan Adonday, March 21.1983 BBBHMIEBSBgiEBSBSr South Carolina State Tennessee (86-51) Cheyney St. (107-35) MIOEAST S. Bend, Ind. f—— Mar. 25-27 Penn St. (94-80) EAST Unv. Park, Pa Mar. 24-26 Maryland (94-71) Georgia (72-70) USC (99-65) Championship Norfofc, Va. Apr. 1-3 ODU (86-63) La. Tech (91-59) Oregon State (75-62) WEST LA Cal. Mar. 24-26 Lono Beach State Long Beach State (88-61) Auburn (89-76) MIDWEST Ruston, La. Mar. 25-27 Kansas St. (91 -72) Texas (84-55) Florida State Mississippi indiana Kentucky North Carolina Georgia use NE Louisiana JM L Arizona State Oregon State UCLA SFA Cheyney State Monmouth Penn. State N.C. State Maryland Central Michigan St. John's Old Dominion Louisiana Tech Middle Tennessee Auburn Missouri Kansas State Illinois State Louisville Texas NCAA pairings cram p UTs plans By BRAD TOWNSEND Daily Texan Staff The groundwork for a national championship carefully had been laid out for the Texas women's basketball team even before the season began. A group of veteran returnees — sup­ ported by a bevy of talented new­ comers — were to test preseason ex­ pectations with a stiff non-conference schedule (eventually consisting of sev­ en top 20 teams), which would offset a comparatively weak conference sched­ ule. But after piecing together a 29-2 record, a No. 3 national ranking and remaining undefeated the Southwest Conference season and tournament, the Longhorns received a rude jolt March 12 when the NCAA announced "regionalized" pairings for the national tournament. through "Being an independent would have been a better choice (rather than play­ ing in the SWC)," Texas coach Jody Conradt said. "Either that, or playing a 40-0 schedule. "It's the cheapest bracket you could put together," Conradt added of the format, which placed Texas along with No. 1 Louisiana Tech in the Midwest regional and forced other teams into re-playing conference opponents in early rounds. The Longhorns opened tournament play Thursday with an 84-55 win over Louisville in the Frank Erwin Center to advance semifinal matchup Friday with Kansas State, a 91-72 winner over Illinois State in the first round. regional to a Both the semifinals and finals of the Midwest Regional will be in Ruston, La., on Louisiana Tech's home court. The Lady Techsters, 28-1 this season, have won 75 of their last 76 home games. While two of the nation's top three- ranked teams are fighting it out in Rus­ ton for. a Final Four spot at Norfolk, Va., April 1 and 3, Tennessee (24-7)-is the top seed in the Midwest Regional. The Lady Volunteers, who lost 74-59 to Texas Dec. 9, finished third in the Southeastern Conference tournament "The world is not always fair," Con­ radt said. "I learned that early in life. I just hope these 18-, 19- and 20-year- olds (the players) can learn that bé- cause I don't want to be the one that teaches that to them." After scanning the tournament set­ up, however, Texas guard Terri Mao key didn't seem particularly worried. "You mean only one team gets to go from Ruston?" she asked. "Well, (Lou­ isiana) Tech ain't going. "We're going to have to beat every­ one anyway," Mackey added. "We're just going to have to do it earlier." CHERT PEOPLE UHTH D GREBT IDEA! At Taco Bell, we continue to be the nation’s number one Mexican fast-food chain. With on-going plans for continued expansion, we have a definite need for aggressive, career-minded people who can move forward with us. We offer the opportunity to put your college education to work right away! Our Management Training program is one of the industry’s most intensive, with regular performance appraisals to determine your future success at Taco Bell. Let’s get together. WE’LL BE ON CAMPUS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23rd. Sign up now at the Business College office. We look forward to meeting you and discussing our career opportunity that can really work for you. If you’d like additional information, or are unable to meet with us on campus, call our Personnel Manager in Ft. Worth at 817/625-6233. TRY THE TASTE OF SUCCESS TflCQ BEIili a d ivisio n o f PepsiCo Equal O p p o rtu n ity Em ployer LATE NIGHT HAPPY HOUR MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY 9-12 311W. 6th 477-8999 UTMen’s SOCCER TRYOUTS PLACE: Intramural Fields (45th & Guadalupe) DATE: March 21-24 TIME: 4:30-6:30 • New Coach • New System • Several Teams • No Cuts Until April 5 • Nonplaying members welcome MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION NAME: ADDRESS: PHONE: CHECK FEE: PLAYING NONPLAYING MEMBERS_______ CLASS:___ ( $ 10.00) ($15.00) Check Tryout Dates: M-W March 21-23 T-Th March 2 2 -2 4 ___ Please leave application a t Division o f Rec Sports Gre 33 or bring to tryouts with tryout fee. Any questions cell M r. Andrews 327-5098 IMMIGRATION Paul Parsons, p.c. Attorney at Law BOARD CERTIFIED • IMMIGRATION & NATIONALITY LAW TEXAS BOARD OF LEGAL SPECIALIZATION LICENSED BY TEXAS SUPREME COURT 2200 GUADALUPE. SUITE 216 (512)477-7887 IMPACTED WISDOM TEETH If you require rem oval o f im pacted third m olars and w ould be willing to com plete a survey o f your postoperative care a reduction in your fee will be offered The following services will be provided Consultation and examination X rays A nesthesia (I V sedation» Oral Surgery Postoperative Care Please contact Biomedical Research Group, Inc. 451-7179 Garnett Lewis Cleaners V i PRICE DRY C LEAN IN G thru M arch 26 Good on Regular Dry Cleaning Only 4807 Burnet 907 W. 12th 8610 N. Lamar 12006 Research PHI KAPPA THETA’S 5th A N N U A L S O F T B A L L TOURNAMENT M arch 26-27 a t K R IE G F IE L D S M a n a g e rs M e etin g T ues. M ar. 22 in T ex a s U n io n Rm. 2204 a t 6:30 LAST CHANCE TO SHOW UP T -S hirts J e r se y s U n iform s Q u a n t i t y p r i c i n g , c u s t o m l e t t e r i n g a n d p r i n t i n g , l e a g u e o u t f i t t i n g , l a r g e i n - s t o c k i n v e n t o r y . C o n t a c t u s f o r p r i c e a n d d e l i v e r y q u o t e s . i n s t i t u t i o n a l & T e a m S a l e s Di v R o o s te r A n d r e w s s p o r t i n g g o o d s YOUR BSN IS WORTH AN OFFICER'S COMMISSION IN THE ARMY. Your BSN means you’re a professional. In the Army, it also means you’re an officer. You start as a full-fledged m em ber of our medical team. Write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713, Burbank, CA 91510. ARMY NURSE CORPS. BEALLYOUCANBE. BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS 50% OFF HALF PRICE BOWLING AND BILLIARDS Saturdays, Til ó pm — All day Sunday-Monday TEXAS U N IO N RECREATION CENTER ‘exds L w Please Present Coupon O ffe r expires M a r 31 1983 50% OFF 50% OFF HALF PRICE BOWLING AND BILLIARDS Saturdays, Til 6 pm — All day Sunday-Monday TEXAS U N IO N RECREATION CENTER lé x d s U n o ' Please Present Coupon. Offer Expires, Mar. 31,1983 50% OFF ditor? applications are now being accepted for the position of for the 1983-84 Issues of E ditor UTmost. Deadline for applications: Friday, March 25,1983 Application forms may be picked up in the G eneral M ana­ ger’s Office, TSP 3.208 and should be com pleted and re­ turned with a letter of application before the deadline of March 25. Following is a list of qualiñeations for UTmost editor: 1. Must be a student registered in UT Austin. 2. Must have completed at least 60 hours of college work. 3. Must have demonstrated proficiency in magazine editing and production, such as completion of magazine editing and graphics classes (J.336 and J.375) or professional magazine experience. 4. Must have completed at least 30 hours at UT Austin with a minimum GPA o f 2.25. 5. Must have served regularly on the magazine staff, that is appearing in a minimum of % of the staff boxes during the previous 12 months to fíling. 6. Must agree to fulfíll all the duties of editor during the full term of appointment and must agree to sign the editor's contract 7. Applicants must provide a resumé, a grade transcript, samples o f previous work, at least three letters o f recommendation and a proposal for the operation of the publication during the year as editor. Only item 4 and 5 o f the qualiñeations for magazine editor may be waived by two-thirds vote o f the members present tHtao^ The Student Magazine of the University o f Texas at Austin. Fine bicycles assembled with meticulous care Centurion &M1YATA Huge selection A best prices on all bicycle accessories including: Gloves, shoes, jerseys and shorts KirHand & Eclipse bicycle touring packs Specialized tires and tubes * N o w in stock — the best of the mountain bikes: Specialized and Ridge Runner 'Quality A Service are the difference ‘ UT swims to third at NCAA meet By HER BENENSON Daily Texan Staff When the Texas w om en's swim team lost its luggage on the way to the N CAA Swim­ ming and Diving Cham pion­ ships Thursday through Sat­ urday in Lincoln, N eb. it was a sign of things to come. ev erything A lm ost that could go wrong did. Illness, freshm an jitters and relay team s and individ­ uals who didn't place as ex­ pected all added up to a third-place the Longhorns. Stanford won its first NCAA Championship with 428.5 points. Florida took second with 389.5 and Texas finished next with 314. finish for "W e were disappointed that we didn't swim a bit bet­ ter," Texas coach Richard Quick said. "W e had some that you adversity hit us hope d oesn't h ap p en ." Senior Jill Sterkel said she had hoped to close her career at Texas with five wins in five events. However, she began to feel ill after the Southw est Conference Cham pionships three weeks ago, and no doc­ tor was able to diagnose her sickness. Sterkel won the 100-yard butterfly in 53.54 Thursday but lost her American record to Kansas' Tammy Thom as as she finished second in the 50 freestyle. "I just d on't feel w ell," Sterkel said. "I d on't think I was capable of going as fast as I could. 1 was just going to do my best and try to beat h er." Freshman Kirsten W en- gler, who qualified for the meet in seven events, fin­ ished seventh in the 100 indi­ vidual medley and 12th in the 200 freestyle. Quick, how ever, said he to had expected W engler place in the top six in three or four events. in O ne m atchup that pitted sw im m ers was two great S t a n f o r d 's M a r y b e th Linzm eier vs. Texas' Kim the 500- and Linehan 1,650-freestyle. In a dual th is y e a r, e a r lie r m eet Linehan edged Linzm eier in both events. At the national cham pionships, this was not the case. Linzm eier nudged Linehan by .06 seconds in the 500 freestyle and beat her by almost five seconds in the 1,650 freestyle. lost to a great sw im m er," Quick said. "She didn't have as good a meet as she hoped. Kim just wasn't having her best m eet." " S h e O ne of the biggest disap­ pointm ents of the m eet was the seventh-place finish of the 400 m edley relay, Quick said. Texas did close the m eet on a high note, w inning the final event, the 400 freestyle relay. All seem ed well for the trip hom e. But w hen the team landed in Austin Sunday, its luggage was som eplace else. So was the first-place trophy. Oklahoma St. beats Texas golf team By BILL DUNCAN Daily Texan Staff eventual!v ends. One thing inevitable about everv winning streak is that it On March 10-12 in Guadalajara, Mexico, the inevitable hit the Texas m en's golf team The Longhorns record-setting winning streak was stopped at four by Oklahom a State at the Alacorn Invitational. Texas could do no better than fifth despite Brandel Cham blee's sec­ ond individual victory of the vear Texas junior Paul Thom as was forced to withdraw before com pleting the 54-hole tournam ent because of a muscle pull under his rib cage. Thom as suffered a similar injury halfway through last year's season. Texas coach Jim m y Clayton said Thom as' early exit was the difference betw een the Longhorns winning and losing. Clayton said Thom as' injury probably would not keep the lunior from com peting in the Morris Williams Intercollegiate Friday through Sunday. Texas will host the tournam ent at the M orns W illiams Golf Club. CLASSICAL RECORDS 20% OFF SALE! Extended through A pril 1 W . 3 0 t h • Top Q u a lity Used IP 's • Privately-issu ed collectors' LP's of historic an d 'liv e " perform ances • O rigin al 78 rpm records • We b u y good classical records 29th 1404 w. 30th nmmumflT. n'KroKiKm iL'dl 478-9954 Perry School ESL Quality instruction in English in a personalized atmos­ phere. Conversation Grammar Reading Composition Preparation for TOEFL Small classes • Authorized to issue 1-20 form Separate classes for adults and adolescents Perry School 710 Easr 41srSt. '10 to ■ from H oncoc* Aecreorton Center) 456-1211 Leisure Time Yacht Rental 474-8709 IN AUSTIN FOR SPRING BREAK? Don t be STUCK in your Dorm room or in your oportm ent BORED! Rent for the Doy W eek or W eekend o beautiful yochr on Lake Travis Call us 24 hours a d a y for a H appy Spring Break. j 6 TIMES FREE | ! j SUBS, SOAPS, ■ NACHOS & STEREO M-TV! I I STILL THE BEST VIDEO DEAL IN TOWN! I {6 PLAYS SI • 40 FOR $5 ¡ Limit one per customer Expires 3 -2 5 -8 3 2 6 th & th e D r a g Are You Playing Games With Us? For ten years the Back Room has been known for bringing you the best in live music every night. But we have also quietly maintained the finest gam e room in town. All our m a­ chines are the latest models, and kept in top shape. If you didn't know, come on in. If you forgot, come on back. • Xevious • Jungle King • Q Dert • Pope ye • Liberator e Millipede • Joust (2) • Galago (3) e Ms. Poc Mon e Pac Mon Plus • Doby Poc Mon (2) • Centipede • Moon Palrol • Time Pilot (2) e Gravitar • Storgote • Tran Tempest • Turbo PINBALL: Defender • Scorpion Speok Easy • Medusa (4) Foosboll e (5) Pool Tables IM S E. R IV E R S ID E NIEUWE HOPE INN & LAZY DAISY 2801 GUADALUPE N O W OFFERING OYSTER BAR SERVED DAILY 11 A .M .-11 P.M OYSTERS O N THE HALF SHELL 25c EACH SE A F O O D G U M B O 75c C U P S1.45 BO W L FRIED BASKETS with FRENCH FRIES OYSTERS ■. D Z . $1.95 BAKERS D Z . S3.25 BL TTERFLIED SHR IM P 3-S2.35 a d d i t i o n a l shrimp so-' f ac h HAPPY H O U R S : M O N THRU SAT SUNDAY 11AM Til 7PM 12 N O O N Til 7PM DRAFT BEER 65tf HI-BALLS $ 1 .0 0 SELLING YOUR C O M P L IM E N TA R Y BOOKS? FIVE P O IN TS TO C O N S ID E R Is it fair to your students? T h e i n c r e a s e d d e m a n d f o r u n n e c e s s a r y c o m p l i m e n t a r y c o p i e s i n c r e a s e s t h e c o s t s o f p u b l i s h e r s d o i n g b u s i ­ n e s s S o m e o f t h e s e i n c r e a s e d c o s t s m a y b e p a s s e d a l o n g t o t h e s t u d e n t I n a d d i t i o n , t h e s t u d e n t o f t e n r e s e n t s s p e n d i n g m o n e y f o r a b o o k w h i c h w a s o r i g i n a l l y g i v e n g r a t i s t o a p r o f e s s o r . Is it fair to authors? D o n ' t y o u a g r e e t h a t it s f a i r a n d p r o p e r f o r a u t h o r s t o b e r e i m b u r s e d f o r t h e i r k n o w l e d g e a n d e x p e r t i s e 7 N o r o y a l t y is e a r n e d f r o m f r e e p r o m o t i o n a l c o p i e s N o r o y a l t y i s e a r n e d f r o m u s e d b o o k s . N o r o y a l t y is p a i d f o r b o o k s w h i c h a r e n ' t s o l d b y t h e p u b l i s h e r , a n d w h e n f r e e b o o k s e n t e r t h e m a r k e t p l a c e , t h e y c a n c e l t h e s a l e o f b o o k s f r o m w h i c h t h e a u t h o r s w o u l d o t h e r w i s e h a v e r e c e i v e d t h e i r r o y a l t i e s Is it fair to your profession? P u b l i s h e r s i n t e n d f o r t h e i r f r e e b o o k s t o s e r v e y o u r p r o f e s s i o n , n o t t h e i n d i v i d u a l s i n it. S t i l l , a g r o w i n g n u m b e r o f p e r s o n s a r e t a k i n g a d v a n t a g e o f t h i s p r o ­ f e s s i o n a l p r i v i l e g e f o r t h e i r o w n p e r s o n a l e n r i c h m e n t . T h u s , p u b l i s h e r s o f t e n h a v e l e s s f i n a n c i a l r e s o u r c e s f o r t h e p u b l i c a t i o n o f m o r e a d v a n c e d t i t l e s . Is it fair to your school? Som e sch o o ls and som e states have re g ulation s and laws c o n c e rn in g the use of s ch o o l p ro p e rty fo r private e n te rp rise T e ch n ica lly, sale of co m p lim e n ta ry books fo r p e rson al p ro fit cou ld c o n s titu te v io la tio n of such a rule. is it fair to publishers? Free o r co m p lim e n ta ry e x a m in a tio n copies of te x t­ books are an expensive part of th e total p u b lish in g process. W hen a free or c o m p lim e n ta ry co p y is sold, not o n ly is it rem oved from its in te n d e d purpose (and q u ite ofte n m ust be replaced), but it also cancels the sale of a book w h ich o th e rw ise w o u ld have helped defer tho se costs. So, w h at s h o u ld you d o w ith th o se free bo oks w h ic h you d o n ’t w ant o r need? Here are som e suggestions: 1 Give them to colleagues who may teach the course; 2 Give them to the school library or the local public library; 3 Give them to the prison system; 4. Finally, if you’re concerned about the rising cost of text­ book publishing and want to keep it down, return your books to the publisher or local sales representative. Association of American Publishers, Inc. COLLEGE DIVISION O ne Park A venue New York N Y 10016 T elepho ne (212) 689 -89 20 The Daily Texan M o n d a y M a i on 21 1 9 8 3 P a g e 11 VALUE COUPO K f f i ¡ - 2 A R B Y ’S® B E E F ’N C H E D D A R S A N D W IC H E S | I 1 A R B Y ’S F R E N C H D IP S A N D W IC H ^ Buy o», f _ this coup on Not ■ valid w ith any o th e r H o ffe r O ffe r valid thm Apr i 21.’ 983 H S i S IN A U S T IN WAC O K ll L f . - 1 A R B Y ’S R E G U L A R R O A S T B E E F S A N D W IC H S k • a j m j F U ■ ■ H -his p n c e w itr this co u p o n N ot - o ffer O ffe r valid tttruApni21 1983 id th in , o th e r S IN A U S T IN ,VA( KILLEF N 1! •.■ | J I nA rbii: ★ Super £ O i * ¥ * ¥ * * * * * * f ¥ * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ^ > * * * ★ * * * * * Don’t forget t City Co Electi on Saturda April 2n If you are going out o for Easter p l a n ah and VOTE ABS until M arch 29th at 4:4 * * * * * * * * ¥ * * * ¥ * * * * * * * * * * * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ * in D obie Mai 1st floor Paid for by Student Voting Pro\ % * PtQ» 12/The Daily Texan/Monday, March 21,1983 J* 'V I P % fy- ' I-i y< vwt Ü Wt m 1 1 c l : *“ t * ' ' ' / : - • 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. /T8P t . t - , FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Consecutiva Day Ratos 15 word minimum Each word 1 twn»................................ $ .22 Each word 3 t im o s ............................. $ .48 Each word 5 t im o s ............................. $ 59 Eoch word 10 tim os............................. $ .97 1 col. x 1 indi 1 lim o .......................$6.46 1 c o l x 1 inch 2-9 limo s ................ $6.23 1 col. x 1 inch 10 or mor» timos $1.00 chongo to chango copy First two words may bo all capital lottors. 25c for oach addi­ tional word in capital lottorv Mastorcord and Visoaccoptod . $5.90 . . Auto» for Soto_____ l& M V O LKSW ERKS N ew ond m od V W port». Rebuilt engines $ 6 9 9 installed, exchange. W e buy VWs, any condition. 251-2265. 1979 D O D G E pick-up. 6 cyf, short bed, $3,200 or best offer. Co» offer 4 30, 2 5 5 1974.____________________________________ AU TO M O TIVE REPAIRS. M in o r repairs and tune-ups done at your home. $15 plus ports (if necessary) for tune-ups. Repairs negotiable. UT student CoH Rofoel 4 4 5 -0 35 3._______ 20% DISCOUNT on oil dossthod advertising ploced in person and prepaid (cash or chock only — no credit cords) CHRYSLER AIR conditioner - real bone chiller 1200 B T.U. window unit. Coll Charlie at 4 78- 6776. $125 negotiable ossette CB radio $ 87 5 4 5 8 -5 53 7._________ CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE L I M I T E D O F F E R 5%* I 4)%* n st A u s t in Rat«- 3 NORTH i «OOP : z , / / - \ - DOC • < : uhhounr • Tennm ( oort* • Sport* ( ourt* • < nver**d Parking ( , M i N \ V M O D E L S O P E N 10-6 D A IL Y (512)451-2191 Cahlr TV Stacking Waaher & Dryer Refrigerator* Included mat* (512)476-2673 *5 '' f o r 1 s t y e a r . 7C f o r 2 n d y e a r . W < fo r d r d y e a r t h e n to F N M A ra t e . V 7 / ¿¿é t 901 W . 