V o l8 1 .N o . 102 TfcE lOAIiy TfeXAN Navy, Congress monitor El Salvador S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n i v e r s i t y o f Texas a t A u s t i n Wednesday, February 24, 1982 (USPS 146-440) Tw enty-Five Cents Spy ships look for Cuban arms flow Rights abuse hit WASHINGTON (U P I) — U.S. destroyers have been dispatched to waters off El Salvador and Nicaragua on intelligence gathering missions for the past two intelligence months, administration officials and sources said Tuesday. The USS Deyo, a Spruance Ciass destroyer specially outfitted with sophisticated electronic gear for spying purposes, docked at Charleston, S.C., Tuesday after having spent nearly two months on station in the Gulf of Fonseca, the body of water between El Salvador and Nicaragua, the sources said. The USS Caron, another destroyer of the same class, has taken the Deyo’s position in the gulf, which Penta­ gon sources said is being used as a route to funnel Cuban-supplied arms from Nicaragua to leftist guerril­ las in E l Salvador. The stationing for the first time of American naval vessels in the gulf reflects a deepening U.S. involve­ ment in the war between the U.S.-backed Salvadoran government and the leftist guerrillas. The naval presence in the Gulf of Fonseca coincides with warnings by Secretary of State Alexander Haig of possible U.S. action in the Caribbean Basin to intercept the Cuban arms traffic. The gulf is on the Pacific Ocean side of Central America. The Defense Department has cautioned against set­ ting up a U.S. naval blockade unless the administration was prepared to order Navy ships to sink vessels car­ rying weapons to the guerrillas, incurring the risk of a war. The Pentagon has warned the United States is ill- prepared to go to war. The 7,800-ton Deyo, commissioned in 1980 and fitted with gear that can intercept radio conversations ashore, stayed in international waters and was not in­ tercepted by hostile ships, said the sources, who asked not to be identified El Salvador and Nicaragua have set three-mile offshore limits, but the sources said the spying gear aboard the Deyo is sufficiently sophisticated to ensure successful interceptions of radio traffic from beyond territorial waters. The destroyer reported sighting “ many” ships dur­ ing its deployment in the gulf and “ at no time did a ship from another nation try to stop the Deyo,” one source said. The nature of the ships sighted and their identities were not known by the sources. Information gathered by the ship relating to arms traffic plying the gulf or to guerrilla operations on the ground was not disclosed. The sources said the infor­ mation was not relayed to the Salvadoran government of President Jose Napoleon Duarte. “ There is intelligence patrolling, and it’s only logi­ cal,” an administration official said. “ We want to keep an eye on what's going on because it’s a tricky situa­ tion there.” Asked what type of information was being gathered, one source said only, “ It's an ongoing mission, and if we weren’t getting anything out of it, it would have been stopped.” The presence of spy vessels sent to gather intelli­ gence about forces hostile to U.S. interests recalled the North Korean capture of the USS Pueblo while it was in international waters in the Sea of Japan off North Korea in January 1968 Monday, defense sources said the North Atlantic Treaty Organization plans to conduct its first major naval exercise in the Florida Straits near Cuba and the Gulf of Mexico for 10 days, March 8-18. Those maneuvers will involve about 30 ships from six nations and about 80 U.S. warplanes. The Deyo. armed with two 5-inch guns, ship-to-ship missiles and torpedoes and carrying two helicopters for antisubmarine warfare, is one of a handful of Spru­ ance Class vessels outfitted with special electronic gear that gives it intelligence gathering capabilities. Other Spruance Class ships are destroyers only. The Deyo carried a special intelligence team aboard to operate the monitoring equipment, the sources said, in addition to the 18 officers and 243 enlisted men gen­ erally assigned to a ship of that class. The Deyo and ships like it replace the unarmed spyships such as the Pueblo and the USS Liberty that were used by the Navy in the 1960s. Israeli warplanes fired on the Liberty while it was monitoring the 1967 Middle East war in international waters off the coast of the Gaza Strip in the Mediter­ ranean Sea. The planes killed 34 sailors, wounded 171 others and damaged the ship so badly it had to be scrapped. WASHINGTON (U P I) - Three con­ gressmen just back from E l Salvador said Tuesday President Reagan’s claim of improved human rights there is “ simply and obviously false” and called for an end to all U.S. military aid to the Central American country. “ We return with the conviction that U.S. policy in El Salvador supports vio­ lent oppression of human rights by the military in El Salvador,” said Reps. Tom Harkin. D-Iowa, and Jim Ober- star, D-Minn., in a joint statement. “ The El Salvadoran armed forces are instruments of violence and ter­ ror,” they said in the statement dis­ tributed at a Capitol Hill news confer­ ence. They said Rep. Jim Coyne. R-Pa., who was in Philadelphia Tuesday, sup­ ported this view. The three congressmen returned late Monday after a week investigating claims by the Salvadoran government and the Reagan administration that substantial progress had been made on human rights. House Speaker Thomas “ Tip” O’Neill, who received a critical report Tuesday from his own fact-finding mis­ sion to El Salvador, said the winning side in next month’s elections should open negotiations with the leftist guer­ rilla forces. Robert White, who was the Carter administration's ambassador to El Sal­ vador, called for “ a negotiated solution to the conflict with internationally su­ pervised elections to follow ” He also favored sending an international peace force to El Salvador, perhaps under the auspices of the Organization of Ameri­ can States. “ Unless some version of this policy is adopted, the leftist insurgents will take power by force,' White said in testimony to the House inter-Americun affairs subcommittee Harkin and Oberstar urged the ad­ ministration to: Related story, P a g e 1 9 . • “ Terminate all military assistance to E l Salvador. • “ Support immediate negotiations between all political factions in El Sal­ vador. • “ Support multilateral participa­ tion in the negotiation process by other interested nations, including the pro­ posal to station international peace­ keeping forces within E l Salvador.” The United States should accept Bishop Arturo Rivera y Damas as a mediator to seek a cease-fire policed by the United Nations, they said. The foreign aid program for the cur­ rent fiscal year includes $26 million to El Salvador in military assistance. Cronkite scores policy Newsman weaves bleak tapestry By CARMEN HILL Daily Texan Staff SAN ANTONIO — Patchwork foreign policy and emotional response to the fear of communism has prevented the United States from retaining its world position as a ‘ beacon of nope,” Walter Cronkite told a full house at Trinity University in San Antonio Tuesday night. Opening his hour-long lecture with jokes and reminiscences, the former CBS anchorman touched on a variety of topics rang­ ing from fishing expeditions on the Amazon to the threat of nuclear war. “ The modern Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are blazing down upon us," Cronkite said. “ They are population, pollution, depletion of natural resources and nuclear proliferation.” Unless the world can overcome these problems, there isn’t “ much chance of getting through the 2lst century,” said the former University student and The Daily Texan reporter. Cronkite, pausing often for audience applause, said the Unit­ ed States should indulge in a “ self-inspection,” to determine “ who we are, what we are and what we want to be.” “ We don't have a concept of foreign policy. Everything is ad hoc, extemporary, reactionary,” he said. “ This country and the world face a revolution today as sci­ ence and technology advance," he said. “ In just one lifetime, we have seen the world plunge into five or six eras that qualify as entire ages of man,” he said, listing the ages of space, computers, petrochemicals, telecommunica­ tions and DNA. Cronkite, who left the University as a junior in 1935, predict­ ed a social and political shift similar to that of the industrial revolution. The constantly narrowing hold on power over the “ devices and inventions that make life more pleasant” will mean underdeveloped countries will want a bigger slice of the pie, he said. Citing underdeveloped nations' national aspirations for digni­ ty, liberty and freedom. Cronkite *aid the United States' great­ est crime since World War II was to allow the “ drain of the greatest reservoir of goodwill." “ The crime is we have let the Soviet Union — heathens be­ hind the Iron Curtain — take the lead of peoples who only want their fair share, self-determination, ” Cronkite said While affirming the importance of a strong national defense, Cronkite said, “ We have to simultaneously talk peace. For eve­ ry effort we make to arm, every dollar we spend to arm, every amount of brain power we assign to this waste, we must give equal time to disarm, to find a solution with the Russians — honorably, fairly." Cronkite criticized the link U.S. officials have forged be­ tween the crisis in Poland and disarmament talks. “ It is in our self-interest to talk peace,” he said. “ We’ve got to talk or there will be an escalation of arms until we blow ourselves to kingdom come." Cronkite, who anchored CBS evening newscasts for almost 20 years, described his year since leaving the helm as the “ insidi­ ous, capitalist-management conspiracy known as semi-retiie- ment.” “ It doesn't seem like it could be that long - except for Dan Rather, of course," Cronkite quipped. Of his experience with the CBS science series “ Universe,” Cronkite said, “ I'm not complaining about what I'm doing. Most people would be glad to crowd these experiences into a lifetime, much less a year ” Walter Cronkite Peter Robertson, Dally Texan Staff Governors near agreement with Reagan Leaders willing to swap programs, keep direct federal aid ® 1982 The New York Times WASHINGTON — The nation's governors, without a dissenting vote, agreed Tuesday to negotiate with the Reagan administrate n over swaps in federal and state responsibilities on a smaller scale than President Rea­ gan first proposed A few minutes later they voted to reassert their poli­ cy that all income maintenance programs should be financed by the federal government, including food stamps and Aid to Families with Dependent Children, which Reagan wants the states to take over. At the White House, a top aide to Reagan said the governors’ vote represented progress toward “ finding a commonality" on turning federal programs over to the states. “ We've achieved our first goal, which was to have the parties remain at the negotiating table," said Rich­ ard S. Williamson, assistant to the president for inter­ governmental relations. The unified votes by the National Governors Associa­ tion masked two underlying partisan strains of disa­ greement, despite the widespread optimism about Rea­ gan’s initiatives in the group The governors have lobbied for years for a greater role for the states. Some Republican governors, including Pierre V. du Pont IV of Delaware and James R. Thompson of Illi­ nois, indicated they would be willing to consider and perhaps accept Reagan's original plan to swap a federal takeover of Medicaid for a state takeover of food stamps and the family aid program. Some Democrats, especially Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. of California, made it clear that they feared the negotiations would lead to such a result. But the Democrats, fearing that they might appear to be cooperating with a politically vulnerable president, breakfasted and collectively decided to issue a more partisan attack than any of them attempted individually at the annual winter meeting of the association. They assailed “ the administration’s callous disre­ gard of the elderly, small business, farmers, college students and unemployed workers." The 24 Democrats present charged that “ the insensitive policy of high in­ terest rates, runaway deficits, rising bankruptcies and unaffordable housing is tearing at our social fabric. The statement of all the governors reaffirmed their objection to budget cuts for the fiscal year 1983 “ to the extent that state governments are weakened and left without the capacity to meet the new service delivery requirements for 1984 and beyond. " They resolved to work w ith the administration to de­ velop a set of exchangeable programs without eliminat­ ing the current federal responsibility for food stamps and joint federal-state financing for aid to families. They said the status of those two programs should be “ deferred for further negotiations.” Williamson, at the White House, said the Reagan ad­ ministration would consider a proposal to have the fed­ eral government retain control of certain health bene­ fits for the poor, but to transfer control of health benefits for the elderly to the states. The general tone of the governors’ resolution was optimistic They praised Reagan for showing “ strong dedication to the concept of federalism" and promised to work with him and Congress “ at every opportunity." Both Senate majority leader Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, and Thomas P “ Tip" O’Neill Jr. of Massa­ chusetts, speaker of the House, assured the governors that Congress would consider the federalism issue this year And the association's chairman, Gov. Richard A Snelling of Vermont, a Republican, announced he would appoint a bipartisan negotiating team in a few days Drivers’ work stoppage closes ‘New York Times’ NEW YORK (U P I) - A work stop- ige by drivers for The New York mes late Tuesday forced officials to spend publication of the newspaper's ednesday editions. Times officials id. In a statement issued early Wednes- y, John Pomfret. executive vice pres­ ent and general manager of the news- per, said, “ As far as we are able to II, the reason for the wildcat work >ppage is the refusal of The Times to pay thousands of dollars a year in bogus overtime pay to Bernard Weisner, who is a chapel chairman (shop steward) of the drivers’ union at The Times, but for The who performs no duties Times. “The New York Times has been forced to suspend publication of its Wednesday, Februrary 24. issue be­ cause of an illegal work stoppage by the drivers’ union,” Pomfret said. It was not immediately known how many drivers were involved Pomfret said two arbitration rulings had found the newspaper “ is not obli­ gated to pay Mr. Weisner extra funds pending a hearing on the matter." Pomfret also said an arbitrator, Thomas Christensen, ordered the driv­ ers to go back to work Tuesday night. They refused and walked off the job about 10 p.m., newspaper officials said It was not known how much of the newspaper’s normal press run was completed The newspaper prints up to 940,000 copies daily As hundreds of drivers gathered in the street outside The Times building, Joseph Cotter, the business representa­ tive of the NMDU. said the job action was the result of a “ long-festering prob­ lem.” “ This is the latest episode in a long and sad story of disruption by this union of New York City newspapers," Pom fret said s Access road accessible Raul De Luna adds finishing touches to the north-bound IH 35 access road over the Colorado River. The road opened Tuesday. Dian Owen, Dally Texan Staff Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, February 24, 1982 \ The Daily T exan PERMANENTSTAFT r uih«atsvill« co-op F E A T U R IN G : FRESH CREAM, BUTTER & COTTAGE CHEESE from a local farmer open 9 a .m .-9 p.m. daily 3101 G U A D A L U P E BRAZILIAN FILM FESTIVAL February 22 to February 26, 1982 Three more film s by the acclaimed Cinema Novo director, Glauber Rocha. AH film s are shown at 7:30 p.m. at the Academic Center Auditorium , free. Wednesday"Land in Anguish" Thursday "Antonio das Mortes" Friday "The Lion has seven Heads" UTmost magazine will be on sale at the following locations around campus: JESTER CORNER WEST MALL RL MOORE HALL LITTLEFIELD FOUNTAIN 24TH & WHITIS EAST MALL FOUNTAIN BATTS-BEB PLAZA SPEEDWAY MALL The following groups will be selling UTmost: ALPHA PHI OMEGA SIGMA DELTA CHI UTmost EDITORIAL STAFF John S chw nrti Senior S p o rts w rite rs............................Steve . . . M ark Dooley C a m p b e ll, C h a rlie M cCoy, D avid Spangler, Snsle Woodhams E n te rta in m e n t E d i t o r ........................Cindy W ldner A ssociate E n tertainm ent E d ito r . Chris Jordan P hoto E d i t o r ................... Kevin Vandivier Jennifer Bird A ssociate Photo E d i t o r ...................Susan Allen-Camp Richard Steinberg . C.R. Frink Pam ela M cAlpta t.raphics E d ito r ............................. Alex P la ia Tina Rom ero, Associate Im ages Editor . Assistant Im ages Editor Images E ditor E ditor M anaging E ditor A ssociate M anaging Editor A ssistant M anaging E ditors Reid L aym ance Ja y . . . H am lin. G ardner Selby, David Teece W illiam Booth A ssistant to the E ditor News E d ito r News A ssignm ents E d i t o r .................Jodi Hooker G eneral R ep o rters John E hlinger, Doug McLeod, M ark S tuti. David Woodruff . . . Features E d ito r ................ Diana Moore Sports E d ito r Roger Cam pbell A ssociate Sports E d i t o r ..................David Mc.Nabb ISSUE STA FF A ssociate New s Editor Mike News A ssistants Barbee Steve Levine. Gary Rasp Herb Booth Wire Editor New sw riters M ichelle Locke. Scott Williams. Brian Stppie. Hector Cantu. David Lindsey Mary Hearne Carmen Hill. Editorial Assistant Entertainm ent Assistant Lauri A rtists Make up Editor Sports Assistants T im Sralla, Jim Belanger Brian Dunbar Harry Potter Copy Editors Steve Levine. Greg Kreth Phil I)t Valerio, Dudley Althaus Mark Maguire. Owen Ellington Sports Make-up Editor Photographers Nelson Suzanne Michel Michael r ry. Sam Hurt Steve Goodsoiv ülenda Huff TEXAN AD VERTISING STA FF Calise Burchette. Doug Campbell. Joel Carter Kirrue Cunningham, Cindy Filer. Cathy Giddings, Claudia Graves. Mike Littman, Cheryl Luedecke Marianne Newton. Ken Grays. Jay Zorn The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Drawer l>. University Station Austin. TX 78712-7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, except holiday and exam periods. Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710 J « News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communica­ tion Building A4 1361 Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be m ade in TSP Building 3 200 1471-52441 The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students. 1633 West Central Street. Evanston. Illinois 60201 phone 1800 1 323-4044 toll free The Daily Texan subscribes to United P ress International and New York Tim es News Service The Texan is a m em ber of the Associated Collegiate Press the South­ west Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1982 Texas Student Publications TH E DAILY TEXAN SU BSCRIPTION RATES One Sem ester (Fall or Spring) Two S em esters ( Fall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall, Spring and Summer) 10 00 50.00 Send orders and address changes to T exas Student Publications. P.O Box D Aus­ PUB NO 146440 tin. TX 78712-7209. or to TSP Building C3.200 ......................................................... $20 00 AUSTIN BURGER WURKS W hen w as the last tim e you ate a H a m ­ burger, a small order of Fries, and drank a M ediu m Drink and then paid only 1.99 How about today? We also serve chicken, burgers, anti chicken fried steak, among other things » V serve goo d f ood 24 hours around the eloek. and if sou uant. you can get it to go. If you stay, you ran play on our I ideo (.ames until your foods ready, or watch our large color 7 . 1 Stop on in. f o r $1.99, s ou can t go wrong. 478-9299 300 W. MLK Alpha Epsilon Pi * J & * M uscular * D ystrophy UT groups attack MoPac extension By DOUGLAS McLEOD D aily T exa n S taff and The pollution contam ination caused by a one-and-one-half-mile-long bridge over Barton Creek “ could be the final blow to Barton Springs,'' said John Warren, president of Students to Save Barton Springs. Several Austin environm ental groups, including two U niversity groups — Stu­ dents to Save Barton Springs and Stu­ dents for E nvironm ental Defense — have banded to campaign together against the proposed southern extension of MoPac Boulevard which would in­ clude the bridge across Barton Creek, he said. The Coalition to Save Barton Springs announced Tuesday at City Council Chambers its intent to fight the propos­ al up for public vote April 3. John W arren, a UT graduate student and president of the Students to Save Barton Springs, said his group form ed last week at the suggestion of law yer Frank Cooksey, president of the Save Barton Creek Association. The student group plans to cam paign against the southern extension by or­ ganizing rallies, distributing literatu re and bringing in speakers to inform stu­ dents of the danger to Barton Springs, W arren said. “ The student vote is very im portant in a vote like th is,” it could m ake the difference, he said. “ I really think they could be the edge in this kind of elec­ tion.” Cooksey told W arren last week that the coalition was form ing and asked if he would be interested in organizing a student group to fight the extension. Students for E nvironm ental Defense, another cam pus organization, is also a m em ber of the coalition. Kathy Phillips, a senior liberal arts student and president of the group of about 50 members, said, “Our concern is with the water quality at Barton Springs.” Phillips and Warren agreed that stu­ dents use Barton Springs pool a lot. She said the extension of MoPac across Barton Creek would “cause less water to filtrate into the ground, increase run­ off and further flood control problems.” Warren pointed out the pool already has been closed twice recently because of bacterial contamination after rain­ fall. “In the future, we may see the springs closed after every rain — too polluted to swim in. “The tim e has come to take a stand against development which will destroy the most beautiful natural one of springs in the country,” Warren said, citing “the extensive development that inevitably follows the extension.”