24 — - .......... an ■ 1 j; — It niv f>( T3 "2 _ T3 I T exas , „ 476-2673 * : W H , . r y.s., K ) v > ’ 1 5 c o r d o m i m u m site s ist ed W h t v y , \ , v 3 0 0 c on, i()rrin,i:rr<, -o s' y e a r , y o u r e a li z e ' h a ' w h e n < , r - r c o n d o s L i n d a I n g r a m ' s ' h e n a r r e C a m p u s A r e a C e n t r a l A u C e n t r a l A u s t i n 505 B e llv ie w N o 9 A o d 'O x 991 sq *t stud io 1 b e d r o o m 11; b a th $93 500 P e c a n Tree C o n d o s 2107 P ío G r a n d e #13 1 1 p lu s loft $ 4 9 9 0 0 O ran g e tre e #62 Eft $59 500 Park P la c e C o n d o s #206 2 1 $71.000 G re e n w o o d Towers #205 1 1 $51 500 O A K K N O IL # 2 15 2 1 $66 900 VILLAS O N JO W N LA K E # 211 A # 2 12 1500 WEST LYNN Comer of West Lynn Enfield Model Open 10-6 Daily * Shuttle Bus Stop ♦ 2 Car G arage w /0pener * 2 Bedrooms w/Sfudy Luxury at only $135,000 ONLY 3 UNITS LEFT Ready for O ccu p a n cy Below Market Financing (3 I o I University of Texas TheTREEHOUSE condominiums 2612 San Pedro Models Open 10-6 Daily 1 & 2 Bedrooms $69,950-$117,950 ONLY 6 Blocks from Compus Private garage w.openet Panoramic view of Shoal Creek Split level hot tub Fireplace Microwave Condominiums with the luxury you’re accustomed to. i r e GABLES MODEL OPEN DAILY 10-6 MLK & Rio G ra n d e UVE FREE N O PAYMENTS TIL August O N LY 2 UNITS 9% FINANCING MODEL OPEN DAILY 10-6 Features: * M ic ro w a v e O v e n C eilin g Fans # Wet B a rs f Built in D esk & B o o k c a s e s r* P o o l, S p a & S u n d eck ★ S ecurity System w/ T e le p h o n e Intercom System SOM€RS€T , C O N D O M I N I U M S , MODEL OPEN DAILY 10-6 INTRODUCTORY OFFER 1st 4 Sales $98,500 Amenities: Microwaves 3 Ceiling Fans Miniblinds Stackoble Washer/Dryer Security Gates ON Shuttle Route 5 Blocks to UT 0 THt O V ER LO O K MODEL OPEN DAILY 10-6 One Bedrooms & One Bedrooms with Lofts p o o i & H o t r u b P r i c e d i n 6 0 s & 7 0 s O N L Y 2 U N I T S LEFT! Features Security System Mini Blinds Washer Dryer Eighteen e le g a n t condom inium homes lo c a te d on a w o o d e d bluff within walking distance o f the University o f Texas 901 W. 24th S t A u stin , T X 78705 2706 Salado I) (> M 1 Two bedroom, two bath units with heated pool and spa. From $79,500. Financing 6% below FNMA rate telephone: 454-1755, 477-0099 TSP &utiding, Room 3 200 2500 Whihs Monday through Friday 8 a m.-4 30 p.m. DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T e xa n . . . . F rid ay 11 a.m. Tu e sd a y Toxon . . .M o n d a y 1! ajn. We d n esd a y To xo n .Tuesday 11 o.m. T h u rsd a y Te xa n W ednesday 11 a.m. M d a y T exan . . . Th u rsd a y 11 a.m. In the event o f erro rs m ad e In an a d ­ vertisem ent, Immediate notice must be g iven as the publishers ore re­ spo nsible fo r o n ly O N I Incorrect Insertion. A ll claim s far adjustments sh o u ld be m a d e n e t later than 38 d a y s after publication. Advertising pre p ay m e n t n o n -re fu n d a M e. CONDOS FOR SALE West Campus' Desf Kept Secret Grohom Place Condominiums in the heart of the prestigious West Campus community, is lo­ cated ot 708 Grohom just off Rio Grande be­ tween 25th/26th Street. Our small complex of only 12 units has been designed with you the student in mind. Convenient to compus yet Grohom Place is neatly hidden away so that you con hove peace and quiet whenever you Pvort 1 > h a m OC» n dot A ^ r< W > Co E I 1 Wo Grom to € tv $ tv G u ada l u p * 1 CM UT wont it. Stop by for a tour or call, but watch who you tell, spaces ore limited. ONLY 4 BLOCKS FROM CAMPUS 1 bedroom 1 bath with loft from the mid 60's 2 bedroom 1 bath units from the mid 80 s Graham Place Condominiums MODEL OPEN DAILY 10-6 D eveloped by D.L Turlington 472-8605 C O N D O M I N U M S Because West campus has always been your first choice. C o m e discover th e luxury, co n v en ien ce and in vestm en t advantages of a beautiful o n e or two-Bedroom , flat or studio co n d o m in iu m at C helsea C o n d o m in iu m s. Enjoy superb living just a few blocks west o f cam pus. A vailability is lim ited and early interest is advised. First u n its available for Fall S em ester 1983. P roject L ocation 2 5 th an d S an G abriel 1000 W est 2 5 th St. A ustin, Texas 78705 Sales O ffice 807 W est 2 5 th St. A ustin, Texas 78705 (512) 472-8605 A n o th e r fine student com m unity from B.L. Turlington & A ssociates, In c., developers of C n n x C on do m in ium s, G raham P lace C o nd om inium s, Nueces C o m e r C o ndom inium s a n d C e n te n n ia l C ond om inium s Parker Square. Country Charm with a City View. A c o u r t y a r d c o n d o m i n i u m fo r the s e r i o u s s t u d e n t , y o u n g p r o f e s s i o n a l or i n v e st o r . A n e q u i t y y o u p u r c h a s e w i t h sa le s p rices b e l o w a p p r a ise d v a l u e . A b l o c k o ff R ivers id e, first o n the sh u t t l e , c o n v e n i e n t to s h o p p i n g an d e n t e r t a i n m e n t areas. A m e n i t i e s ga lore! A n d q u a l i t i e s n o t f o u n d in c o m p a r a b l y p riced h o m e s . S p le n d id v i e w s th r o u g h sl i d i n g g l a ss d o o r s or o ff y o u r p r i v a t e b a l c o n y t o d o w n t o w n A u s t i n . A n i n d o o r w h i r l p o o l , p r i v a t e , se c u r e a n d re laxing. N a t u r a l a n d i m p r o v e d la n d s c a p i n g m a k e li v i n g ca refree at Parker S q u a r e . P ark e r Lane Parker Square IH 35 D ow n tow n Parker Square Condominiums O nly a few select units are still available. Com e by our model home or phone 448-3055. & M ark eted by D avid Starry B roker 4 4 4 -6 9 6 9 Project C oordinator Jack B e n n e tt 78 PLYM OU TH Volare. AT, A/C. $ 2 7 0 0 4 77- 6 5 3 4 ,12-3pm.____________________________ GREAT BUY 1979 H onda C¡v k , 4-speed, AC, cassette, new tires, battery $ 2 7 9 5 447-4113 after 6 p.m W A N TED FOR parts. 6-cyltnder Dart around. 71 model (preferobly Demon) 250-0158 M E C H A N IC PARTS best broken or wrecked foreign vehicle $125, will buy 250-0158 MUST SELL 198) Horizon 4 -d r , 6 -cyf. 14.000 miles AC, AT A M / F M new" cor Mustafa 443-6298._______________ GREEKS ENDLESS fun possibilities House limousine 1966 Cadillac, very good condition Jeremiah's Hoircuftmg, 2512 Rio $1850 Gronde. 477 -7 20 2._______________________ FUN, RELIABLE- PAST 1977 Chevy M o n zo M irage 305V8, AT, AC, PB til*, A M /F M cas­ sette Excellent condition 56K miles $ 2 8 0 0 / best offer C a ll Solly 476-0621 days, 478- 5883 evenings 1978 FO RD Fiesta 4 7,000 miles, AC, stan­ dard $1500 or best offer Evenings, w eek­ ends, 4 76 -9 7 3 2 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE 75 convertible'" 3 7 0 0 0 original miles hve new rodiols A M r M, e xce l­ lent condition $2,200 474 0991 6 5 FO RD Mustang, 2 89 engine, V 8 outo $ 2 0 0 good body point ongtnol negotiable After 5 p m 3 8 5 -3 7 9 0 or 928- 0 0 6 2 __ interior ’ 9 76 FIAT T 3TS. AT AC stereo new uphol­ stery great condition, asking $1100 441 978 8 _ _ _ _ 1982 C A M A R O excellent condition $ 9 0 0 0 or best off»- Co» Don 4 44 4884 or 4 44 6216________________________ 1976 M G B British roong G reen with gold stnpe block lop new brakes $ 2 9 0 0 465- 4784 or 447 5220 1980 V W 4 door diese1 RabEx* 48 0 0 0 miles 4 speed, stick stuff excellent condition AC, ra ­ dio Rated 50mpg $4195 454 4872 SELL YOUR CAR A N D W ALK TO SCHOOL 1BR 1&A co n d o m im u m within short dista nce »o fbe uruversity N e w cotHne-try on d flo o r t»ie Lovely Hardw ood floors 4- liord, 4 54 -0 85 7. * O W N E R FIN A N C E D W ofc to UT. 1BA condo. W /D, refrigerator O n ly Co» Barbara mlbord. 4 54 -0 8 5 7 ________ Large HR- r $48,300. C O N D O 2BR. Private solarium with f A a t view /pool $64,900. 345 -5 29 7. Agent UT C O N D O — Large 1BR/' View/ Pool/ Sqeur- ity/ Covered parking $51,000 345 -5 2* 7 Agent. „• Motorcycles ter Sol» - 1978 H O N D A H aw k 400, 7 0 0 0 m4es. .d e ­ pendáis», good pickup. Best offer C o l Rgfcn 476-5918____________________________ »■ 1979 K A W A S A K I K 2 4 0 0 G o o d cond«p^ Pnce negotiable Co» 454-1896________ *.■ 1975 H O N D A C B 3 60 T W onderful begmeér s bike W ell maintained 24,500 mtles. $900 CoH Aaron 8 3 7 -3 0 7 8 _________________ H O N D A CB200T Runs good, great can pus bike 6.000 miles 458-1635 between 11am- lpm $ 4 0 0 firm Lynn Y A M A H A M O T O R scooter CA 50 1 mo ’¿id, 295 miles Paid $80 0, sacrifice ot $ 5 0 0 £36 3 053 4 75 -3 53 7, Ben__________________ 71 H O N D A C L 35 0 excellent condition. $ 500 O' best offer 4 51-8553 after 5 p m 1980 H O N D A C M 4 0 0 T 4,000 rmles Adult- owned Luggoge rock, crash bor, helmet $ 1 0 0 0 4 4 7 -2 7 2 8 ____________________~ 1979 FREE Sptnl moped with accessories.-Ex­ cellent shape $ 3 0 0 negotiable C a l Dome», 475 8186, 258 0 0 5 6 _________________ ■» 1981 YELLO W H ondo Passport 70 DekixeJSm than 150 miles $ 6 0 0 CoH 4 76 -5 25 7 Hom«s for Sol* • GREAT L O C A TIO N • GREAT PRICE • GREAT INTEREST • GREAT D O W N PAYMENT W h y p a y re n t w h e n y o u c a n b u y n o w — a n d then se ll w h e n y o u 'v e firvsh e d w ith s c h o o l f o r a n -i-i-i-i-c -e p ro fit? Id e ­ a lly lo c a te d o n th e shuttle n o rth o f the c a m p u s, this 2 b e d r o o m h o m e w ith s e p ­ a r a te i v in g o n d d m in g ro o m s ca n b e a tru ly g re a t in v e s tm e n t P le n ty o f ro o m g re a te s t b e n e fits o f this h o m e is Jhe p re s e n t o w n e r w ill w o rk w ith y o u 'o n s e c u n n g e x c e lle n t fin a n c in g tf th q is s o m e th in g y o u w o u ld lik e to co n sid e r, c a ll J e r ry Tinde! a t 3 2 7 -4 1 5 1 , 4 5 4 -1 1 0 9 , o r n ig h ts a n d w e e k e n d s a t 2 5 8 -5 3 1 1 ! GRAY & COMPANY OWN YOUR ihare to 7BR. 4BA minutes froon compus Income from tJ^ro "ooms vooobie purchase p*oo* Col for pQmt CONDOS FOR SALE • UNBEATABLE COMBINATION 4 BLOCKS TO UT 2 b e d ro o m s, 2 baths, 2 y e ars old in a 13 unit for y o u r pets a n d o r g a r d e n in this h e g e co m ple x, p o o l o n d K K U Zli, 2 co r g a r a g e d o o r c h o m - lln k f e n c e d y a r d A n d o n e of th e o p e n e r skyught m study m a n y oddrhona* fea tures 510 W 8th $13 9 9 0 0 Cotí Joh n lo n g s w orth 4 5 3 6611 4 5 4 2 2 5 3 N ets o n Puett & A ssocia tes LEASE/PURCHASE 2 0 2 E 4 5th L a rg e a p p ro x im a te ly 70 0 sq H * b e d ro o m Excellent co ndition, very priva te co m m u n o ho t tub $ 4 9 ,5 0 0 a n d or $ 4 2 5 m e C a ll D o u g Rostedt Realtor 4 8 0 8 2 7 3 UT C O N D O G reat 1BR Pnvate s^cunty sys­ tem $36 7 50 Inciudes furrwture 3 4 5 -5 2 9 7 Agent 88R/4BA ,n French Plac» Duplox potwrtloi O w ner tenro CoH Barbara H &ard, 454 0 85 7 AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR PHOENIX MOTOR WORKS. INC. BMW EXCLUSIVELY! • Tune-ups and maintenance • Problem diagnosis • Rebuilding, mechanical restoration and parts. 442-1361 1606 For tv ie w R o a d , o n e b l o c k n o r t h o l B en W h ite a t C la w s o n CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE wmmm SQUARE Condominiums M o d e l N o w O p e n 1 pm til ">pm T w o B e d r o o m C o n d o m i n i u m s 3 B lo c k s W est o f C a m p u s S to p b y 7 Scceptim f C m m n u I S m m 9 * * Oeeajjem ef órne & 7 i m S i d u M * T^téídeecee V veeU "Pitee* "pnem tie 70 * t* tie tem 90 * THE CEO.C.U, O n - lt t » S o l « O fflC » N o w O p » A 715 W. 22'A Street 479*6906,470-2031 N t S M I muu RjmsHBAMmniK ruoinÉDMimufí m r n M S m S M W OLD M A IN Apartment». 25th and Peart Effi- WiimmKL Four I . dwlle. 476-5109 or ¡ ü m ü ^ f r 'r « o d a UT, 892-4214. ■ A W O» to campus. 5mcA attroc- complex. 1BR-1BA. $325/mo. p h * L t o u n d i y M ^ 5 ^ 1 2 ^ ^ ^ ^ NICEST LUXURY eflkferscy ap arfen ife ht UT I r m for laawtg b a n Apr! 1 oreo. Spat Ihraugh Auguat 31. AvoNablRy Ip L HowaN Propartiaa.477-9925.__________________ ALL B U S paid. leauN M 3-1, $4SQfete. 1-1 $34Qffee. I alt o nil s, p os. pool wfib am deck. N e a rS *-fir* dap to aadfcom UT.Gte- dan Apfe 444-1339,3-5 pm , M-F.________ O N SHUTTLE • 18R dry. $275 4 M b. 476-0774 BBaftSyPam. la now. P ool laun­ SPW NG SFEdALI B Corfez new fearing * o - rioui H $300; 3 -1, $350. On « S g C e n - Tbt Daily Tman/Mondty. March 2 , 1963/P* 113 m o r POR SALE Musical for Soto ''tN D tf 75 ampfifier. (Meeo-Boogie #yle). EV L" 6* ' 451' 514’. 1P#? k,f W * product bofe FenderandM ar- Ka» (Ks*; $965). 472- shod sounds. S a l for KM* * * *1 | H o r n — f o r S o l a B ■ ¿SH U T T L E A K A ; 28*. 1BA. exceder* first home ,, »c* y nt "f * home y % I476-5698J. Gene Spence •% ' 885?. tk y d o s for Soto J * TEXAS CYCLE Werire. Bicycle salvage Special ^•gjrTs old cruder» and 3 spds $30-39 1-5 7 ¿ . dayt. 1104 E. 1«t._____________ _ £ *A 1 0 G H 10-SPEED Gran Sport Brand new «or M i $300. 835-8677 i M EN - hora lO ^p^ d to fit. Dovra» m »? C. 9°°d candKen. From* it Reynolds 531 aluminum. $200. jown. 442-2122. Storoos for Solo -JENSEN 6*9 Triaxiol cor speakers. Brand now, novor oponed 50 watts. $60 474-4156 after 7 GO p.m LIKE N€W1 Technics SA-222 30 watt retejer Howdh * 2 tape dodo, 14 channel memory $175.327-9607 ELECTROSTATIC 500 watt amp needs repair $150 or boit offer. C o i Mickey at 443-3532 YAMAHA UPRIGHT piano, eight years of transferable guarantee. $2800.443-3447. Mobila Homos for Seria SKIRTED 12*50, Comoran, 28R, CA/CH, pilancas, storage shod, terms/p $7900 After 5pm, 385-5790. ■A/CH, op- nf^O iQ M . Tickats for Serio PAT BENATAR, ERIC CLAPTON - JUOAS PRIEST tickots. Foe prices, good seals. 447- 7521, keep trying. HALL & OATES tickets, great floor seats C o l Adorn or James at 477-6528, cai anytime. HALL A N D OATES. Front row center and bock. C a i anytime day of night. Bit 467- 8478.__________________ ___________ HALL OATES Exceient floor seals of far pric­ es. 467-2558 3-6 pjn. ■ * 5 T SO U TH W fSTH N Indtan ¿ ^ 1 | BNEST SO UTIM CSTERN Indtan jewelry plus ■ M M ^ ^ K ^ K K H H W o k o n 's Gifts, I 4502 S. Congrewt 444-3814. ■ 4 4 4 - 3 8 1 4 ^ ^ ^ M A A- M -l «- ill M Ü INSTANT CASH paid lor used b oob and re­ cords (thousands of used books in Pock). Stop in and see for yourse*. Co-op North Discount Storp, 4101 Guadalupe. 453-3031.________ • M M O O Cl C typewriter, Hco type, nylon rib­ bon. Exceient condition. $125 firm. 258- 5553.________________________ FOR SALE: Woterbed $130. For more infor­ mation co l 474-2260. BIG CASH paid for your old basebol and footboi cards and sports yeorbooks. Steve 478-7226.__________________________ T 80 Model 1 Microcomputer Good be­ ginners set. $400 or best offer. Lynn 454- 8210 after 7 pjtt Q UEEN SIZE mattress and box springs. Brand new. $150.346-6173.__________________ WET SUIT, almost new, Ripe urt, size large, blue and yellow, spring suit. Asking $80.474-2231. CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE An exclusive condominium community On a private residential street, close to the University, shopping and entertainment, The Partridge condominiums provides busy students a quiet place for relaxation or study. In this exclusive community of eight one- and two-bedroom homes, you’ll find privacy foremost — no side walls connect you to your neighbors, and individual patios or balconies allow for special gatherings. CLEARANCE SALE - Computer products ■ ■ K t V «uMAma AjMttsuwJLr amel jse lesme lawaPi. fw K D n m y wv n n i or laoM proouas toe «hort twivi gronH or projacA. C d l RTS 452- 8380. TeleHáM BAM BO O CHAIR. $100; Porch Swing, $15; End Tables, $10. Col 445-2161, Man, Thun, evenings, weaken, 6” TELESCOPE C o l 451-7784, evening and FURNISHED APARTMENTS O N E BEDROO M $300. Close to CR shuttle, total quiet complex. Disposal, dishwasher, gas cookjn^gos poid. C a i Ekrem after 6:30pm, 1904 SA N Gabriel. 2BR/1BA $350 plus bife immediate occupancy, cai after 6 p.m. 476- 1531 or 454-9904.____________________ 1BR FURNISHED cottage. A l new appliances. A few minutes from UT A professional or graduate (References) $350/mo student preferred. + bills 477-5526. MAY 1ST 6 month I Ottorf UT shuttle 441-2629 lose. 1-1, pool. IH-35 and $310/month 443-7391, RIO NUECES — 600 W. 26th availobie now. 2BR, 2BA furnished, no pets. 474-0971. WALK TO campus. Furnished or infer he Larga efficiency 2BR-2BA efficiency. Shuttle and city bus. 472-2147._________________ FURNISHED 1BR, 45th and Duval. Spanish Oaks Apartments. CA, CH, gas and wafer paid. On shuttle and city bin. $305. 467- 0698.______________________________ Select efficiency apartments s il 302 W. 31 available, all appliances, one block from shut- tie, from $245 plus electricity. 453-4002. WEST AUSTIN, unexpected vacancy. Largs, dean efficiencies, now carpal and paint. G as/ wafer paid. $280 + E. N o pals. Sae manager, #204,1115 W. 10th, or co« 477-3461. FREE LOCATING Service - Habitat Hunters: Condos, Apartments, Houses, Duplexes. AN Areas - AN Prices. Cad 474-1532. BROWNLEE, 2502 Nueces. Efficiency $225 ABP. Wodr to campus. 478-1532. GIVE ME a coN. M ary 476-7639. I'H toN you a about a great place for summer - meet lots of people - have lot, of fun IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Furnished, large 1BR. Pool, laundry, shuttle, dishwasher, CA/CH, Another World Apartments, 415 W. 39th. No pels. 451-9321, 346-7233. FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS AVAILABLE O N E badraom condo, Nttao block» UT. $350 plw ■ ■ I UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES 76-1701 64)0,1 UNFURNBHPAPARTMPfTS BROWNSTONE PARK 1 BLOCK FROM IF SHUTTLE lo rg* 2-1 from 1350 wilh got poid. Two Moor plans to cHooso from, tomo wÑi pool vow, 5 „ • _ a_ - i _ _ H i r J ilf m r l L i j J I T rfm M . I w O p O O O , WyW- n W M M ITOffl $ mi -------1- ftrj , i aK *dP0<5ÍSTANDN. LAMAR 454-3496 m moppmg. l- ■ , v - * v oLN aorCajaÑolFIozl, 451-6106. STUDIO C O N O O naor St. Edworxfi Unrvemi- ty. 3-1, ved fed eain g wife fan», covered pork- I Solar hoofed p o o l No poll. $39Vm a ¡ ■1 -8 5 9 4 ,4 8 2 -5 8 2 1 DUVAL VIUA, $100 o il finl month's rent 28R. IR A $435 plut E. Hydt Fork araa, 4305 Du- [ volStraat. 451-2343.__________________ EFFICIENCY, 1BR in Hyda Fork triplo*. $280- I $375. lately remodofed New carpet a i m I «cafe point ate. 4517 Avwwo C 480-9191, 451-1424, Jim. CONDOS F0RR NORWOOD Spacial ramodatno ralas through April 1st. Efftcioncy, $230/monffi, 1 bad- rootm, $275 and $289. Lease now and save. 5606 N. Lamar 451-1917 FREE RENT until March 31. Beautiful unfur­ nished 1-1 on shuttle. Pets allowed. Patio, pool, appliances, $295/mo. 447-7927. UT EFFICIENCY Close in area, W. 28th and Whitis. $210/monfh plus ofectricty. 480-0600; after 6 p.m., 346-0110. BRAND NEW 2-dory condominium, iculp- turad pool, dubhouM, fireploco, polio, m*- rowove, your own W/D. N o pet» pleote. 2- lVi, near 183/1-35. 8 mm. to UT, $550/ma C a l Al Garráon 345-9480,837-5869. D O N T RENT any . -ng unfit you too IhuM 2BR luxury unite a l Norvndk Squaro on Enfiald. $600-$625 Pool, hoi tub, micrawavu, fira- placa, on ihtfilfe, no pote. 480-8222 doy», 474-4695 uvoning». Ruud Fraporliu».______ TOVrtN LAKE 28R condo — vww — pool — all now inferior. $450 monthly. 345-5297, Agont. North Fork Condos Jud complufed luxuriow» 1, 2 8 3 bodroom». coratoc with pormrat Noor UT Dattgnar • orinj gordan window» ond door», fira- plwh corpafing, wafipopar, bra»» lor», pk itockad wadiar ond «yon, ond largo touch- 458-5906 4401 SPEEDWAY #100 or 255-5710 EFFICIENCY In Clarksville. ER/MS shuttle, CA/ CH, no pets. 808 NMnslow. 480- 9732. After 3:00 p.m. LEASE/PURCHASE 202 E. 45th. Larga, approxlmofeiy 700 iq. ft, 1 badraom. ExcoNont condition, vorv privota, communal hot tub. $49,500 ond/or $425/mo C o l Doug Rododl, Realtor. 480-8273 Shuttle or Walk to Campus We currently have vacancies at these fíne university area apartments. Act VI 2803 Hemphill Pecan Square 506 w 37th 2711 5 2721 Hemphill 4 7 6 -0 4 1 1 4 5 9 -1 5 9 7 4 7 2 -0 6 4 9 Professionally managed by E d P a d g e tt C om pany APARTMENTS FOR rant. Efficiencies. 1-1, 2-2. 1900 Burton. 442-9612. Furnished oportments also available. FOUND: Y O U N G female dog. Pari shepherd, tan, black. Near 26th/Eos! Campus Drive. 471- 3248. CHRISTIAN FEMALE needed today. Larga 2BR. ABP. $155 month. 1 block from compus M onho 478-8447.______________________ FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS LOST A FOUND W U U N W l a ^ t o b i t o . S S Ñ a a ñ ancte, WTO a u u j ^ T ^ t o ^ a S m On riudfc route. $57y«oteb Shad fen* m m » ovalufal*. CsB Conniu, CL fiauvu» M b f e 447-8303. A V A K A K E SO O N, 5300-8 M cC ondh^ Luwriow toumhomoL 3M /38A, ca m fe d C A/ wUhdryl, * M w aggfian c^ mdudtog mienwavu ov«x W /D# carport wNh ikxogc, rmrcrad iw# it $82Vtoo.936-74531 S J , 2800 SA N Pudro dowrataúi, 288, kvw» rootiv kFdfen, bofe. $450/monlK dapotS $200. C o l John, 473-9381. NEAR SHUTTLE-Intramural Fluid. 3-1, oppfi- «K fe, A C coding (on, hardwood fioon. $430 • 451-8122. W ad World Rual Edafe NEAR BARTON Spring» pool and Z la r Fork. 2-1, CA/CH, privacy, toncod, no dog». M ud hova reference». $425/mo. Available' April 1, I 445-0310. fiíS S H S F ü ffiria ñ c y rri^ B both, no dogt. 605(9 Elmwood. 441-8379, 441-2594. UT-HEMPHILL-LUXURY Largo, newly renovated 2BR-1BA, CA/ CH, ceiling fan», miniblinds, hardwood floors, all appliances, 9* ceilings, 1100 sq. ft. N o pets. $700/month. 478-6041 ROOMMATES ONE OR two female or male housemates needed for 3BR duplex. ZJker Pork. $220 ABP. C ol Rob 442-9672 til midnight NEED ROOMMATE, femóla A S A P 18R, 18A fufiy-fumohad, CA/CH, pool, mtcrowova, wo»-m cfcxat, IF ihullla. $137.50 plu» V¡ E. Cobla optionol. Co» 458-6890.___________ NEED FEA4ALE roommola ihora duplax ZAnr Poik orea on thuttia. $175/mo. Shora bill». Avoilobla April Id. 444-7235 offer 5.30. RECENT GRAD naads raommofe to «hora Enfiald 2BR opt. $ Vi bife Co« Kristin 479-0089,472-7557 nil $145 plus FEMALE ROOM M ATES wonfed. Nice housa, CR shuttle, AC/CH, oil oppltoncm, $180 ond S200. N o children or dog». Coll 24 hr». 458- 9686._________________________________ NEED FEMALE roommate. Share 1BR, 1BA $160 ABP. Nonsmoking preferred. 447-9034 after 5:00. FEMALE ROOM M ATE needed for 2BR/2BA N W Hife apartment. Pool, tennis courts. Great for spring, summer. $237 + (9 electricity. C o i Chris, 346-1333. Keep trying or leave mes- ” 9»_________________ CHEERFUL R O O M by garden, with mony win­ dows, hardwood floors, and French doors in spodous vintage house. $250 ABP. Negoti­ able. $200 deposit. Must seel Mori. 441- 645 4 ,4 4 5-49 8 2 ________________________ O W N R O O M in Travis Heights apartment. Neor shuttle. $110 plus phone. 441-7930. FEMALE ROOM M ATE needed April 1st. Shore terge 2-1 apt. (9 block music/law school. 478- 6020 HOUSEMATE NEEDED immediately Shora centraiy located duplex. Hardwood floors, fireplace. Prefer easy-going, nonsmoking grad/prafessional. $250 + (9 bills. 451-6711 after 5 p.m. NEED M/F shora 2BR/1BA 5 blks. from cam­ pus. $182.479-6746.____________________ WANTED: TIDY copeasetic femóle roommate to shora 2BR/1(9BA fourplex in South Austin neighborhood. Peggy 447-9774 after 6 p.m. RESPONSIBLE NEAT femóle wonted to shore 3BR house in Hyde Pork. $100 + Vj bids. Move in April 1. 453-7443. FEMALE ROOM M ATE wanted. Nonsmoker, responsible, 2BR/2BA $210 ABP. Nice com­ plex on Town Lake. CoH Tommy 443-7360. ROOM AND BOARD CASTILIAN HAS o limited number of spaces to lease for spring. Phone 478-9811 The Castili­ an. 2323 Son Antonio St NEED N O N S M O K IN G female to take over contract at Castilian. Call 478-4035 or 444- 4358.________________________________ FEMALE/MALE vacancies: Vegetanan co-op, with swimming pool, sun deck. 2610 Rio Grande. Check us out. 476-7905 SENECA HOUSE, o feminist vegetanon co-op, has one vocancy. Come by for dinner at 6:00 p.m. ond meet our members. Coll 477-0225 for more information. ROOMS TAOS CO-ED dorm 1 block from compus. Rooms avoilable immediately for spring. 474- 6905._________________________________ PRIVATE FURNISHED dorm room, bids poid, near UT, kitchen privileges, carpeted. $200/ month. 477-1529._______________________ FURNISHED. BOYS Walking distance UT $185-5205. ABP Howell Properties. 477- 9 9 2 5 _________________________________ NURSE WITH child has room for rant neor Zilker. $100 * (9 utilities in exchange for weeknight babysitting. Kathy, 327-8019 MISCELLANEOUS FOR RENT FROZEN MARGARITA, cocktail mochines for lorae parties. Margantaville. Jay Bnm ot 454- 9724. Nights, 837-0890, 837-3904 2BR UNFURNISHED condo iust off Town Lake. Convenient to downtown or campus 5490/month Call Patty, 452-9692, 476- 2673._________________________________ COMMUTER PARKING avoibble, $ 75/se­ mester For information, coll: 478-8575 F in d the a p a rtm e n t c o m m u n ity th at is best suited to you w ith the Greater Austin Apartment Guide The A p a rtm e n t G u id e h as been used by th o u sa n d s in cities a c ro ss the co u n try and is now b e in g pub­ lished for you, the A u stin a p a rtm e n t seeker. T o receive y o u r FREE copy, call ou r o ffice s at 512/454-0215 or send a se lf-a d d re sse d sta m p e d envelope (w ith 70* p o sta g e ) to H a a s P u b lis h in g Co., 8220 R e se a rc h Blvd., No. 148-E, A u stin , T e x a s 78758 ALSO AVAILABLE AT; 7-Eleven Convenience Stores, M ilitary Bases, Motels, and Hotels, M ajor E m ­ ployers, Realtors, Banks, M oving Companies, Schools, Cham bers of Com ­ merce, and Airports. ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD Style Comfort and just across the street NCIATÍ INCREASE S in g le o r D ouble O N E LO W R A T E $420 per Summer Session 17 meals per week On the comer of 21st & Guadalupe rnw m iM HñLL 2026 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 476-0669 78705 Professionally Managed by Morrison’s Mgmt Services Inc. MODEL OPEN DAILY Weekdays 1-6 Weekends 10-6 All dim ensions are approxim ate. Com petitive financing available. Go east 1 block on 30th from Guadalupe & turn left on Fruth or call 477-6713 or 472-6505. Units start at $69,900 ($480/mo. — 5*% down V /k ARM) Every aepect of The Partridge is designed for luxury and comfort. Distinctive ex tenors of • latticework e atrium door* a bay windows a wood decking and jacuzzi a meticulous landscaping with apnnkler systems. 9pacioua interior* accented by a ceiling fans e mimbhnds e woodburaing fireplaces a microwaves a waahers and dryers a decorator packages for a personal touch. Discover the easy lifestyle of the ultim ate in The Partridge luxury and seclusion in a choice Austin location We've got it Where you Wont it. And fhar s ngbf w here you wanr ro b e — in the brand n e w luxury co n d om in iu m c o m ­ m unity of Q uena Visra1 Irs jusr o n e block wesr of rhe University so you con le a ve your car or h o m e — a n d snil b e on n m e for class A nd w e ve go t you covered — with plenty of covered parking, so you con o vo id the com pus-oreo crunch Bue no Visto s new o ne an d two b e d ro o m h o m e s feature srare-of-the-art intercom security systems ro nsure your safety a n d pnvocy A n d they re fully e q u ip p e d wtrh quality Whirlpool ap p li­ ances — n d u d in g washers an d dryers1 Right n o w you con ge r outstanding FNM A financing on your new co n d o m in iu m c o m ­ m unity or Q uena Visto1 Stop b y this w e e k ­ end an d check out our o p e n m o d e l or 1 9 0 S Son Antonio be tw e en 1 9th o n d 21 sr Sneers — or coll fot m ore information At Quena Vista you II k now you ve arrived (512) 474-5659 or 477-6366 BiiefwVista A Devetopmenr of Aydon Inc “Aorkered by Ginger AyOom ALL BILLS PAID Efficiency, 1BR, small 2BR. $ 2 4 0 - $390. CA/CH , walk or shuttle to UT. 2212 San Gabriel. Al L BILLS PAID EFFICIENCY $280 In Hyd« Pork, cloie to campus & shuttle Pool fulty carpeted, draped, ond beoutifully pan­ eled AH built-in kitchen, CA/CH 451 6966 4206 Avenue A 4000 Avenue A, 458-4511 CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC 451-6533 ONE BEDROOM $325 Large studio apartment, private balcony lVy bath some covered parking, gas cooking, wa­ ter and gas paid 701 W North Loop. 451- 5579 Central Properties, Inc 451-6533 M O D E L O P E N T O D A Y ! FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS i.... ' ---- 11......... " ’1 ' " " " FURNISHED APARTMENTS ......... .. ' • FURNISHED APARTMENTS — " 1 ........ - ... - -....i U 4 P 6 E 6 R U 6 M 6 M 6 E 6 R A 4 V 6 ! ♦ N 6 G 6 S Lease Now at Low Summer Rates Furnished and Unfurnished Apartments HALLMARK 706 W. 04th 1 Bedrooms WINFLO 808Winflo Efficiencies LORRAIN 1401 Enfield 1 0 2 Bedrooms LANTANA 1602 West Avenue 1 r 2 6 3 Bedrooms THREE ELMS 400 W. 35th 1 6 2 Bedrooms WEST NINTH 1115 West 9th Efficiencies PETERSON PLACE 0903 Peterson Place Eff 61 Bedrooms CASTLE ARMS 3121 Speedway 1 6 2 Bedrooms CHIMNEY SWEEP 105 W. OB1/» Efficiencies, 16 2 Bedrooms ANOTHER WORLD 415 W. 39th 16 2 Bedrooms THUNDERDIRD 4510 Duval Efficiencies & 1 Bedrooms 452-7769 460-9732 472-3650 477-2661 452-6024 474-9052 454-6416 472-2619 451 -6063 451 -9321 456-3607 If no answer at above numbers, call 476-7750 ¡— All Complexes SHORT WALKS to and from Shuttle Routes— ¡ Professionally Managed by JLD Investments, Inc. t . - l b ’ S . ■ n - t f t . t f * k { * i r * r i V» i m : 1 . ► F* * tv _ Page 14 The Daily Texan,-Monday, March 21,1983 TRAVEL SKI STEAMBOAT Spring Break. N eed (wo od- dihonol skiers Tiqle or female Transportation provided Call 4 76 -9 0 5 4 or 477-0991 SKI SPRING BREAK March 13-19 $269 COMPLETE Includes transportation, lodging, 2 meals doily and 5-doy lift tickets Coll W a n ­ derlust Travel fo t details 4 74 -5 5 6 6 ,2 4 0 4 Rio G rande STEAMBOAT MADE EASY! W e can sleep 3- 90 people »>t T T U N D A ’S TYPING, south Fait, accurate, inex­ pensive 4 4 2 -7 4 6 5 after 5 p.m. r { f TYPING BY DEANNE Specializing ie theses, term papers, dissertations, legal. IBM Correct­ ing Selector Reasonable rates. 447-7794. KATHE'S QUICK Type - dissertations, theses, legal and professional. References, available 15 yeors experience 282-6139 PROFESSIONAL TYPIST Accurate tervkS, fast turn around Theses dissertations pro fe sio na l reports, etc. Barbara TuBos. 453-5124. 1 W O O D S TYPING S ervK . - when you wont it done right 2200 Guodoiupe, side enMsnce 4 7 2 -6 3 0 2 _______________________ _ TYPING - TUTORING - proofreading 10,*ears experience, former couege teocher M A in English See your grades go up 276»?771, 2 5 8 -7 7 5 0 _________________________ LIGHTNING QUICK TYPING Themes, 6sser- lotions techmcol. legal Proofing sinks English B A iBM II Barbora, 476-7991 INTELLIGENT ACCURATE l y p in g / w a p r o ­ cessing Customer misspellings corrected Resumes with Son Rush service a idfloble Creative Services, 2 4 2 0 G uodoiupe. A 78- 3633 PROOFREADING, TUTORING. $10/hour Im­ maculate typing of theses, reports papers. $1 35/p og e up See M onng o d Moude Cordwell Ph 0 4 79 8909 JEANNE'S TYPING Service North Austin home rate 8 36 -4 3 0 3 Fast. Typing s o n o b ls 'ppccu- in PATTY'S WORD Processing Term papers, pro- ‘essionol reports, dissertations Pick up rvsh service Mi midnight 3 4 5 -4 2 6 9 TYPING- PROOFING:'Stenography nonporei! theses manuscripts, resumes, letters. reports stattshcoi legal medical South Joe.^,447- 2552____________________________ TYPING 1532 7 DAYS/WEEK v ir o Tee 454~ FAST SERVCE typing Engksh $1 0 0 -poge Sponish tolion, Portuguese $ i 25 poge Koren 452 6 72 6 ■' » $ 1 0 0 -poge Legal TYPING Selector N eor UT compus j 4 77 5456 I Prolessionoi experienced typist $ 12 6, IBM QUICK T y p riy p m g ^ W n c e $1 50 p e ^ c x ^ . w'thout ‘ ootnotes N o extra chorge lev ^ s h lobs W il also do ort work C o l AAetaffg^»" at 1-863 5385 YES we typel FRESHMAN THE! So start me whh gooff peém TYPING FAST occurate lent spe*ling, grommor Resume dy 451-9596 PROFESSIONAL ACCURATE ooge mosi cases Campus pick-up ery Jome 244-0213 SPECIAL RATES until M arch 1 5 0c/o ao e D S W ord Processing Ask about pick up o n d |U - rery Lee Starr. 444-0801 ■VORDMASTER PROFESSIONAL typing for p open esumes multiple letters Rusrisenec. 3voitob»e R verude IH 35 orea 44 7- 925 includes rush service S' 25 TYPING .ro o h n g extenyve ocoderruc experience Conecting Potoco Henderson B A 4 t ' 0167 lla m a r 55lhj | TYPiS’ FAST occurate resume and rushmLe cioiist IBM equipment $1 25/poge, grammar 4 54 -8 9 3 0 ALL “WORDS N O A C T O Ñ 7 O n £ Tutor accepts popers until nudmghl 8om 4 7 4 -4 72 3 __________ EXPERIENCED SECRETARY !ed typing service Cafl after 6 30 anytime weekends. 4 5 4 -8 5 5 4 WORDPROCESSlNGrTYPtNG m m yJ AUSTIN home Ten yeors combmeff I ai experience m engmeenng and ocpouptmg helds Theses, dissertations, techmcol low review monusenph, resumes, etc ndtup and delivery available upon request RiSh Thr wee available Millie 4 4 8 -3 9 5 9 TYPING $1 2 0 /poge Pickup, delivery toe IH Excellent spelling, grommpr P e jB s resumes etc Shoron. 2 5 5 -0 9 0 7 o r 48O 3I0B TYPING 4 P R O O F R E A D lN G ^K e^ S t n iL , 458 3648 (Hyde Porkj 10 years e xpe n^S e 9 73 UT Groctaote English! Speciqi'-orfflm the written word A K E AUSTIN NEtGHBO RHOO cT24 TYPING SERVICE BM Selectnc 20 y legal and ocodemic typing and proof experience Regular spaced poge Coil Pat, doy or mght, at 5488 o r 4 77-1402 rate $ ! 0 0 d: EXCELLEnT T y PING T e p o rts, d ,... . resumes etc Correcting Selectnc. 8 3 6 -0 7 NEED SOME neot typing done? N o easy or too hard Coll Brendo, 2 5 8 -8 3 9 9 PROFESSIONAL TYPING $1 50 leqol Rushers welcome, Candace 4885 452 -9 37 3 $1 25/, wp/idn Ann r e s u m e s!! one or two day service J w ith o r w ith o u t piety 2707 Hemphill Just North o f 27m at Guaffaiupe t 472-3210 472-767X MISCELLANEOUS >| j FAST CASH We loan on most anything q< v*l ue. We buy, sell gold and silver, j » * 5134 Burnet Rd. 454-0459 ‘ J 892-0019 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION’ EXPERIENCED PIANO/GUITAR teacher, ginners-odvanced. UT degree. A fter 5 4 5 9 -4 0 8 2 __________________ PIANO LESSONS, beginner-advopced.^Xi nenced, qualified teocher. Classical ajvd] provised styles. 4 53 -9 69 6 . PERSONAL G W M , 36, seeks nonsmokers for fun ok c e v e n in ^ E n jo y massage, music, doncing. WANTED GRAPHIC ARTIST needs part-time l position. 2 years commercial art Freelance exp. Can do paste up, layo illustrating photograph tng logos, Students, handicapped Houstonian win Capitol 10,000 race ■ The DaNyTtxanAfonday, March 21, 1 9 6 3/P a g t1 5 — ”1 H B B M M IM B ! ^ a i a r u m u ELLOA MATHEWS áad ELLOA MATHEWS Düty Texan Staff ^ A member of the University's wom­ en's trade team took first place in the women's division of the sixth annual Capitol 10,000 footrace Sunday, finish­ ing die 6.2-mile course in 35 minutes and 10 seconds. *• Tracey Lynn Wong, a journalism sen­ ior, competed against more than 20,000 runners in Sunday's race, braving cloudy 40-degree weather and strong winds to compete. '1 feel great," Wong said at the awards ceremony after the race at the Hyatt Regency Hotel. Wong, who also placed first in her division in 1981, said she will run the race next year if she finds employment In Austin after she graduates this year. Roger Solar finished first overall in the race in 29 minutes and 34 seconds. Solar is a 22-year-old physical education senior at UT San Antonio. Geoffrey Koech, a UT computer sci­ ence senior, finished third overall, one minute behind Solar, with a time of 38*34. Koech, a member of the UT men's track team, finished second in last year's Capitol 10,000. LaVeme Achenback of Houston won first place out of six wheelchair entrants with a time of 33:10. Entrants for the Capitol 10,000 came from as far as Germany, Japan and Canada. The race began at 10 a.m. at 15th Street and Congress Avenue un­ der cloudy skies and a cold 15-mph wind. Mayor John Trevino started the race with the drop of a sword and the firing of the ceremonial cannon. The crowd of competitors was backed up few three blocks, forcing the later runners to wait as much as five minutes after the gun sounded before they could cross the starting line. Spectators lined West 15th Street, Ex­ position Boulevard and West First Street along the race route. Race director Donya Andrews said more than 20,000 runners entered the race, but a full count would not be available until Monday. More than 20,000 joggers com­ peted in the Capitol 10,000 Sun­ day despite threatening weather. Tracey Wong (above), journalism senior, pushes to victory in the women’s division, which she lost by 100 meters last year. PROFESSIONAL MODELS needed fo r life drawing doss in Round Rock. Please call 255- 2781___________________________________ NEED DEPENDABLE, hard-working persons with flexible schedules to make over $ 4.0 0/ hour for cleaning service Call 4 73 -6 9 6 3 or 1- 5 59 -2 6 8 5 after 6 p.m HELP WANTED YOUR O W N hours! Must be self motivated, courteous, and dependable. No expenence necessary Start immediately 444-6180, 836- 3248. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 3 / 2 1 /8 3 UPt W E A T H E R F O T O C A S T Monday’s weather will be fair and mild with a high in the upper 50s and a low in the upper 30s. Winds will be light and variable Monday with increasing cloudiness on Tuesday. Nationally, rain is expected on the Pacific Coast and part of the Intermountain Region. Snow is expected in parts of the North Atlantic Coast states, turning into rain in sections of the Lower Great Lakes Region, the Ohio Valley and the Middle Atlantic Coast states. Elsewhere weather will be fair in gener­ al. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 W arbled 5 C onstruct 10 Length units 14 Unusual thing 15 Exposed 16 "Y es — — ? " 17 Theater org 18 Defaming 20 W ithstood 22 C astle and Dunne 23 Require 24 Throb 25 California peak 28 Decks out 32 Ship area 33 Piano part 35 Kukla s pal 36 Hit 38 B riton of old 40 Bones 41 Seizes 43 Consum ers 45 Electric unit 46 Highest 48 Flowers 50 Frost 51 UK river 5 2 --------- and only 55 Praise 59 Thin m etal sheet 2 wds 61 W icked 62 S tra ig h t as 63 Prayer 64 Ice cream — 65 Raise 66 Devourer 67 W oody plant DOWN 1 Fly high 2 G irl's nam e 3 Fishing gear 4 Prairies' produce 5 M ade secure 6 M ade angry 7 Rumanian city 8 Troops 9 C urrents 10 Augured 11 Hibernia 12 Num erical prefix 13 C lothing 19 Poetry muse 21 Sm all spring 24 C o n tra d ict FRIDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED aaaa aaaa □□ana aaaa aaaa hqqqq aaaa aaaa aaaaa aaaaaaaa aaaaaa aaaa aaaa aaaaaa aaooaaaa aaaaa aaaaa aaa aaaa aaaaa aaaa aaa aaaaa aaaaa □aaaaaaa aaaaaa uana aaaa aaaaaa aaaaoaaa aaaaa aaaa aaaa aaaaa aaaa aaaa aaaaa aaaa aaaa 25 Stands up 26 Key 27 Fencepost 28 Gounod opera 29 M ixtures 30 Recess 31 Appears 34 Muslim ascetic 3 7 --------- a transom 39 P ra ttle r 42 B ackbone 44 B ’way signs 47 E xtrude 49 Fly 51 Blue shade 52 Form er ruler 53 Bury 54 Lam b 55 Vessel 56 N ovello of stage fam e 57 Expos or Braves 58 Kind of club 60 M onk The annual event is "a celebration of Austin, fitness and spring," she said. "It began six years ago when the Austin Runners Club approached the A ustin American-Statesman and asked it to help sponsor a race similar to the Peachtree Road Race, which is a 10,000- meter race held in Atlanta," Andrews said. "The race has grown each year, and now 30 percent of the runners are from out of the Austin area, and 1 percent are from out of the state and country," Andrews said. Several Austin groups cooperated with the Statesman, which has spon­ sored all six of the races. The Austin Parks and Recreation Department had 200 volunteers supervising the finish line on Auditorium Shores, while Travis County Emergency Medical Ser­ vices personnel administered first aid to ailing runners. HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED SERVICES f o r PHOTOS PASSPORTS APPLICATIO NS RESU M ES 1 - i n j f # s e rv ic e M o n f r i 1 0 - 6 SAT 10 2 • I ? 7 S S S 6 THE THIRD EYE 2 S 30 G U A D A L U P E ELECTRONIC REUift Audio equipment cassettes, tape recorders, guitar amps. LOW RATES 6 REFERENCES CALL 441-3657 U .T. AREA T ax Returns 1800 A L A V A C A 476-6330 NEED A P O . Boa? UT or*o No warfmg Its) Col 477-1915 504 W 24th SERVICES PHONE ANSWERING wrvice Onfy $15 0 0 a month! Cad 477-1915,10 30om-S 30pm HOUSECLEAN1NG FOR p ra fe » o n By the week or month Cad ond enk ter Betty 259- 2481____________________________________ GUITAR LESSONS ter ad styles (|azz, rock, country, ckmrcai, etc.) Taught by experienced teocher Cod Cod. 441-4982_______________ STUDENT MOVERS ! Wid move your furniture onywhere ter an unbeatable pnce Andrew Long 458-9573_____________________ FURNITURE M O V IN G 3 years experience Have Tradesman, wtd houl 441-7930 CUSTOM BUMPERSTICKERS Your nome menage, or organization Anything goes $3 0 0 eoch, no minimum Volume discount Cod 4 73-2565___________________________ BEAUTIFUL PORTRAITS m Zitker Gordens Large format camera for highest quolity re­ sults ksdmduoh or groups Kite R Tuck Photo­ grapher, 479-8617 PROFESSIONAL WEDDtNG PHOTOGRA inexpensive pockoges avoilotoie Please PHY cod for mtermoton about our unique services Kirk R. Tuck Photographer 479-8617 RIDING INSTRUCTION hunt seat equitation Qualified instructor Cad day or evening Win- dhdl Stables. 