______ Around Campus Sufi dancing group to meet A newly formed U niversity organization for Sufi dancing will m eet a t 8 p.m. Wednesday in Goldsmith Hall 105. Sufi dances are dances accom panied by religious music, particularly Hindu and Moslem music and that of the Sufi religious order. Beki Halpin, a professional instructor, will direct the Sufi dances. “ They are dances of universal peace,” said Jim Shuffield, a student representative of the organization. Sufi dancing is sim i­ lar to square dancing, he said, but with different music. The organization is open to everyone, and there is no charge for m em bership. Speaker covers black esteem F rank Blair, research associate for the African and Afro- A m erican Studies and Research Center, will speak on “ Self- E steem Among Black Collegiates” at noon Wednesday in Edu­ cation Building 370. B lair, a UT graduate student, will detail the results of an extensive research project he conducted two years ago on the varied attitudes of black students. 40 00 Basket case still puzzles UT police U niversity police still have no leads in the alleged theft of seven rare A m erican Indian baskets — valued a t m ore than $15,000 — from a cam pus museum, police said Tuesday. Texas M em orial Museum officials reported theft Feb. 5. The baskets had been four missing weeks when w orkers conduct­ ing a m useum inventory dis­ covered the loss, police said The baskets were not on dis­ play at the tim e of the theft. three or the for Police said the baskets, p art of a larger collection, w ere being kept in a fourth- floor storage they disappeared room before “ They (em ployees) went to do som e work in the storage area and noticed the baskets w ere moved around." said UTPD Sgt. Lance Idol. “ After an inventory, they found that some of these baskets w ere gone.” The baskets are m ade of straw and feathers and date back to the mid 1920s, police said. There was no evidence of forced entry into the building, police said, but crim e lab offi­ cers took fingerprint sam ples. There a re no suspects, and no a rre sts have been made, po­ lice added. Lynn Bilotta, registrar at the museum, could not be reached for comment. Correction In an article Feb. 17 concerning faculty salaries at the Uni­ versity, T h e D a ily T e x a n inaccurately reported that the Uni­ versity has a sabbatical program . The University does not have a sabbatical program . In the sam e article, F o rest Hill, professor of economics, was m isquoted as saying the sabbatical program does not receive a great deal of consideration from the administration. Hill said that som e legislators don’t give a great deal of consideration to sabbatical program s in general. V. Start the summer on-the-drag at 2406 Guadalupe NOW IT’S WEEK ENTIRE STOCK OF THESE FAMOUS BRAND SHOES — ALL LATEST STYLES AND COLORS 20%D O F F YARING S DOW NTOW N • HIGHLAND M A LL • SOUTHW OOD • W ES TG A T E • NORTH LOOP PLAZA AND 244M GUADALUPE Wednesday, February 24, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN World & National Page 3 Court rules Amish must pay Social Security • 1982 The New York Times WASHINGTON — The Suprem e Court ruled unani­ mously Tuesday that m em bers of the Old O rder Am­ ish Church who run businesses m ust pay the Social Security and unemployment taxes required of all em ployers, despite their religious belief that paying the taxes is a sin The decision, w ritten by Chief Justice W arren E. Burger, reversed a ruling by a U. S. D istrict Court in Pennsylvania. That court said the Amish could not be forced to pay the taxes w ithout violating their constitutional right to the free exercise of their re­ ligion. The 80,000 m em bers of the Old O rder Amish Church believe they have a religious duty to provide for all m em bers of the com m unity from birth to death. They regard the acceptance of Social Security benefits, and the paym ent of taxes to support the Social Security system, as a sin. Congress has exempted the Amish who are self- employed — a m ajority in a com m unity that consists prim arily of small farm ers — from paying Social Security taxes. But it has not relieved Amish em ­ ployers of the obligation to withhold Social Security taxes from their employees or to pay the em ployer share of Social Security and federal unemployment taxes. Edwin D. Lee, an Amish fa rm e r and carpenter in his carpentry who employed several w orkers shop, sued the federal governm ent a fte r he was as­ sessed $27,000 for seven years of unpaid taxes. He argued that he w as constitutionally entitled not to pay, and the trial court agreed. The governm ent ap­ pealed directly to the Supreme Court. Writing for the high court Tuesday, Burger said that the “ conclusion that there is a conflict between the Amish faith and the obligation imposed by the Social Security system is only the beginning and not the end of the inquiry.” He continued: “ Not all burdens on religion are unconstitutional. The state m ay justify a lim itation on religious liberty by showing th a t it is essential to accom plish an overriding governm ental in te rest.” Burger concluded that a strong Social Security system is such an interest. “ M andatory participa­ tion is indispensable to the fiscal vitality” of the system , he said. “ It would be difficult to accom m o­ date the com prehensive Social Security system with m yriad exceptions flowing from a wide variety of religious beliefs." Burger noted: “ The tax system could not function if denom inations w ere allowed to challenge it be­ cause tax paym ents w ere spent in a m anner that violates their religious belief . ” The Amish, he stressed, w ere not required either to “ enter into com m ercial activ ity ” by becoming em ployers, or to accept Social Security benefits. “ E very person cannot be shielded from all the burdens incident to exercising every aspect of the right to practice relgious beliefs.” The Amish w ere the subject of a Supreme Court decision 10 years ago that also required a balancing of public policy and religious belief. In that decision, Wisconsin v. Yoder, the court exem pted the Amish from com pulsory school-attendance laws. While agreeing with the outcom e of Tuesday’s de­ cision, U.S. v. Lee, No. 80-767, Associate Justice John Paul Stevens did not join in the court’s opinion but w rote a concurring opinion of his own O ther action a t the Suprem e Court on Tuesday in­ cluded : It decided the latest of a series of cases interpret­ ing the federal laws and regulations governing the Medicaid program , which provides state and federal m edical assistance to the poor. In an 8 to 1 decision w ritten by Associate Justice William H. Rehnquist, the court upheld a federal regulation that lim its the ability of the states to assess individuals for a por­ tion of the cost of caring for institutionalized hus­ bands or wives who are receiving Medicaid benefits. The regulations lim it, to one month in some situa­ tions and six months in others, the period during which a state may “ deem ” that a portion of the non­ institutionalized spouse's income is available to de­ fray the institutionalized spouse’s expenses. The 8th U.S. C ircuit Court of Appeals upheld an Iowa Medic­ aid regulation that, by contrast, did not lim it the tim e period. Tuesday’s decision, Herweg v. Ray, No. 80-60, overturned that ruling. Burger dissented. He said the decision “ undermines the s ta te s ’ role as part­ n ers” in the Medicaid program . A dissent by the chief justice from an opinion by Rehnquist is a rare event; it did not happen at all last term . The high court also heard argum ents in a voting rights case from Georgia that could produce an im­ portant ruling on the type of evidence required to bring a successful challenge to an at-large electoral system. Two years ago, in the Mobile case, the Suprem e Court required proof that an at-large system was established or m aintained for the purpose of diluting black voting strength. But th at decision offered no clear guidelines on type of evidence that would m eet that standard. In the case argued Tuesday, Rogers v. Lodge, No. 80-2100, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals inter­ preted the Mobile ruling as perm itting a court to infer discrim inatory intent from a history of segre­ gation and other circum stantial evidence. That court affirm ed a lower court order that substituted five election d istricts for the 67-year-old at-large system of electing the county com m issioners in Burke Coun­ ty, Ga. No black has been elected to office in the rural county. Ugandan guerrillas attempt overthrow • 1982 The New York Times DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania — Anti­ governm ent guerrillas, said to be sup­ ported by Libya, were reported Tues­ day to have attacked the m ain arm y b arracks in Kampala, the Ugandan cap­ ital, sparking the m ost sustained fight­ ing in the city in m ore than two years. W estern diplom ats in K am pala, con­ tacted by telephone from neighboring Tanzania, said the attack began before dawn Tuesday when about 300 insur­ gents, arm ed with assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenades, assaulted the Lubira barracks. An official Ugandan statem en t said the guerrillas had been able to attack because of the “ relaxed situation,” but w ere then repulsed by arm y troops. By mid-afternoon, afte r several spasm s of firing, K am pala residents said the city was quiet, although virtually deserted. issued in Nairobi, The Uganda Freedom Movement, one of a half-dozen rebellious groups ranged a g a in st P re sid en t M ilton Obote, claim ed responsibility for the attack in a statem en t the Kenyan capital. According to the official Ugandan statem ent, four Ugandan soldiers and “ a num ber of te rro rists” w ere killed in the fighting, described as the battle closest to the center of K am pala, and the m ost intense, since the guerrillas began th eir cam paigns a year ago. K am pala residents also term ed the assault the m ost protracted fighting in the capital since Tanzanian troops oust­ ed the form er dictator, Idi Amin, in 1979. A W estern diplom at described casualties as “ heavy.” The fiercest ex­ changes, Kampala residents said, oc­ curred before dawn, but firing resum ed a t mid-morning and Ugandans who had reported for work fled for home. M inister of State P eter Otai told dip­ lom ats la ter that the insurgents’ w eap­ ons included light m achine guns and m ortars. He charged that the guerrillas had been seeking to im press unidenti­ fied “ foreign m a ste rs.” The Ugandan governm ent, apparent­ ly concerned that the shooting foresha­ dowed a wider attem pt to topple Obote, issued a statem ent urging residents to “ c a rry out normal w ork.” “ These terro rists are not capable of overthrow ing the governm ent, and any­ body who joins them brings only m isery and suffering to his fam ily and neigh­ b o rs,” the statem ent said, seem ingly w arning that reprisals would be taken against the guerrillas’ supporters. The Uganda Freedom M ovement is led by Andrew K ayiira, a form er inter­ nal affairs m inister, who was once known for his ties to -Is ra el but now, according to W estern sources here and in Nairobi, is known as a protege of the Libyan leader, Col. M oam m ar Khadafy. The w estern sources said K ayiira had struck an alliance with the leader of an­ other Ugandan guerrilla group, Yoweri Museveni, and that both men had received arm s supplies from Khadafy in recent months. The Libyan connec­ tion in central Africa extends from Burundi w here, the sources said, Li­ byan arm s supplies w ere sighted late last year, apparently for delivery to the Ugandan insurgents. Libya also has ties with Rwanda on U ganda’s southern bor­ der and reportedly owns Rw anda’s na­ tional airline. During T uesday’s fighting, a United States spokesman said in K am pala, the American em bassy sent its staff m em ­ bers home, and other w estern missions ordered their non-essential w orkers to return to their houses and stay indoors. Obote. who was U ganda’s first presi­ dent afte r the country becam e inde­ pendent from B ritain in 1962 until his overthrow by Amin in 1971, was re­ turned to power in elections in D ecem ­ ber 1980. Those elections a re now gener­ ally acknow ledged to have been flawed by extensive irregularities. resolved Im m ediately afte r Obote’s victory, to wage arm ed opponents guerrilla w arfare against his regim e. Initially, the insurgents w ere restrained by the presence of 10,000 Tanzanian troops who rem ained in Uganda after routing forces loyal to Amin in the face of Libyan support for the form er d icta­ tor. The bulk of the Tanzanians returned home in mid-1981, leaving a training battalion of 800 to 1,000 men. This unit, a Tanzanian m ilitary source said Tues­ day, was withdraw n three weeks ago, despite repeated Ugandan entreaties for the Tanzanians to stay. G uerrilla activity during the past year has been largely restricted to a t­ tacks on police posts in outlying areas around K am pala, whose inhabitants are predom inantly from the Baganda tribe that opposes Obote. W estern diplom ats said Tuesday’s a t­ tack represented a severe challenge to Obote s control, and that his regim e was considered likely to press wide­ spread m ilitary action against its oppo­ nents. A nd they’re off UPI Telephoto Wearing aprons and carrying frying pans with pan- ney, England. American Barbara McCaffrey (No. 7) cakes, women of Liberal, Kan. begin the Internation- won the 415-yard race In 65.3 seconds. The victory al Pancake Race competing with the women of Ol- Increased the Kansas women’s record to 19-13. Future of Solidarity uncertain Polish Communist Party leaders to meet WARSAW, Poland (UPI) — A senior governm ent source Tuesday dism issed recent m edia attacks on Lech Walesa as insignificant and said the future of Solidarity will be decided Wednesday at the first Com munist P arty leadership m eeting since m artial law was imposed. In Washington, S tate D epartm ent spokesm an Dean Fischer said “ the renewed attack on Lech Walesa unfortunately sug­ gests the continuing failure of the Polish m ilitary regim e to recognize the need for genuine reconciliation between all politi­ cal and social forces in Poland. “ C ontrary to Gen. (Wojciech) Jaru szelsk i’s prom ises of ‘re­ new al’, the Polish governm ent appears to be moving toward increased repression.” F ischer said in a prepared statem ent. Canada and Japan — stressing the im portance of unity with the West — stepped up diplom atic, economic and educational sanctions against Poland and its Soviet sponsors to protest con­ tinued m artial law in Poland. P oland’s official PA P news agency attacked Walesa on Mon­ day, but charges the Solidarity leader headed an anti-com m u­ nist crusade w ere not carried on Tuesday, indicating official indecision to discredit the popular leader. Asked about an article in the official arm y newspaper Zolni- erz Wolnusci accusing Walesa of condoning plans to lynch party officials, a senior government source said, “I would not attach significance to this opinion. “ It is not the official government o rg an ,” said the source, adding, “ The shape of the unions will be clear a fte r the plenary session of the Central Com m ittee.” The source asked not to be identified. The two-day central com m ittee m eeting beginning Wednes­ day is the first of the 200-member policy-making body since m artial law was imposed Dec. 13 It will be followed Friday and Saturday by a session of parliam ent. M ilitary chief Jaruzelski desperately needs a show of party unity to em erge from the central com m ittee session before his trip to Moscow early in March, observers said. Debate on the issue of trade unions is likely to be storm y. Wayne Williams testifies, challenges prosecution ATLANTA (U P I) — Wayne W illiams, accused of killing poor young blacks because he loved the challenge of defying police, insisted Tuesday that “ I feel just as sorry for them and their fam ilies as anyone in the world " But, winding up his first full day on the witness stand, the 23-year- old black would-be music producer actually challenged the prosecu­ tion to prove his alleged victim s left scratches on his arms in their death throes. D ressed neatly in a three-piece suit with an open shirt, Williams cam e away virtually unscathed through four hours of cross-examina­ tion in the 33rd day of testim ony in his trial for the murder of Nathan­ iel C ater, 27, and Jim m y Ray Payne, 21. C ater and Payne were two of the 28 young blacks abducted and slain in Atlanta, and testimony linked Williams with 10 m ore victim s. He faces more grilling Wednesday. Grim-lipped prosecutor Jack M allard returned again and again to the idea that Williams found a w eird challenge in his plight, noting that his m other testified that “ you love a challenge.” Toward the closing of the day’s session, M allard asked Williams about the scratches witnesses said they had seen at various times on his arm s and his face. “ Did any of those victims scratch you that you were choking the life out o f?” m arks) with the ju ry .” “ No,” said Williams, “ and I challenge you to find them (scratch “ I haven’t killed anybody,” W illiams told Mallard. “Sir, I’m about as guilty as you are If I killed them , you killed them .” “ I feel ju st as sorry for them and their families as anybody in the w orld,” he said. “ I could have been one of them; I could have wound up dead m yself.” “ Think you could?" M allard said. “ Yes, and I'm not so sure it’s over with, to be honest with you.” W illiam s’ story of his actions from May 21, the day before he becam e a suspect, until June 22, the day he was arrested , w as the subject of m ost of M allard's questioning. The prosecutor leaped from one point to another, but Williams never appeared confused and nev­ er stum bled. He discounted considerable discrepancies between the account he gave rep o rters in a June 4 news conference and his current testim o­ ny, and said the many discrepancies in police reports of w hat he told them was due to their own inaccuracy. He said they never “ allowed me to m ake a signed statem ent. ” “ Didn’t you consider this a challenge?” Mallard asked. “ No,” said Williams. “ Isn’t it a fact that every chance you’ve got to talk to somebody in this case, you’ve done it, haven't you0” M allard dem anded. “ No,” said Williams. “ Isn’t it a challenge to you0 “ Man, this ain ’t no challenge.’ “ I’m on trial for my life and I wouldn’t be sitting up here lying, he told the prosecutor. “ Can you think of any better reason for lying, Mr. W illiam s0” asked M allard in a cold quiet voice. M allard noted that in describing the events at the Jackson P ark ­ way Bridge on May 22. Williams told reporters that “ I was leaving the scene...” “ What did you mean, leaving the scene?” ’ he dem anded “ Just leaving the scene of the bridge.” Williams said “ You don’t m ean leaving the scene of the crim e? “ No.” “ W eren’t you about to slip up in that news conference0” “ Sir, I w asn’t about to slip. I told you what happened. “ Because you’re always in control of the situation, a re n ’t you0” M allard cut in him of the prosecution w itnesses who claim ed to have seen him with various victims, and he denied them one by one. But he also told a considerably different story than his parents about the crucial hours of May 21. The main discrepancy was that he said he left home about 1 or 1:30 a m on May 22, an hour la ter than his parents recalled. The times are critical, because the sta te claim s he killed C ater that night and had just dumped his body in the Chattahoochee River when stakeout officers spotted him coming off the Jackson P arkw ay Bridge. Another m ajor discrepancy concerned the mysterious Cheryl John­ son Police said he told them he had m ade an interview appointment for 6 a.m . on May 22 — because she had to go to work later. He first testified Tuesday that she told him she was “visiting Atlanta and staying with friends” and he had made the appointm ent for “before” 8 30 a m Later, he said it was “ before 8." His reason for being near the bridge, he told police, was that he was trying to locate her apartm ent at 3 a.m . “so I wouldn't get tied up in traffic" trying to find it later But the Johnson woman has never been found and police claim she does not exist. When he first took the stand Monday, Williams flatly denied mur­ dering anyone and also denied any homosexual tendencies Before winding up his direct testim ony Tuesday he methodically challenged a long series of w itnesses the prosecution had presented linking him to various victim s He said the story of witness Nellie Tram m ell, who testified she saw Williams in a green station wagon with victim Larry Rogers, and later saw him at the funeral of victim T erry Pue, was “ fiction, absolute fiction.” He said he never drove a green station wagon. W illiams wound up four hours of d irect testim ony in his own de­ fense shortly before noon Chief defense counsel A1 Binder reminded He said two policemen who claim ed he w as a t the scene where Pue s bodv was found were wrong “ I was not th e re ,” he said. World in Brief From Texan news services IRA sinks freighter Irish LONDONDERRY, Northern Ire­ land — IRA guerrillas stormed a British coal freighter off the fog- shrouded coast Tuesday, forced the crew to abandon ship and sank it with explosives in the second such attack in a year. None of the 10 crewmen aboard the 1,600-ton St. Bedan was harmed, Londonderry police reported. Anniversary approaching PEKING — Strains over Taiwan apparently will prevent Washington and Peking from marking the 10th anniversary of the communique that put them on the road to re­ newed relations, diplomats said Tuesday. The 10th anniversary of the Shanghai Communique falls Sunday and with only five days to go, both U.S. and Chinese officials said they were unaware of any plans to publicly mark the occasion. H ie two sides have declined in almost identical language in recent days to say why there will be no ceremony, but western diplomats said Taiwan is almost certainly the holdup. Bomb kilts seven BEIRUT, Lebanon — Two car bombs exploded within four minutes of each other in a crowded market quarter of Beirut Tuesday, killing at least seven people, injuring about 66 and trapping scores of shoppers and merchants under the debris of col­ lapsed stalls. Police said the death toll was certain to rise. At least 12 of the injured were listed in “very serious'' condition. A group calling itself the “Holy War Front,” a name unknown until now, claimed responsibility for the blasts and said they were directed against the Syr­ ian peace-keeping force occupying Lebanon since 1676. Resignations sought LONDON — Publisher Rupert Murdoch offered Tuesday to rein­ state 210 fired workers at the T im e s and the Su n d a y T im es if they could find colleagues willing to resign in their place. Murdoch, who had threatened to close the two prestigious newspapers if 600 staff members did not resign voluntarily, announced the dism issals Monday after last-minute talks with union leaders collapsed. He also promised more layoffs would follow. The of­ fer to reinstate the fired clerical workers cam e as union leaders met to discuss a response — possibly in­ cluding a strike — to the dismissals. Court upholds ruling - A WASHINGTON federal appeals court Tuesday barred pro­ secutors from using notes seized from John W. Hinckley's jail cell, or his statements to the FBI shortly after his arrest, when he stands tri­ al for trying to kill President Rea­ gan. A three-judge panel of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Wash­ ington upheld a ruling by U.S. Dis­ trict Court Judge Barrington Par­ ker the information about Hinckley was illegally obtained and could not be used as evidence. Further court ac­ tion appears likely, since prosecu­ tors have said the material is cru­ cial to their case. EPA defends cuts in N o v em b er th at WASHINGTON — Environmental Protection Agency administrator Anne Gorsuch, defending the second year of cuts in her agency’s budget, said Tuesday the proposed 1983 funding blueprint is “realistic and environmentally sound.” “Gone are the days when increased spending could be equated to progress, or when larger programs and expand­ ed staffs equal environmental im­ provement,” she told the Senate Environment Committee. The ad­ ministration is proposing a 12 per­ cent cut to 1961.4 million for the 1983 EPA operating budget. That follows a 17 percent cut for the cur­ rent year. Stocks gain slightly NEW YORK — The stock market — reeling from a severe loss that pushed it back to 1980 recession lev­ els — posted mixed results Tuesday with the help o f bargain hunters. Trading was heavy A late rebound was helped by news the nation’s ma­ jor banks lowered their prime lend­ ing rate to 16 Mj percent from the 17 percent they adopted less than a week ago. The Dow Jones industrial average, which lost 13.04 points Monday to its lowest level since it hit 806.20 on May 12, 1980, gained 1.72 points te 812.38. It had been (town six at the outset. Editorials THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, February 24, 1982 Viewpoint Surprise! M on ey still talks Why is the U niversity of Texas getting involved in MoPac? Last month, P resident Flaw n publicly endorsed the M oPac’s northern ex­ tension. UT’s B alcones Research C enter provided Flawn with a re a ­ son: the danger of confining high-level research scientists to their cars during traffic jam s when otherw ise they could and should be in their laboratories. And the prospect of being stuck in their cars m ay discourage them from accepting professional employm ent with the U niversity in the first place." Then the Board of Regents endorsed the extension at its last m eet­ ing, citing BRC’s $21 million annual funding and its $52 million devel­ opm ent project approved last October. We suspect the regents are stressing a m inor point to support a much larger issue: M oPac North has m ore to do with a good bidness clim ate and increased property values for U T’s North Austin invest­ m ent than with research scientists caught in traffic jam s. Is it right for the University to take p art in a local issue — and a controversial one at th a t9 MoPac is m ore than a quick way home; it raises questions of growth policy for a city that is on the verge of growing to death. Any proposal or endorsem ent should take in m ore than the narrow interest that the regents expressed. The U niversity's voice is rich with the sound of money; when UT talks, people listen. And it talks often, whenever tenure decisions are m ade, whenever construction contracts are decided, whenever pro­ gram s are announced — to nam e just a few examples. The University speaks especially clearly when it invests its — our — money, as when it buys stock in corporations that deal extensively with South Africa. The situation becomes even m ore political when one considers that UT v o t e s its stock, thus taking p art in the corpo­ ra te decision-making process. The U niversity of the first class consist­ ently votes with m anagem ent. And it speaks with one voice; to ensure unanim ity, the ad m in istra­ tion censors its com ponent parts. F or exam ple, Texas Student Publi­ cations m inutes m ust be approved by the UT Austin president. He has veto power and uses it In an incident this year, the TSP board voted to express its opposition to AT&T's entry into ‘electronic new spaper services, which threatened further corporate intrusion into the news m edia. President Flaw n did not approve that p art of the TSP m inutes, which m eant in effect that the TSP statem en t had never been made. The sam e thing happened when TSP tried to voice support for T e x a n editor Mark McKinnon during his battle over turning photo negatives over to the police And before that, UT P resident Lorene Rogers ac tu ­ ally killed a new publication called B l a c k p r i n t afte r TSP had ap­ proved it. Most of the U niversity is not allowed to speak. When the U niversi­ ty ’s voice is used for local fights and m ajor political and ethical ques­ tions, we have to ask if it is right f o r the regents to use a public tru st to do so Appointed by the governor, they —■ and by extension, the UT president — have an obligation to serve the state as a whole, not vested interests. J o h n S c h w a r t z I'l E D G E C l f Y O 1 1 A f l U i L 2_ L ' I “ A 1969 survey revealed that 58 percent of A m erican m ales viewed draft card burnings as violent, while 57 p ercent felt that police shoot­ ing was not violent." S c i e n c e N e w s , July 3,1971, pp. 14-15. — c o u r t e s y of J i m R a t lif f Reporter's plagiarism debases communication and dem ocracy T h e N e w Y o r k T i m e s s a i d in an e d i t o r i a l on T u e s d a y , F e b . 23: When a newspaper u ses precious front-page space, as the T i m e s did on Monday, to expose a lie in its own col­ um n s, it is trying to do m u ch m ore than onfess a procedural lapse The point is to reaffirm a co m p ac t with the reader: that what is printed has been honestly gathered and labeled; that any credible challenge will be rigorously examined, and that serious error w ill get prompt and conspicuous notice. In this case, it w as not m erely an er­ ror but a hoax, a sh a m eless beaut, by a 24-year-old American freelancer, Chris­ topher Jones. With laborious research, he w rote a false and partly plagiarized ta le about an action-filled four-week journey with Khmer Rouge guerrillas in Cam bodia last y e a r Having established so m e credentials for know ledge of the area, he combined old interview s with m any fake new ones in an article for T h e T i m e s M a g a z i n e la st D ec. 20 And he did it so well that no Cambodian experts challenged the accou n t until the p lagiarism of an An­ dre Malraux novel was discovered. It took w eeks to track him to Spain, and three days of questioning by T u n e s edi­ tors and reporters before he adm itted the fabrication, including even the for­ gery of related expense accounts. We lea v e exploring the psychology of to oth ers. The such ad v en tu rers T u n e s ' s responsibility is keenly felt. As w e have previously observed, the lie the fabricated event, the made-up quote, the fictitious source — is the nightm are of the newsroom. It is in­ tolerable not only because it discredits publications but because it debases com m unication It may not be too much to say that, ultim ately, it d ebases de­ m ocracy. As E xecu tive Editor A M. Rosenthal said of this particular case: “ We do not feel that the fact the w riter was a liar and hoaxer rem oves our responsibility. It is our job to uncover any falsehood or e r r o r s I regret this whole sad episode and the lapse in our procedures that m a d e it possible." 1982 The New York Tim es Page Silence from graduate students explained University ’s activist community alive and well By ELIZA WILLIS During the past few months, the graduate student com m unity at UT has been unusually quiet. Last year at this tim e, graduate student activism w as at a peak and T h e D a i l y T e x a n w as filled with stories about the Kathleen Kelleher case and the Houston-Austin Solidar­ ity Coalition (HASC). The Council of Graduate Students (COGS) was the scene of intense and heated debate over a variety of issues including the Kelleher case, TA- AI w ages and working conditions and Dean King's pub­ lic com m ents about the D epartm ent of Governm ent. This is no longer the case. Such silen ce from the gradu­ ate student com m unity, a group usually known for its activism , is esp ecially noteworthy and disturbing. How can w e explain it? Choose one of the following: a ) Graduate students feel dem oralized by President Flaw n's decision to overturn the G rievance Panel in the Kelleher case. b) Graduate students are content with the gains made in TA-AI salaries and im provem ent in health care benefits. c) Graduate students are an apathetic, cynical bunch 0 Ü T a vlY T txw of people who could care less what happens at the Uni­ versity as long as they can finish their degrees. d) All the a ctiv ist graduate students have moved to an undisclosed foreign country w hose ideology is m ore consistent with their own. e) There are no issu es of in terest to graduate stu­ dents this year. f) None of the above. The correct answ er is f. Although we are disappoint­ ed that President Flawn chose to ignore the findings of the G rievance Panel — the m em bers of which he, him ­ self, selected — w e are by no m ean s dem oralized. We still believe in the strength of the K elleher ca se and w ill continue to support her battle in federal court. We are pleased with the gains m ade by TAs and AIs in term s of salaries and benefits but have not becom e com placent. COGS is planning to conduct a survey of the working conditions of TAs and AIs throughout the U niversity in an effort to push for greater equity am ong depart­ ments. Undoubtedly, a few of us are apathetic and cynical (wouldn’t you be if you looked at the unem ploym ent rate among MAs and P h .D .s in this country?). Howev­ er. the m ajority are a ctiv e and optim istic about im ­ proving student life at UT. D espite the secret desires o f) certain adm inistrators, m ost of us have not d e p a r te c ^ for parts unknown. We like it here — at least for awhile Finally, and m ost im portantly, in a year where the m ajor issu es on cam pus have revolved around re-open-j ing the Tower, electing U niversity Council representa-; tives and creating a student governm ent, it has been difficult for us to get excited. Fortunately, there have em erged a new series of issu es which, I hope, w ill cap­ ture everyone’s interest. At the next COGS m eeting (Thursday, Feb. 5 in Welch Hall 2.304), w e will be con­ sidering these issues. At the level of the U niversity, we w ill discuss the final drafts of our survey of TA and AI working conditions. In additon, w e will discuss our posi­ tion and actions concerning the effec ts of recent policy changes concerning physical plant staff cutbacks on student life. We feel these issues are crucial ones, and w e urge all elected m em bers of COGS and other interested parties to attend our next m eeting. Graduate student activism j has returned to campus. Wi l l i s is p r e s i d e n t o f t h e C o u n c i l o f G r a d u a t e \ S t u d e n t s . THE SUR6E0KI GENERAL HAS DETERMINED THAT SUBSIDIZING THE , TOBACCO INDUSTRY CAN BE HAZARDOUS TDVOUR HEALTH. ¡Git long thai oV ‘B litzen’ By DICK WEST I ‘T m an old reindeer AiqM 11 j I from the Yukon land. And > learned to... ” I Pardon me for breaking teto MB ■ this way, buU can’t help ■ 3|l leave me feeling downright lyrical, and I have come across one I ¡¡the Agriculture Department J / » ■ It reports that reindeer ranching! once again has a bright future |¡¡f Alaska, now that the warble flv^B is on the run. Reindeer ranching has been at­ tempted in Alaska with varying de-1 grees of success ever since the first herd was imported from Siberia»! ■§ 1891. ril admit that punching reindeer may not sound quite as glamorous as riding herd on cattle out in thefe wide open spaces back before the. West was won. But given the Holly-' A couple of westem-style movies H starring some melodious, modem day Gene Autry warbling* warble flies; a television! with the good guys gunning down. brucellosis instead of bad* “Oh. give me a home, M r m m . . . have been a ■ Ifftpp and I however, the potential[.' T ■of the warble fly, MGBg that opens the door to a : L renaissance in Alaska. . M a new method of doing in warbles offer* rich material for g a few reindeer operas, treatment is called “a baiiis- |i s “a .15-caliber compressed air rifle can be used to shoot a biode- IgradaWe, drug-impregnated pellet I hito toe reindeer ” ¡ Do you see the scenario po&úbili- I ties? High noon at the OK Corral. A s gu g of desperadoes has just held ; tip toe Nome stedcoach. Suddenly, a Gary Cooper type ap­ pears on the horizon, pounding I leather tty KniwB iiwtaaii of sagebrush. He is carrying toe mail for the Fawn Express. Under his ;white hat, he wears 10-gallon ear i “Head ’em off at the glacier,” the hem shouts, and a posse gaBope off in hot pursuit. Any movie fan can anticipate tow grand dim shootout with .25-caliber pressed air rifles. fat the fadeout scene, toe hero is seen riding 0it into the midnight sun. He is singing a few bars of “Bury Me Not on toe Lone Ice- • INS United Press lateraeüsaol ; Chemical dumps: ‘Texas’ Love Canal an impending environmental disaster By MICHAEL B. MARTIN You’ve heard of Love Canal — the deadly chem ical w aste dump in Niagara F alls, N .Y. where a school along with 80 hom es w ere built d irectly on top of the disposal area. U nfor­ tunately, like m any environm ental catastrophes, it can easily be forgotten once the im m ediate danger has ended In 1978, Love Canal w as declared a national d isaster after the discovery of toxic w aste seep age into residential basem ents; subsequently, 300 residents w ere moved from the area because of a drastic increase in health-related incidents such as cancer, birth d efects and death. Ordinarily a federal declaration of disaster follow s a natural disaster such as a flood, hurricane or severe earthquake; this declaration w as the first in history issued for a m a n - m a d e disaster. Maybe you haven’t heard about Love Canal, but have you heard about the T exas City Wye? It’s a ch em ical dump in T ex­ as that is ranked as one of the m ost dangerous chem ical dumps in the country — even m ore dangerous than Love Canal. Love Canal w as probably not the first hazardous w aste disaster, and it won t be the last. A sim ilar incident has already happened in Texas, a state which ranks second in the nation for the produc­ tion of ch em ical w aste. The T exas City Wye, about six m iles w est of T exas City, is a series of seven large pits and several tanks a little more than 500 yards adjacent to what w as once a trailer park. The dump, w hile open, served as an area for the disposal of oily w astes, spent acids, heavy poisonous m etals such as lead and m ercury, plus styrene tar. Its last owner went bankrupt, and for 20 years no com pany or governm ent agency had the capacity to clean up the dump. The “ W ye” gives off vinyle chloride fum es (a ch em ­ ical known to cau se liver cancer) at three tim es the m axim um level perm itted in California, the only state that regulates vi­ nyle chloride em ission s. From 1973 to 1978, 600 people lived in the trailer cam p adja­ cent to the T exas City Wye w aste pits. These residents w ere exposed to dangerous amounts of ch em ical fum es for five years. The T exas Control Board knew about this danger, and so did the county health departm ent: the only problem was, the 600 residents who lived there didn't. Heard enough9 In T exas there are no regulations written into the law that could prevent this type of environm ental danger from happening again. We do not set requirem ents on where a w aste disposal dump should be — resulting in m islocation of sites, like the Wye, near residential areas or fragile environ­ mental habits. It w asn’t even until spring 1981 — years after these dumps had been abandoned — that law s were im plem ent­ ed to tighten chem ical w aste disposal p ractices and clean up abandoned w aste site s like the Wye or Love Canal. Perhaps the m ost disturbing asp ect about these ch em ical dumps is that they aren’t considered “ unique” or “ unordi- narv ” The w aste m anagem ent director of the Environm ental Protection A gency said in referen ce to Love Canal: “ I don’t think Hooker (the ch em ica l com pany responsible for Love Canal) is any better or any w orse than any other chem ical company in the U.S. A. The only thing unusual about Love Canal is that it w as d iscovered .” Obviously there is a lack of proper monitoring of w aste dis­ posal. In T exas, 40 persons m onitor over 400 k n o w n dumps — a sta te in which nearly half of the petrochem ical industry is lo­ cated. This number is dangerously low ; many ch em ical dumps (abandoned or unknown) have been discovered only becau se of citizen com plaints. Trusting the petrochem ical industry to oversee their w aste disposal p ractices has been a joke. In the 50s and 60s, night dumping, ocean dumping and open pit stor­ age were all legal and unregulated until the early ’70s when these practices w ere outlawed. H owever, it w as not until 1981 that government has been able to effectiv ely prevent these illegal practices. It is true that w e have begun to im plem ent stricter regula­ tions on the ch em ical industry in T exas, but w e didn’t begin doing this effectiv ely until 1981. Industry has been disposing of large volum es of ch em ical w aste sin ce the la te ’30s. So the question is what have we done to our environm ent over the last 40 years? If you w ake up sev eral years from now in your four- bedroom hom e to discover benzine g a s in your basem ent with black tar leaking from the w alls, the answ er w ill be too late. Our environm ent is this nation’s m ost valuable a sset; the natural inclination to avoid dealing with this seem in gly insolu- able problem has created our present situation. The presence of abandoned m islocated w a ste fa cilities, the shock of Love Canal and the rapidly increasing quantity of hazardous w aste generated by the continuing industrial growth T exas is enjoy­ ing will not disappear without affirm ative sta te action. During the next session of the L egislature, deliberations m ay take place on m ore com prehensive w aste disposal regulations. It is important to be aw are of this legislative activ ity and take an activ e part in participating in governm ental deliberations. When considering these issues, the reality that chem ical irreparably dam aging to our environm ent w astes m ay be should be upperm ost in the m inds of every citizen. The form er tim idity of our elected public o fficials to “ bite the b u llet” and require industry to m anage its w aste as w ell as it m anages production and profits has left us all with the poisonous prob­ lem s of the past as our legacy for the future.