2 55 -0 2 2 5 _________________ DATA ENTRY/Programming/Editing Expen •need - UT System. Micros. Mocros Quick cheap, dependable degreed Dowd 451- 8 7 3 4 _____________________________ GET COLOR-COOED Discover most ftattenng colors. Coordinate wardrobe and makeup Convenient color ten. 4 52-6823 CUSTOM BUMPERSTICKERS Your name message, or organization Anything goes $3 0 0 eoch, no minimum I Hate E T $1 50 473-2565_________________________ AUTO ALERT Inc.. 892-1473 Our wheels to your wheels Brake repcxr, otl change, tune up emergency cods, battery service Vaa/Moster- cord. 24 hour sennce No |ob too small HELP WANTED HELP WANTED Waitpersons, Cooks, Bartenders, Hostess Be a part of Austin's newest restaurant opening early April. The Interurban Eating House is an exciting, high volum e, full service establishm ent located in one of Austin s most presti­ gious markets. Good pay, benefits & bonuses ar all part of the management philosophy which believes that em ployees are one of our most im portant com m odities A p p ly betw een 2-4 00 p.m. Mon.-Sat. at 1014 W alsh Tariton Lane, 1 mile west of Mopac off Bee Caves Rd , next to Supreme Courts Raquet Club, or call for appt. 327-6639 EMPLOYMENT SERVICES CRUISE SHIP ,obsi $ l4 -$ 2 8 0 00 year Canb- bean Howan world Call Cnjtseworld for guide, directory, newsletter 1-916-973-111! Ext UTEX HELP WANTED WANTED 10,000 STUDENTS PHOTOS. i n c o m e $3 5 $ 1 5 0 G u a r a n t e e d m inim u m with a c c o m p a n in g m anu scr pt Free detailed information and 100 photo sam ples Send $1 25 to cover postage ana handling to New York Photo Exchange '2 0 Inc Wall Street New York NY 10005 (Dep' CP OUTRAGEOUS OPPORTUNITY Ch»pwich is Here! We wtil be htnng vendors for the UT compos 6th Street area ond spec-o' cjttrocfions Coil Gregg between 10 a m 4 pm Fnday for appointment 4 4 4 -’ 069 HELP WANTED Canbbean Atmosphere SPINNAKERS Lake Travis Premier Waterfront Restaurant open Thursday through Sunday N o w hmng cashiers, cooks, kitchen help waitpersons and buspersons in person Fnday, M arch 25 through Sunday March 27, 1pm- 5pm Interviews Located N e a r Lakeway at Yacht H a rb o r M a nna 16412 Stew art Rd 266-1112 o r 4 7 6 -6 2 6 2 PEER COUNSELOR R A SS L /L E A R N IN G SERVICES Applications now available for Peer Counselor positrons m math writing and public speaking tor 1983 84 Come by Jester A 33 2 M-F from 9am -5pm Applications due A pni 8 Part-time 5-9pm to moke appointm ents fo r local home im provem ents com pany G o o d starting salary and weekly bonus Call M r Johnson between 12-4 p m 4 5 2 1629 Part-time Two canvas appointm ents fo r a local home im provem ent com pany S 4 .25 hr to start plus bonuses Coll M r David between 12-4 p.m., 4 5 2 -1 6 2 9 BUDGET Rent-A-Car now has a full time service agent position o p e n to work 7om-3pm M o n d a y through F riday A p p lica tio n s are now being accepted at 3330 M anor Rood, or phone 4 78 -6 43 8 ter more information Secretory ' receptionist bookkeeper o ff­ ice monoger in small, pleasant, fast-paced highly respected non-profit health agency Type at least 70 wpm with accurate spelling and grammar Answer phones pleasantly Record and acknowledge contributions Set up filing system W ork graciously witfi volunteers Assist director on special protects Be fast, o r­ ganized, and efficient $4.50 an hour for 35 hours o week G ood possibility fo r hours to increase Send letter and resume to Director, Capital Area Branch, Arthritis Foundation, 4107 M e d i­ cal Parkway, Suite #114, Austin, Texas 787 56 FLOWER SELLERS Austin s original flower people, cash paid daily We serve Austin 474- 2 369 473-6231 $4-$6 PER HOUR AN Y SCHEDULE Easy fun atm osphere, group w ork. A p ­ ply afte r 1 p m . 2 9 0 8 Cole, 2 blocks east o f 30th and Red River Looking for a fun career that offers unlimited opportunity and leommg potential? Arthur M urray Dance School seeking ambitious men and women to tram as professional dance in­ structors N o experience necessary. Full and port time training programs starting soon A p ­ ply 877 6 B Research, G rand Central Station, Monday-Fnday, 2 -5pm, 6-8pm N O P H O N E CALLS PART TIME GRAPHIC ARTIST Must be familiar with paste-up and color sepa­ ration Creative drawing im portant Call for appointment, Rudi. 327-3150 UNIVERSITY REFRIGERATORS, INC is accepting applications for U.T. Student M an­ ager Applicants must possess a high degree of responsibility and matunty Position involves personnel and asset management, accounting, inventory control and marketing. Musí have at least a two year commitment to Austin area and live off campus Business motors preferred Send resumes to UNIVERSITY REFRIGERATORS, INC 8 2 4 0 M opac Expressway Suite 395 Austin, Texas 78759 DESK CLERK, motel, part time, 9pm-7am eve­ ry other night Also 2pm-9pm 6 days Appli­ cant must be available through summer and fall semesters. Must be personable, neat ap­ pearing, some college, experience in dealing with public, dependable Ideal for law student. Apply in person - mornings West W ind Motel, IH-35 and A irport Blvd. THERAPIST TECHNICIAN IV (RELIEF) in Special Education or relcrt- BA or BS in prererably. Hands-on teoch- ed areas ing experience with autistic Individuals. Expenence with families of autistic chil­ dren. Knowledge and practical experi- ° ? t lave cumculum for developmental^ delaved individuals. Flexible hours, M onaay- Saturdoy Salary $ 5 .54/h o u r to be in­ creased after six months employment. Apply before Fnday, M arch 11, 5 p.m. at Austin-Travis County Mental Health Mental Retardation Center, 1430 Col­ lier, or call 4 4 7 -2 1 6 6 between 4 -5 p.m. EOE GIRLS! DO You like to party while making good money? Are you affable, sociable, ond a* least 19 years old? Come on over to 4412 N. Lamar after 1 p.m and talk to us PART TIME linyene salesperson Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday mornings and some Saturdays. Minimum wage plus 453-1227 for appointment NUTRITION STUDY Healthy male students (age 19-22 only). Earn $875 PLUS free m edi­ cal work-up PLUS all meals free 4 /2 5 /8 3 -7 /3 / 83 PLUS live m Student Health Center 5/13/ 8 3-7 /4 /8 3 . Must be willing to follow restncted diet lifestyle ond donate samples of blood, body fluids and feces 471-4287 ext 3 0 or PAX 10-974 or GEA 307 (9-12om, 2-4pm) GEORGE'S GET It and G o Part time help wanted. Apply in person, 2 6 0 4 E. 7lh M on- day-Fndoy, 11-6 N o phone calls AIDE IN kitchen to help prepare and serve lunch in private nursery school 8 30om -lpm Also, aide fo r teacher in four year old class Hours 9-6pm West Lake Hills Call 327-1530 after 5pm PART TIME help wanted in seafood restaurant ond market Apply Terry s Seafood, 1151 A ir­ port Blvd QUIET MATURE mdividuol seeks research as­ sistant position for pnvate com pany/law firm Hove extensive expenence in bibliographic searching, clerical work and would en|oy legal research. Reply to Box 526, Route 2, Austin, TX 78744_________________________ GENERAL CLERICAL help needed for small publications firm in Northwest Austin, 15-20 hours/week. W e need someone who can work well with figures, and be attentive to de­ tail G ood phone presence and typing skill necessary Proofreading and copy editing skills helpful Modest salary but great opportu­ nity to learn. Send resume to Nather Publica­ tions, Box 27007, Austin, 7 8 7 5 5 EARN EXTRA cash on your own time! Person­ able, outgoing salespersons needed G ood product, good money! Call 477-2019 NIGHT KITCHEN, port time Steak and Ale, 2211 W. Anderson Ln. Apply M-S, 2-5pm N o phone colls please WILL PAY computer science m ajor to help stu­ dent enter data in computer. Call Debbie 441- 0 06 3 PHOTOGRAPHERS PHOTOTECH is now ac­ cepting applications fo r candid party photo­ graphers. Must have 35mm SLR, be clean cut and personable Call from 10-5, 4 7 4 -4 87 9 EXPERIENCED PERSON for swimming pool upkeep at River W oods Apartments. Through summer $5 0 0/hour 441-8314 PART TIME pre-auditor, three nights, 7 p.m.-3 a m Apply personnel office, 9 a m -12 noon M-F, at Dnskill Hotel, 117 E. 7tfi St. RELIABLE STUDENT wanted to monitor alarms 5-10 p m Monday-Thursday $4 00/hour, summer session student preferred Apply Tues- doy-Thursday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m., 4910 Burnet Rd. Stanley Smith PRE-SCHOOL TEACHER needed 8 a m -noon. required Children’s Discovery Expenence Center 458-1891 or apply 4112 Duval IMMEDIATELY, p a rt AVAILABLE time researcher Will train to work on oil ond gos leases, real estate acquisition, properly evalu­ ation Flexible working schedule Send resume, picture to P O Box 2492, Austin, Texas 78768__________________________________ NEED DEPENDABLE person with cor to pick up child from school and core for him In my home Pleasant working conditions. West Aus­ tin 4 7 7 -8 3 3 0 EASTER HELP needed March 26 thru April 22 Hours lla m -6p m Part time and full time posi­ tions available. 459-6515 Ask for Karen JUAN GOLDSTEIN'S is now accepting appli­ cations fo r doy and night cocktail and barten­ der positions. Apply at 4 04 E 6th. N o calls PEPSI COLA weekend merchandiser wanted Ambitious, conscientious, outgoing personnel desired G ood pay, interesting work Apply in person, 2412 E. 1st St NEED AMBITIOUS self-starters for multi-level marketing program Create your own hours ond your own eormngs with the perfect prod­ uct ond perfect timing 250 -0 88 9 PHOTOGRAPHERS PHOTOTECH ,s now ac- cepting applications fo r candid party photo­ graphers. Must have 35mm SLR, be clean cut ond personable. Call from 10-5, 474 -4 87 9 RENEGADE HAS positions available Call 4 79-8888, between 2 -4 p.m. for interview HARVEST TIME Assembly of G od Church needs a pianist/organist for Sunday services If interested please contact Rev W O Harrell 443-298)_________ BEAN'S RESTAURANT taking applications for waitpersons and hostpersons Must be expen- enced and personable. Apply between 2-4, Mon.-Fn., 311 W, 6th St LIVE-IN single house parent at residential treatment facility for 4-12 year old emotionally disturbed children. Salary plus room and board Please apply by M arch 25tfi at 3804 Avenue B, 8am-5pm N o phone calls please DAYCARE NEEDS substitute teachers Flexible hours, mornings and afternoons. Classroom expenence preferred. 444-7870. WE NEED A FEW G O O D MEN for nutrition study Healthy male students (age 19-22 only) A great opportunity to know your medical sta­ tus plus earn $875 plus all meals free 4 /2 5 / 8 3 -7 /3 /8 3 . Must be willing to live in Student Health Center, 5 /1 3 /8 3 -7 /4 /8 3 , and follow restncted diet/life style and donate samples of blood, body fluids & feces. 471-4287 ext 30 or PAX 10-974 o r GEA 307 (9-12am, 2 4pm) PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz MERES HOU) IT IS CHUCK... ALL THE 8I6-LEA6UE TEAMS HAVE MASC0T5 R16HT 7 OUR TEAM IS THE "PELICANS," RI6HT ? WELL U)E HAVE THIS COSTUME UJE UIANT YOU TO WEAR... SO TRY IT ON, CHUCK... SEE LUHAT YOU THINK TEXAN CLASSIFIED AD ORDER FORM Address 1 4 11 16 21 2 7 12 17 22 ______ Phone -State Zip 3 8 13 18 23 4 9 14 19 24 Start Date: End Date: Total Runs: 5 10 15 20 25 RATU (Minimum Ad-15 Words) MINIMUM A D - 15 WORDS by jo h n n y h a r t Berke Breathed I WW ■ ra o fu rR a u x l m m m PRCMRE THE COMÍ* IfWORAW 60 ■ iKAftViiANre? Per Word To Order Your Ad, Mail this Coupon to: Texan Want Ads, P.O. Box D, Austin, TX 78712 BLOOM COUNTY 2* 471-5244 □ Check Enclosed for $ ________________ □ Charge my □ VISA □ MasterCard # Exp. Date XXJ6UY5 AK£ W0RRIEP ABOUT SOMETHING.. I can see it. WAIT...i£MM6 6uess...so#vnniN& THAT'S ON m e YilNP OF ALL AMERICA . GOON. IST'S HEAR ff r r Syracuse 14 (W aldron 7) Oh® State 15 (Concheck 6) OKLAHOMA-INDIANA OkW wnw(40) Little 4-9 1-2 9 Wa Tisdale 6-12 2-3 14, Jones 2-4 3-4 7 Panneii 1-6 0-0 2 Barnett 3-8 2-2 8 O verton 1-1 0-0 2 Wi Tisdale 0- 2 0-0 0. Clark 1-5 3-3 5 Pierce 0 - 1 0 - 1 0 Johnson 0-0 0-0 0 Lee 0-0 0-1 0, Gandy 1 - 2 0-0 2 Totals 19-4911 16 49 M a ra (63) Wittman 10-17 2-3 22 Bouchie 1-5 2-2 4, Blab 4-8 2-3 10. Thomas 5-6 3-4 13 Brown 3-7 0-0 6 Dakich 0-0 0-1 0 Morgan 2-5 1-3 5. Robinson 0-0 2-3 2. Cameron 0- 0 0-0 0 Gtomi 0-1 1-2 1 Totals 25-49 13- 2 1 6 3 Indiana 17 Rebounds Halftime — Indiana 34 Oklahoma 22 Fouled out — none Total fouls — O klaho­ ma 21 Oklaho­ ma 30 (Cee 6) Indiana 34 (Morgan Blab Bouchie Wittman 4 each) Assists O kla­ homa 9 (Pannelt 3) Indiana 3 (Brown 2) MISSOURI-IOWA Missouri 63 Cavener 4-9 1-2 9 Jones 2-4 2-2 6 Sti- panovich 3-11 0-0 6 Budges 5-7 0-1 10 Sundvoid 14-24 1-2 29 Dressier 0-4 0-0 0 Walker 0-0 0-0 0 M oody 0-2 0-2 0 Round­ tree 0-0 0 -0 0 Laurie 1-1 1-2 3 MusserO-O 0 -0 0 Totals 29-62 5 -11 63 Iowa 77 Payne 7-12 5-6 19 Gannon 4-6 3-5 11 Stokes 7-11 8-10 22 Cartino 3-4 2-3 8 Hansen 4-12 7-8 15 Banks 1-1 0-1 2 An derson 0-0 0-0 0 King 0 0 0-0 0 Dennard 0-0 0-0 0 Lohaus 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 26-46 25-33 77 Ha!»!ime Iowa "4 Rebounds Stipanovich Tola 'o u !s 'owa 32 M ¡ssou" 20 F o ued Missour out 25 M ssoun 28 (C a.ener 1 0 i Iowa 3 6 (Gannon 9 ) Assists M 'sscun 11 (Jones Budges Sundvoid ¡owa 13 (Gannon 4, Techr Dressier 2) cats none A 14 1Q5 NORTH CAROUNA STATE-UNLV North CaroKna Stale (71) Baiiey 12-21 1 4 25 C la r es 7 (3 3 5 17 McQueen 1-3 1-2 3 Whittenburg 5 -10 3-5 13. Lowe 2 4 2 2 6 M cC am 1-2 0-0 2. Gannon 1 4 0-0 2 Myers 0-2 1-2 1 Bame 0-1 2 3 2 T otas 29 60 13 25 71 N e vada-Las V egas (70) Green 9 16 9-9 27 Anderson 8-22 0 0 16 Brzov-i r 1 1 0 0 2 , 1-4 0 ' 2 Collins 5 8 2-5 12 Booxer 1 - 1 1 3 3 Hudson 3-9 1-3 7 Graham 0-0 '-2 ' To­ ra s 28 61 ’ 4 23 70 ' irk ,• H a*tim e Nevada-¡.as Vegas 33 NC State 27 Pouted < NC S 'v e 21 Nevada La 1 bounds NC Sstate 43 , vada as Vegas 38 G'ee NC Stale 15 . owe 1C V .1' - i a '' H e 6 Total Vegas 21 Re . ’ ar ' '0 Assists v30d v.dS VPQciS Tenneeaee (57) Ellis 6-13 1-3 13. Burton 4-10 1-2 8. Federm ann 1-1 1-2 3, Beaman 4-7 2-2 lO, Brooks 8-17 2-2 18. H y a tt0 -1 -0-00 . Carter 0-0 0-0 0 Harper 1-4 0-0 2. W oods 1-S W ) 0 R Jones 0 -0 0 -0 0 Totals 25-56 7-14 57 Lb-.. ' , , S McCray 5-7 0-0 10 R M cC ray 0-1 1-2 1 C Jones 7-8 4-7 18. Gordon 7-15 4-4 18 W agner 6-10 3-4 15. Valentine 0-0 0-0 0 Weest 0-0 0-0 0 Hall 0-2 2-2 2. Mitchell 0-0 0-0 0 Thompson 2-4 2-4 6 Totals 27- 47 16-23 70 Halftime— Louisville 34 Tennessee 27 Fouled out— Beaman Total touts— Ten­ nessee 17 Louisville 8 Rebounds— Ten­ nessee 25 (Burton 7) Louisville 31 (C. Jones 11) Assists— Tennessee 12 (Brooks 5) Louisville 13 (S McCray. C Jones 3 each) A— 11 900 RUTGERS-ST. JOHN’S Rutgers (55) Black 4-4 3-4 11 Tillman 7-11 2-2 16, Hinson 5-12 0 -0 10, EHerbe 1-3 0-0 2. Brunson 0-1 2-2 2 Battle 4-7 2-2 10 Rem- 'ey 1-2 0-0 2 NtePeriein 1 -1 0 -0 2. Totals 23-41 9-10 55 St. John's (66) Russet 2-7 0-1 4 Goodwin 6-18 2-5 ’ 4, Wennmgton 3-9 2-4 8 Kelly 0 -1 0 -0 0 Mui- im 10-13 4-4 24 Williams 5-5 4-4 14 Stew- an 0-0 0-0 0 Jackson 0-0 2-2 2 Totals 26- 53 14-20 66 ^ Hatftime - St John s 29 Rutgers 28 "ora fouis Rutgers 17 St John s 15. Rebounds Rutgers 24 (Hinson 8). St. (Wennmgton 6) Assists — uOhn s 28 Rutgers 15 (Brunson 41 St John s 17 Goodwin 5) A _ 14 897 nba Sunrtoy'a Results Kansas City 128 G olden State 114 P o r 'and '1 8 Den ver '0 6 ^hi.'adeiDhia 121 Detroit 119 Boston 90 C-eveiand 79 New Je'sey a' M *a uke e Dai as at Los Angeles C hicag o ar Seattle Monday's Game* No Games S cheduled! TuesadysGemes (A l Times CST) F*- ade«pri a a’ New Yor* 6 30 0 m • a' C ' '3 5 p m Afiantg a! l" d 'a r'a 6 35 r m Jta h SI W ashington ' 0 5 o m Boston at M waukee " 30 p - D e " .age 3 de- Sra'e at Da as Cieve and a' Kansas City 7 3 5 p .m Phoenix at D enve' 8 35 p m Hous'on at San Diego 3 3 0 d m S< a-;e a t Los A-\g»-«s 9 3 0 p m ,• P >rt and 9 30 o m San A1 • t ’ 35 0 m fiTTITUDÉS Ud olcMUfA etc¿ttna the doniel Hechter collection — the affordable designer look that is a step ahead in quality! long sleeve solid uuith elegant, uuhite spread collar in muted pink, blue or camel, long sleeve button-douun in muted shades of lavendar, pink, blue & camel stripes. easy core cotton poly blend, sizes 14-16 1 2 21.00 P ag e 16/The Daily Texan/Mon day, March 2 1 ,1 9 8 3 sportsrecord co te g e H f basketbal y ^ U i ^ »-■ «»-*' * i w m w in v m o o n i o u rn e rn e n i oy ü nw a rrm» imefTisiione F M Round March IS South F ¡onda 81. Fordham 69 Vanderbilt 79 East Tennessee State 74 March 16 South Carolina 100 Old Dominion 98 Iona 90 St Bonaventure 76 New Orleans 99 Louisiana State 94 Taxas Christian 64. Tulsa 62 DePaui 76 Minnesota 73 O regon State 77 Idaho 59 Fresno State 71 Texas-EI Paso 64 Virginia Tech 85 William & Mary 79 Wake Forest 87 Murray State 80 Nebraska 72 Tulane 65 Mississippi 87 Alabam a State 75 Northwestern 7 1 Notre Dame 57 March 18 Michigan State 72 Bowling Green 71 Arizona State 87 Fullerton State 83 Wake Forest (18-11) at Vanderbilt (19- 13) 7 3 0 p m p.m. Iona (22-8) at Nebraska (20-9). 7 35 Northwestern (18-12) vs DePaui (18-11) at Rosemont, I I I , 8 p m Texas Christian (22-10) at Arizona State (18-12) 8 3 5 p m New Orleans (23-6) at Oregon Stale (18- 10). 9 p m lacond Round (AITImaaCST) Virginia Tech (23-10) at South Carolina (21-8) 7 p m (18-11). 7 p m 11) 7 3 0 p m Fresno State (21-10) at M ichigan State Princeton (42) South Florida (22-9) at Mississippi (18- Sunday's NCAA Tournament PRMCETON-BOSTON COLLEGE 1-2 0-0 2 Totals 16-48 10-14 42 Boston Colega (SI) Clark 1-2 0-0 2 M urphy 5-8 7-12 17 Pressley 1-2 4-5 6 Garris 1-4 5-6 7 M Adams 3-7 1-2 7. O Shea 0-0 0-1 0 McC ready 3-3 1-1 7 Taliev 2-2 1-2 5 Primus 0-1 0-0 0 B Adam s 0-0 0-0 0 To­ tals 16-29 19-29 51 Halftime— Boston College 24 Princeton 23 Fouled out— Mullm. Smyth Total touls— Princeton 24 Boston College 14 Rebounds -Princeton 26 (Simkus 8) Bos­ ton C ollege 30 (M urphy 10) Assists— Princeton 14 (Ryan 6) Boston College 12 (M Adam s and Talley 4 each) Technical fouls— None A— 8 700 Enderle 8-16 1-2 17 Robinson 3-9 6-8 12 Simkus 0-3 3-4 3 Ryan 0-6 0-0 0 Smyth 3-11 0-0 6 Carter 1 1 0 - 0 2 Mullm GEORGETOWN-MEMPHtS STATE Georgetown (57) Martin 3-4 0-0 6 Wingate 0-2 0-0 0 Ew­ ing 8-16-8-8 24 Smith 1-"2 2-3 4, Jackson 4-14 4-7 12. Dalton 0-1 0-0 0 Jones 1-5 0- 0 2 Broadnax 4-10 0-0 8. Brown 0-0 0-0 0 Dunn 0-2 1-2 1 Blue 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 21- 56 15-20 57 Memphis Stole (68) Parks 3-5 3-4 9 Lee 8-11 12-16 28 Phil­ lips 2-2 6-8 10 Turner 1-5 2-5 4 Haynes 5- 8 3-4 13 Holmes 0-0 0-0 0 McC oy 0-0 2-2 2 Battle 0-0 0-0 0 Luckett 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 19-31 28-39 66 Halftime — M emphis State 30 G eorge­ town 25 Fouled out — Ewing Smith Haynes Total fouls — Georgetown 28 Memphis State 17 Rebounds - r G eorge­ town 22 (Ewing 9) Memphis State 37 (Lee 15) Assists Georgetown 13 (Smith 5) M em phis State 11 (Turner 4) Technical Ewing A — 11 000 «YBACU8KJMO STATE 8yracuM(74) Rautins 7-14 2-4 16. Brum 2-7 6-6 10, Hawkins 2-2 1-2 5. W aldron 5-14 2-2 12, Santifer 7-16 10-12 24. Addison 2-9 0-0 4 Alexis 0-3 3-4 3 Kerins 0-0 0 -0 0. SperaO- 1 0-0 0 Perry 0-0 0-0 0 Totals 25-66 24-30 74 Ohio Stole (79) C am pbell 7-12 3-4 17 Concheck 6-12 0-0 12 Waiters 5-7 2-4 12 Taylor 5-11 5-8 15 Huggins 6-10 0-2 12. Stokes 1-3 5-7 7 Jones 1-3 1-3 3. Wesson 0-0 1-4 1 Totals 31-58 17-32 79 Halftime — Syracuse 35 Ohio State 27 Fouled o u l--Ftautms Brum, Waldron A d ­ dison Cam pbell Waiters Total fouls — Syracuse 29 Ohio State 25 Rebounds — Syracuse 44 (W aldron 11) Ohio Slate 40 (Campbell. Concheck 9) Assists — TOM SELLECK BESS ARMSTRONG IOAD Time & Money SPEEDO Get in the swim of things w ith Speedo Swimwear. Now available at Scherts & M ore Dobie Mall Sw im suits G o g g le s Earplugs $10.95-40.95 $5.50 $2.00 $11.95 And more... 1-3:10-5:15-7:30-9:45 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT A D S ... 471-5244 Fun and adventure at every turn. D i s t r i b u t e d b v ^ n N E R B H O S W ARNER C O M M i 'N i l A - O N S C O M P A N Y c War e- Bk* A: a-j-s Reserved 1 ELSIMATE EL-407 BUILT-IN CLOCK AND ALARM Basic Functions/% Key/3-Key Memory Reg. ‘19,s SALE $14,s Calculators l)ehind Sc hool Supplies street level J M A JO M H G IN SERVICE SINCE 1 8 9 6 HURRY — SUPPLY LIMITED B U Y , SELL, RENT, TRADE... W ANT ADS...471 -5 2 4 4 BUY IT! Smart Shoppers Read the Texan Want-Ads! d ito r? applications are now being accepted for the position of Editor o f the 1984 Edition o f liSi \ The Cactus Deadline for Applications: Friday, March 25,1983 Application forms may be picked up in the General M anager’s office, TSP 3.208, and should be complet­ ed and returned with a letter of application before the deadline of March 25. Following is a list o f the qualifications for Cactus Editor: 1. M ust be a student registered in UT Austin. 2 M ust have completed a t least 60 hours of college work. 3. M ust have completed a t least 30 hours a t UT Austin with a m inim um grade point average of 2.25. 4. Must have served on the Cactus staff as a section editor or associate editor during the year during which the application is made, or the previous year. 5. Applicants m ust provide a resum é, grade transcript, sam ples of previous work, a t least three letters of recom mendation and a proposal for operation of the publication during the year as editor. Only qualifications 2 and 4 for Cactus Editor may be waived by two-thirds vote of the members present. C a c tu s . Student Yearbook at the University of Texas at Austin 37% larger 35mm color prints from Kodak .. .at no ex tra charge WITH THIS COUPON mcigncipnnf 4 # service f I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I A Bring in this coupon and gel big * x 6 KODAK C< >lor Pt mts lor the same price us f x 5" prints Otter ends April 13. 1983 S e ? u s to*., co-op camera second level All cl 1*1 * Ifl it MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1 8 9 6 The Night is Bright And every Housing alternative under the moon and stars will be covered in this year’s Spring Housing Guide. Don’t get | caught in the Dark looking for your summer and fall residence. Be Bright, Don’t miss THE SPRING HOUSING GUIDE to be published April 6th fiTTITUD€S — first level BUY, SILL, RENT, TRAOC .. WANT A D S ... 471-5244 t MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1 8 9 6 15%off FICTION 1. The Little Drummer Girl, John LeCarre Publisher’s Prices all listed hardback ¡y COOPS13.55.Í; COOP $15.25. NON-FICTION 1. M egatrends, John Naisbitt 2. In Search of Excellence, Peters 2. S pace, James Michener Reg $15 95 Reg $17 95 Reg $15.45 Reg $15.95. Reg. $15 95 3. The Delta Star, Joseph Wambaugh. 4. Master of the Game, Sidney Sheldon 5. Mistral's Daughter, Judith Krantz . . . . . . COOP $13.10. COOP $13.55. COOP $13.55. . COOP $13.55. 3. Jane Fonda’s Workout Book. Jane Fonda 4. The One Minute Manager, Kenneth Blanchard & Spencer Johnson Reg $15 00 5. Blue Highways, William Least Heat Moon Reg. $15.50 Reg $19.95. Reg $18 95 Reg $17 50. Reg. $13.50. Best Sellers COOP $13.15. COOP $16.95. COOP $16.10. . COOP $12.75. C O O P ! 14.85. 6. Ellis Island, Fred Mustard Stewart Reg. $15 95 ............................................ 7. The Mists of Avalon, Marion Zimmer Bradlev. Reg $16.95 8. The Valley o f Horses, Jean M. Auel Reg $15 95 9. 2010: Odyssey Two, A rthur C. Clarke. 6. Living, Loving and Learning, Leo Buscagha ,COOP$ 14.40. Re8 $12.95 ........................ COOP $11.00. 7. And More by Andy Rooney, Andrew A Rooney. 8. Mary Ellen’s Help Yourself Diet, Mary Ellen Pinkham COOP $13.55. Reg $10 95 ........................................ COOP$ 9.30. 9. The Youngest Science, Lewis Thomas .......................................COOP $11.45. Reg $14 95.................................................................................................COOP $12.70. Reg $14.75 10. Floating Dragon, Peter Straub Reg. $15.95.................................................................................................COOP $13.55. 11. Foundation’s Edge, Isaac Asimov. Reg. $14.95.....................................................................COOP $12.70. 12. E.T. The ExtraTerrestrial Storybook, William Kotzwinkle. 10. Life Extension, Durk Pearson & Sandy Shaw. Reg. $22.50.................................................................. COOP $19.10. 1 11. Jane Fonda’s Workout Book for Pregnancy, Birth and Recovery, Femmy DeLyser Reg $16.95................COOP $14.40. 12. How to Make Love to Each Other, Alexandra Penney. COOP $12.50. Reg $6.95....................................................................... COOP $ 5.90. Reg. $10.95. 13. Life, the Universe and Everything, Douglas Adams. Reg. $9.95....................................................................... COOP $ 8.45. 13. T h e F a l l o f F r e d d i e t h e L e a f , Leo Buscaglia Reg. $7 95............................................................ 14. Savannah, E. Price. n 14. G r o w i n g U p , R u s s e ll B a k e r Reg. $17.95.....................................................................COOP $15.25. Reg. $15.00......................................................... 15. Emerald, Phyllis A Whitney 15. A L i g h t i n t h e A t t i c , Shel Silverstein. Reg $14.95.................................................................................................COOP $12.70. Reg. $12.45......................................................... C O O P $ 9 .3 0 . E C O O P $ 8 .7 5 . C O O P $ 1 2 .7 5 . C O O P $ 1 0 .5 5 . P L U S ! *20% O ff S a a r & *15% O ff ÜNIYERSITYCO-OP MAJORING IN SERVICE SINCE 1896 monday, march 21, 1983 the daily texan arts and entertainment magazine Hank Jr.: living outside the law By Louis Black THE ROAD AND THE LEGEND They had com e to look for America, leaving behind the N ew Jersey Turnpike and taking to the back roads and cor­ ruption-birthed m o d em cem ent highways. The long scream ­ ing down through the heart o f the South, through Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia bled the road white and m elded the m yth o f m ovem ent with the m otion o f the car At dawn they hit the Florida shore and stood there, in the sun, the sand and the salt water, laughing because they were in such a ridicu­ lous state They drove the whole night, all night, the radio tuned to truckers channels, searching for the country and the heart o f the country The Sherm an s arm y o f advancing kudzu draped the sides o f the highway, from above, it looked as though it were only a long tear in a burlap bag. Everyone in the vehicle was asleep except the driver who was hum m ing along with the radio The kudzu. the night and the road blended into fragmentary patterns as he slipped into the hallucinations o f m em ory Suddenly, as abruptly as the Wicked Witch o f the West s face appeared in the glass ball to Dorothy, he saw a vivid image o f a boy o f about four years standing by the side o f the road wearing a shirt with the word D a d d y'o n it. The child looked at him and held up a sign that said "I won it all and I did it on m y ow n The driver laughed and didn't even slow down. THE CHILD IS THE FATHER OF THE MAN Within the last few w eeks, country singer, songwriter and musician Hank Williams Jr. has released a new album ("Strong Stuff), w as covered in one segm ent of a network magazine show and saw the prime-time debut of Living Proof, a made-for-TV movie loosely based on his autobiog­ raphy You figure if you test the rigging of this superstar windjam mer it's bound to be okay, fully unfurled to capture every bit of wind. Wrong. If there is one thing that Hank Williams Jr is, it is full of contradictions and contrasts, so it is only logical that during this extremely commercially success­ ful penod, his creativity appears to be at its lowest and laziest ebb in a decade FAMILY AND BIOGRAPHY When 1 sing them old songs o f Daddy s/Seems like every one comes true/Lord, please help me, do I have to be/The Irving prooP'' Hank Williams Jr. Hank Williams Jr w as only 4 years old w hen his father died, m onths before his 30th birthday During the short course of his life. Hank Williams had established himself not only as one of the m ost important pioneers of country music but also as a major influence on American popular music in general The son grew in the shadow of his father, both imitating him and assum ing the mantle of his stardom. Becoming the Son to his Father. Hank Williams Jr spread the m essage and faithfully reiterated the gospel Frustrations would finally lead him to do battle to find himself not as a performing hologram of his father but as a talent with his own identity Since then, he has written a New Testam ent 's worth of histories on his father to match the Old Testm ent he w as so tired of heanng from everyone else Shortly after his father s death, Randall Hank s nam e was changed to Hank Williams Jr. and, just a few years later, at the age of 8, he began touring. He w as 11 years old w hen he first performed at the Grand Old Opry (singing "Lovesick Blues," the song that propelled his father to stardom) and three years later his first record was released. He earned his first gold record, w hen he w as 16, for the soundtrack album to "Your Cheatin' Heart, " the story of his father's life. There is something profoundly weird about a child raised to be his parent, to do his parent's work and perform his parent's songs. Not surprisingly, this situation began to get to Williams Jr., who becam e increasingly determined that to live he had to carve a path separate from his father's. Although he had been writing songs for years he began to pour them out in the early 1970s. Ironically, m any of these songs represent his attem pts to work through his feelings about his father. There was definite hostility from audiences as the child e m ­ erged as the m an and ceased to be a clone of his father. In 1974 Hank Williams Jr. m oved to Cullman, Ala., joining the small but growing num ber of rebels and loners turning their backs on Nashville. He recorded a new album, "Hank Williams Jr. and Friends, ” working with a num ber of rock musicians. The album would becom e one of the first classics of the emerging "outlaw m usic," though Williams w asn't real­ ly able to take advantage of his good timing. In August 1975, while on a hunting trip, he slid down the side of a mountain, landing on his face. Many were ready to write him off. But in a sort of a country "Other Side of the Mountain" fairy tale, plastic surgery worked wonders and he rapidly recuperated. Williams Jr. began to tour again in 1976, joining the outlaw fringe ofWaylon Jennings, Willie Nelson and cronies just as that black sheep fatemity found manufac­ turing gold records almost easier than getting rejected, bust­ ed, strung out and lost. FATHER AND SELF “Why, just the other night after the show/An old drunk came up to me. /He said, You ain t as good as your Daddy, boy,/And you never will be. ” Since the mid-1970s. Hank Williams Jr. s stardom has — Hank Williams Jr. n grown so much that reissues of his father’s albums now bear the name Hank Williams, "Sr." The extent of Hank Jr. s com ­ mercial popularity is such that at one time last year, eight of his albums were on the Billboard country charts (and at least three of them still are). His earnings that year, according to a report in Record magazine, were a staggering $15 million. But though he has found extraordinary success in the country field, Hank Williams Jr. has yet to have a crossover hit on the rock charts — this, despite his distinct and aggresive rock/heavy metal/blues sensibility. Initially, his best songs dealt with either his father or his lifestyle and beliefs. In his songs about his father, he keeps trying to come to terms with Hank Williams as both a man and a legend. He both demystifies and celebrates his father, striving to achieve som e musical encapsulation of his father’s persona that will finally allow him to feel at peace. In the songs about himself, he deals with romance (an outstanding theme being the difficulty of monogamy in to­ day s world), sex, booze, drugs, guns, cars, planes, hunting See HANK JR., pages 6-7 Galbraith interview • Passenger • Calendar/TV Listings FEELTHE FEELING! American-made Cherokee, designed to make you feel good. You've never felt anything like 'em! Lower Level H ighland M all Upper Level Barton Creek Square M a ste rC a rd , Visa and A m erican Express W e lco m e d 2 images jn g n d a y , march 21, 1983 CALLING ALL CARS! AUSTIN'S PREMIER CAR-STEREO SOUND ROOM DOBIE MALL *-*-7421 NORTHCROSS M ALL 459-3321 index opening word COVER STORY Hank Williams Jr.: life as the son of a leg­ end, p. 1,6-7 CENTERPIECE Economist John Kenneth Galbraith speaks on the state of America's economy, p. 16- 17 IMAGES ALMANAC This is the week that will be, p. 5 THEATER The original "Hello Dolly ’; the Department of Germanic Languages presents Johann Nestroy’s "Etnen jux will er sich," p. 19. A review of Zachary Scott Theatre Center's production of Edward Albee’s "Seascape. " p. 21 UVE WIRE Keeping up with music action around town, p. 18 THE ARTS Piintmakers capture Texan culture and wfldfife, p. 9 SOUND ADVICE Record reviews; the latest in vinyl habits, p. 13 KEEPING IN TUNE Local jazz/fusion band, Passenger reveal what it's like to be the "Best Jazz band in Austin, "p. 20 REEL TO REEL Reviews of the first "Raiders” take-ofT, "High Road to China" and Disney's "Trenchcoat,"p. 22-23 staff EDITOR: Marie Mahoney ASSOCIATE JU IGMMBMTS EDITOR: Liz Patterson CONTRIBUTORS: Louis Black. Jack Crager, Lori tITOR: Cathy Ragland Hannusch, James Michael Kozak, Tom Maurstad, Henry O Hare, Michael Saenz, Steve Smith, Richard Steinberg. Kip Welch PHOTOGRAPHER: Ken Ryall By Tom M ounted I've got brown hair I'm a Libra. Size 10 shoes usually feel a little tight, so I always rent size 10 '/2 shoes w hen I go bowling I put at least one quart of oil (30 weight) in my car every other day. I have a Seiko watch that will run for over a year without a single winding I took a spee- dreading course in high school, but I still can’t get all the way through "Moby Dick er tried a McRib Sandwich. I have nev­ These are som e of the fragmented characteris­ tics marking the person I appear to be ending up as. I have countless others, but right now, since society seem s to place an undue em phasis upon it, m y personal appearance warrants som e indi­ vidual attention. My problem is simple, yet com ­ plex. I don't look like Mel Gibson. As a matter of fact, disregarding basic facial elem ents that, for purely functioned reasons, we both have, I bear absolutely no resem blance to him. It all began one day as I w as casually comparing my physi­ cal features with Gibson s. I had a startling real­ ization. I not only don't look the same as Mel, m y appearance is undeniably different from Mr Gibson's. Perhaps owing to these two massive strikes against m e, I have never been mistaken for a dashing, Aussie rogue star But then I never real­ ly cared if that mistake w as m ade before. Now, as a result of the saturation bombing of media, it's clear that the idea is to accentuate the predeterm ined nature of a Mel Gibson 's attrac­ tion. The futility of struggling against something essentially decided by birthright descends on the m asses, accom panied by a sense of loss at b e­ ing forever deprived of Gibson's ruggedly fash­ ionable good looks. Perhaps m y feelings are just the bastard off­ spring of failure — painful mem ories, borne out of m y miscarried attem pts a few years ago to develop the uncompromising sensitivity of the Velveeta-esque Alan Alda For awhile my hopes of becoming the total m an seem ed destined to be forever hinged on whether the thought of starving children reduced me to tears But the belief that a m an m ust first be an emotional he mophiliac before he is truly whole slowly lost for me. support. It w as probably just as well anyway Living in North Dallas, my encounters with starving children were rather limited Thrusting whatever is the day's most favored blue-eyed, dim ple-cheeked look into the social limelight further distorts the already bloated im ­ portance of personal appearance It is the sam e twisted nature, fueling the dehumanizing ntual of romanticizing the superfluous and disregarding the essence, that also fortifies the ritual s d e­ fense. But the problem is m ore than the way all the different Mel Gibsons are so slickly presented, trying to veil the covert attacks on the subcon­ scious. And the problem isn't just the manipula tion o f an entire population for the profits reaped in the cosmetics industry. Anoretic models, after spending hours with m ake-up artists, step under precisely designed lighting. For the next several hours, a profession­ al photographer takes hundreds of photographs, and later chooses the best two or three, carefully airbrushing over any imperfection Photos of these illusory visages reveal the kind of precon­ structed beauty that exists only on film Convinc­ ing w om en and m en that som ehow there is a choice betw een forever failing at something that doesn't exist and forever existing in something they never failed, is little m ore than a cruel, sa­ distic joke. 4 « Jgnages , M onday, fparch 2}, J 9 8 3 information, call 477-0461. "The Asteroid and the Dino­ saur will be show n at 7:30 p.m. in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102 as part of a series of BIOLOGY MOVIES wednesday,23 “TEXAS THROUGH ARTISTS' EYES." a sym posium on the visual arts, will be held in conjunction with the "Images of Texas" exhibition in the Huntington Art Gallery, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. The first session will be from 10 a.m. to noon, the second from 2 to 4 p.m. For more infor­ mation, call 471-7324 Lanford Wilson's Tony Award-win­ ning adult comedy, “FIFTH OF JULY," will be performed at 8 p.m. in the Capitol City Playhouse, 214 W. Fourth St. The show will run through April 2. Also at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday. For m ore information, call 472-2966. Photographs by Tracy Hart will be on display in the Austin Photographic Gallery at Precision Camera, 3004 Guadalupe St. The exhibit, entitled “AUTO EROTICISM,” explores the sensuous side of cars along with other elem ents of Ameri­ can society. The exhibition will run through March 31. For m ore information, call 477-3841. DAN DEL SANTO AND HIS PROFESSORS OF PLEASURE will perform their "world beat" music at Soap Creek Saloon, 1202 S. Con­ gress Ave. For m ore information, call 443-1966. A chilling com edy that m anages to be extraordinarily funny, “DIARY OF A MAD HOUSEWIFE,” directed by Frank Perry, will be show n at 3:50 and 7:45 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. Whisper From Space," a brief history of astronomy, will be show n at 7:30 p.m. as part of the ASTRONOMY FILM SERIES in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. fhunday,24 ESTHER'S FOLLIES' freewheeling season continues with m ore musical com edy fun at 9 p.m. Also at 9 and 11 p.m Friday and 8 and 10 p.m. and midnight Saturday. For more information, call 474-9382. Dance to the fiddles and spoons of DAGUSH. LARSEN AND SUTHERLAND at the Bastrop Opera House in Bastrop. This lyrical journey across a variety of musical landscapes will begin at 8 p.m. "GUN images almanac monday,21 POSTERS OF THE MASTERS, a group of signed and un­ signed, old and new posters of Picasso, Chagall, Dali, Cald- er and more, will be on display through April 18 at the Ruth Borinstein Gallery, 1701 West Ave. For more information, call 472-6943 Registration begins for UT RUNAROUND, a 3.8-mile jog around campus, sponsored by the Texas Un­ ion Recreation Committee. The run will be April 16. For m ore information, call 471-5651. The Department of Music presents a rare opportunity to hear the award-winning NEW ENGLAND CONSERVATORY CONCERT CHOIR AND CHAMBER SINGERS at 8 p.m. in Bates Recital Hall, 25th Street and East Campus Drive For more information, call 471 -1444 Chicano artist MALAQUIAS MONTOYA will speak on the state of Chicano art and the role of the Chica­ no artist in society from noon to 1 30 p.m. in Texas Union Building 4 206. His works will be on display in the Union Gallery. Rock's "excitable boy," WARREN ZEVON. returns to shake Club Foot. 110 E Fourth St. "IMAGES OF TEX­ AS," an exhibit exploring how the myths and realities of Texas have shaped the state, will be on display through April 10 in the Art Building, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard, sponsored by the Archer M. Huntington Gallery. For m ore information, call 471-7324. tuesdoy,22 “BREAKING AWAY," an off-beat com edy about four friends out of high school looking for their future, will be show n at 2, 6 and 10 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater. CinemaTexas will show Orson Welles' classic “CITIZEN KANE" at 7 and 9:15 p.m. in Jester Center Auditorium. Public Access Cable Channel 10's “NUKE NEWS” will air a repeat broadcast of a special which includes an interview with the former God of Hell Fire, ” Arthur Brown, along with a video collage of the English Beat's classic "Stand Down, Margaret ' Showtime is 7 p.m For raw, melodic pow er pop and a guaranteed good time, don't miss THE DESIGN at Liberty Lunch, 405 W Second St For more hit of the week Rock's excitable boy' visits Club