___________________ M a r t i n is a l i b e r a l a r t s m a j o r . DOONESBURY I CANT MAKS UP MY MIND AJHAT 1 sh o u ld tu rn 1v M Y s & m c m MIKEY. IF YOU AJERE The JUP6E, I im t uould make A e e rm IM­ PRESSION A GREY SUIT OR A AJHUB ONE? TPS HARD TO SAY UNCLE HENRY E YOU AJEAR THE UJHrmSUfT, iu m r CON­ CLUDE YOU AJER&JT TAKING your am c m s E fw u s L y .. il* “ by Garry Trudeau ON THE OTHER HAND, IF YOU LOOK UKE YOU'RE ON YOUR AJAY TO A FUNERAL, I m m THINK YOU MERE TR Y/N O V CON M E . \ HOU ABOUT A M IX * ATHAT IF I AJORE A DARK LEISURE SLUT AND A AJHtTE B E U * \ Tdthroaj THU BOOK A T YOU. Wednesday, February 24, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 EPA threatens to re-register banned pesticide By RO G ER WORTHINGTON When I heard the news that the Environm ental Protection Agency is seriously considering re-registering M irex for use, a carcinogenic pesticide banned in 1978, I could not help but re­ call a quotation I recently read in the Texan . In an article on the cyclical nature of racial inequality, Hegel is quoted: “ History repeats itself twice: the first tim e as trag ­ edy, the second tim e as* farce ” Indeed, aerial spraying of Mirex again to kill fire ants — and nearly every other creeping thing which creepeth on E arth — will be tragic. And, in only one repetition of history, the repercussions will be farcical, too. In fact, although the final decision is still two weeks away, the farce has already begun. The EPA should not even be con­ templating the registration of a banned and hazardous chem i­ cal. The agency is supposed to protect the natural and human environment — not destroy it. What is more, the pushers of Mirex a re having us believe it’s not really Mirex they are peddling a t all, but a “ new ” pesticide called Ferriam icide. The active ingredient in F erriam icide, as the EPA and everybody else knows, however, is Mirex. The m anufacturer m erely added a few salts and am ines to Mirex, which supposedly cause it to break down m ore rapidly. But there is nothing inherently terrific about a chem ical “ breaking down” faster. As for F erriam icide/M irex, the situa­ tion is probably worse. Now, the chem ical only degrades into Photom irex and Kepone m ore swiftly. The catch is th at Photo- m irex is 25 and 5 tim es m ore toxic than Mirex and Kepone, respectively. What does all this intrigue m ean? It m eans that the sta te of Mississippi is desperate and the EPA is playing dumb. And, as usual, everybody else loses. Mississippi, you see, has a disposal problem. Before Mirex was banned, Mississippi bought tons of the poison from Hooker Chemical Co. (of Love Canal fam e). Suddenly, M irex becam e a hazardous waste. Instead of paying to have it carefully disas­ sembled and adm itting defeat, sta te officials took the capital­ ist’s approach. What did Milo M inderbinder in “ Catch-22” do when he need­ ed to get rid of tons of E gyptian cotton? He covered it with chocolate, of course, and called the stuff cotton candy. E x act­ ly! All Mississippi did was sprinkle on a few trivial ingredients, com e up with a new nam e, and presto! — a fabulous new pesti­ cide was born. Now it w ants to sell the poison to nine southern states, thus showing again w hat fun the free-enterprise system can be. Lest you think this is a secret, everyone a t EPA knows that ferriam icide is only a reform ulation of Mirex. They know that Mirex was canceled in 1978 (at least EPA ought to, since they banned it). They know that Mirex persists longer than DDT and is excreted in milk and eggs. They know th a t Mirex dam ages the nervous system , liver, spleen and fetal h ea rt (the proposed label sta te s th a t pregnant women should avoid exposure to F e r­ riam icide/M irex). They know that M irex w as used throughout the South since 1962 and it did not stop the spread of imported fire ants (in fact, several entomologists allege that it only ac­ celerated the sp re a d !). But everyone left in the Reagan-purged EPA also knows that F erriam icide/M irex is cheap. At 29 cents per pound, as op­ posed to $4 per pound for the altern ativ e chem ical, Amdro, killing im ported fire ants with F erriam icide/M irex is a real bargain Although the decision to register for use a cheap but perni­ cious biocide is in line with the philosophy behind the current adm inistration’s economic policy, the decision m ay conflict with R eagan’s position on the “ sanctity of life.” Mirex causes cancer and birth defects in humans. Kepone exposure leads to sterility in men, thus preventing freedom to procreate. As E rik Jansen of “ F riends of the E a rth ” wonders, w here does the adm inistration really stand on birth defects and abortion? Does it favor sterility in men? If EPA adm inistrator Ann Gorsuch approves the request, and all indications a re that she will, Texas will have a health problem. Although our crazed agriculture com m issioner claim s that the fire an t “ epidem ic” has already forced him to declare a “ state of em ergency,” public health will be th re a t­ ened m ore by pesticides contam ination than ant bites. Texans need to speak up now. Gorsuch — the “ Ice Queen” — is courted by slick lobbyists, who are succeeding in convincing her that an em ergency exists and F erriam icide/M irex is the best solution. Do you think that a fire ant “ epidem ic” exists? Do you be­ lieve that saturating the land and cities with a carcinogenic and ineffective pesticide is the best solution? If you oppose the approval of F erriam icide/M irex, if you are shocked by the Reagan adm inistration’s publicity, or if you think it is tim e to stop a few A m ericans from poisoning America, please send a letter of protest to: Dr. John Hernandez Deputy A dm inistrator U.S. Environm ental Protection Agency 401 M St.S.W . Washington, D.C. 20460 Let the EPA know that you are not duped by th e ir doubleth­ ink. Remind them of what Santayanna said: “ Those who ignore the past are condemned to repeat it.” Tell them F e rria m ic id e / Mirex is a good joke, but no longer funny W orthington is a P la n II m a jo r. New start fo r ‘pro-life ’ movement A legislative solution—life begins at 40 By NOAH FENCE For the man-on-the-street student of history and cul­ ture, the gam es of Hyde-and-seek being played by the U.S. Congress with the m ysteries of life m ust surely seem laughable. It is difficult to resist the conclusion that our elected representatives suffer from am nesia. When does life begin? Not a new issue, it was debated and settled five decades ago, when, in 1932, W alter B. Pitkin issued his definitive study “ Life Begins a t F o r­ ty ,” and three years later, Will Rogers cam e out with the movie version. Behind the legislative debate a re popular dem a­ gogues such as Karen M ulhauser and Phyllis Schlafly, blindly leading their respective multi-million-headed contingents. Though b itterest of enem ies, two cam ps are united in confining the argum ent over life’s inception to the period bounded by conception and birth. They hover over the human organism ’s every develop­ m ental stage, sniping a t each other about “ viability.” Yet Professor P itkin’s lucid observations about “ life” before 40 call into question the very prem ises of the modern and demand that the thoughtful reader a s k : the You Call This Viability? • “ From birth to seventeen we a re busy growing up ... (I)t is ... a terribly dangerous period of irresponsibility, during which (we) lean on parents and other elders for support and m anagem ent.” — p. 12 • “ Nobody under seventeen ever knows anything, ever has a clear thought on any im portant subject, ever a t­ tains an im portant skill except perhaps in music, ever gains full control of wild em otions, ever converses in­ terestingly, or ever does anything in the way of living as a m ature person.” — p. 12 • “ From seventeen to twenty-two or thereabouts we learn the social life ...” — p. 12 “ Thousands com e out (of college), degrees under their arm s b u t no th in g u n ­ d e r th e ir s k u l l s . ’’ — p .15 • “ G irls usually wed around twenty-two, youths a t twenty-four in our country. Then all sta rt to m ake a living ... The toil of raising children joins with the long, hard pull of buying a home and pushing up the worn rungs of the success ladder ...(T )hese enterprises con­ sume the best energies until forty, a t le ast.” — pp.12-13 There are some people, im m une to reason, who will insist on calling the first 40 years “ life.” These a re the sam e folks who will tell you they’ve w atched M aster­ piece Theater, when in fact they’ve spent the whole tim e fumbling with the fine tuning on their TV sets. O thers of us a re capable of facing facts, and we m ust insist that the fruits of enlightenm ent be brought to bear on public discussions, not sw ept under the rug by self-annointed m essiahs and politicians scheming for voting blocs. If life begins a t 40, the effects on law and custom are far-reaching. Human Life Legislation: A New Beginning A much-publicized m ovem ent is under way in this land to define conception as the beginning of life. Called Right to Life, it is pursuing its goal along two strategic fronts. F irst, by pressing for a H um an Life Amend­ ment, which would w rite its definition of life into the Constitution. Second, and as an interim m easure, by persuading a congressional m ajority to go along with a Human Life S tatute, which would extend the due pro­ cess protections of the 14th Am endm ent to fetuses. To a person who realizes that life begins a t 40, the fetal posi­ tion in hum an life legislation is a silly joke, made ‘To a person who realizes that life be­ gins at 40, the fetal position in human life legislation is a silly joke, made pathetic by the emotional expenditures of its partisans. As well we might ask, in chorus with scholasticist theologi­ ans, “How many fetuses can dance on the head of a pin?” Or more to the point, “How many lawmakers can a fetus make dance atop an opinion poll?” > ________________________ pathetic by the em otional expenditures of its partisans. As well we m ight ask, in chorus w ith scholasticist theo­ logians, “ How m any fetuses can dance on the head of a pin?” Or m ore to the point: “ How m any law m akers can a fetus m ake dance atop an opinion poll?” About 535. Right to Life is seen by a public all-too-pliable in the hands of experienced, capricious opinion-molders as a revisionist m ovem ent of m ajor proportions in relation to the legal status quo, which defends the equally ridic­ ulous doctrine of birth as the beginning of life. Informed A m ericans know better. Undaunted by phony revision­ ism, they are dem anding recognition of the “ life begins at 40” concept and its application in the socio-legal a re ­ na. If life begins a t 40, gone are the stringent restrictions on abortions handed down by the Suprem e Court in its “ liberal” Roe v. Wade decision. A m other m ight choose to term inate her child any tim e before its fortieth birth­ day. What m other would not w elcom e the opportunity to join other m o th ers in squelching the m ore obnoxious elem ents of a generation whose only chance a t attaining an “ im portant skill” (by P rofessor P itk in ’s estim ation) is in a field which m odern youths m ostly equate with ritual acts of gang-banging electric guitars? Under-40s them selves would be accorded a right which, in today’s reign of barbarism , is denied even to term inal cancer patients — the right of euthenasia. What an im m ense relief it would be to find thousands of m oral bullies manning suicide hotlines put out of business overnight! That a sizeable and thriving under-40s contingent would survive, even with freedom of choice fully realized in our law, there can be no doubt. A m ericans a re tra d i­ tionally soft-hearted tow ard their young. In addition, the continuation of our species would compel us to in­ dulge the proto-hum ans in our m idst, else no one would reach 40 and begin to live. Conceivably, the sub-40s could pose a grave th rea t to the tranquility of the hu­ man population. Not to worry. The noisome and tim e consuming protections of due process of law would be unavailable to them , and they could be entrusted, if necessary, to the safekeeping of work cam ps and pris­ ons. H ere our youths would find a wholesome altern a­ tive to the schools, which introduce them to subversive ideas as authority unravels. Brass Tacks “ If life begins a t forty, then ...” The exercise can be extended by active im aginations into such areas as na­ tional defense, public officeholding, traffic congestion and rookie bonuses. At every turn, one is confronted by the unassailable logic of the “ life begins a t forty” con­ cept and its beneficent contributions to common sense and public m orality. However, as the “ Pro-Choice” successes in the Suprem e Court and the “ Right to L ife” orchestration of Congress dem onstrate, a concerted as­ sault on the political process will be necessary to bring about change. Concerned A m ericans, you m ust a c t now. I ’ll m eet you in the lobby. Editor’s note: Noah Fence chairs the Berkeley, Calif., chapter of Right to Laugh. He will not turn 40 until sometime in 1990. Therefore, his peculiar devotion to this cause may best be explained by Professor Pit­ kin’s remark: “ Not a man in a million under forty is worth listening to except for gag lines and clowning.” _____________ f e n c e is a T e x a n W est Coast c o r re sp o n d e n t. ». 102 Firing Lina They’ve gone too far these human Although Austin citizens voted by nearly a two-to-one m argin last month to stop the so-called “ Austin Citizens for Decency,” rights obfuscators are back in the pages of the press telling us why we voted to keep Austin free. They say that the City Council had b etter not go ahead with m ajority plans to include gays and un­ m arried couples and single parents in the housing ordinance, but I hope that threats do not dom inate this council. The Hotze brothers go too far when they claim that even those of us who voted “ no” in January somehow were voting for their sexist position. They a t­ tem pted to draw us down into the dirt with them during the election by claim ­ ing that gays w ere child m olesters and that the Citizens for a United Austin was being run by a “ known homosexu­ a l.” Those of us who saw through their clouds of hatred voted to include those groups heretofore unprotected in the city statutes. The only reason we voted on this is­ sue in the first place was because ACD forced it with their petition drive, after the Austin Human Relations Com m ittee voted unanimously to endorse inclusion of gays in housing protection. That they do not command the m ajority viewpoint in this city has been dem onstrated in numerous elections during the past 10 years. The enlightened council coalition of Richard Goodman, Charles Urdy, John­ ny Trevino, Larry D euser and Roger Duñcan ought not to delay this very se­ riously needed ordinance any longer. Let ACD now put up or shut up. They are bluffing, and they know it. They can call another special election to w aste m ore of taxpayers money if they wish, but they know that they cannot win ever again in Austin, Texas. I, for one, urge the City Council to act on this now, and not to let th reats of recall referenda hinder the m ajority will. Enough is enough. Jo se p h Roehl Latin A m e r ic a n Stu dies Come over to my foxhole In response to Amy Mashberg s “ opinion” expressed in the T e x a n on Feb. 17,1 would like to make the follow­ ing com m ents: 1. I registered for the draft not for patriotic aspirations nor for fear of crim inal prosecution, but for the basic obligation of preserving the rights and freedom s that we enjoy for future gen­ erations of Americans. 2. I feel great! I couldn’t stand it if it was any better, but should I? A fter all, I have been the victim of the crim es of 800,000 men. Tell me, a re they not ex­ ercising the right to protest? 3. I have m ore faith in my intelli­ gence than to let my conscience be deceived. I pity those who underesti­ m ate the intelligence of others. N evertheless, if you a re vitally inter­ ested in vital interests, then com e on over to my foxhole. But, bew are of that puddle of BIG OIL — you m ay slip and regain consciousness. R i c k y Van de n Bosch In te rn atio n al B u s in e s s M a jor Cheesy garbage S t o n e m a g a z in e In response to “ NRBQ: Gonzo fun for the Lucky F ew ” ( T e x a n , Feb. 18), let me begin by saying that I ’ve never giv­ en R o l l i n g a m om ent’s worth of notice. Lord knows there a re few bands for whom I have less respect than Van Halen (poor Roy Orbison - m u st’ve rolled over in his grave when the new version of “ P retty Woman” cam e out). The Cars, Lover Boy — it ’s all Foreigner to me! Yes, yes, it’s all pretty cheesy garbage. pre-pubescent, My point is this: leave this “ hot bed” of top-forty-loving clones alone. Let them get lost in Dan F ogelberg’s quagm ire of self-centered concerns. H ere’s why: there w as a tim e in the not-to-distant past when a sem i­ dedicated following of a particu lar band could m arch pell-mell into a club, move around, dance and at least see the show. Catch Joe Ely a t Club Foot a few week­ ends ago? Ju st seeing him was a task within itself, but dancing? Your clones finally got hip. Now that I ’ve vented my spleen and my personal d istaste for large crowds has been expressed, I ’ll assum e that the overall intent of your article was to ex­ pose the talent of a w orthwhile band. With this in mind, h ere’s my second point: your column reeks of a “ holier- than-thou” aura of arrogance. Your piece begins, “ Hey morons! you missed out! Had you been willing to take a c h a n c e ...” C’mon. If you’re concerned about club acts receiving am ple support, don’t place yourself on som e authorita­ tive pinnacle m erely by dubbing the seem ingly oblivious m edia and public as “ a group of idiots.” Try addressing “ the m asses who seem to determ ine al­ m ost entirely w hat records become hits (as your article s ta te s)” and m aybe m ore people than the select few you’ve choosen to address will attend such digs. P erhaps some of these Van Halen fans would have been m ore attracted to your colum n’s intensions had you not so snobbishly placed them on the lower stra ta of listenership. If bands like the NRQB a re to receive support via new spaper columns like yours, don’t exclude such large portions of listening audiences — i.e. potential club-goers — by dubbing them as clones. Is it not possible to express a talent without criticizing so band’s M oralists and even everyday folk are condemning this kind of lewd occupa­ tional gratification. It seem s any inclu­ sion of an on the job pleasure principles m akes for atrocious production and im ­ m oral problem s these days. Still, our role models dictate how Am erican men would like spending their a fte r work hours. The prolifera­ tion of m acho-enthralled beer and ciga­ rette ads urging daily weekends and features that “ get you noticed” have superseded any puritan work ethic. The real panoram a is revealed as no differ­ ent the advertising fantasy of gyms, public baths and superm arket shelves all geared to sim ple id impulses and narcissistic leisure. than I am not endorsing the ca reer choices of “ those older than 16” who enjoy their WEmnSHT BÜTTHBM W C fM S OF NICARAGUA T M DIRTY BUTTON IT WONT END ON p TO THE SHORES COMWlESdUST UPllKEITDID AND H E GOING OF SALVADOR IN VIETNAM TO DROP THE LIKE WE DID ■ BEFORE BOMB 44 SUNG TO TVE MARINE HYMN many other people? At the very least it m ight prevent a reader from being disgusted to the point of giving up half way through the a rti­ cle. John D a v e n p o r t P h o to jo u rn a lism Occupation: Stud “ The typical adolescent m ale hustler ... m ay enjoy his w ork.” Or so states a recent study quoted in T hursday’s T e x ­ an. I, for one, am glad to hear that some­ one in this concrete jungle is enjoying their job. T here’s no doubt the Big Brother suspect occupations. But I do wonder to what extent A m erica’s frustrated ath­ letes, executives and politicos forever into high-level pushing heart attacks truly enjoy the one-up­ manship. How many wish they could simply earn a living by being a stud! them selves K e v in L Wesl L a n g u a g e Lab Needs more research In response to Mary S tew art’s and Mike D avis’ Firing Line letter of Feb. 4, yes, there are current plans by so- called “ pro-life” factions to outlaw all form s of abortions, and although there a re not plans to outlaw all form s of con­ traceptives, the IUD and certain birth- control pills could be outlawed. the Human Life To be specific, Amendment, which the so-called is “ pro-life” factions’ ultim ate legislative goal, states that “ human life begins at conception.” This statem ent effectively aw ards a fetus legal personhood rights. In practice this m eans th at any birth control method which works after the egg is fertilized such as the IUD and some form s of the pills would be out­ lawed ; in addition it m eans abortion is m urder, even if the m other’s life is in danger, even if the child has serious de­ fects, even if the m other is a victim of rape. You assum e, Ms. S tew art and Mr. David, that all babies a re healthy; this is not necessarily true. You also as­ sume that millions of babies are “ mind­ lessly slaughtered,” destroyed “ for the p are n ts’ convenience and the abortion­ ist’s profit.” Do you think that doctors have successfully coerced millions of women onto the operating table solely for the doctors’ profit? Why then did thousands of women die while perform ­ ing self-abortions before abortion was legalized? That is neither convenient for the parent nor profitable for the doctor. F urtherm ore, why do you as­ sum e that there are two parents in­ volved? Does a rapist generally raise his victim ’s children? If you believe that “ pro-life” factions are the self-pro­ claim ed not planning to outlaw all form s of abor­ tion, you a re the persons whose argu­ m ents are “ obviously not researched thoroughly.” K a ra Kern L ibe ral A r t s Old reruns review of “ Lady and My com plim ents to Anne Boyer for her m ost perceptive and well-written the editorial Tram p ” What she doesn’t say, but clearly implies, is why that poison­ ous dose of middle class American p rej­ udice” should even be shown on this cam pus as entertainm ent ? Clearly it is only fit for classroom study. Indeed, if m ost of the cam pus films stop short of is being “ poisonous,” they a re nonethe­ less mostly a m ixture of pap and old w arhorses seen year afte r year. Where a re innovative films? W here the avant garde — the far out film s which don’t m ake money, just history? The University had a budgeted, subsidized film program for 20 years in which fac ulty and student com m ittee m em bers tried to find films of in terest even if they lost money when we showed them . As the last chairm an of th a t com m ittee I deeply regret having agreed w ith the University adm inistration th at such a film program was no longer necessary Now it needs to be revived. R o b e r t F ertiea A n t h r o p o l o g y p r o f e s s o r Hope for new keys To s ta rt with, I