Foot tonight W arren Z ev o n s s ta tu s a s LA s m o s t rag g ed ly ro m a n tic p o e t a n d his resu ltin g im a g e a s th e d e te rm in e d ly se lf-d e ­ stru ctiv e artist (th e n e w ro m a n tic is m is b re d m o r e fro m th e fo rm s o f su ic id e th a n o f love) is ironic; th e first to sc o ff at this im a g e s artificiality a n d p r e te n tio u s n e s s w o u ld b e Z e v o n h im se lf But Z ev o n h a s m o re th a n a p ublicity fueled rep carrying him into A ustin M o n d a y for his s h o w at Club Foot, 110 E 1 o u r th St C o n siste n tly a cult artist for th e p se u d o -s u rly , w h ite m id d le class, razo r b la d e a n d m a g n u m c ro w d (it’s m o r e ro m a n tic to b e d o w n a n d stru n g -o u t th a n to w o rry a b o u t p e rtin e n t is s u e s), Z e v o n first g am ed a tte n tio n a s th e w riter o f m m g s o th e r LA m ú s ic o s m a d e into hits His slu m b e rin g so lo c areer, d e s p ite a brilliant first alb u m , b o th e x p lo d e d ai i c re ste d w ith th e o v e rw h e lm in g p o p u larity o f hr s e c o n d re c o rd E xcitable B oy 1 * n ° d . Z e v o n p r e s e n ts h im se lf a s a grow ling c o m b in a tio n telling the tales >f irtist, w e re w o lf a n d h a r d e n e d p a l t e r if a w a s te d p< >et, tales b u stlin g w ith cynic ism a n d electrici­ In his m u sic fro m this ty After a mu< h pu b licized victory ver b o o z e , Z ev o n put o u t a lb u m s w h h, d e s p ite < F arting h r no n a s a m u sic ia n , h a d n o n e ot th e vise eral in ten sity that i-.celerating m a tu ra ’■urged his earlier m a s te rp ie c e H is later re le a se s h a v e also taile i to rival th e c o m m e rc ia l spiccess of E xcitable B oy N ow , sh ru g g in g off th e e n v e lo p in g folklore of his c a reer, Z e v o n rips th ro u g h his so n g s w ith th e kind o f sw a g g e rin g g u sto th at r e d e e m s im p re c isio n , tu rn in g it into an affirm a turn th at le a v e s a u d ie n c e s in sp ired ra th e r th a n u n co n - M r e d If a b le n d o f h a rd e d g e d rock a n d adroit so n g w ritin g uf p e a ls to y o u , th e n y o u sh o u ld b e at C lub Foot M o n d a y rught CRAZY,"Joseph H. Lewis' action-packed testam ent to America's m anias for youth, action, sex and crime, will be show n at 2 and 6 p.m. in the Texas Union Theater "Pre­ lude to Power Magnetism in Space Superconductors' will show at 8 p.m in Painter Hall 4 42. The film is one in a series o f films presented by the SOCIETY OF PHYSICS STUDENTS. friday,25 Internationally known art educator Betty Edwards will present a w orkshop on enhancing artistic creativity and confidence entitled DRAWING ON THE RIGHT SIDE OF THE BRAIN from 7 30 to 9:30 p.m. in Welch Hall Auditori­ um, 24th and Speedway streets. The workshop, sponsored by the Laguna Gloria Art Museum, 3809 W. 35th St.. will also be from 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday. For more information, call the UT Continuing Education office at 471-3121. ACTV presents “ACCESS TO THE CANDIDATES,” a series of live call-in program s featuring G ty Council and mayoral candi­ dates on Public Access Cable Channel 10. For broadcast times, call 478-8600. "THE DAY THE KLAN MARCHED," a short docum entary which chronicles the events of Feb. 19, 1983 in Austin, will be cablecast at 8.-30 p.m. on Public Access Cable Channel 10. For m ore information, call 478- 8600. “GOD BLESS YOU. DAHUNGS.” Leo Lerma's origi­ nal one-act play based on excerpts from Tallulah Bank­ head's autobiography, will be perform ed at 11 p.m. in the Capitol City Playhouse, 214 W. Fourth St. Also at 11 p.m. Saturday. For m ore information, call 472-2966. Joan Mick- lin Silvers “CHILLY SCENES OF WINTER" will be show n though March 31 at the Varsity Theater, 2402 Guadahipg St. For information regarding screening times, call 474- 4351. Polish m im e Andre will perform at 8:30 p.m. in the new HYDE PARK SHOWPLACE, 511 W. 43rd St. Also at 8:30 p.m . Saturday. soturday,26 The Laguna Gloria Art M useum will sponsor the AUSTIN ARCHITECTURAL HISTORICAL WALKING TOUR, a look at architectural styles from the 1850s to t.ie 1930s. For m ore information, call 458-8191. ALVIN CROW AND THE PLEASANT VALLEY BOYS will bring their hom e-grown m usic to Soap Creek Saloon, 1202 S. Congress Ave. For m ore information, call 443-1699. The Ritz, 320 E. Sixth St., will be the setting for the intimate and beautifully complex vocalizing o f FERRON, who will perform at 8:30 p.m. in a fund-raiser for W omenspace. For m ore information, call 479-0054. The SHARIR DANCE COMPANY will perform at 8 p m. in the Performing Arts Center, 23rd Street and East Cam pus Drive. The program will feature a collage by Sharir and a recently com pleted set-piece by David Gordon, a m em ber o f the company. For m ore information, call 471- 1444. The Texas Union Chicano Culture Committee will sponsor a CHICANO STUDENT INVOLVEMENT CON- TERENCE from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Texas Union Infor­ mation Lobby. For m ore information, call 471-5651. Pianist BERNARD FLAVIGNY will perform at 8 p.m. in Bates Recit­ al Hall, 25th Street and East Campus Drive. For m ore infor­ mation, call 471-1444 As part of Dance Repertory The­ ater's Weekend Conservatory program, a new course in STRESS REDUCTION will be offered Saturdays from 10 to 11 a.m. in the Winship Drama Building, 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. For more information, call Sharon Vasquez at 471-7544. sunday,27 Today will be the last day to expenence TOUCH WITH YOUR EYES, FEEL WITH YOUR MIND, an exhibition of works borrowed from Texas collections that illustrate the principles of surface and texture, at the Laguna Gloria Art Museum, 3809 W. 35th St. For m ore information, call 458- 8191 The WEST STREET REPERTORY COMPANY OF NEW YORK will present three original plays: "The Perfect Relationship," "If This Isn't Love" and "My Blue Heaven," written by som e of the nation's most prominent gay play­ wrights. Performances will be at the Capitol City Playhouse, 214 W Fourth St., through March 29. For more informa­ tion. call 441-3678 or 472-2966 m o n d a y , march 2 1 ,1 9 8 3 imaged 5 from the front wd froga pago 1 HANK JA., c and the difficult personal strategies by which we live. The limitations of his obsessions finds Williams Jr. dealing with only a very small topical territory. The end result has been such an onslaught of songs about Hank Williams Sr. and/or Jim Beam that music critic friends claim to have become confused over which one is the father and which the drink. Their dism issals are too glib¡ on the one hand, they deride Williams Jr. as opportunistically exploiting his father and on the other, they judge his work as simply the entertainm ent output o f a m usician rather th an cogent, though som etim es ridiculously facile, philosophical statem ents. LIFE, LIBERTY AND THE SOUTH "I live back in the woods you see/My woman and the kids and the dogs and m e/I got a shotgun, a rifle and a four wheel drive/And a country boy can survive! " — H ank Williams Jr Gradually H ank Williams Jr. h as beco m e m ore overtly o b ­ se ssed in his w ork with trying to confront and understand A m erican society and its contradictions — especially the con holiday 0 q P r e s e n t s V/ flict b etw een the North and South, b etw een the d e m a n d s of urban grow th and the traditions o f rural society, b etw een big governm ent an d local control As Michael Bane n oted in a recent issue o f Esquire while no one w a s looking Hank Junior turned his jaundiced eye on current events, and b e ca m e the m o st overtly pohti cal songw riter in country m usic While w e tend to think o f political songw riters in the Sixties w hining liberal m ock radi cal m ode, he is the strangest beast o f all, a politically conserv ative songw riter wildly popular with young people songs a r e ) ... antiauthoritanan, antiurban and deeply rooted in the southern tradition that nothing, but nothing, is ever free, and that you and you alone carry the responsibility for your ow n actions. ” (His Williams Jr s beliefs are too em otional to fit into expedient political categories He is concerned with m ore than the past versus the future, or liberal v ersu s conservative The m ost basic A m encan values often contradict each other, and the conflict betw een social responsibility and individual liberty se e m s to have b e en written into the Constitution S om etim es Williams Jr. red u ces com plex issues to a level so simplistic as to be m eaningless But at his m ost eloquent, he se e m s d e te r­ m ined to reach so m e kind o f peace, balancing tradition with desire, freedom with responsibility, nature with m ankind and violence with harm o n y His belief is in the heart and soul o f the country and o f country people. It sta n d s as m uch in opposition to the cheap m oralizing o f R eaganesque bigots as it d o e s to kneejerk liber­ als In The Coalition to Ban Coalitions,” a song dending social pressu re groups, he displays his disdain for both e n d s o f the political spectrum : "T hey w ant to get rid o f m y forty fours/And all the R' rated films/If they only knew how m uch w e'd all love/To get rid o f th em " This is not to blindly pro m ote his positions, but rather to explore political and social alternatives suggested outside this country s political m ain stream . Williams Jr. declares I ain't a politician But 1 got view s " As the g overnm ent displays m o re and m ore open contem pt for its people, any stand o f resistance and defiance is w elcom e. In dealing with his father, H ank Williams Jr is both going through a personal exorcism an d redeem ing his father from the priggish country m usic traditionalists w ho once disdained and now deify him. T here is a direct lineage from Hank Wil­ liam s to today's m o re renegade and self-destructively poetic Ol \ ( il( «ANTIC I’ROI ) L C T 1 0 N \ U SIC. COMEDY, DA NX 1 \ \ D I HI INCREDIBLE HOLIDAY 11.1.1 SIONS Ol ANDRÉ KOLE AN AWESOME INSPIRATIONAL RECREATION OF THK MAGNIFICENT EASTER STORY WEOS.. MARCH 23 through TUES., MARCH 29 at the PARAMOUHT THEATER WED THUR FRI 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. SAT 2:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. SUN 2:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m. MON TUES 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Tickets are on sale at the Theater Box Office and all UTTM outlets. AH seats are reserved $4.00 — $6.00 — $8.00. CHARGE TICKETS BY PHONE! CALL 477-6060 Use your VISA or Master Card. For Group Rates Call 472-5470. Experience the excitement and inspiration o f Easter in a new w ay •- images monday. march 21,1983 ñAHfittm 77Jen. rtnaL Jaduon, 1204 West 6th in Pecan Square 476-2291 talents. But by enshrining Williams Sr., the conservative Nashville m usic establishm ent has denied his hum anity and m ad e the m ost conservative and least innovative areas o f country m usic a p p ea r to be his legacy. By celebrating his father as an em otionally com plex off-the-edge-dangler, Wil- liam sjr. is creating a cultural archetype that challenges rather than acquiesces to authority. SUCCESS Ironically, now , w h e n he should be hitting the stride for w hich he has so long aim ed, H ank Williams Jr. is stum bling into the com fortable an d the redundant He h as ju st put out his m ost uninteresting album in p erh ap s a decade, with every cut sounding like a bad lounge b and rip-off o f classic Hank Williams Jr. The m ade-for-TV m ovie biography o f him not only m ad e his life into a cheap m orality tale advocating val­ ues w hich directly conflict with his personal beliefs, but it add ed hum iliation to insult by casting Richard T hom as w ho looks as if he couldn t enjoy drugs if he tried lead Essentially, Williams Jr. s life w a s portrayed as a R ea d ­ er s Digest H ow to be a good C ountry Star" article in the Most distressingly, the video m agazine story on him se e m e d derived from so m e hallucinatory fantasy rather than his life. The sh o w deprived him o f his soul as it portrayed him as a sw eet, happy, m iddle-class type w h o had licked lust, trium phed over drugs, gone m o d era te on booze and, in g e n ­ eral, settled dow n. Sure, these are the standard lies o f net work television, w here heaven on earth is presen ted as a profoundly w arped w orld o f happy h eterosexuals w ho try out different kinds o f detergent for kicks. But there w as som ething especially sad in this, b eca u se these are the very lies that Hank Williams Jr has been confronting, denying and denouncing his w hole life. Bob Dylan once said that "to live outside the law, you m ust be honest Regardless o f his obsessio n s, his diatribes, his so m etim es alm ost com ically c h eap m achism o, Hank Wil­ liam s Jr has spent the last decad e m aking m usic that, at the very least, tries to be h o n est Still, living outside the law is never easy, and so m e tim es rebels get too soul-w eary to c o n ­ tinue the guerrilla w ar for personal freedom and integrity His m ost recent w ork so u n d s like a goodbye note, but m aybe this is just a lull an d soon, crazed an d wild, this defiant vision ary will lyncallly gut-punch us, disdaining custom ary notions about social order as he search es for som ething he finds m ore tangible an d honest Helpful hints and information to help the stu­ dent find a w ay through the Austin housing maze. Read all about it in the Texan's Housing Guide on April 6. SPRING SESSION 5 weeks for $25 O n e h o u r classes m e e t 2 \ a w e e k he g in n in g M a rc h 2 1 and 22 at N.W. Rec­ reation Center I l h 6 0 0 pm . 7601 Hornet M W S ó p m . Hancock Rec­ reation Center M XX 1 0 :IS am, S 50 p m , 0 50 p m and I T h S 50 p m . South llamar XI XX S 50 p m , 6 50 p m . Oak Hill XI XX 6 0 0 p m and Round Rock I lo w C iear” classes to r o ld e r a d u lts at N.W. Hills I 1 11 H 50 am. 4 ^ 0 0 Grover M XX S »S p m and Tarry- town I Call 44 1 -7 3 7 6 tor registration. 1 1 1 6 :0 0 p m i oo p m l h h Hank Williams Jr. is search­ ing for the “heart and soul of the country” while learning to deal with life as the son of a country legend. A POSITIVE SMILE b y Dr. Ralph Branch TMJ SYNDROME Q. W h a t is TMJ syndrome? A. Those letters stand fo r Tem po­ rom a ndibula r Joint Syndrome, a painful disorder that comes when chew ing muscles and the joints o f the |aw refuse to w o rk harm oniously A p o o r bite, ten­ sion, stress and habit patterns can couse clenching o r grinding of teeth This cyclic abuse o f the chew ing muscles can to muscle spasm and pain and ul­ timately, to TMJ Syndrome. O ther causes are accidents that dam age the bones o f the face and jaw Even diseases such as arthritis can play a contributing role leod The fam ily dentist can often treat this problem W et heat a p ­ plications and muscle relaxants help, and intra -oral splints and bite plates can do a w a y with the negative effects o f teeth- clenchmg Counseling can ease the em otional stress that brings on TMJ symptoms, surgery is a last resort in cases o f extrem e dam age Presented a* a public service by Dr. Ralph J. Branch, D.D.S., B.C. 2907 Duval OHke Rhone 472-3633 24 hr. Emergency 443-1161 the "¡tty bitty"" book light, now at Joske's! The world's first serious book lig h t™ lets you read in bed, on a plane, in a car, in a tent . . . any­ where . . . without disturbing those around you! Clips to any hard or soft book, plugs into battery pack or electric o u tle t. C o m p le te w ith 8' c o rd , re ­ placement bulbs. Stationery, all stores. J O S K E 'SA UNIT OF A LL IE D STORES | Q g | f iSoap Creek Saloon 1201 S. Congress 443-1966 TUES: ERWIN O'PRATHER BAND WED: DAN DEL SANYO thursPONTYBONE f r i: MACUMBA LOVE SAT: ALVIN CROW Hdpfui hints and informotion to help the student find a way tfwough the Austin housing maze. Read ail about it in the T e x ­ a n 's Housing Guide on April 6. § J tw tu fiu f 1 sw sK K t3 P3 5 t u % * u w B W T g y i r ^ ~ _ _______________T i É f e M lM £ M W m w n v s i m m Íu 2 £ £ =S iWs*i;CP,YL0W ¿ 7 I „CtC PRICE of 4“ TICKET J <“ f HEINZ HOLLIGERh b f the World’s Premier Oboist yfflpF p j April 15,8:00 p.m. _✓ PAC Concert Hall ^ on sale now for CEC Members P ' J p ? THANK-YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT Take a Friend to Lnnch fo r Free! 2 for 1 Salad Bar $2.25 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m. in The Cactus Cafe Second level Texas Union Offer expires March 25. Please present coupon. PRESENTS CO M ED/ WORKSHOP 302 UU 15th ot Lavoca 47 5 2300 Shouutimes: 8 30 Tues thru Sum Additional Shau. 11 00 Fr. & S o t Amateur Night Mon Ritch Shydner Ron Robertson Susan Healy Next UJeek: Jerry Dize Coming this week! Tonight THE EDGE THE FANATICS Tues W e d Thurs Sat Sun M ICKEY WHITE BAND ALTER EGO D A N A COOPER & DC3 RO CK-A -D IALS W.C. CLARK BUIES REVIEW *Back. Room 2015 E. RIVERSIDE Everyone deserves a little slice of heaven on their birthday. ! . / ■ / / 1 ; ^ S The H a a g e n -D a z s ice cream cake. A tru K perfect gift in 2 0 deliciou s flavors ( all 2 4 h o u rs in adv a n c e f o r y o u r hoice of style and flavor, o r com e by >ur sh o p p e on 24th near G u ad alu p e . ONKERS NEWLY REMODELED with Large Sit-Down Bar New Entrance off of 21 st Street Larger Rooms with Band Stand Live Music Every Thurs 8pm -l 2am Fri 10pm-2am Sat 10pm-2am H A PPY H O U R M-F 3 :30 -7 :0 0 A lso Thurs. n igh t 12 m id n igh t to 2am 2100 Guadalupe 474-2321J Open Noon to 12 a m Mon -S a t 1 p m to 10 p m Sundays 476-5038 Haagen-Dazs Ice C ream S h o p p e The Best Cones. Cakes, Cookies and Shakes 8 images monday, march 21,1983 Texos lifestyles depicted in print show sympathetic smile. And T he Logan Place " says just about all there is to say about rural life in Texas: a long spout crosses the depth of the Logan house to connect the rain gutter with the well behind the back porch; the Logans will take help from w herever it comes, above or below. "Twentieth-Century Prints,” featuring only 49 prints — 22 of them Bonner s — is by no m eans a comprehensive show; instead it seem s intended to be a visual footnote to the “Im­ ages of Texas" exhibit on the gallery’s main floor. The prints don't share the larger exhibit's quality, but they do offer a quick glance at an area of graphic art which has become an increasingly popular m edium for m odem artistic expression in Texas, as elsewhere. KENT OF EUROPE INTERNATIONAL HAIR DESIGN the arts By Michael Saenz Twentieth-Century Prints by Texas Printmakers, 1924- 1941 ; through April 10 in the Archer M. Huntington Gal­ lery mezzanine; 23rd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard. Art Nouveau is a peculiarly appropriate style for capturing Texas spirit, as a glance at much of the state s early 1900s architecture reveals. Strong silhouettes, generous massing outfitted with absurdly delicate decoration, sinuous and ro­ mantic lines calculated to fit within strict frames, a w eakness for the sentimental over the astringent: all are to be found in the mythic Texan frame of mind as much as in the works of the tum-of-the-century art movem ent. Twentieth-Century Prints by Texas Printmakers, 1924- is dominated by Mary Bonner, a printmaker bom in 1941 Louisiana w ho spent much of her career rendering Texas scenes in Art Nouveau motifs. Bonner's m ost eye-catching prints (usually etchings with aquatint) are something of a cross betw een a classical Greek frieze and the em bossing on a colorful cowboy belt. They are framed not by the usual Art Nouveau garlands, but rather by dark bands adorned with bats, snakes, lizards, alligators, vul­ tures and other quintessential^ Texan fauna rendered like cave paintings. Bonner has worked hard to give the paper the visual effect of animal skins stretched taut to receive the ink One of Bonner s recurring them es is the way m en and animals coexist. Horses and bulls, both m ounted and u n ­ mounted, appear frequently in the exhibited prints Le tau- reau au rodeo' (1929) shows a cowpoke riding a bucking bull, the rider's trained horse trails obediently behind with a now empty saddle Ahead of the bull, an escort rider's horse is about to rear up in fright. The print, in short, show s a range of tam eness and wildness, and m en dealing with each Bonner obviously had tantalizing ideas about how to apply European artistic fashion to a new er culture, but her ideas fail to rise above the formulaic. Her renderings in the frieze series (less so in other prints) fail to capture the verve and conflict behind her subject's actions. Perhaps this w as an intentional formal effect; but perhaps it w as an unintended carryover from the gloomy stasis that w as the them e of much Europe­ an Art Nouveau by the 1920s (Bonner spent som e time studying her craft in Paris) The exhibition includes other artists, notably Merritt Mauzey, w hose vigorous, swelling lines capture rural Texas at its most bittersweet Goat Ranch " is an abandoned cabin picturesquely overrun by its nam esakes, two of them climb­ ing up the roof Grand Pa Sweezy," seen from behind and over the shoulder, is plowing up a hill so hopelessly studded with tree stumps, that his determination can only evoke a Can’t Believe Its YOGURT! Frozen Vbgurt Stores WELCOME BACK FROM SPRING BREAK! HALF PRICE SOFTIE one cup or cone Nmall or medium Expire»: April 20, 1980 GUADALUPE & 20TH OUR NEW SPIRAL PERM FOR LONG HAIR FROM GERMANY and NEW MINI PERM FOR MEN AND WOMEN MANICURIST SCULPTURE NAIL ARTIST 5806 WOODROW 454-4556 NEVER A COVER - NEVER A DULL MOMENT SAFE — Nutritionally balanced, the DALLAS DIET” contains 100% of the U.S. RDA of vitamins and minerals with added fiber. It contains all natural ingred­ ients. SIM PLE — A meal can be available a t a moment’s notice. A DALLAS DIET” bar can be slipped into a purse or briefcaae at the start of a busy day. SATISFYING — Delicious. The DALLAS DIET” provides three chewabie meals each day, eliminating hunger pangs. The program consists of taking a DALLAS DIET” bar twice a day, and eating a normal third meal. Pre-packaged supple­ ments are taken with each meal NO CALORIES TO COUNT. NO MEASURING OR MIXING. MONEY BACK GUARANTEE CALL Jane or Bill 472-9420 (Distributor Opportunities Available) 4 0 4 H ig h la n d M a ll Blvd. ATASTE OF BARE SWEETNESS HAPPY HOUR 4.8pm EVERYDAY SUNDAY NIGHT IS AMATEUR NIGHT $175 IN PRIZES OPEN MON-FRI 11:30-2am SAT-SUN 4pm-2am 451-1711 ★ N E W APPLICATIO N S ALW AYS ACCEPTED ★ STEVE LAWRENCE EYDIE GORME IN C O N C E R T 8pm, Monday, April 11 Performing Arts Center Concert Hall The University of Texas at Austin Tickets $18, $16, $14 Tickets on sale at the PAC, Erwin Center, Texas Union and UTTM outlets: Northcross Ice Rink, Paramount Theatre and Sears stores. Charge-a-Ticket, 477-6060. Information, 471-1444. No cameras. No Recorders. Produced by PACE Theatrical Group. monday, march 21,1983 images 9 • • T . w • r . „ i r ’~ - - - EE 315 E. 6th r C U 474-8348 M u s ic & B e e r (¡a rd e n Blv« Monday: ★ KINGPINS ★ Tues: Musician's Night-open mike ★ ★ Happy Hoar w / MAX A THE MAYORS ★ ★ 5-9 P.M. 75* Blatz Beer Wed: Happy Hour w/ Georgie Star & Michael Harkins Joe Don's B rushy Bottom Revue Bring your gang to our place for the h^ppiedt happy hour irftown. v ^ e c te (^ d rin k s ,SRnCf uniqufc appihiers v ced prices. C o íi in, unwind and $njoy Monday thru RkJay from 3 to 7 pm. 0 D epartm ent of M usic College of Fine A rts The U niversity of Texas at A ustin Performance Schedule fo r the w eek of March 21-27 21 ■ M onday Guest A rtists Series New England C onservatory C hoir Lorha C ooke de V aron, C onductor 8 pm , Bates Recital Hall Public $4; studen ts/sen io r citizens $2 23 B W ednesday Faculty A rtists Series Leonard Johnson ,tenor D avid G arvey, piano 8 pm, Bates Recital Hall 24 ■ T hursday N ew M usic Ensemble D an W elcher, D irector 8 pm, Bates Recital Hall 26 B S aturday G uest A rtists Series G eorge Perle, C om poser C ham ber M usic C oncert D onald W right, viola soloist N ancy G arrett, piano soloist Featuring Guest, Faculty and Student A rtists 8 pm , Bates Recital Hall 27 B Sunday Jazz Lab Band & Com bos Richard Lawn and Paul McKee, D irectors 8 pm, Bates Recital Hall A dm ission free except as noted P erform ing A rts Center College of Fine A rts & Texas Union C ultural E ntertainm ent C om m ittee U niversity of Texas at Austin W in n e r o f the Van C lib u rn P ia no C o m p e titio n a n d the A v e ry F is h e r P riz e 1 ‘ A fo rm id a b le p ia n is t w ith a fie rc e in te g rity he is e le g a n c e p e rs o n ifie d . ” — H arold C. S chonberg, The New York Times An evening of S chubert and Chopin fantasies, plus S ch u m a n n ’s "C a rn iv a l” and H aydn’s Sonata in E-flat Major. 8 pm, Sunday, March 27 Performing Arts Center Concert Hall Public: $8, $7, $6, $4 (sales begin 3/7) CEC/PAC optional fee holders: $6, $5, $4, $3 (sales begin 3/1) Tickets at the PAC, Erwin Center, Texas Union and other UTTM outlets: N orthcross Ice Rink, P aram ount Theatre and Sears. Charge-a-Ticket: 477-6060. Inform ation, 471-1444. / 2 9 » GUADALUPE 474-5314 Mon: LEWIS A THE LEGENDS Tubs DU 9A BALL Wed: CALL CUIB Thu: SHAKE RUSSELL Fri: CAUCLUB Sot JUKE JUMPERS A THE PLANETS Sun: KILIfi I BEES The University of Texas at Austin College of Fine Arts Department of Drama S H A R D A N C E I R C O M P A N Y □ ----------------------------- M A R G A R E T J E N K I N S C O M P A N Y D A N C E SDC presents its premiere performance with the celebrated Margaret Jenkins Dance Company from Son Francisco. 8 pm, March 26 Performing Arts Center Concert Hell Public: $8. $7, $6 and $5 Students/Senior Citizens: $1 off Tickets at PAC, Erwin Center, Texas Union and UTTM outlets: Northcross Ice Rink, Paramount Theatre and Sears. Charge-a-Ticket, 477-6060. Information, 471-1444. enetfade 4 7 9 - 8 8 8 8 727 W. 23rd ¡3 Momdav 50C BAR DRINKS 8-12 Tmeedav LADIES NIGHT-FREE DRINKS 810 O pmm to moa at I f arttk $1.15 BAM D BINKS A SI LONGNECKS Wedmemda GREEK NIGHT Gr««fca t« t ia fr«« w ID $1.25 BA R D RINKS A $1 LONGNECKS Thursday LADIES NIGHT • FREE DRINKS 810 Op«a to m i at 10 arttk $1.25 BA R D RINKS A $1 LONGNECKS Friday A Satarda GO FOR IT Smadav Door* O R€i at 8 witfti 25C DRAFT BEER iacraasiag 25< «vary hoar BAR DRINKS $1.25 O pea 7 daya a week til 2 FUNK • PARTY* SOUL BEACH MUSIC Open Wednesday thru Sunday with MANAGERIE A dm ission Specials w /S tu d e n t ID WEDNESDAY DRAFT BEER $2.50 PITCHERS, 50c GLASSES THURSDAY $1 HIGHBALLS 1907 E. RIVERSIDE 443-1695 b Monday "I Love Texas" Drink Special Shiner Bock and Lone Star pitchers $1.95 Tuesday Chicano Night Wednesday B tllydancing Margaritas $ 1.50 Thursday All Beer Pitchers $2.35 Friday Austin All-Stars $1.50 UT $2.50 public Saturday Patio Party THE QUIFFS and The Sporty Plaids in e U n o p y T ie U n a f ai T ent ^ ^ 24 A GukUnpr O n view in the Art Building, 23rd and San Jacinto A C en ten n ial Exhibition S u b n e t / id dluitut/JejceU. Featuring: Omelettes, sandwiches, soups and salads...homemade desserts, freshly ground coffee and breakfast all day long. New hours 7 a.m. till 10 p.m. everyday. R in g Us Up - We D eliver! In tin famous .JJ s Super S ibs 'radition of fine service and great food, we now otter home delivery a!:, r >pm 7 lays a week (Sec our delivery area below ) We' re J J ’s and we’re er • any w a y you lo o k at us. ' jv # & Imtegés of T<^e h s * * * * £ & - iq a a ft*• * A• • * « » « « « s » ü i ¿ | »| „ n n * n n t * „ . * „ i * «A* #f% i Í | i f í‘ I * Í H i j ¡ ; m WELCOMES x o ^ i ---------------------------------------------- P ro d u tk by PACK Concerts and Canada Dry G inger Ala D A R Y L . J O H N H A L L ^ O A T E S O T T O U R O F A M E R I C A Fri.( April 8 *PM s p e c i a l g u e s t ROCKATS $11, $10, $9 - Tickets on sale n ow at The Erw in C en te r & UTTM o utlets Northcross M a ll Ice Rmk, Seors P aram ount Theatre & PAC NO CAMERAS UTTM CHARGE-A-TtCKET Austin 512/477-6060 60c c o n ve n ie n ce charge per ticke t on a ll pho n e orders & at UTTM o utlets THE A T 1 4 M K E Í W I H C E N T E R TICKETS AVAILABLE AT ALL UTTM OUTLETS ^ TIN* Data: Tim* Plac* RegNtrattoft Registration w f begin Monday, March 21 and w i continue until 3 0 minutes before race time U.T. Runaround Apr! 16.1963 Check-in by 8:4Sam. Race begns at 9 0 0 a m Start a t Peose Fountain. Register in person weekdays at the Texas Union Program Office. Room 4.300, or mail your check and signed registration form to: UT Runaround. Texas Union Program Office, PO Box 7338, Universi­ ty of Texas Austin, TX 78712 Register by 5:OOpm on Apr* 1st and you wl* receive your T-shirt on race day: otherwise, you w i be abie to pick up your T-shirt the following week In the Texas Union Program Office. ♦ th e U.T Runaround is a 3.8 mile jog. two times around the set course The race starts at Pease Fountain, located at the intersection of 23rd and San Jacinto Entry Fee 55.00 with UT 10. 56.00 without UT ID Entry fee includes a T-shirt. Please pay by check or money order onfy ■■ENTITY BLANK-- y NAME. ADDRESS CITY____ -ZIP- AGE ON APRIL 16,1983______ MALE FEMALE PHONE NUMBER__ UT STUOENT/FACULTY/STAFF UT ID NUMBER_____________ NOT UT RELATED T-SHIRT SIZE (cxcte one) S M L XL DIVHON: 12-17___ 18-29_____30-39 4 0 8 Over_____ Wheelchair. Enclose a check or money order payable to University of Texas: $5 UT/S6 non-UT Sponsored by the Texas Union Recreation Committee neideocepianoetdiNierwv * » Ttal «nrry * u s. me O v of Audr and orta a i ar»j 9GNATURL. DATE., F 0 1 K V IIIC W O R L D FH R€ Real Food • live Music imported beeri Uline uiith o Cork! MON.FRI. 11 AM-2 AM SAT. & SUN. 2PM-2RM 2911 Son Jacinto 474 0605 N€UJ OUINCR in J L L 1 1 L L L C M IT BAR-B-Q R E S T A U R A N T S HAVE A “ T E X A S S IZ E ” MEAL A T YOUR NEXT PARTY CALL STEVE JONES FOR CATERING INFORMATION 2304 South Congress 444-4379 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 A.M .-9:30 P.M. DOORS OPEN AT 8 :00 W A L L E N Z E V C N COMING APRIL 8: LENE LOVICH COVER ONLY S8 00 sound advice U2 War Island Records U2 has spent m ost of its musical career trying to find itself Beginning with the band's first release, "Boy,'' the m em bers, obviously faced with familiar pains of growing up. articulated their mutual struggle to hang onto the innocence of their youth and to remain untarnished by the anger and hatred that surrounded them in their native Ireland Bono Vox's vocals and the LP's musical arrange­ m ents were simple and uncomplicated but honestly expressive of the band's passion Still, U2 allowed their listeners to create their own interpretations of the band s unansw ered questions. U2's second release. "October, ” almost a year later, found the band looking at religion from an inquisitive, but rather ro­ mantic, angle The result w as a fluffy, sparkling piece of art, with Vox coloring familiar religious passages and words with his airy vocals "October” w as an attem pt by U2 to experiment further with its sound, searching for a solid, but more complex mixture But m ore importantly, it represented the band's attem pt to ex­ pand that sound and to grow as m usi­ cians October, " however, w as a pretty album, with little of the life so vividly cap­ tured on Boy. ” Now with the release of "War, " warm th and life has returned to U2's music, this time with renew ed strength. Drawing from the m ore positive” elem ents of their previous album s, "War exhibits a marked display of maturity Vox's vocals are once again ignited with the fire and fury of Boy," as well as with the control o f October The Edge's razor sharp gui tar playing, along with a pronounced rhythmic beat from drum m er Larry Mul­ len Jr , repeatedly charge Vox s vocals, which breathlessly carry the band from one sequence to the next. Undoubtedly the best cut on the LP, "On New Year's Day” exhibits the band's optimism, while their music and lyrics ring of a new-found hope. The uptem po, dance-oriented rhythms on m any of the songs m anage not to destroy but e n ­ hance the entrancing and soothing effect for which the band is known. While the them e of the LP deals with the attendant sadness and destruction of civil war and unrest in their country — as in songs such as "Sunday Bloody Sunday" and "Like A Song" U2 offers no solutions. Instead, the band dem onstrates a simple faith in humanity, like that which is ex­ pressed in the love betw een two people ("Drowning Man") or in the face of a child. "War" finds U2 emotionally committed to its cause. Band m em bers dem onstrate that they do care and take the chance that there are others who feel as they do. The m em bers of U2 don't preach, nor do they claim to be prophets They have quit ask­ ing questions and have learned to look at life from a realistic point of view. Through War, " the boy has finally grown into a man. — CATHY RAGLAND KATE & ANNA McGAR- RIGLE Love Over And Over Polydor Records A steam ing cup of coffee by her side, she sat by the w ood stove tending the fire, not looking at m e as she talked. I stood gazing out the window, marveling at how deceptively gentle blizzards look in the evening, the graceful sweep and sway of the snow belying both the storm 's danger and force. Half-transfixed by the sight, I still listened closely to her, straining to m ake sure I caught every word She spoke in low tones, imparting secrets to the fire — whispering about the husband she no longer loved, about her children w ho were her life, about her new lover w ho cultivated areas she feared bar­ ren. There is m ore to the story than that and m ore to the evening, but small histo­ ries are better served by m em ory than language. When I hear Kate and Anna McGarrigle s alm ost ethereally lovely m u­ sic, I think of that evening, of the north, of snow, of love. For it is about such times, tainted with both hope and loss, that the Canadian McGarrigle sisters sing their sparsely elegant melodies. Once, songs such as “Heart Like A Wheel” and "Kiss and Say Goodbye" (featured on 1976's "Kate and Anna McGarrigle,” their brilliant debut album) found the sisters journeying straight into the heart of rom ance, boasting an almost naive bravado as they neither hesitated nor looked back. Yet, innocence simply proved to be the w om b of experience and now, on their fifth album, "Love Over And Over," they have m oved beyond the fields of the simple heart and back into themselves. Instead of hopeless despair at the fra­ gilities of hum an commitment, however, this album (which they spent two and a half years co-producing with their sister Jane) is filled with a sense of reaffirma­ tion The joys of soaring too close to the sun, the McGarrigles have com e to insist, m ore than com pensate for the bruises that follow the inevitable fall, especially for those w ho have com e to expect it. The McGarrigles m anage to render the autobiographical reminiscences at the heart of these songs with an enthusiasm and aw kw ardness that, on first listenings, m ay seem amateurish. But their lyrical and stylistic clum siness serves to texture their work with an atm osphere of convic­ tion and im bue it with an alm ost eerie maturity of vision and tone. Slickness breeds formulas, not passion. The very tenuousness of the transitions in a song like “Love Over and Over” ex­ pand it from pop sloganeering into a poetically resonant personal statement. They almost whimsically acknowledge the past: "You asked me how 1 feel/I said my heart was like a wheel." Then, in­ stead of simply star-boasting, they abruptly challenge both their lovers and their own mythification of love, demand­ ing "Why don't you listen to it sometime. ” There is a precise abandon to the McGarrigle sisters' earnestness, one which allows for passion and for growth, for lovers present and lovers left, for ro­ mance and for solitude. They deny the simplicities of monogamous romantic perfection that most pop songs insist are the birthright of us all. Instead, the McGarrigle sisters render careless histo­ ries of mundane wars. The kind of wars that can neither be won nor lost, wars fought with silences, advanced by ges­ tures, waged near windows, next to stoves and during storms. — LOUIS BLACK PARDNERS W J ' ‘ l i s “ A Country- Western Disco p iR O N E R g LADIES SPECIAL FREE BAR DRINKS Mon. 7-9pm 500 BAR DRINKS FOR ALL LADIES 2:00pm till 2:00am Mon. thru Thur. G A R D N E R S ^ = — 3 FOR 1 PRICE H ap p y Hour 2-7pm a n d a ll d a y S unday P A R T N E R S 500 BLOODY MART’S Sat. a n d Sun. til 2:00pm G A R D N E R S « i — % ' — $1.00 MARGARITAS S u n d ay 12 noon-2am I GARDNERS %1 1 % . S tiv ln g Lunch a n d D inner G reat 8 oz. P a rd n er Burger Best H am S an d w ich in Austin $1.00 9ARONERQ W eekend A fter Hour*: 2 a m -4 a m F riday a n d S aturday PARDNERS s s a j W V B ^ a Located in tho Riverside Plasa Shopping Contor noar M.K.B. 2237 E. Riverside Dr. (East otIH-35) Phone 443-5011 FOR THOSE ABOUT TO ROCK... f 9 L éW A jñ rjrjfM LIVE ROCK 12173 BURNET RD. TOMORROW NIGHT HEAD EAST WEDNESDAY NO COVER 50' BEER, 75' DRINKS TIL MIDNIGHT $1.00 DRINKS 12-2 A.M. id* WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDA Y w t / v R i m m tffia R tifflk . M O N D A Y N IG H T THE ULTIMATE LADIES NIGHT FEATURING AN ALL MALE BURLESQUE REVIEW LADIES: NO COVER DRINK SPECIALS MEN INVITED ' H *&gjj A F r e R . t f ^ ^ N ^ v v i m i r ii 2402 G U AD ALU PE 474-4351 upstairs FRUITS OF PASSION S ta rrin g KLAUS K IN S K I 7 : 15, 9:15 downstair* MARCH 9-APRIL 2 • 8pm it. $6 Wed Thuf 55 • Fn L o o t u r m a a s T a llu la h B o n k b o a tí " G O D BLISS Y O U D AH LIN G S" An h o u r w ith fh a o u t i p o k o n d iv a of sta g * a n d K roon 8 p.m . • MARCH 1 3 ,1 4 1 3 . J 3 1 1 p m MARCH 18 , 1 9 ,2 5 .2 6 • S3 -RESERVATIONS- 472-2966 CAPITOL CITY P LA YH O U S E 21 4 West Fourth Street 7 :0 0, 9 :3 0 ¿nmc THEATRES TIMES SHOW N FOR TODA Y ONL Y \ r f r 4K rs r \ S O U U M O N S A T t w i l i t e p r i c e s M m S U N D A Y A N D H O LID A Y S l i m i t e d t o s e a t i n g A L L S H O W S B E F O R E 6 :0 0 PM 1 » l S H O W O N L Y c j k n n '* mW \ Mm UMailJUMiiakJnakii W T a a a A , A Y n o h t h c r o s s m a l l ‘*D4 3 1 4 r lH D fR S O N lB O B H i[r Q E. T. [r ] (1:30-5:30/$2.00)-7:45-9:45 P G l (1:45-4:45/$2.00)-7:00-9:15 SWORD iw STONE (l:4 5 -5 :0 0/$ 2 .00 )-7:15-9:30 g j j 48 HRS. [ jjj (2:00-5:45/$2.00)-7:45-9:45 TEN TO MIDNIGHT (1:30-5:15/$2.00)-7:30-9:30 j j g THE STING II p Q (2:00-5:00/$2.00)-7:00-9:00 1 '5oo^ r HT 1 48 HRS. E. T. (5:15/$2.00)-7:30-9:45 p Q (5:00/$2.00)-7:15-9:30 SWORD THE STONE IC Y STICKS G (5:00/$2.00)-7:15-9:30 |[r ) (5:30/$2.00)-7:30-9:45 R - T .T | l l I *5 3 ’ e 6 4 1 2300 H A N C O C K OH MARGOT K ID D ER T f ? E H C H C O A T ROBERT H A Y E S P i . IS 30/52.50 -7:30-9.30 \ SO U T H W O O D ! $ 4 j 0 0 ALL M I S E X C L U D I N G M I C FIRST BLOOD ; H 4 4 2 - 2 3 3 :. i « j » i , i « w w i i O V lI S 3 4 0 0 • N IG H T S H O W 3 ■ _______................] o r n e n •#. a g i m t l e m a m I 7 30 9.4? I'D 7:00-9:30 ir S IN THE TEXAN, OF COURSE! What's to be covered in Birdwcrtching 301.5A? You could call the instructor. O r you could wait until Wednesday, April 20, and read the Texan's OF COURSE! Official listing of courts descriptions for Fall, 1983 G E N E R A L C I N E M A T H E A T R E S $2.00 OANDHI M OMTHtUSATAUSHOMNGSKFOtf mpetition and adaptation I he play begins with exchanges betw een a retired couple lounging on the beach and contem plating their future Charlie is ready to en g ag e in several y e a r s o f long sought rest Nan cy feisty and gregarious, thinks they've earn ed a chance to really live and she decries Charlie's urge to the crib." lie back dow n in Albee h a s placed Nancy and Charlie in a clevet setting In general, e x p an se im plies o p e n -en d e d n ess, seaside expanse, in particular, a d d s connotations o f historic depth and m ystery w hat Patti Sm ith has sung about as the sea o f possibili ty Against this backdrop, Albee sets in m otion a dialogue on h u m a n pu rp o sefu ln ess and fulfillment Is there life after ro m a n e e 7 Is there life after effort7 Can o n e float with the tide, or m u st o n e sw im u p stre am to affirm o n e 's w orth? Set on the b order b etw een land and sea, the safe and the unfathom able, N ancy and Charlie dispute. In their case, though the unfathom able decides to speak up Leslie and Sarah co m e to them Leslie and Sarah are tw o sea lizards w ho find them selves in a m irror im age o f Charlie and N ancy s d ilem m a they have ju st decided to leave the sea to take the next step in evolution The e n co u n ter betw een the tw o couples is filled with stranger-in -a-strange-land hum or, heavily spiced with sexual in nuendo The play s early m o m e n ts, especially, are delight­ ful But later dialog, w here Sarah an d Leslie ask N ancy and Charlie's advice, is disappointing O ne w ould expect Nancy and Charlie's a n sw ers about p u rp o se and m eaning to take on a d d ed d epth w hen the q uestions are p o sed by creatures b e ­ yond the h u m a n pale They do not Nancy and Charlie both se e m sure that progress and struggle are unexpendable parts o f the w ay things are, but neither explains w hy O ne might Seascape' cast members Scooter Cheatham (I), Scottie Wilkison, John Meadows and Loyce Bates suspect Albee o f heavy irony here but his script never gives the lizards a serious parry to the h u m a n s ' argum ents. T he acting in the Z achary Scott T heatre C enter's production o f S e a sc ap e ' is u neven Scottie Wilkison s portrayal o f N an­ cy is the m o st consistent perform ance, although she is s o m e ­ tim es overdram atic. W hat Jo h n M eadow s' Charlie lacks in verbal n u a n ce is m uch c o m p e n sa te d for by his true-to-char- acter sloped shoulders, self-im portant walk and furrowing brow Scooter C heatham and Loyce Bates as Leslie and S ar­ ah also lack finely sh a d e d verbal delivery but do excellent jo b s o f m oving a bout the stage and a ssum ing the naive but intelligent ex p ressio n s o f inquisitive sea creatures Particularly successful are the co stu m es, sets and sou n d effects Charlie and Sarah are d re sse d in garb that faultlessly co n n o te s unp reten tio u s success. And the c o stu m e s for Leslie a n d Sarah are a sm all coup. Convincing w ithout trying to be literal, am u sin g in a w ay analogous to the play s’ w ry hum or, they are b etter than the c o stu m e s designed for the play's 1975 run o n B roadw ay. The set is spare, using netting to sim ulate beach sand. Charlie an d S arah 's picnic b asket is filled with the kind o f everyday tnnkets that m ake on e feel intim ate with its ow ners: flatware, plastic plates, a Jo h n Updike paperback — artifacts that b eco m e, th roughout the course o f the play, increasingly h u m a n an d endearing. T here is an irreducible charm to theater in the round p e r­ form ed before a sm all audience, it adm its e n ough informality to let the au dience like the actors for them selves. It leaves the aud ien ce m o re suggestible to the stag e's effect. After S atur­ d ay night's presentation o f "S eascap e," the audience w as laughing, thinking out loud and acting light-heartedly civil. It is rare th ea ter ind eed that can do m ore The first step of the rest of your LIFE. Why should you think about life insurance now, when you 're still young? Because, every year that you wait, it costs more to start you r financial planning. That's why. Let you r F idelty Union Life associate show you the college plan purchased by more seniors than any other. GRANT FOSTER GRANT FOSTER & ASSOCIATES, INC. 1801 Lavaca Suite 105 Fidelity UnbnLife 477-3757 Gaynell Eppler Gary Foster Marlain Bailey M argaret Myers Tom Kenyon Wendell Vibrock M argaret DeBarbrie Chuck Burr M argaret G n a Roger Noak David Buchanan Clevenger Peters Pat Molina Jack Box M ary Beth Vibrock Bill Melton Chuck Simm mondav. march 21,1983 , - 5 S 1 . 