am a very opinionated person. I have a lot to say and I am seldom wrong, so read w hat I have to say and all your problem s will be solved This is an alarm to all who a re op­ posed with anything that deals with nu­ clear weapons. As a future engineer it is hard for me to believe that a fellow engineering student would m ake such m isleading statem ents as did Mr Neaves. Wake up, Mr N eaves, this is the 20th century soon to be the 21st. Nu­ clear weapons becam e reality 37 years ago and I ’m afraid they a re here to stay. N uclear weapons w ere presents given to us by technology. “ Technolo­ gy,” a seemingly unfam iliar term to some engineers, is like tim e and goes on The a rt of engineering is to discover new keys to the doors of technology. It seem s to be that you want to take a step backward in a gam e where the survivor is the fastest I was taught that America stood for dem ocracy and independence. Isn't that why we go to w ar? Being the strongest m ilitary nation we preserve this dem oc­ racy enabling us to “ choose the engi­ neering field we wish to choose F ace it, we have it and the com m ies have it. and neither of us are going to give it up I have a suggestion for you, other engi­ neering students like you and everyone else that shares your opinion — w ake up from your nap Then hope our future engineers discover the next thing that m akes nuclear w ar obsolete. T r a c y B ro oks M e c h a n i c a l e n g i n e e r i n g Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday. February 24,1982 Compromise on busing offered (UPI) WASHINGTON - Sen. Slade Gorton, R-Wash., proposed an amendment Tuesday that would prevent courts from ordering school busing but allow them to take other steps to bring about de­ segregation of public schools. The freshman senator of­ fered his compromise as the Senate leadership took steps to shut down a liberal filibus­ ter that has prolonged for months the Senate considera­ tion of the most sweeping anti-busing legislation ever to move through Congress. Gorton’s so-called “racially neutral” amendment would forbid the assignment of a student to a school by virtue of his or her race, but would not prohibit a local school board or the courts from or­ dering such devices as mag­ net schools or clustering. Earlier, Senate Republican leader Howard Baker moved to committee amendments to the bill. strike all This would drastically shorten debate because Sen. Lowell Weicker Jr., R-Conn., has proposed hundreds of his own amendments as a tactic to delay a vote on the bill. The amendments would be out of order if Baker’s motion pre­ vails. Sponsored by Senators Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and J. Bennett Johnston, D-La., the legislation would forbid a judge from ordering busing for more than 10 miles or 30 minutes a day, and stop the from Justice Department spending initiate funds anti-segregation busing suits. to “Congress has not only the right, but the duty to say ‘no,’ ” Helms said, pounding his desk, “when the judge be­ gins to act in a vain and fool­ ish manner.” An aide to Gorton, a former Washington state attorney general, said he had serious doubts about the constitu­ tionality of the Helms-John- ston measure. Assistant GOP leader Ted Stevens of Alaska declined to reveal the leadership strategy but said, “There is a point where we can control it,” re­ ferring to the filibuster. He said crushing the out- manned and outgunned oppo­ nents of the legislation will take time, but, “when ... it’s time to wind it up, we’ll wind it up.” TTie first vote to crack the filibuster against anti-busing legislation occurred on the fourth try last year and the Senate attached the proposal as an amendment to the Jus­ tice Department authoriza­ tion bill. the Undaunted, liberals launched a new filibuster on the bill itself. That filibuster, too, was shut down earlier this morith. Senator aims for bipartisan budget bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., saying he has seen no sign of flexibility from Pres­ ident Reagan* announced Tuesday he plans to put together a bipartisan budget that will take “a bite” out of defense spending. Domenici, chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, told reporters such a proposal might also include substantial changes in Reagan’s in­ come tax cut program. He was one of a handful of GOP congressional leaders who met with Reagan at the White House Tuesday morning, but Domenici — unlike some of the others — said he didn’t feel the session was “very construc­ tive.” Asked if he had received any signs from the administration expressing willingness to make changes in Rea­ gan’s $757.6 billion fiscal 1963 budg­ et, Domenici said emphatically, “None. None at all.” Senate Republican leader Howard Baker described the one-hour meet­ ing with Reagan as “good, strong discussions.” He said he believes the administration “is flexible” on the spending proposal. But assistant GOP leader, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, who also at­ tended the meeting, said the presi­ dent “showed no inclination of any changes or any suggestions of chang­ es.” Upon returning from the White House meeting, Domenici announced he would seek a compromise plan while budget director David Stock­ man was testifying before his com­ mittee. “I’m going to try to put a bipar­ tisan budget together,” Domenici told Stockman. Domenici told re­ porters later he expects such a pro­ posal would take “a bite off de­ fense” — as well as other areas — to lower budget deficits. Tax increases or tax cut changes will also be exa­ mined, he said. “At this poiht, I don’t rule out any­ thing,” said Domenici. Reagan and his top aides have re­ peatedly said he will not accept sub­ stantial changes in his proposed $215 billion in defense spending for 1983 or in the three-year tax cut program enacted last year. Democrats and Republicans alike on the budget committee told Stock­ man that Reagan’s budget will not be approved by Congress because of its huge deficits — starting with $91.5 billion in the '83 spending year. “The budget as a whole is not even a bargaining chip,” Sen. Joseph R. Biden, D-Del., told Stockman. “No­ body likes it. Nobody wants it. No­ body’s going to entertain it.” Sen. Donald Riegle, D-Mich., said, “Not a single senator in either party is prepared to support this budget.” City could profit from refinancing utility debts By BRIAN SIPPLE Daily Texan Staff In a move that could save Austin $38 million at present dollar value, the city’s Department of Finance will suggest Thursday the City Council au­ thorize refinancing Austin’s $900 million utility debt. If approved by the council, the city would ex­ ercise its right as a municipality to borrow more than $587 million tax free and reinvest that money in a taxable market, which, even at an equal inter­ est rate, would prove a windfall investment for the city. In essence, the council would initiate a plan by which the city would pay a higher interest rate but on a lower principal. At the same time, the city would receive a higher rate of return on money invested. This would result in a $1.6 million yearly reduction in debt service charges over the next 20 years, Finance Director Philip Sheps said Tuesday. Aside from money saved in debt service charges, the move could make available to Austin $10 mil­ lion for construction by unfreezing money current­ ly tied up as collateral, Sheps said. Sheps, who returned Tuesday from New York City where he was attempting to secure a bond rating for the new bonds, said those are not the only advantages the new bonds will have. While the city will profit financially by refinanc­ ing the bonds, Sheps said, the main reason his de­ partment is requesting the move is because the existing bond ordinance fails to mention the city’s right to sell its share of the troubled South Texas Nuclear Project near Bay City. While no stipulation in the old ordinance pre­ vents the sale, he said, all references to the project are made in light of keeping Austin’s 16 percent share of the 2,500 megawatt, $5 billion project. “When you refinance bonds, though,” he said, “you rewrite the ordinance. And the new ordinance makes clear the city’s right to sell its share.” Also, the new bonds will be callable, he said — giving the city the right to return investors’ money at any time should Austin find a buyer for its share. Whether Austin is able to divest itself of its 400- megawatt share, though, Sheps said Austin’s ener­ gy future is in good shape. “We have a very strong utility, especially for a city that owns a share in a nuclear power plant,” he said, pointing out the $286 million the city col­ lected as utility revenue in fiscal 1981. Sheps said the bonds would be sold as soon as next week if the scheme meets with council ap­ proval. The council would vote on it March 4 and the private underwriter hired by the city Jan. 14 would sell immediately the $5,000 denomination bonds to institutional clients. Amid charges by other firms of council favorit­ ism, the council accepted in January a bid of New York-based Dillon, Read, Smith Barney, Harris Upham and Boettcher over those of local firms. Dillon, Read & Co. Inc. is owned by the Bechtel family, who also own Bechtel Power Corp., the new engineer and project manager for STNP. Sheps said because Dillon, Read & Co. Inc. is un­ derwriting only the bond sale and not acting as an agent in selling the city’s share of STNP, no con­ flict of interest exists. Adviser sees more oil woes By SCOTT WILLIAMS Daily Texa n Staff adviser The energy crisis is not over, and another Middle Eastern oil embargo can­ not be ruled out, an oil company said Tuesday. W.E. Lindenm uth, adviser for Middle Eastern affairs for Mobil Oil Corp., spoke to a small group of students in the Texas Un­ ion Building about the in­ terplay of Middle Eastern politics and oil supply. The talk was sponsored by the Center for Middle Eastern Studies. Lindenmuth, a Mobil employee for 27 years, said that although there is cur­ rently an over-supply of crude oil in the world, “We will remain susceptible to major oil supply interrup­ tions for the rest of the century.” The Arab-Israeli, East- West and underdeveloped- countries’ industrialized conflicts could affect the supply of crude oil to the West, he said. Lindenmuth also said a struggle between Arabs and Israel could affect the United States’ oil supply. The Arabs could impose an oil embargo against the United States for support­ ing Israel, he said. “The Arabs think the United States will side with Israel in any war, as they did in 1967 and 1973,” : - : S ____ Dlan Owen, Dally Texan Staff W.E. Lindenmuth he said. D eveloping co u n tries m ay not have the money to pay for oil needed in their growing countries, he said, and “ some bankers fear it will cause some countries to said. “ About 100 developing countries rely on oil to m eet 60 percent of their energy needs,” he said. d e fa u lt,” he Projections for w orld­ wide consumption of Mid­ dle E astern oil in 1985 have been placed as high as 40 million b arrels per day, but Lindenmuth said fig­ ures now point to a figure of only 28 million. Lindenm uth said be­ cause of a 17-fold increase in oil prices and an ever- widening worldwide reces­ sion, crude oil consump­ tion has dropped 12 percent since 1973. The reduced consump­ tion by the West will hurt OPEC nations, Linden­ muth said, because OPEC countries, except for Saudi Arabia the United Arab E m irates, cannot re­ duce production without hurting financially. and Uribe slams work proposal State Sen. Hector Uribe, D-Brownsville, Tuesday criticized Gov. Bill Clements’ propos­ al to allow Mexican citizens to work in the United States and said such programs would only make it tougher for unemployed Ameri­ cans to find jobs. “We have 6 percent unemployment in the state and double that in our border area of the (Rio Grande) Valley. With no assurances that the unemployment situation is going to get bet­ te r and with workers from other states coming to Texas, I ’m disappointed that the governor of Texas would advocate an open border poli­ cy ,” U ribe said. Clem ents, in rem arks Sunday to a National G overnors Association session in Washington, said Mexican workers should be allowed to en­ te r the United States on work perm its. He said foreign w orkers would not take jobs away from Texans. Register February 2 4 , 2 5 , 2 6 Noon-6 pm Texas Union Information Lobby for more information call: 471-5651 H appy Hour in th e M oonlight Wednesday night only from 9-10 p.m. speddonedayorfr dosses •MINI WALTZ CLASS-Fobruary 28 only, 2-5p.m. $4 UT, $5 public U om the elastic art of ballroom waltzing. Registration in this courts entitles you to the CIC discount price at the "Night in Old Vienna" dance, March 6. •RUBIK'S CUBE-Fobrvary 28 only, 2-5 p.m. $9 UT, $12 public Loam to solve the Rubik's Cube, amaze your friends! •NEW GAMES-March 7 only, 12-4 p.m. $4 UT, $5 public Especially designed for educators, counselors and group facilitators. Emphasis is on interaction, stress reduction, creative thinking, and play. Courses will bo held in the Texas Union léxds Linen u JEWS FOE JESUS present CHRIST IN THE PASSOVER Wed, Feb. 24, 6:30 p.m. University Baptist Church 2130 Guadalupe Parking at 22nd A San Antonio Free-wiU offering will be taken CAREER CENTER The C a re e r Center offers assistance to students by providing: a lib r a r y con­ t a i n i n g i n f o r m a t i o n on v a r io u s o c cu p a tio n s and ¡ob trends, vocational tests to help you with your selec- t i o n of a m a j o r a n d co u n s e lo rs to teach you how to job hunt effectively. Je ste r Centér A115A 471- 1217. e e e e e e e e e e e e e e * « e e IMMIGRATION & NATURALIZATION CITIZENSHIP RELATIVE VISAS STUDENT VISAS TOURIST VISAS LABOR CERTIFICATIONS PROFESSIONAL VISAS R E FU G E E MATTERS ORPHAN PETITIONS JIM B. CLOUDT ATTORNEY AT LAW 3810 MEDICAL PARK WAY NO. 231 AUSTIN, TE XAS 454-1438 SE HABLA ESPAÑOL 2801 Guadalupe Early Bird Specials M o n day thru Friday 5 a.m . til 11 a.m . Coffee Served With Any Breakfast .35 2 m os any style, kask ktw ss. * 2 biscuits or taast, jelly, Hast »r biscuits cieaai gravy an request. with 2 pieces si batan arsoosoga ................... 2 .2 5 2 .5 0 (room gravy, c off at ...... 1 .3 5 with 2 piscas bacon or saasago .................... 1 .8 5 * Chsico of bat bomomods CaWaa with abava breakfast .................... .3 5 swaat rail or 1 -brsskfnst toce served with coffee ........ 1 .3 5 CHICKEN FRIED STEAK French fries, salad & roll $2.50 NUgas Can Queso or Breakfast Tacas................ 2 .9 0 Meanest Frozen Margaritas in Town Happy Hour 11 A.M. - 7 P.M. GO BANANAS LATE NIGHT By p o p u l a r d e m a n d for ta s ty food after 10 the k itc he n at BANANAS will k e e p s e rv i n g its g r e a t a n d ta s ty bu r g er s , q u i ch e , M e x i c a n s pe c i a lt ie s , s p i n a c h s a l a d , a n d m o re until 11:30. For t h o s e on a li quid di et BANANAS b a r t e n d e r s h a v e a l ate ni ght H a p p y Hour 10-11 T u e s . - S a t . nigh t s, p lu s G O BANANAS H a p p y Hour 4-7 Tu e s .- Fri. G O BANANAS— lunch. d in n er , h a p p y hour, a n d now LATE NIGHT ( P a r k i n g 17th & G u a d a l u p e a n d U n i t e d B a n k P a r k i n g G a r a g e RESTAURANT a n d BAR 1601 GUADALUPE 476-7202 477-8999 311 W. 6th - IsPSaiSi S f t * co" fo O *‘'S ««O *** sc**' ,0 ^ ° ° & ,ovcs Wednesday, February 24, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 Wheatsville Co-op facing troubles from cash flow By LAURIE WATERS Special to The Texan The Wheatsville Co-op may be facing ex­ treme financial difficulties if it does not im­ prove its cash flow within the next six months, according to an article in the Feb­ ruary Wheatsville Breeze, the co-op’s monthly publication. The Wheatsville Board of Directors hired Dick Schram, a Cornell University finance professor, to prepare a financial analysis and six-month financial plan for the co-op. Schram inspected Wheatsville for three days in December to study store operations and financial records. He reported that the co-op's relocation a year ago to 3101 Guada­ lupe St. has placed the co-op in an “ inade­ quate” cash position. Schram said the relocation debt is com­ ing due before the store has reached a suffi­ cient level of sales and member investment to repay it. The resulting cash bind is ag­ gravated by unrealized sales projections, changes and losses in personnel and the lack of a financial reporting system to help monitor co-op financial problems. “ Without immediate corrective actions, Wheatsville’s cash problems will get worse over the next six months ... The board and staff members I spoke with are aware of the severity of the situation and have al­ ready begun to take steps to remedy it,” Schram said. Mary Jude Peterson, manager of the co­ op, said, “ We don’t want to disclose any­ thing about our financial position at this time. Right now, we don’t have any specific merchandising plans drawn up to alleviate it, the problems We’re working on though.” In his report , Schram suggested the co-op make several changes to improve its finan­ cial position in the next six months. These include increasing sales to $50,000 per week by March instead of the projected $43,000 per week; increasing the number of new members from 30 to 80 per month; and re­ questing a 90-day deferral of its National Consumer Co-op Bank loan repayments. Estimating that it may take $60,000 per week in sales or $3 million annually to pro­ duce a profit for the co-op, Schram said the first six months of 1982 are crucial. To reach its goals, several staff mem­ bers already have taken cuts in hours and benefits. Schram said the co-op needs an organized financial information system, a comprehensive business plan and clarifica­ tion of organization roles to survive in the long run. In a letter accompanying his report, Schram said that the co-op should be able to meet its goals through the strength of its organization. Problems mark start of MIA talks HANOI, Vietnam (U P I) — A U.S. delegation that includ­ ed a former POW held three hours of tough talks with Viet­ namese officials Tuesday but apparently failed to convince them to help account for 2,500 missing American service­ men Led by Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard C. Armitage, the five-man delegation began a two-day visit just hours after a stem warning from Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyen Co Thach that Washington could expect “ no more coopera­ tion’’ on the question of Americans still missing in ac­ tion from the Vietnam war. sions of the day with the Viet­ namese contrasted sharply with the optimism Armitage expressed upon arrival. “ The talks are on-going and will continue tomorrow,” said Armitage, the highest ranking member of the Reagan ad­ ministration to visit Vietnam Curt remarks to reporters following the first of two ses­ “ We don’t have any other statement at this time.” Apply for the 1982 MARGARET C. BERRY W OMAN'S SCHOLARSHIP Sponsored by: ORANGE JACKETS, MORTAR BOARD & EX-STUDENTS' ASSO. To qualify for the $500 aw ard, student must be in her fourth semester in residence at UT and have shown excellence in scholarship, leadership and service. ★ ★ ★ Applications available at Texas Union 4.3 0 0 , Union Information Desk Main Bldg. Info Desk, and Student Services Bldg. 101. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ DEADLINE: FRIDAY, FEB. 26 Can You Believe! A creative engineering career with the Southern California IEEE Company of the Year Pseudoscience class pinpoints puffery Rory Coker (r) watches Jay Spears support Karl Trappe. Steve Goodson, Dally Texan Staff Student board fails to control parking By MICHELLE LOCKE Daily Texan Staff A bid to bring optional parking fees under the eye of the Student Services Fee Committee, although provided for in the state code outlining the commit­ tee’s scope, has been stalled by administrative in­ terpretation of the letter of the law. The law in question is Section 54.503 of the High­ er Education Code in Vernon's Civil Statutes, which spells out the duties of the fee committee and lists student services. According to the code, parking should fall under the jurisdiction of the fee committee as an optional fee to be reviewed and voted on before budget recommendations are sent on to the University president. But Charles Franklin, vice president for business affairs, said Tuesday that the code provides for an advisory committee only when the overall fee is to be increased. Because the fee has hit its $60 ceil­ ing, technically the committee has no legal grounds for existence and the parking question is moot, Franklin said. Currently, the only avenue for student input on parking and traffic regulations is a presidentially appointed policy committee. Of 13 members, two are students. Student parking spaces, outnumbered 3.7-to-l by stickers issued, are scarce on campus, and student dissatisfaction with the situation was illustrated recently when School of Law student David Haug petitioned for a temporary injunction challenging the constitutionality of UT parking practices. Students who buy the C permit for $10,an optional fee not scrutinized by the fee committee, must compete for parking room. “ That’s not a parking sticker, that’s a hunting license,” said Paul Begala, a fee committee mem­ ber Begala, a government junior, lobbied earlier in the semester to add parking fees as a committee- supervised optional fee. T really am going to push to put that into our recommendations,” Begala said Tuesday. However, he said he is not optimistic that UT President Peter Flawn will act on a rec­ ommendation to bring parking fees back under the fee committee s eye. ” It s a big administrative headache.” he said. If the fee committee had the opportunity to peruse the parking and traffic budget, students would have more opportunity for input, Begala said. “ It's quite a racket right now.” he said. Franklin said, “ If the University were to in­ crease the Student Services Fee from $60, then it would need to consult this committee.” But, because of vigorous student lobbying against past bids to increase fees and tuition, Uni­ versity officials do not expect to increase the fee in the next session of the Legislature, he said. “ I would like to see the committee assume the parking fees,” said Jim McCormack, committee chairman. The tee reached its $60 limit last year, but the committee was not disbanded because “ the admin­ istration generally feels this (student input) is a good practice.” Franklin said. ' . . Although only a general review of the proposed fee increase is provided for in the code, he said the committee is allowed to examine individual cam­ pus agency budgets because of precedent set by past University presidents. The administration welcomes student participa­ tion in setting parking fees, which is why the park­ ing policy committee is appointed, he said. Parking fees have traditionally been swept off the fee committee agenda because they include fees paid by faculty and staff and because part of the parking and traffic budget finances University police who patrol the parking lots. “ It’s only fair that staff and faculty are equally represented (on a committee overseeing parking fees),” the vice president said. By JUNE PORTER Special to The Texan Solar systems and ancient astrological charts light the walls of a classroom in Paint­ er Hall. Chilling music swells to a peak as the tightly packed audience watches the instructor intently. He tells them to “ really believe” and, magically, the light bulb in his hand flashes. The bearded man throws ping-pong balls at the observ­ ers and asks those who catch them to choose a card from the deck he holds. They do — and through “ sheer concen­ tration,” he announces the correct card. He stands over a quivering compass needle and asks for the students’ faith. Suddenly, the compass needle moves. Rory Coker, professor of physics, is sometimes a psy^ chic, sometimes a magician and always a skeptic. Coker is the developer and instructor of Physics 341, Pseudoscience, a new physics course that examines the ori­ gins, history and present sta­ tus of modern pseudosci­ ences. Topics include flying saucers, spiritualism, mon­ sters, extrasensory percep­ tion, UFO-ology, the Bermu­ da Triangle, biorhythms and pyramid power. As Coker sits in his office with a replica of a pterodactyl flying above his head and looks for a missing ping-pong ball, he explains that he usu­ ally teaches a graduate course in quantum mechan­ ics. “ When I'm not teaching a graduate class, I need some­ thing to keep me amused ... I've had it in the back of my mind for a long time to teach a course about this.” Coker said his purpose in teaching the class is not only amusement He says college students have become espe­ cially gullible to pseudosci­ ence and its claims. He hopes to arm them with ‘ammuni­ tion’' so they can study such subjects without ignorance. “ He’s teaching us to be skeptics,” one student said. Merideth Melville, a senior radio-television-film student, disagrees “ I don't see that his motive is to make people skeptical,” Melville says, “ but to think about claims ... we logically and scientifically break down the claims.” Logic, science, skepticism, jokes — they all enter into Coker's class. His unique teaching method includes slides, music and demonstra­ tions in each class. Coker constantly jokes with his students who crowd the auditorium, often sarcastical­ ly commenting on pseudosci­ ence literature or personali­ ties. He jokingly repeats what has become a motto, “ I am only a tool,” as he shuts his eyes and bows his head. Students shout advice like, “ Use your mind,” as he tries to straighten something under the movie camera. Although students often ask how he performs his tricks, he never tells them. Coker says he wants them to figure it out on their own * “ The important thing is that you figure out only one way that it can be done, not (the only way) how it's done.” OUTREACH/CONSULTATION AREA AT COUNSELING CENTER Outreach/Consultation Area activities are designed to increase the responsiveness and resourcefulness of the U n iv e rs ity com m unity regarding the emotional and developmental needs of students. Assistance is available to campus programs and departments via consultation, program planning, workshops and training. Call 471-3515. DRIVEWAY TUNE UPS ALL CARS S p ecializing in Ja p a n ese, B ritish and all A m erican models 4 & 6 cylinder............. . . . $ 1 5 piu* part»* 8 cylinder.......................... $20piu* port** $10 Valves adjustm ent.................. Free Estimates on other repair Robert's Rolling Repair *Parti cott m a y I'a r y from $10-1j 477-0949 for oppoinlrmnl C h arles Leutw yler Jew elers Presents The Classic...Class Ring A q u ality ring that m irrors the effort and the accom plishm ent of your time at U .T . D e liv e ry time on this ring is tw o weeks. If the ring is not ready for d e live ry after tw o weeks, 5 ("< w ill be deducted from the price for each d a y late. Ring *.17 ct. diamond S3V(MM> hown) $335.75 $725.75 * h r TV) c \v , r 1 'J r v*"* ^ ) * / 'E a c h diamond sold will be shown to the customer under a microscope. Diamonds of different size and quality are available. Charles Leutwyler Jewelers » . MU! H I 'II 'n HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT CENTER 2105 San Antonio 476-0125 Faculty/Gradúa te Lox and Bagel Brunch Wad. Feb. 24tb at Noon SPfAKIR: Dr. Seth Wolitz Gala Professor in Judaic Studios TOPIC: "Satre's Jews in the USSR. An Encounter." $3.00 activity card $4.00 without STUDENTS & FACULTY In solidarity with SOVIET JEWRY T-V Thursday, Feb. 25 RALLY Noon West Mall Speakers, Folk dancing, petitions LECTURE Dr. Stephen Blank "Soviet Jewry: Past, Present, and Future" 8:30 GOTA FIST FULL OF A t m i i G le n d a Huff, Daily T e xan Staff PesLki*. Drumming up business A member of the Hare Krishna religious organization chants and plays the tabla for onlookers In the West Mall area near Guadalupe Street. The group has been active locally during the past two weeks, prom oting its Austin chap­ ter and dispensing literature as well as offering free Sunday dinners. Texas sues for oil windfall A ttorney G en eral M ark White announced Tuesday that a fed eral d istrict cou rt in B e a u ­ m ont will allow T e x a s to present evid ence to show the fed eral governm ent has receiv ed windfall profits from fed erally auctioned T e x ­ as oil and gas le a se s and that T e x as m ay cla im its fa ir sh are of the revenue. In The S ta te of T e x a s vs. Ja m e s W att. W hite has filed suit in U .S. D istrict Court under a statu te entitling co a sta l sta te s to an • e q u ita­ ble division” of revenues from offsh ore fe d e r­ al oil and natural gas exploration. T he govern­ m ent leases the a re a from the shoreline to the s ta te s ’ offshore boundary, th ree m iles o ff the coast. T he disputed revenues a re from fed eral lease sales that began in 1979. W hite said the federal governm ent has received alm o st $1 bil­ lion from oil com panies for the right to drill th ree-m ile for oil and gas within T e x a s' offshore boundary. W hite said the fed eral w indfall com es as a •direct result of all the risks T e x as has taken to develop its oil and gas exploration for m ore than 40 y ears. “ At trial, we intend to prove to the cou rt how that windfall occurred. The fed eral gov­ ernm ent is willing to take windfall m oney away from the s ta te but is unwilling to sh are with the s ta te s a windfall of its ow n,” W hite said. kinko's copies e p p ie s iS K # Quick Service ^ M r . I No Minimum» # 1 | / • Large O rders / 6 1 ^ £ M b Jmá T • U g a lShe 51/26 476-4654 2200 Guadalupe 2913 Medical Arts 476-3242 J W / location lost and found LOST AND FOUND Lost property is usually turned in to the in laboratories, offices, departments, dormatories, residence halls and buildings on campus. This property is held for 3 class days. If the owner can be identified, contact is made to return the property. Property not claimed is forwarded to U T Police in B e llm o n t . A l s o c on ta ct the U T Police for any emergency like the loss of a wallet. They are open from 8:00 to 4:30, closed from 1:30 to 2:30 AAon. thru Fri. Call 471-4441. ¡i ¡ ' J* r Or just a handful of change? Well, for a "few dollars less" you' find more at Callahan's General Store We've got things you need along with some things you may not even know you need, yet Plus, with a valid U.T I D., w give you a 10 percent discount (excluding sale items) when you com e out and meet up with us. We have stuff to help you build shelves, hang pictures and get your place in shape. Lots of western gear, too. leans jackets, boots, hats, belts and more. For students living in and around the Riverside area, we're just a short trip as the crow flies. So bring out your I.D and see what a few dollars less" will buy at Callahan's. STORE H W Y 183 SOUTH 385-3452 M rs. Johnson's Bakery Chocolate.. .Chocolate.. .Chocolate! Chocolate Chip Cookies Fresh Baked Fudge Brownies Chocolate Croissants with nuts 79* perdoz. $2.29 perdoz. 59* each Main Bakery 453-7271 1303 W. Koenig Lane (Between Burnet & Lamar) 7am-6pm Sun. 7am-2pm 4909 Airport 24 hrs. day 7 days a week Limited Special 5 0 * off all doughnuts ordered by the dozen Coupon expires 2-2H-H2 A Great Tasting Beer for Those with Great Taste. Faulk blasts arms race Humorist stresses negotiation By DAVID WOODRUFF Daily Texan Staff The possibility of nuclear war is “ too hor­ rible to contemplate — but we m ust,” Austin humorist and civil rights activist John Henry Faulk said Tuesday night. Faulk, a University graduate, speaking be­ fore an audience of more than 100 people in Burdine Auditorium, said, “ The only way out (of a nuclear war) is to initiate a dialogue. For the first time in the history of mankind, we have a way of wiping ourselves out — and no way to prevent ourselves from doing so.” Citing Jam e s Madison’s statement made during the drafting of the Bill of Rights, Faulk said that “ the American people can solve anything with a free and open dia­ logue.” “ Ours is a society of people who control their own destiny,” Faulk said. Faulk, 68, said there was discussion of the potential problems of nuclear proliferation when nuclear weapons were in the early stages of development, “ but 50,000 nuclear warheads later, now we are confronted with a reality that is so unimaginably horrible that we don’t even like to think about it.” Quoting the Declaration of Independence, he said that dialogue on issues such as nucle­ ar proliferation is necessary “ to secure the blessings of liberty for ourselves and our pos­ terity.” Faulk alternately ridiculed statem ents of the Reagan administration on nuclear prolif­ eration and bemoaned the possibility of a nu­ clear holocaust. While saying that he had no expertise about nuclear arm s, Faulk said, “ I know something Reagan, Haig and Wein­ berger don’t know. We’re just about to get the hell blown out of us — unless we have a lot more meetings like this one.” Faulk’s speech was sponsored by Educa­ tors for Social Responsibility, a group “ dedi­ cated to initiating a dialogue on the prospects of nuclear w ar,” said group spokesman Al­ fred Crosby, University professor of Ameri­ can studies and geography. A nuclear war would “ differ from anything we can conceive of. It would lead to destruc­ tion of the ecosphere and death of the spe­ cies, as opposed to individual death,” he said. “ We can destroy everything, but we can’t create anything.” “ Who is important in stopping nuclear in abolishing nuclear w eapons?” he war, asked rhetorically. “ Each of us is .” He mentioned the efforts of Citizens for a Bilateral Nuclear Weapons Freeze, a group pushing for a referendum in California on nu­ clear proliferation, and said “ There’s no rea­ son why we couldn’t hold a sim ilar referen­ dum in T exas.” John Henry Faulk Clayton Brantly, Dally Texan Staff Petitioners seek citizens’ control of city taxes By DOUGLAS McLEOD Daily Texan Staff Citizens’ Tax Veto, a new group formed “ to promote democ­ racy in taxation,” has started a referendum petition drive that would require voter approval for any city tax increase. To refrain from placing an extra burden on taxpayers, CTV has proposed holding the referendum to amend the City Char­ ter on the sam e day as the bond election scheduled for Aug. 7, Libertarian Fred Ebner, chairman of the group, said at a news conference at City Council Chambers Tuesday. The CTV “ Tax Levy Election" proposal states no new tax or increase in taxes “ shall be enacted by the City of Austin, ex­ cept by consent of a m ajority of qualified voters at a regular or special election.” The proposal further states such votes will not be held more than once a year. CTV needs 5 percent of Austin’s registered voters — slightly more than 10,000 signatures — to get the referendum placed on the ballot, Ebner said. The CTV proposal would not prevent the city from collecting what Mayor Carole McClellan euphemistically calls “ the peo­ ple’s profit” from city utilities, Ebner said. “ But the amount of that so-called profit — which in reaility is a tax on our utility bills — cannot be increased from its current record-high level without your (the voters’ ) consent. “ Nine percent of the revenue of the City of Austin from utility bills is tax revenue and is transferred to the general fund. And 64 percent of the total revenues of the city is from utilities,” he said Gary Johnson, vice chairman of the group, said, “ This pro­ posal will require voter approval for any increase in the profit that the city government m akes on its electric and water utili­ ties and spends in other departments. ” The city s fiscal 1981 budget shows surplus revenues — aibove operating cost — from electric and water utilities, totaled more than $30 million, Johnson said. To meet the city’s deadline for filing 60 days before the planned Aug. 7 bond election, the referendum petitions m ust be filed with the city clerk by June 8. “ Every citizen who signs this petition will be declaring that the people should be given final control over their tax e s,” John­ son said. The group will be gathering signatures at shopping m alls this week. Ebner said he conducted an hour-long survey in his neighbor­ hood during the weekend in which he garnered nine signatures from the only nine people he asked. “ I know that it’s going to be terribly successful,” he said. “ The only opposition I can think of would be the Austin Maso- chists Association,” he said, jokingly. He said the question is. "D o es the city have the moral right to tax people without their consent? That’s what this is all about.” Concerning the effect his proposal would have on funding for city program s in light of President R eagan ’s New Federalism plan requiring cities to fund program s that previously were federally funded, Ebner said, “ I think that’s one of the best reasons of a ll.” The bureaucracy will say all program s are vital when in truth they are not, he said. " I f we don’t get a hold on it we could be in for some staggering tax in creases.” Ebner said he first thought about such a proposal 20 y ears ago when he was studying com parative government. He stud­ ied the Sw iss constitution and observed Switzerland has the lowest taxes in Europe though it has an army larger than the United S ta te s '; the government functions well and its economy is the soundest in Europe, he said. The Student Services FEE COMMITTEE announces a PUBLIC MEETING on the consideration of voting on ALL BUDGET REQUESTS Today at 3:15 p.m. Sinclair Suite Texas Union Students' Attorney Student Health Center Recreational Sports Shuttle Bus System The Daily Texan Senior Cabinet Ombudsman Program Election Commission Student Activities College Councils This is a final voting session on all Budget Requests NOW OPEN! Home-style Cookin’ in the Texas Tradition tPSBtS A S / B É S T A U R A N T ^ Ü 503 East Sixth Street Wednesday, February 24, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 Defense test puts Bell in quandary the local (UPI) conceded WASHINGTON - Education Secretary Terrel Bell blamed school standards Tuesday for blacks' low scores on Pentagon tests but results m ake it hard for him to ju sti­ fy cuts in aid to poor children. A Pentagon study released Monday, based on a test de­ termining the quality of m ili­ tary enlistees, found blacks scored less than half as well a s whites on verbal and math­ em atical skills. Bell, who asked several re­ porters to his office to talk about the Pentagon results, said blacks’ low test scores are a “ serious problem” but that he does not think one race has more “ sm arts” than another. “ We’re failing to meet the these population needs of groups,” Bell said. He blamed much of the problem on the nation’s 16,000 local school boards, saying they autom atically promote bad students, let school out too often for such activities a s a sse m b lie s foo tb all gam es, and fail to reward teacher excellence. and “ If you have low expecta­ tions, you’re going to get low­ er results,” said Bell, a for­ mer superintendent and once chief of Utah’s edu­ cation system. school “ If the school boards would come on stronger there, we could raise the whole level of education,” he Am erican said. But asked how, in light of the results, he can justify the Reagan adm inistration’s pro­ posed $1 billion cut in the $2.9 billion Title I program of aid to poor children, Bell said, “ That’s a tough one for me to answer When I get through answering that, you have to ask: How much credibility is there in my reply ?” Bell said education cuts must be made because feder­ al spending must be reduced, and other are a s like defense and entitlements are held sacred. “ I would hope that our cut in Title I is a temporary m ea­ sure and maybe we can see a time where we can have some resources com e back,” he said. The Education D epart­ ment, in its annual report to Congress, recently singled out Title I for special praise, say ­ ing it helped raise students’ basic skills. Bell echoed that praise. “ If it weren’t for Title I, it might be even worse than it is,” Bell said of the test re­ sults. The scores of whites on the Pentagon test averaged 56 percent, blacks 24 percent and Hispanic Americans 31 per­ cent, the study said. Among recruits, whites achieved 58 percent, blacks 33 percent and Hispanics 41 percent. *2500 OFF* ALL 14» GOLD IIT CLASS RINGS Al l S i l a d i u m R i n g s O n l y '1 1 4 ” X - \ \ \ * ' I S 00 OFF ALL 1 0k RINGS & Sfei *NOW through Feb. 26 /W(7IRVED V;: v ! ( lfpIN ,s class Rings Finance & Accounting Majors O ur R epublic is stilL the land o f opportunity! W anted: Finance and Accounting Majors (BBAs and MBAs). As the lead bank within the Republic of Texas Corporation, a 31 -member bank holding company, we are building our future on a financial base in excess of $10 billion That’s why we are always on the lookout for talented individuals with a determination to keep us on top of the banking industry — no matter how far we have to look. Our College Graduate Development Program prepares you for that challenge The College Graduate Development Program at RepublicBank Dallas was designed specifically for those individuals with an interest in commer­ cial lending. It exposes young bankers to the diversity of opportunities in banking at Repuhiic- Bank Dallas. Formal instruction along with on- the-job training prepares young bankers for lending assignments. Our training includes seminars, workshops, and internships in different lending departments, working with our top lending officers. If you feel this program is what your career needs, consider these qualifications an MBA with nine (9) hours of accounting or a BBA with twelve (12) hours ot accounting We also look for good personal selling skills and a GPA o< 3 0 or better If you can meet these qualifications, you should be looking at a career m the land of opportunity — RepublicBank Dallas R RepublicBank Dallas -¿¿X - Collect on our opportunity by contact­ ing your Placement Office regarding our upcoming campus interview dates An Equal Opportunity Employ»» **/F;H /V In just a few weeks, college hoop fans from Animal Houses to civilized dorms, with cheer resounding (and in hand), will psych up for the NCAA basketball playoffs. How will your school fare? Last year's playoffs were grab bags of upsets. You just can't predict the NCAA's. Which is why they're a blast to watch. And the best way to catch all the action in color Is with SPORTS ILLUSTRATED. Si's photographers and writers will be prowling the baselines at every gam e.. .snapping rolls of color film and a gross of pencils. The result for you? Fast-closing, fast-paced coverage of the jams and jump shots, the slowdowns and run and guns, from outside the key to inside the players' heads. As a student, you get BIG savings—the lowest price available to anyone! Just 350 an issue. You save 76% off the cover price. You pay 49% LESS than our regular subscribers pay. Now is the best time to subscribe. BUT THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT-Do it today. To be sure you see the playoffs from start to finish, you must clip the coupon below and mail It back now. For even f aster service, use our toll-free number—1-800-621-8200 —and ask for operator 11. (In Illinois, call 1-800-972-8302.) In addition to the playoffs, you'll see the Holmes-Cooney fight, the baseball pennant race, the college and pro football seasons and much more. So subscribe now. Then sit back and enjoy all the action. SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT ; YES! SENO ME SPORTS ILLUSTRATED ; IN TIME FOR THE NCAA PLAYOFFS! I would like I I I Rate o fju st3 5 c an issue. That's 76% off the cover price ■ and 49% off the basic rate (Minimum 26; maximum 104) 1 issues of SI a t the Student Discount Nam e Address City (please pon tj Apt No State Zip College oí University Mall to: SPORTS ILLUSTRATED 541 North Fairbanks Court C hicago, Illinois 60611 Where no term ts indicated them nm unn will b e served Vteor studies end FOR EVEN FASTER SERVICE, CALL TOLL-FREE—1-800-621*8200. Ask foi operator 11. (In Illinois, call 1-800-972-8302) Wednesday, February 24, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN Sports Page 11 Texas grabs Day takes on hero role bill; By DAVID SPA N G LER D aily T e x a n Staff Between games Tuesday at Disch-Falk Field, Texas first baseman Randy Day sat quietly in the corner at his locker eating a hero submarine sandwich. Day was angry be­ cause he struck out on some bad pitches dur­ ing the first game. But the 6-2 senior sandwiched a triple and game-winning double around that, clearly stealing the role as the Longhorns’ hero for the day. Day's one-out shot came in the last inning, scoring Mike Trent from second base to give Texas a 2-1 first-game victory over Lubbock Christian. The Longhorns came back with a 5-2 decision to sweep their third consecutive double-header of the young season, good for a perfect 6-0 record Day said he went up to the plate just look­ ing to make contact. " I was mad from my last time at bat, be­ cause 1 didn’t swing at a good pitch," Day said. " I was more angry than aggressive and was just looking to make contact’’ That he did. driving the ball high off the left field fence. Day said he thought the ball had a chance to go out of the ballpark, but the double was sufficient. " I thought it had a chance to go out," he said. " I was hoping it would. But it doesn’t matter as long as we win " Calvin Schiraldi went the distance in the seven-inning opener, pitching a four hitter. The 6-5 sophomore from Austin Westlake upped his record to 2-0, with a sparkling 0.64 ERA. Schiraldi has surrendered only one run in two outings — a solo home run by LCC’s Scott Lawton in the fourth inning. Lawton tied the game at 1-1 after the Long­ horns went ahead in the second on Day’s triple to center field Chaparral center-field- er Chet Feldman appeared to misplay a rou­ tine fly ball by racing back to the fence. The ball fell in front of him. bounced over his head and Day raced to third base. "When 1 hit it, I thought it was a pop out," Day said. But when 1 reached second base, I saw that the ball had bounced in. I ’ll take them any way 1 can get them. " Texas took advantage of the opportunity, as designated hitter Tracy Dophied promptly brought Day in on a Sacrifice fly. Day was the only Longhorn baserunner in the first six innings of the contest. Lubbock Christian, however, was unable to capitalize on opportunities the entire day. The Chaps opened the game with two singles, putting runners on first and second with no one out. But Schiraldi struck out the next three batters in order, which were the only strike-outs he managed on the day. Roger Clemens also increased his record to 2-0, after going seven and one ihird inning? without yielding a run. The transfer pitcher from San Jacinto Junior College gave up five hits, while striking out a season-high eight batters. Rusty Uresti came on in the eighth to ex­ tinguish an LCC rally, picking up his first save of the year. Chaparral ace-pitcher Steve Hunter sport ed a perfect 4-0 record coming into the game, but Texas jumped on him early for three first-inning runs Designated-hitter Kirk Killingsworth drove home Spike Owen with a booming triple into the right center field alley. Catch­ er Jeff Hearron, who had two RBIs in game two, singled sharply to left and Day drove him home with a ground-rule double that bounced over the right center field fence. Texas added one more in the fifth for a 4-0 lead before LCC posed a minor threat in the eighth inning. Once again, the first two Cha parral hitters reached base safely to open the inning. And once again, Lewis Stephenson and Leland Creel struck out back-to-back ending any threat of a rally That combo which represents the heart of the Chaparral lineup, went a combined zero for 15 in the double-header, striking out six times. The Longhorns added one more insurance run in the bottom of that frame as Milo Choate scored on a passed ball after getting to third base on the strength of a triple. LCC mounted one last threat in the ninth, bunching three doubles and a single together for two runs before Uresti got Stephenson to pop up harmlessly to third base. " I was really pleased to beat them twice,” Texas coach Cliff Gustafson said "With their game experience (20 games played al­ ready this season) and advanced stage of their pitchers. I thought that would hurt us. But we’re still going to have to do something to find some punch in the lineup " The Longhorns were virtually punchless in the first game and Day said he detected the trouble. "We didn't play aggiessive at all," he said “ We were just flat. Maybe we will learn from this These kind of games are not good for the heart, but we'll take them anv way we can get them. Last year’s magic is still around and maybe we can keep it going " Texas first baseman Day waits for Chapparral baserunner who took one step too many away from the bag. Steve G o o d s o n , Dalty T e x a n Staff Catcher trades mask for mound By SU SIE W O ODH AM S Daily Texan Staff No, the scorecards sold at Tuesday’s double- header between Texas and Lubbock Christian didn't have a misprint out to the side of No. 10, Rusty Uresti’s name. The “ C” to the right did stand for catcher. That’s why The Wild Bunch led a chorus of cheers at Disch-Falk Field when the 5-10, 180 sen­ ior from Austin took the mound in the top of the eighth of the second game, just moments after Texas coach Cliff Gustafson told starter Roger Clemens to take a shower. Uresti can catch, all right. He probably would be doing that more often if junior transfer Jeff Hearron hadn’t jumped out to such a good start at that position. And when Gustafson lets him, Uresti can pitch. He just doesn’t do it too often, and that's why those left of the 800 fans yelped in slight disbelief when the Longhorn coach signaled for the home­ town boy to trot to the field — sans catching gear — with runners at first and second, one out, Tex­ as up 4-0 and Chaparral designated hitter Leland Creel coming up to the plate. “ I knew he was a home run threat, and he’s a hard fastball hitter," Uresti said of the former Texas player, now one of Lubbock Christian’s hottest hitters. So how did Uresti walk away from the mound at the end of the inning looking like Nolan Ryan Jr.? He stayed away from his fastball and fed Creel a curve ball three times to strike him out swinging. After a wild pitch moved up the runners, third baseman Milo Choate made things easier for Uresti by snagging a short chopper to throw out Scott Lawton and end the inning. A cinch, huh? " I knew I could do it over here, but I didn't know if I could do it there, if you know what I mean," said Uresti, pointing to the bullpen to the left of the Texas dugout and then sweeping his arm in the direction of the pitchers’ mound on the field. Sure, Gustafson understands perfectly That’s why he threw Uresti into the situation Not to shake things up, but to see if the senior, who had pitched and played catcher at Crockett High School, could make the transition from behind the plate to in front of it in major college ball. (See CATCHER, Page 12.) 7-EIEVEII FREEDOM SUPER PRICES BUDWEISER SAVE 40< GRAND OPENING SPECIALS 1 1814 GUADALUPE STORE ONLY . PRICES EFFECTIVE 2/24/82-2/27/82 BIG GULP PEPSI DIET PEPSI MOUNTAIN DEW ELEVEII DORITOS-$1.29 size ALL THREE FLAVORS BUY ONE GET ONE FREE QUART OF HOMOGENIZED É Í5 MILK 59' ICE CREAM LUXURY PINT BUY ONI GET ONE FREE so 19 6 PACK 12 OZ. CANS SAVE 30< YOGURT 3 for 99 ALL PREMIUM BEER 12 OZ. CANS $8.99 /„» ($9.19 CASE-LIGHT) SATURDAY ONLY HOT DOG AND COKE AT CONCESSION STAND 99 SAVE 66- WE CARRY A FULL LINF OF IMPORT BEER BUY SARA LEE DANISH AT REDUCED PRICE OF GET 6 OZ. CUP OF COFFEE SAVE 50- FREE GASOUNE AT COMPETITIVE PRICES PAY BY CHECK 24 HOURS A DAY The One Place Where Freedom and Super Prices Meet By JOEY REISTROFFER Daily Texan Staff Darts offers students an opportunity to refresh their mathe­ m atical skills without the hassles of lengthy classroom lec­ tures, bulging books with boring numbers, or homework dead­ lines. Students can always elim inate the tedious numbers game by procuring a calculator, but the gam e of darts permits pupils to further their math talent in a relaxing, social environment, free from educational pressures George Kane, founder of the University of Texas Dart Asso­ ciation, said darts is an excellent chance for students to learn math and agreed that expert dartsmen need quick mathemati­ cal minds to concentrate on the game. “ One thing good about darts is it improves your m ath,” Kane said. “ It has been known to help kids. " The University Dart Association mushroomed at the Texas Union Building five sem esters ago and continued expanding. c ÉÉ This sem ester, Kane estim ated the In tram u ral D art League a ttra c te d 60 to 70 participants. K ane recognized the popularity of the sport and formed a sep arate Texas D art Team , which com petes in Austin bars against other city team s. To achieve m em bership to the com petitive team , students try out for the organization. M em bership has increased to such a degree that some ex­ particip ants hesitated to sign up for the spring 1982 season. Cathy Levin, a three-sem ester veteran, said intram urals were overcrowded. “ I went to join it, but th e re w ere too m any peo­ ple,” Levin said. “ There w ere ju st so m any people on each team th a t I decided not to join. I have a dartboard in my room, so I can still play d a rts.” Kane attrib u ted the m ass enrollm ent in the sport to its lack of physical requirem ents. “ You don’t have to have physical abilities; you don’t have to have those q u alities,” he said. The trick to d arts rem ains rooted in m ental concentration, not physical ability. David Gibson, professor of microbiology and a d arts enthusi­ ast, said the gam e dem ands self-discipline and concentration. “ I t’s a one-on-one situation,” he said. “ I t's you against the d artb o a rd .” Tom H ackenberg, a m em ber of the team, said the sport re­ quires dexterity and hand-to-eye coordination. “There’s not much em phasis on com peting and winning," he said. “ Every­ one sits around having fun. I t’s just a regular Andy Capp scene. Everybody is on a first-nam e basis.” Intram ural team s learn 12 events, practicing a different con­ te st each week. The event recognized in tournam ent play, 301, com m ences with each player receiving 301 points, 501 for dou­ bles and 601 for triples. The object of the gam e is to reduce the point totals to zero; however, the players m ust first hit a dou­ ble, the outerm ost ring, before any subtraction. Each contest­ ant throw s his d a rts — a throw consists of th ree d a rt tosses — and dim inishes the point value from the previous score. It sounded sim ple enough until Kane explained the hitch: “ You have to hit zero exactly, and you have to go out with a double." Herein lie the strategies and the benefit of mathemat- ics. “ The m ath trips people up," Gibson said. “The good players know w hat to shoot at. The average player loses concentration while fumbling a t the co rrec t com binations for victory.” O ther events such as five or nothing, killer and cricket re­ volve around sim ilar guidelines, yet the mathematical combi­ nations ensure different strategies. Four U niversity d a rt players, including Hackenberg, m astered the 301 skills and w ere chosen to represent the Uni­ versity in the d a rts event a t the Association of College Union- International Region XII Tournam ent held at the Texas Union Building Feb. 11-13. Ja m es W arren, a m em ber of Texas’ dart team , won the event, w ith Texas A&M’s Armando Gonzalez placing second. The tournam ent also included other events such as bowling, table tennis, backgam m on and F risbee, adding d a rts in 1980 because of the persisten t efforts of Kane. “ D arts is just like golf or anything e lse ,” K ane said. “They have professional d art shooters th at hop, skip and jump from different p arts of the country (searching for d a rt tourna­ m e n ts).” A ustin’s Villa Capri M otor Hotel encourages professional d art shooters by hosting a $10,000 tournam ent, while Honolulu draw s m ost d a rt experts with a $100,000 classic in September. Gibson said only a sm all num ber trav e rse the globe, searching for tournam ents. Very few m ake a living a t it, he said. “ Most people play in tournam ents just for the fun of it. I play it for relaxation." Catcher... (Continued from P age 11.) "U resti has a weapon th at could really be tremendous for us and th a t’s his curve b all.” G ustafson said. “ We want to have it so we can rely on him in touchy spots. I wanted him in there so it would be a challenge for him, but if we gave up some runs, it w ouldn't hurt too m uch." The ac t he had to follow w asn't the easiest. Clemens left the gam e afte r throw ing 7 v3 innings of shutout ball, something he said he needed to bring down his 6.00 ERA a fte r Friday’s start against M idwestern. Clemens also had throw n 120 pitches on the day. relying on a wicked fastball to strik e out eight. Add the fact that Calvin Schiraldi picked up his second com plete game of the season with a 2-1 victory in the opener, and U resti would ju st about have to ask for a m iracle to look like he belonged on the mound “ I threw against M idwestern last year — two innings, one hit, no earned runs and struck out th ree ," Uresti recalled. But that was all the tim e he put in as a pitcher since coming to Texas. The re st has been behind the plate, as Burk Goldthom’s backup last season and now H earron’s. The latter has a feeling, though, that with a little work, U resti will be out on the mound m ore often, even though he got into a jam in the top of the ninth when Lubbock C hristian knocked his fastball around into the alleys to score two. Shoe Shop „ , , W . m o k. ond *oa* r SHEEPSKIN C Q W & C A L F repair boots shoos leather goods b*"‘ * SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN 1614 Lavaca Capitol Saddlery Austin, Texas 478-9309 Th usderCloud Now Delivers To all Dorms (Univer­ sity & Private) Frater­ nities & Sororities too! CALL 478-3281 1608 Lavaca Delivery: Mon. thru Fri. & Sun., 6-11 P.M. Minimum Order— 3 Sandwiches OPERATION IDENTIFICATION i n o r d e r • E n g r a v e y o u r d r i v e r ' s J J l i c e n s e n u m b e r on all , • v a l u a b l e s to • • f aci l i t at e r e t u r n to you if , • s t o l e n a n d r e c o v e r e d . • J Eng r av e r s can be s ig n e d , f r o m U T P o l i c e . J • o u t J' ' O p e r a t i o n • t i f i c a t i o n ” . Call 471-4441. I d e n - , • ee< T&IÉPHONE : •COUNSELING: • This servi ce provides an* • i m m e d i a t e and confiden-J # tial source of assistance 24* • hours every day, including* T r a i n e d J • h o l i d a y s . ¿counselors are available to * issues r a n g i n g * • discuss • f r o m personal crises to in-J ¿ f o r m a t i o n a b o u t t h e * • University and referral t o * •various community agen-« • ¿cíes. Cali 476-7073. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • y t « - TSP Staff Metcalf ties SWC record with Aggie win By United Press International COLLEGE STATION — Tyren Naulls and Claude Riley broke open the gam e during the last 10 m inutes to bring Texas A&M an 83-74 win over Texas Christian that kept alive Aggie hopes for a Southwest Conference cham pion­ _ _ _ _ ship. College Basketball The win w as the 176th in SWC action for A&M coach Shelby M etcalf, tying him for first on the all-tim e list with form er A rkansas coach Glen Rose. M etcalf needs 23 m ore victo­ ries to equal Rose in overall wins. Texas A&M increased its league record to 10-5, a half gam e back of the SWC-leading Ar­ kansas Razorbacks. TCU led by as many as eight in the first half on the shooting of substitute guard Jeff B aker, but the Aggies closed their deficit to th ree at the half, 40-37. The gam e stayed close through the first 10 m inutes of the second half. But A&M center Rudy Woods broke a 59-59 tie with a free throw and the Aggies did not trail again. After Woods' free throw. A&M outscored TCU, 12-2, and the Aggies la ter scored six in a row to put the gam e out of reach, leading by as many as 14 in the late going. Riley scored 23 points and Naulls added 15 to pace the A&M cause. Guards Milton Woodley and Reggie R oberts had 14 and 12 respectively. Doug Arnold led TCU with 14 points, D arrell Browder scored 13 and Baker had 11 — all in the first half. The Aggies now stand at 17-8 for the season while TCU slipped to 13-12 overall and 8-7 in conference action first half, but the slender Cougar guard was hot at the free throw line in the second half, scoring six from the charity stripe. Houston jum ped to an early 12-3 lead and Rice could com e no closer than that until the final m in­ utes. The taller Cougars outrebounded Rice, 41- 34. and although Michael Young led Houston on the boards with 10. seven-foot sophom ore Akeem Olajuwon was the dom inating factor after entering the gam e midway through the first half. P ierce was slightly hobbled with a sore knee, but was still able to score above his 27.3 average — second in the nation R ice cut the Houston lead to eight early in the second half, but a quick basket by W illiams and a three-point play by Clyde D rexler moved the Cougars into a double-figure lead Houston 75 Rice 69 HOUSTON — Houston's Rob W illiams out scored R ice’s Ricky P ierce 30-29. to help the Cougars fight off the Owls. Both sta r players scored 14 points in the Fordham 65, N. Dame 50 SOUTH BEND. Ind. - Dud Tongal scored 18 points and Edw ard Bonz added 12 to lift F o rd ­ ham over N otre Dame. John Paxson hit for 15 of his 21 points in the second half to help the Irish cut a 12-point half- tim e deficit to five points. But the R am s pad­ ded their lead dow'n the stretch Fordham capitalized on strong foul shoot­ ing. hitting on 25-of-33 com pared to 10-of-13 for Notre Dame. Ala. Birm. 40, Samford 27 BIRMINGHAM, Ala. - Oliver Robinson, the only player in double figures, ran up 17 points to lead A labam a-B irm ingham over Samford. Weber S t 70, Nev.-Reno 69 RENO, Nev. — Todd H arper scored six points in the final three m inutes to lift Weber S tate to a slim decision over Nevada-Reno. The trium ph keeps the playoff hopes alive for the W ildcats in the Big Sky conference. Who put an end to the Ranger? TSP thought it was just a hum or m agazine, but the Rangeroos knew it w as a w ay o f life . The Student Magazine of me university O n sale all around campus W ednesday & Thursday. INTRAMURAL SPORTS Compet it ive sports can be found outside the r e a l m of i n t e r c o l l e g i a t e a t h l e t i c s . RE C SPORTS offers i n t r a m u r a l compet it ion at all levels of play for students, f ac ul t y and staff throughout the school year. Call 471-3116 for e nt ry dates and deadlines. 