1 e ’ J . i ; ’ images 21 - Í red to reel 'High Road to Chino': low-budget imitation of 'Raiders' By James Mlchaal Kozak “High lo a d to China"; directed by Brian G. Hatton; with Tom Selleck, Bess Armstrong and Robert Motley; at the Mann Westgatc and Capital Plasa theaters. Rating: * V i When producer George Lucas was casting about for som e­ one to play Indiana Jones in "Raiders of the Lost Ark," his first choice for the role was a big, good-looking, little-known actor named Tom Selleck. Selleck, though, was already committed to the new television series "Magnum P.l.," and the role eventually went to Harrison Ford, who became something of a box office deity because of it. If thoughts o f lost opportunity festered in Selleck s mind, they must have set off smoke alarms in the leeching, vacu- um-like imaginations that dwell in Hollywood Selleck was quickly cast as the unshaven hero of "High Road to China, " a romantic action/adventure yam set, like "Raiders, comers of the world between the world wars. in exotic The plot, like “Raiders'," deals with a quest and a race against time. Robert Morley schem es to have business part­ ner Wilford Brimley declared dead so he can inherit Brimley s half of their company. Brimley's daughter, Bess Armstrong, has 12 days to find her father before the courts declare him dead and award her inheritance to Morley. Since her father was last seen in the company of the primitive Wazin tribes­ men of Afghanistan, she must enlist the aid of ne 'er-do-weil flight instructor Selleck, who has the only available planes in Istanbul. The rest of the film details their efforts to follow Brimley's elusive trail through Asia and the Middle East. All this sounds as if it might make for som e great boy book-style adventure, but "High Road” is, emphatically, no Raiders.” Instead of "Raiders' " high-speed extravaganza of perilous dangers and hair breadth escapes, we re supplied with only a handful of action sequences that are, at best, sporadic and uninspired There's an unexciting aerial dogfight between Selleck and the film s obligatory Teutonic villain, a fairly silly escape from the Wazins, even a scaled-down battle with a tribe of Manchurian thugs, but virtually none of this proves very involving What lies between the action sequences is even less inspir ing. The characters in this movie slalom through som e of the most banal chit-chat ever to find its way to the screen outside of a Sun International picture The actors get to spout exciting lines like "What's a dam e like you want to go there for?” and You were pretty good back there, ace1” The scads of super­ fluous dialogue in this film retard the pace intolerably To make matters worse, all the characters in this film are cripplingly one-dimensional. When we first m eet Selleck s O'Malley, he s staggering drunkenly down an alley; a m om ent later som e guy lets him have it in the chops and bellows, "O'Malley, stay away from my wife!” There's such a concerted effort to portray O'Malley as a big, colorful lug, there's virtually no attention paid to any other aspect of his persona. However, the big revelation of the movie is that America 's favorite piece of hum an sirloin probably could carry a movie if only given half a chance to do so. Selleck isn 't given much to work with, but he does bring off som e great comic m om ents, like w hen he scream s in anguish at a smoking m ass that used to be his plane, or w hen he reacts incredu lously to the ravings of Armstrong 's war happy dad His cries are at once funny and sincere, and his smirks reveal a great sense of timing. ( J/em A'»1 cV \ ,V v W 10* c*> software & (¿tiny 1 Available N ow For The TRS-80 Color Computer MKk r 'Trenchcoat': experience in colorful humor, intrigue By Lori H ann usch "Trenchcoat"; directed by Michael Tuchner; with Margot Kidder and Robert Hays; at the Mann W estgate and Americana theaters. Rating: *** While Trenchcoat is not a deeply moving, mtellectu.il movie, it is an excellent light hearted comedy This is a movie to be expenenced through the funny bone, not the intellect. Trenchcoat chronicles the adventures of a mystery wnter w ho goes to Malta to find a fresh idea for a story than she bargained for and ends up finding more Margot Kidder gives an outstanding perform ance as Mickey Raymond, the mystery-seeking writer Mickey is a complicated character She sees herself as worldly and experienced, but she is actually quite naive Kidder brings out both the pompous and innocent sides o f Mickey's charac­ ter with seeming ease She delivers her sarcastic gibes with bite and herjokes with the nght amount o f emphasis Mickey s ongoing battle with Malta s police in ­ spector regarding the proper crime solving tech­ niques supplies some o f the film s most hilarious moments and brings out Mickey s egotistical side Although this theme recurs several times dunng the movie, Kidder manages to keep each scene interesting Robert Hays, o f Airplane fame, plays Terry Leonard, Kidder's romantic interest While Hays has yet to show he can handle a role with a great deal o f depth, his portrayal o f Leonard is his best effort so far In Trenchcoat" Hays must do more than deliver one-liners; he is also required to act Dunng the course o f the movie, his char­ acter evolves from a fast-talking man-on-the make to a romantic hero, with several stages in between. Hays manages to make each change without losing credibility, but Leonard never really comes to life The audience is unable to forget that Hays is acting a part rather than creating a character Hays is ultimately unable to elicit sympathy from the audience for his cardboard characters in the way Kidder can for Mickey The funniest person in the picture, however, is Luciano Crovato, who steals two scenes with his portrayal o f a crazy taxi driver His acting ability and sense o f comic timing make both scenes, the only two he plays in, memorable The audi­ ence can easily find hum or in Crovato's charac­ ter; almost everyone has had experiences with a similar hell-bent cabbie Trenchcoat was filmed on location in Malta, which lends believability to the film, a quality sometimes lacking in the plot. The Maltese na­ tives and the colorful landmarks add the proper touch o f the exotic and the imaginative The film has a yellowish tint and a starkness characteristic o f cheap detective movies But "Trenchcoat" is much more than a cheap detec­ tive movie The twists and turns o f the fast- paced plot and the light-hearted romanticism are both refreshing and thoroughly entertaining. VHS VIDEO DISC Amityville II An Officer & A Gentleman Aerobicise An Officer & A Gentleman C. > r13 Annie Blade Runner Honkeytonk M an Playboy Vol. II Vice Squad Young Doctors In Love Annie Animal House Arthur Mash Tron Complete Rental By the day, week or month Expires 3/ 31/83 for the Price of One w /coupon w/Student I.D. C=3 E. 53rd St. North Loop 204 E. 53rd 452-1926 ALPINE VIDEO INC. ALPINE VIDEO INC. Margot Kidder and Robert Hays are held captive in ‘Trenchcoat.’ ANNIVERSARY BOOK SALE MARCH 21-26 LARGE SELECTION GLOBES ART BOOKS DICTIONARIES BEST SELLER LIST COMPUTER BOOKS ALL OTHER BOOKS 50% OFF 40% OFF 40% OFF 35% OFF 35% OFF 35% OFF 21% OFF On Wednesday March 23, Kurth Sprague will autograph copies of the book A JOY PROPOSED poems by T. H. White which he edited. Join Kurth Wednesday from 4:00-5:30 pm at our bookstore on Guadalupe. Bh* GARNER SMITH s5k s t o r e 2425-A EXPOSITION (TARRYTOWN) 476-8336 m 2116 GUADALUPE (ON THE DRAG) 477-9725 monday, march 21,1983 images 23 daytime television KfcOO 1 K T W (A u s tin ) (55 CBN O KTBC ( A u s tin ) 1 5 ESPN (Sp o rts) © GALA VISION 9 KWTX (W a c o ) ® K L R U (A u s tin 23¡ WTBS A tla n ta 9 KSAT ( S a n A n to n io ) © C N N I N e w s ) 42 HBO 9 KLRU ( A u s tin ! @ CINEM A X 9 KVUE ( A u s tin ) ® )W G N (C h ic a g o ) 9 K T W ( A u s tm ) © U S A 2 4 im age s m onday, m arch 21, 1983 © AG AINST THE O D D S (THU) ® BULLSEYE © M O V IE (MON-WED) ® THE UNW ANTED (FRI) © SC O O B Y DOO (MON-THU) ® INSTRUCTIONAL S E R IE S (MON) ® SPO RT SW O M A N (R) (WED) © L E A V E IT TO B EAVER ® G YM N A ST IC S (MON) 3:35 3:45 4:00 O LITTLE H O USE ON THE PRAIRIE O G O OD TIMES O B J / LOBO © NATIONAL G EOG RAPHIC SPE C IA L (TUE) M ISU N D ERSTO O D M O N ST ER S (WED) o ® C ARO L BURNETT AND FRIENDS ® M ISTER RO G ERS (R) 9 ANDY GRIFFITH 9 9 ® LA VERN E & SH IRLEY 6 CO M PA N Y 9 , 9 ® HAPPY D AYS AGAIN THE ADVEN TURES OF BLA C K BEAUTY CHAIN REACTION XETU © EL NINO DE PAPEL THE M U PPETS (MON-THU) NEW SW ATCH PO CKET BILLIARDS (R) (WED) TEEN SPO R T SS C E N E (THU) 9 ® © © ® © THE BRADY BUNCH 4:05 4:30 0 42' © o A A A Foxfire" ( 1955) Jane Russell, Jeff Chandler 42 A A Kill And Kill Again" (1981) James Ryan. Annelme Kriel 14 A A A A Forbidden Games (1952) Brigitte Fossey, Georges Poujouly 14 A A A Ticket To Heaven (1981) Nick Mancuso, Saul Rubinek O O CD ® QUINCY (42! MOVIE AAV? "Cheech And Chong's Nice Dreams" (1981) Richard Cheech" Marin, Thomas Chong. CD CD CD © DYNASTY © MOVIE "El M onstruo Esta Vivo” (No Date) John Ryan, Sharon Farrell. 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PRIME TIME NEWS INSIDE THE USFL (D (D i ® i QD ® © I © I ® BUSINESS REPORT MISL SOCCER DANCIN’ DAYS 11:15 © MOVIE A * * "An American W erewolf In London” (1981) David Naughton, Jenny Agutter O O CD ® LATE NIGHT WITH DAVID LETTERMAN CD ® A VIEW FROM THE STANDPIPE: JOHN FALTER’S WORLD CD © STAR TREK (17! MEN'S GYMNASTICS (S ) JACK BENNY @ MOVIE A A A "Virginia C ity” (1940) Errol Flynn, Miriam Hopkins. © MONEYLINE UPDATE 11:30 11:50 ® MOVIE A A "The Magician Of Lublin" (1979) Alan Arkin, Louise Fletcher. 7:30 805 9:00 11:00 12:05 1:30 3:30 5:00 5:30 6:05 6:30 6:35 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 8‘50 9:00 9:05 9:30 10:00 10:05 10:30 10:35 11:00 G BARETTA (B ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE d$ I MARRIED JOAN CB © UNA LIMOSNA DE AMOR © PE O P LE NOW 12:10 Q © MOVIE AAV? "Go West. Young Girl” (1977) Karen Valentine, Sandra Will. O O CD ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT CB t h e l a s t w o r d m MY LITTLE MARGIE i l l MOVIE "Los Dos Hermanos” (No Date) Jorge Rivero, Nadia Milton. 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GOVERNOR’S REPORT ® ® ® (D TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT ® PETER GRIMES 25 700 CLUB GD NCAA TONIGHT I CD IT TAKES TWO O O f f i ® CHEER8 ® e ® ( ^ ^ H O MOVIE "Lagrimas De Mi Barrio" (No Date) Cornelio Reyna. Ana Martin. CB 3D VANESSA ® COLLEGE BASKETBALL Q O S ® NBC NEWS OVERNIGHT © MOVIE A A "Coach” (1978) Cathy Lee Crosby, Michael Blehn. 0 THE LAST WORD © NBA BASKETBALL 25 MY LITTLE MARGIE @ MOVIE “Arthur" (1981) Dudley Moore, Liza Minelli. 0 © CHIQUILLADAS ® COLLEGE BASKETBALL 12:40 @ MOVIE A “Hercules And The Tyrants Of Babylon” (1964) Rock Stevens, Heiga Line. 12:45 © MOVIE AA'/i “The American Success Company" (1979) Jeff Bridges, Ned Beatty. 3 4 0 3:30 4:30 *3 0 EVENING 040 MOVIE A A A "The Boys In Company C" (1978) Andrew Stevens. Stan *0 0 8:30 *0 0 *20 *3 0 D A SPECIAL EDOIE O O e ® HHX 8TREET BLUES O ® ® SNEAK PREVIEWS 000® 20/20 MTT S® 24 HORAS Shaw. ® NEWS © FREEMAN REPORTE ® NEWS ® (D WORLD WARI © NBA BASKETBALL 25 STAR TIME 1*00 O O O O ® O O O ® 0 ® N E W 8 © O N LOCATION 8® DICKCAVETT (R) UN TREN PARA ESTAMBUL 1*30 I ® TONIGHT l NCAA BA8KETBALL ) ALL IN THE FAMILY DOCTOR WHO I ® ABC NEWS MQHTUNE ner. ® M*A*8*H 25 ANOTHER UFE ® CHARLIE’S ANGELS © C R O 88FIRE ® SPORT8CENTER ® NCAA BASKETBALL ® UFE ON EARTH MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE § 11:00 MOVIE A A “The Bedford Incident” (1965) Richard Wldmark, Sidney Poi- 0 CHARLIE’S ANGELS 0 ® UE DETECTOR 25 BURNS AND ALLEN © MOVIE "La Ilegal" (No Date) Lucia Mendez, Pedro Armendariz Jr © NEWSK3HT 11:10 ® MOVIE A Vi “Confessions Of A Driving Instructor" (1977) Robin Askwith, Anthony Booth. O O 83 ® l a t e n ig h t w it h d a v id l e t t e r m a n © FIVE AMERICAN GUNS 0 ® I SPY 11:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:05 2:30 3.-00 3:30 3:40 4:00 4:20 4:30 4:50 O NEWS 25 BACHELOR FATHER 0 © NO EMPUJEN © SPORTS UPDATE O O ® © ® NEWS O CBS NEW8 NIQHTWATCH ® MARY TYLER MOORE 25 UFE OF RILEY 0 © NOCHE DE GALA © CROSSFIRE O ® C 88 NEWS NIQHTWATCH 25700 CLUB ® INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS © P R IM E TIME NEWS MOVIE A A "Texas Lady" (1956) Claudette Colbert, Barry Sullivan. © MANANA SERA OTRO DIA i 8 TOM COTTLE: UP CLOSE SPORTSCENTER © NBA BASKETBALL ® MOVIE A A Vi "Lady Liberty" (1972) Sophia Loren. William Devane © FREEMAN REPORTS ® COLLEGE BASKETBALL 3:55 5?) MOVIE A A * "The Boys In Company C" (1978) Andrew Stevens, Stan Shaw 25 ROSS BAGLEY © ON LOCATION 0 © SOLEDAD © SPORTS © WINNERS 25 ANOTHER LIFE 0 © 24 HORAS 35 MONEYLINE © WORLD AT LARGE FIGURE ITOUT ■ E X E R C IS E CLASSES FOR MEN & WOMEN I THE AOVENTUREB OP BLACK BEAUTY I O 0MQUUA0A8 I M O V AAA "Guys And Oois" (1955) Frank Sinatra. Jew Simmons. O ® MOVIE "Narda O El Varano" (No Date) Enrique Alvarez Felix, Amadee Chabot. ® SOAP © SPORTS TOMGHT © M O V IE A * A Vi "Heartland" (1981) Rip Tom, Conchata Ferrell. 2:20 © M O V IE A A A "The Red Badge Of Courage" (1951) Audie Murphy, Bill Maul­ din. IO 0 (D 0 0 ® NEWS IH M IGDBUMNE88 REPORT IM M L Y P B A I ® UTTIE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE I RADI01980 IAGAMST THE 0006 )0BJAMEVMR l(D SOLEDAD I BARNEY MIXER *0 6 *00 ■ OOLLBBE BASKETBALL H O PORTRAIT OP AMERICA B B u e o e t b c t o r ■ PBOPLE’S c o u r t ■ ■ Ifii® f l ? ® T HE JEPFEWBOH8 B piburebkai^ ^ ^ ^ h ÍI ITM B BPJtf. MAGAZNE M*A*B*H . / I K ) SPORTS TODAY (D SHEENA EASTON: ACT I PX 740 ■ B ® CONDO I NBA BASKETBALL UNPLANNED PREGNANCY! You Have More Than One Choice I Calll Call 1-800-292.5713 (Toll-Free) ( Professional Confidential Counseling E E JXIXE!]!rr|,Tr1^^ Buckner Counseling Services WOMENS CEFELEAL CENTER F R E E I I E I N A M > T E S T S C C U N S E T I N C ( 1 1 1 1 C C N T R C L IN E C R A iA T N N LOCAL R E F E R R A L S l/C -O N / * , 2 4 C4 R IC C R A N R E 3 C L C C T S H I S I - | I ( A M I I S 2 8 images monday, march 21. 1983 CA RD-CA RRY IN G i LOVER?* 5th A n n u a l G ro v e lin g in G ra titu d e to C o n su m e rs a n d L o v ers o f F ro g s B ash P r iv a te C e lla r C lu b 709 E ast 6th St. Friday, A pril 1 8PM until 2AM Live Music - S nacks - Free Keg - Pay B ar — INVITATIO N ONLY — Gold & S ilver C ard s - F ree with one G uest White C ard s -1.00 for each sig n atu re m issing 5.00 for G uest JEREMIAH’S RIO GRANDE MON-SAT 10-7PM 477-7202 HEINE ME LENE KUPERMAN © © UNA UM 08NA DE AMOR © PEO PLENO W ® PICK THE PROS (R) Q ROCK N' ROLL TONIGHT 0 THE LAST WORD 35 MY LITTLE MARGIE ® MOVIE "Los Pajaros De Baden Baden" (No Date) Catherine Spaak, Freder­ ic De Pasquaie. © © C H A R Y T IN © K U N G FU ® COLLEGE BASKETBALL O f f i ® WRESTLING O NBC NEW8 OVERNIGHT 35 BACHELOR FATHER © SPORTS UPDATE © B LO N D IE O ® NEWS 9 MOVIE AA' /i "A Girl Named Tamiko” (1963) Laurence Harvey, France Muyen. 0 S O L» GOLD 35 UFE OF RILEY f f i © SIN PRESENTA © TW ILIG H T ZONE © C R 088F IR E 0 8 C T V NETWORK O N E W S f f i ® NBC NEW8 OVERNIGHT © NIGHT FLIGHT 35 700 CLUB ©INOEPENOENT NETWORK NEWS © P R IM E TIME NEWS 2:10 ® MOVIE A A "Alex In Wonderland” (1970) Donald Sutherland, Eden Burstyn 2 *0 © MOVIE AA'A "Escape From New York" (1981) Kurt Rusaell, Adrienne Bar- beau. 0 MARY TYLER MOORE 9 EL CIRCO DE LA8 GAS © © MANANA SERA OTRO DIA ® MOVIE A A "The Naked Street" (1955) Anthony Quinn, Anne Bancroft. ® SPORTSCENTER f f i ® NEWS © FREEMAN REPORTS ® COLLEGE BASKETBALL O N E W S 35 R 08S BAGLEY 9 MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ©STRIPPERS í i © SOLEDAD ® MOVIE A A A "Clash Of The Titans” (1981) Harry Hamlin, Laurence Olivier. © SP O R TS O MOVIE A A "Outrage” (1973) Robert Culp, Marlyn Mason. © © 2 4 HORAS ® MOVIE A A "Bowery Buckaroos" (1947) Huntz Hall, Leo Gorcey. © MONEYLINE 9 WORLD AT LARGE 12:30 1*0 1 *0 1:30 2 *0 2 *0 3 * 0 3:30 3:46 4 * 0 4 *0 4:45 8:00 6:30 9:00 9:30 9:35 9:40 10*0 10:30 10:35 frídav television DAYTIME MOVIES © © SIN PRESENTA O O © ® KNIGHT RIDER O i G D f D DALLAS 0 ® TEXAS REPORT 0 © (D THE RENEGADES ® AILEY DANCES 35 700 CLUB (D NCAA TONIGHT 0 ® ENTERPRISE 25 EL BIEN AMADO © © V A N E S S A © O O O COUPLE CD COLLEGE BASKETBALL © * * * The Great Muppet C aper" (1981) Charles Grodln, Diana Rigg ® A * * "Clash Of The Titans" (1981) Harry Hamlin, Laurence Olivier 35 * * "P rivate Buckaroo" (1942) Andrews Sisters, Joe E. Lewis, ¡2} * A "A Kiss In The D ark" (1949) David Niven, Jane Wyman. 9:00 14) A A A A "M oscow Doesn't Believe In Tears" (1980) Vera Alentova, Alexei Batalov ® * * A "The Ghost Breakers" (1940) Bob Hope, Paulette Goddard. (4} A A Vi " I Ought To Be In Pictures" (1982) Walter Matthau. Ann-M argret. ¡35 A * A "B illy L iar" (1963) Tom Courtenay, Julie Christie. 11:30 (5® a a a v , "The Man Who Would Be K ing " (1975) Sean Connery, Michael Caine 2 J A A Vi "Doom sday Flight” (1966) Jack Lord, Van Johnson © A A A "The Earthling" (1980) William Holden, Ricky Schroder. ® A A Vi "Never Never Land" (1981) Petula Clark, Cathleen Nesbitt. 4:30 ® * * * * "M oscow Doesn't Believe In Tears” (1980) Vera Alentova, Alexei Batalov. 35 STAR TIME © LUCHA LIBRE 9 NEWS © A A * "The Great Muppet Caper" (1981) Charles Grodln, Diana Rigg. © "E l Super" (No Date) Raymundo Hidalgo-Gato, Zulty Montero. © HUGH DOWNS' SPOTLIGHT 35 A A "Behave Yourself" (1951) Farley Granger, Shelley Winters. 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