15/30REBATE On your College Ring A i . » A u ,my y . FEBRUARY 22 through FEBRUARY 26 Texas Union Information Lobby $15 discount on all 10k gold and lustrium rings $30 discount on all 14k rings most ladies' 14k styles - $153.00 — low est gold ring prices since 1979! — J oslen rings ere a imitable exclu sii'dy through The Texas Union VISA' u ™ A ,.w . Wednesday, February 24, 1962 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 13 Houston defeats Dallas, 105-95 Gervin scores 35 in San Antonio victory By United Press International HOUSTON — Moses Malone went over the 30- point mark for the 13th consecutive game, scor­ ing 34 points and hauling down 21 rebounds to lead the Houston Rockets to a victory over the Dallas Mavericks. Elvin Hayes added 28 for Houston and Jay Vin­ cent led the Mavericks with 23. The Rockets es­ tablished the lead for good midway through the second quarter and did not trail again as Malone scored 11 of his 15 first-half points in the second period to secure a 50-45 halftime lead. NBA Dallas cut a 14-point deficit to seven with four minutes to play but a three-point play by Malone raised the Rockets lead back to 10. The Rockets had to play without the services of starting forward Bill Willoughby, who is out with an injured thumb. Despite the loss the Mavericks concluded the most successful road trip in their history, split­ ting six gam es. San Antonio 143, Golden St. 123 SAN ANTONIO — George Gervin scored 35 points and Mike Mitchell added 24 to send the San Antonio Spurs to a romp over the Golden State Warriors. The victory was San Antonio’s fifth in its last six gam es and kept the Spurs five-and-a-half games ahead of the Houston Rockets in the Mid­ west Division. San Antonio jumped to a 45-30 first-quarter lead as Gervin scored 16 points. The Spurs shot 64 per­ cent from the field in the first period. After a cold spell in which San Antonio did not score a field goal over a 4:39 span, Golden State closed to 54-47 with 6:30 left in the second period. But San Anto­ nio regained control on two baskets by Mitchell and a layup by Gervin to give San Antonio a 12- point bulge with 4:46 left in the half. The Warriors were led by World Free with 25 points and Purvis Short with 23. There was an extraordinary number of fouls, with the teams combining for 70 fouls and 92 free throws. Golden State hit 40-of-53 and San Antonio 35-of-39. Utah 113, Washington 106 LANDOVER, Md. — Adrian Dantley fired in 39 points and Darrell Griffith scored 24 to lift the Utah Jazz over the Washington Bullets. The loss snapped a record of 14 straight victo­ ries by Washington over the Jazz, including the last eight at Capital Centre. With Utah leading 86-85 early in the final peri­ od, Dantley and John Duren scored six points apiece to key a 14-6 surge. Duren’s 15-footer with 4:27 remaining gave Utah a 100-91 lead. Greg Bal­ lard and Frank Johnson scored five points apiece in the next two minutes to cut the lead to 104-101 but Washington came no closer than three points the rest of the way. The triumph ended a five-game losing streak for Utah and raised the Jazz record to 19-35 in the Midwest Division. Washington dropped its third consecutive game and fell to 25-28 in the Atlantic Division. New York 113, Milwaukee 110 NEW YORK — Michael Ray Richardson, star­ ring on both ends of the court, scored seven points in the final 2:43 to snap a 104-104 tie and help the New York Knicks break the Milwaukee Bucks’ 12- game winning streak. Richardson, held to just six points through three periods, hit a foul shot with 2:43 left to put the Knicks ahead 105-104, then swiped the ball from Sidney Moncrief and hit a flying dunk 23 seconds later. His spinning drive through the lane with 1:36 left put the Knicks ahead by five points and when Milwaukee closed to 111-110, Richard­ son's follow basket with six seconds remaining provided the final margin. Milwaukee had a chance to tie with a three-pointer in the final sec­ onds but Richardson stole the inbounds pass. Atlanta 103, Kansas City 94 ATLANTA — Eddie Johnson scored 27 points and had eight assists to carry the Atlanta Hawks to their fifth straight victory, a decision over the Kansas City Kings Johnson was backed by John Drew with 24 points and 13 rebounds and Tom McMillen with 22 points. Atlanta's Tree Rollins had 20 rebounds and seven blocked shots. Atlanta led 79-68 after three quarters but Kan­ sas City took an 87-85 lead with 6:06 left on a layup by Reggie Johnson. Atlanta went ahead to stay at 89-88 with 5:04 remaining on a short hook by McMillen. Kansas City was paced by Reggie Johnson with 20? points and 13 rebounds. Reggie King finished with 13 points and reserve Kevin Loder added 12 Chicago 123, Portland 122 CHICAGO — Reggie Theus scored 13 of his 28 points in the third quarter to lead the Chicago Bulls to a slim victory over the Portland Trail Blazers. The win snapped Chicago’s four-game losing streak while Portland dropped its fifth straight and six of its last seven Portland led 60-55 at the half and built its lead to 73-63 with 8:20 left in the third quarter. Maple Leafs’ Borje Salming and Blues’ Jill Nill scramble for puck. UPI Telephoto Mavs’ Davis attempts layup between Rockets’ Leavell, Hayes. UPI Telephoto Blues end 8-game streak with 3-2 win By United Press International ST. LOUIS — Joe Mullen scored two goals and Wayne Babych added another to send St. Louis to a 3-2 the Toronto Maple victory over Leafs, ending the Blues’ eight-gam e winless streak. The two St. Louis right wings skated with opposite linem ates for the first tim e Tuesday. L ast year, Babych, Jorgen P ettersson and cen­ ter Blake Dunlop w ere the Blues' m ost potent line with 111 goals. NHL That line clicked again for the B lues’ first goal at 14:11 of the opening period. It was B abych’s first goal since returning from a shoulder injury five gam es ago. Mullen joined Brian S utter and cen ter Bernie Federko and convert­ two of F ederko’s passes for ed goals. M ullen's 14th goal a t 16:28 of the second period gave St. Louis a 2- 1 lead. He scored what proved to be the winner at 1:24 of the final p eri­ od. Borje Salming and Rick Viave scored T oronto’s goals. The loss was the 11th in the last 17 gam es for the Maple Leafs. UNIONDALE, N Y. NY Islanders 5, Chicago 1 - Bryan T rottier had two goals and two a s ­ sists to lead the New York Islanders to their 16th victory in their last 17 games, a trium ph over the Chicago Black Hawks. T ro ttie r’s first goal of the gam e late in the second period gave the center 100 points for the season, making him only the fifth player in NHL history to score at least 100 points in five consecutive seasons. The others w ere Phil Esposito, Bob­ by Orr, Guy Lafleur and M arcel Dionne. T ro ttier has scored at least one point in each of the last 17 games. A1 Secord’s 39th goal at 12:01 of the first period gave the Black Hawks a 1-0 lead but John Tonelli. Mike Bossy and T rottier scored du r­ ing an eight-m inute span of the sec­ ond period to give New York a 3-1 lead. Billy Carroll gave New York a 4-1 lead at 7:26 of the third period with a shorthanded goal and Trot­ tier closed the scoring less than four minutes later, overwhelming goalie Murray Bannerman with a vicious slapshot from 40 feet. The victory extended New York’s unbeaten streak at home against the Black Hawks to 17 games. Detroit 6, Colorado 3 - Mike B laisdell DENVER scored two goals and assisted on a third to lead the Detroit Red Wings to a victory over the Colorado Rock­ ies. Blaisdell intercepted a clearing pass by Colorado goalie Glenn Resch and shot into an open net at 7:42 of the second period. He later tipped a long shot from Vaclav Nedomansky for a power-play goal at 13:20 of the middle period to reach the 20-goal mark. He also set up John O’Grodnick for a 45-foot slap shot that eluded Resch on the first shot of the game with just 29 seconds gone. Nedomansky fired a 15-foot wrist shot at 2:37 of the first period to give the Wings a 2-0 lead. Reed Lar­ son made it 3-0 at 4:42 of the second period and Ted Nolan added an unassisted, shorthanded goal at 15:53 of the third period to close the Detroit scoring. Quebec 4, Montreal 3 QUEBEC — Real Cloutier scored with less than three minutes left to give the Quebec Nordiques a deci­ the sion over Montreal, halting Canadiens’ drive the NHL record for most consecutive road victories. for The Canadiens had won eight con­ secutive road games to tie the record but they were unable to maintain their momentum in which they went 16 gam es without a loss. After Chris Nilan knotted the score on a deflection at 13:56 of the final period Cloutier banged in Dale Hunter’s centering pass. DURHAM NIXON- CLAY COLLEGE INTENSIVE ENGLISH Classes begin M arch 1st — TOEFL/UNIVERSITY PREPARATION — UNIVERSITY LEVEL AND ADVANCED COURSES — SIX MONTH "BASIC" COURSE FOR BEGINNERS — SHORT COURSES AND PRIVATE INSTRUCTION _ SMALL CLASSES/CONVERSATIONAL METHOD — AUTH. UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO ENROLL NON-IM MIGRANT ALIEN STUDENTS (1-20) CALL FOR APPT. 478-3446 TELEPHONE COUNSELING AND REFERRAL SERVICE r e l e p h o n e C o u n s e l i n g a n d R e f e r r a l S e r v i c e h as a i t a f f of t r a i n e d c o u n s e l o r s a v a i l a b l e 24 h o u r s a d a y , ¡65 d a y s a y e a r , to d is c u s s a n y p r o b l e m y ou m a y i a v e a nd to g iv e i n f o r m a t i o n a b o u t c a m p u s a n d ; o m m u n i t y a f f a i r s . CALL 476-7073 SO YOU STILL CAN’T REMEMBER OUR NAME? JUST REMEMBER OUR PRICE! ROSES *1.25 A STEM We've sold a lot of students a lot of flowers in the past six months. It’s been gratifying to us that they keep retur­ ning to our store. To all o f you who have com e by, we want to say Thanks Alot! But we know that a lot of you still don’t know of Barbara's Florists, and have yet to discover our wide selection, friendly service, and the absolute lowest prices in town. Even if you can't remember our name, we know you'll be interested in our prices. So com e by soon, and we’ll promise that when you leave y ou ’ll feel real good about having com e in. WE RE BARBARA’S FLORIST, AND WE WANT YOU TO KNOW THAT WE CARE! HOURS MONDAY-FRIBAV: 8:30 am-6:00 pm SATURDAY: 9:00 am-5:0O pm SUNDAY: 10:00 am-5:00 pm C onfidentiality is assured 477-1153 835 W. 12th Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, February 24, 1982 From staff and wire reports Giles said Tuesday. Sportswire L ong-aw aited IM fields open Falling light towers, broken water pipes and the Memorial Day weekend flood slowed down the progress of renovating Clarke and Whitaker fields, but the recreational sports staff said the facilities are now in full use. Fourteen playing fields at Whitaker were ex- peeled to be ready for use last fall, but the flood put a stop to that, canceling the soccer and foot­ ball seasons. Eight fields, as before renovation, will be ready for the softball season, which begins March 5, and all 14 should be ready by next fall, accord­ ing to Tom Dison. assistant director of recre­ ational sports. Forty tennis courts are now lighted at Whitaker instead of only 20. and in the middle of the new sports complex a new control center includes a locker room for the club sports, a classroom for gym classes, an intercom system to all the fields and an open deck on top of the building to serve as a watch tower. Clarke, open since last November, also in­ cludes eight new outdoor racketball handball courts, four outdoor basketball courts and a soft jogging track complete with four exercise Sta­ tions. Both sites have been reseeded with a special bermuda hybrid better suited for heavy wear and tear. The field will be shared by the track team, club sports and University students. Hose, Phillies near agreem ent PH ILA D ELPH IA - Pete Rose and the Phiia- delphia Phillies have reached a "basic agreement in philosophy” on a contract that will ensure he will be with the club as he approaches the all- time record for career hits, team president Bill ‘‘We've reached a basic agreement in philoso­ phy to have a perpetual year to year contract as long as we feel he can play for us,” Giles said. “ He’s agreed to play in Philadelphia as long as he chases the record. It's now a matter of coming to terms on the dollars involved Although Giles admits that both sides ‘‘have not gotten down to the nitty-gritty in dollars,” a new contract would be worth about $1 million a year to Rose. It is also believed Rose will receive a percentage of revenue from souvenirs and other factors related to his record chase. Rose last year broke Stan Musial’s National League record for career hits and ended the strike-shortened season with 3,697, leading the league with 140. He is 494 hits short of Ty Cobb’s all-time mark of 4,191. Hearns: no forecast of 'debut' LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Former World Boxing As­ sociation welterweight champion Thomas Hearns is making no predictions on the outcome of his middleweight debut Saturday against veteran Marcos Geraldo. Hearns, whose only blemish in 34 bouts with 30 knockouts was a controversial loss to undisputed welterweight champion Sugar Ray Leonard last September, said Tuesday he feels he can take on the best of the 160-pound division. “ I don't feel the guys in the middleweight divi­ sion are stronger,” said Hearns. ‘‘I feel I ’m just as strong as any of them.” Echoing a thought of Roberto Duran, Hearns said he did not believe Leonard was a ‘‘true champion'' because the welterweight title-holder has not given him a second fight. “I think I deserve a rematch,” said Hearns. Bunge up front in Avon tennis OAKLAND, Calif. — Bettina Bunge, riding high after her victory last week in Houston, defeated Nancy Yeargin 6-1, 6-2 Tuesday night to advance to the second round of a $150,000 tennis tourna­ ment. The tournament is sponsored by Avon. In the opening set, Bunge slammed two back­ hand returns to gain a 2-0 margin after the game went to three deuce points. She then held serve and gained a 3-0 margin before Yeargin was able to win a game. Yeargin, who advanced to the tournament by reaching the semifinals of a Futures event in Pittsburgh, battled Bunge to two more deuce points in the set before falling 6-1. In other matches: Yvonne Vermaak, South Af­ rica, defeated Leighann Thompson, Newport News, Va., 6-3, 6-3; Claudia Khode, West Germa­ ny, topped Sharon Walsh, San Francisco, 2-6, 7-5, 6-1; and Catherine Tanvier, France, defeated Eva Pfaff, West Germany, 7-6 (7-5), 6-4. ABC denies slander charges SAN ANGELO — A lawyer for a Texas high school football coach said Tuesday he was not satisfied by ABC TV’s denial of responsibility for a program that wrongly accused the coach of bru­ talizing his players. Houston attorney R. Gary Stephens, who is rep­ resenting Brownwood High School athletic direc­ tor and head football coach Gordon Wood in the action against the network, said the response was ‘‘a general denial” of ABC’s responsibility in the Sept. 15, 1981, incident. During a live segment of ABC's “ Good Morn­ ing, America,” on which Wood appeared as a guest in defense of high school football, program host David Hartman produced a film clip of a coach punching and slapping his players. Sports Record W L Pet GB Arkansas at SMU, 7:30 SATURDAY'S SCHEDULE . . . . 38 14 .736 — NBA NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOC. By United Proas International (Waat Coaat Qamaa Not Included) Eastern Conteronco Atlantic Division Philadelphia Boston New Jersey Washington New York Milwaukee Atlanta Detroit Indiana Chicago Cleveland . . San Antonio Houston Denver Utah Dallas Kansas City Los Angeles Seattle Golden Stale Phoenix Portland San Diego Central Division Wastern Conteronco Midwost Division 1 Vi 37 15 712 27 28 491 13 25 a 472 14 25 31 446 15V5 39 15 722 — 24 28 462 14 24 30 444 15 24 31 436 15V4 20 34 .370 19 12 41 226 26 Vi W L Pet OB 35 18 660 — 30 24 556 5W 28 25 528 7 19 35 352 16Yj 18 36 333 17 V; 18 37 327 18 Pacific División 37 17 36 18 29 24 . 28 24 28 25 15 39 685 - 1 667 7V2 547 8 538 528 8VS 278 22 Tuesday's Results Atlanta 103, Kansas City 94 New York 113, Milwaukee 110 Utah 113, Washington 106 San Antonio 143. Golden State 123 Chicago 123. Portland 122 Houston 105, Dallas 95 Denver at Los Angeles Philadelphia at San Diego Wednesday's Games (All Times C8T) Utah at Boston 6:30 p m. Milwaukee at New Jersey, 6:35 p m. New York at Indiana. 6 35 p m. Portland at Kansas City, 7:35 p.m Houston at Denver, 8 35 p m Cleveland at Phoenix. 8 35 p m Thursday's Games San Antonio at Detroit Golden State at Dallas Los Angeles at Seattle MILWAUKEE (110) Ma Johnson 10 2-4 22, Mi Johnson 7 00 14, Lamer 4 3-4 11, Buckner 3 0-0 6, Moncrief 8 2-2 18, Catchings 1 0-0 2, Winters 5 1-1 12, May 6 3-4 15, Cummings 4 0-0 8, Lister 0 0-0 0, Bridegman 1 0-0 2. Totals 49 11-15 110 NEW YORK (113) Lucas 8 5-5 21. Russell 3 1-2 7, Cart­ wright 3 1-2 7, Newhn 10 3-3 23, Richard­ son 5 5-7 15, Webster 3 0-0 6, Williams 7 4-6 18. Demic 10-12, Smith 6 0-0 12, Carter 0 0 0 0 Knight 10-12 Totals 47 19-27 113. Milwaukee.......... 22 New York............. 32 36 23 23— 110 31 22 28—113 Three point goals—Winters. Total (ouls — Milwaukee 26, New York 24 Technical —Richardson Catchings A—9,525. KANSAS CITY (84) E Johnson 1 0-0 2, King 6 1-1 13, S. Johnson 1 0-0 2, Ford 3 3-4 9, Woodson 4 2-3 10, R Johnson 9 2-3 20, Loder 5 2-3 12. L Drew 4 2-3 11. Grunfeld 3 2-2 8. Dennard 3 1-2 7 Totals 39 15-21 94 ATLANTA (103) J Drew 7 10-15 24, McMillen 9 4-4 22, Rollins 5 3-4 13. E. Johnson 11 5-6 27, Sparrow 4 0-0 8, Pellom 0 1-2 1, Macklin 1 0-1 2. Matthews 2 2-2 6. Williams 0 0-0 0 Totals 39 25-24 103 Kansas City.............. 28 28 12 28— 84 35 22 22 24— 103 Atlanta Three point goals— I Drew Total fouls — Kansas City 32, Atlanta 30 Technical foul— Atlanta coach Loughery A—7,452. UTAH (113) Dantley 14 1 1-14 39, Hardy 5 3-6 13, Wilkins 7 2-2 16. Green 7 1-2 15, Griffith 10 4 5 24 Schayes 0 0-0 0, Robinzine 0 0-0 0 Duren 2 2-2 6. Poquette 0 0-0 0. Totals 45 23-31 113 WASHINGTON (108) Ballard 9 0-0 19, Haywood 4 4-4 12, Mahorn 8 3-3 19, Collins 2 0-0 4, Lucas 1 0-0 2, Davis 3 0-0 6, Grevey 0 0-0 0, Ru- land 2 4 6 8, Johnson 8 10-11 27, Witts 3 2-2 9. Chones 0 0-0 0 Totals 40 23-26 106 U ta h ................. 28 Washington....... 20 29 32 27—113 33 30 23— 106 Three-point goals—Ballard, Johnson, Witts Fouled out— Ruland. Total fouls— Utah 22 Washington 24 A—8,134 GOLDEN 8TATE (123) Smith 2 4-4 8, King 7 5-6 19, Carroll 4 4- 5 12, Gale 2 2-3 6, Free 6 13-17 25, Romar 1 0-0 2, Short 9 5-8 23, Hassetl 4 0-0 11, Parker 3 12 7, Brown 1 6-8 8. McDowell 1 0-0 2 Totals 40 40-53 123 SAN ANTONIO (143) Mitchell 9 6-7 24. Olberdmg 8 5-6 21, Corzine 5 1-2 11, Moore 0 3-4 3. Gervm 11 13 13 35. Bratz 6 2-2 14, G Johnson 0 0-0 0. Banks 7 1-1 15. Phegley 3 2-2 8, Lam­ bert 3 2-2 8. Rams 2 0-0 4 Totals 54 35-39 143 Golden State San Antonio 30 37 28 31 — 123 48 33 34 31 — 143 Three Point Goals — Hassett 3 Fouled Out — Gale Total Fouls — Golden State 33. San Antonio 37 Technicals — Carroll A — 9.648 Leaders Bowttng Noaulte By United Praaa International PBA National Championship At Toledo, Ohio, Pah. 23,1882 (The top 24 bowlers with pinfall totals after 16 games — two rounds ) 1 Larry Laub, Santa Rosa, Calif, 3.586 2 Mike Durbin, Chagrin Falls, Ohio, 3.577 3.465 3.380 3.377 3.365 3.362 3 354 3.352 3 346 3 345 3 Earl Anthony. Dublin. Calif , 3,465 4 Don Johnson, Las Vegas, 3,445 5 Jim Snow Altoona. Pa , 3,444 6 Jay Robinson, Vany Nuys, Calif. 7 Jerry Held. Monroe. Mich 3,435 8 Mark Lapp, Tucson, Ariz , 3.415 9 Tom Hmz, Joliet, III 3,406 10 Hugh Miller, Seattle, 3,405 11 Ken Fernandez, Grants Pass. Ore . 12 (tie) Steve Lickliter, Beckley. W Va . Steve Ray, Irving, Texas. 3,377 14 Mark Roth Spring Lake Hts N J , 15 Gary Dickinson, Burleson, Texas, 16 Pete McCordic, Houston 3.356 17 Dick Nardozza, Bellefonte, Pa , 18 Gary Morgan. Bloomfield. Conn , 19 Jim Robinette. Alexandria, Va . 3,350 20 i tie I Cecil Caddel, Dallas, 3,346 Joe Losurdo, Oswego. N Y , 22 He) Gary Cunningham. BaKJwins- ville N Y , 3.345 Dave Soutar Leawood, Kan 24 Tom Laskow Cornmack, N Y , 3,344 Baylor Texas Tech TCU . . Texas Rice SMU .600 9 6 8 7 .533 8 7 533 .400 6 9 .333 5 10 .067 1 14 16 9 16 9 13 12 16 9 15 13 6 19 .640 .640 .520 .640 536 .240 TUESDAY'S RESULTS Texas A&M 83. TCU 74 Houston 75, Rice 69 WEDNESDAY'S SCHEDULE Texas A&M at He .ston, 2:10 Texas Tech at Arkansas, 7:30 Baylor at TCU, 7:30 Rice at Texas. 7:35 (regular ——on anda) TCU (74) Arnold 6 2-2 14. Luke 2 0-0 4, Christen­ sen 5 0-0 10, Browder 5 3-4 13, Stephen 6 2-3 14. Nutt 2 0-0 4. Baker 5 1-3 11, Cuci- nella 2 0-0 4 Totals 33 8-12 74 TEXAS ASM (83) Riley 8 7-8 23, Naulls 6 3-6 15, Woods 6 2-4 14, Roberts 6 0-0 12, Woodley 6 2-2 14. Lewis 1 3-4 5, Bluntson 0 0-0 0, Thom­ as 00-00 Totals 33 17-24 83 Halftime — TCU 40, Texas A&M 37. Fouled Out — Arnold Total Fouls — TCU 19, Texas A&M 16 Technical — Stephen A — 4.567 Basketball NEW MEXICO STATE (88) Harris 0 0-0 0, Sublet 0 0-0 0, Colter 8 3- 5 19. Taylor 1 2-2 4, Sailors 2 2-2 6, Wil­ liams 5 2-2 12, Moultrie 2 3-4 7, Patterson 4 0-0 8, Pena 5 2-2 12 Totals — 27 14-17 68 DRAKE (98) Butler 2 2-2 6, Youngbauer 7 0-0 14, Parks 0 0-0 0, Dunson 5 1-2 11, Earl 8 0-2 16, Watson 0 0-0 0, Van Hook 1 0-0 2, Campbell 0 0-0 0, Watley 2 2-2 6 Totals — 25 5 8 55 Halftime — New Mexico State 36, Drake 30 Total fouls — New Mexico State 15, Drake 16. Fouled out — none Technical fouls — none A — 8.385 WEST TEXAS 8TATE (88) Bell 6 5-7 17, Steppes 8 0-0 16, Robin­ son 1 3-5 5, Simmons 2 0-0 4. Smith 8 5-6 21. Burd 0 0-0 0, Hale 3 3-4 9, Perkins 1 1- 2 3, Harris 6 2-2 14 Totals 35 19-26 89 WICHITA STATE (106) Carr 11 1-1 23, Jackson 5 1-3 11, Lev- ingston 8 4-5 20. Sherrod 5 1-1 11, Martin 6 2-3 14, Gibbs 1 0-0 2, McDaniel 1 1-4 3, Dreiling 6 3-4 15, Jones 1 5-7 7, Durisic 0 0-0 0 Totals 44 18-28 106 Halftime — Wichita State 49, West Texas State 36 Fouled out — Smith, Levmgston. Total fouls — West Texas 24, Wichita State 20 Technical — none A — 10,666 Golf PGA Statistics By United Praaa International Scoring Laadara 1, tie. Johnny Miller, Tom Kite 69.05. 3, Wayne Levi 69 18 4, Scott Hoch 69 38. 5, Calvin Peete 69 41. 6, Curtis Strange 69.44. 7. Craig Stadler 69 50 8, Mike Reid 69.52. 9. Ed Fiori 69 59 10, Tom Weiskopf 69 75 Driving Dtatance 1 Bruce Douglass 274 9 2, Gary Trivi- sonno 272 5 3. Fuzzy Zoeller 271.8 4, Tom Weiskopf 721 3 5, Tateo Ozaki 270.6 6, Bill Sander 269 5 7, Tom Purtzer 269.1. 8. Greg Powers 268 4 9, Johnny Miller 268 2 10, Fred Couples 267.3. Percentage in fairway — 1, Calvin Peete 828 2, Danny Edwards 786 3, Doug Tewell 776 4, Mike Reid 726. 5, Bill Rog­ ers 754 6, John Mahaffey .752. 7, tie, Joe Inman Tom Kite 748 9, Morris Hatalsky 745 10. Doug Sanders .738 Greene in Regulation 1, tie. John Mahaffey, Tom Kite 772. 3, Andy Bean 771. 4. Mike Reid 770. 5, Keith Fergus 756 6, Dan Halldorson .736. 7 tie, Curtis Strange, Scott Hoch 762. 9, Peter Jacobsen 761. 10, tie, Larry Nelson, Tom Weiskopf 757. Putting 1. Wayne Levi 28.44. 2, Morris Hatalsky 28 74 3, Craig Stalder 28.83 4, gibby Gil­ bert 28 90 5. Jerry pate 29.05. 6, Bill Cal- fee 29 08 7, Forrest Fezler 29.20 8, Ben Crenshaw 29.21. 9, Lonnie Nielsen 29.23. 10. Ed Fiori 29 24 Percentage of sub-par hokes — 1, Tom Kite 272 2, Tom Watson .265. 3, Wayne Levi 250 4, Fuzzy Zoeller 249. 5, Craig Stadler 241 6. John Lister 239, 7, Ben Crenshaw 237. 8. tie, Johnny Miller, Tom Weiskopl 236 10, tie. Gibby Gilbert, Scott Hoch .233 Eagles — 1, Jerry Pate 6. 2, Nick Faldo 5 3. tie, Andy North, Tom Weiskopf, Tom Purtzer, George Archer 4. 7, 15 tied with 3. Birdies — 1. tie, Scott Simpson, Vance Heafner 105 3. Fuzzy Zoeller 103 4. Tom Kite 102 5, Craig Stadler 101. 6, Fred Cou­ ples 99 7, Tom Watson 98. 8, Bob Gilder 196 9. John Cook 95 10, Greg Powers 94 Band Savaa 1, tie, Curtis Strange, Jack Renner 714 3 Lee Elder 692. 4, Wayne Levi 650 5, Bob Gilder 647 6, tie, Jim Barber, Bob Easiwood 636 8. Rex Caldwell 629 9, Bill Falfee 619 10. Craig Stadler .613. 1 Johnny Miller $102 227 2, Craig Stald­ er $97,236 3. Wayne Levi $74,645 4, Tom Watson $72.484 5, Jim Simons $67,411. 6. Tom Kite $61,710. 7, Lanny Wadkins $59.540 8. Ed Fiori $55,817 9, Scotl Simpson $55,728 10. Jack Nicklaus $45.930 NHL NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE By United Praaa International (Calgary at Vancouver Not tndudod) Wales Conteronco rfin c R 1/1 w o n W L T NY islanders 4 1 14 6 Philadelphia 31 24 5 NY Rangers 28 22 10 Pittsburgh 23 29 10 Washington 18 34 9 Pis. OF OA 88 290 190 241 235 67 222 230 66 231 265 56 234 257 45 Montreal Boston Buffalo Quebec Hartford A1#vvmi DtvMon 84 35 12 14 34 19 8 76 76 33 18 10 29 23 11 69 16 30 14 46 284 177 244 209 233 188 276 261 203 264 Campbell Conteroneo Norris 1Plvtefen W L T 25 19 18 26 30 5 22 30 10 20 27 12 17 31 15 18 32 12 Pte. OF OA 266 227 68 57 243 261 54 262 283 224 264 52 243 280 49 220 268 48 Minnesota St Louis Chicago Winnipeg Toronto Detroit Smyths Ototaton 89 39 13 11 Edmonton Vancouver 58 23 26 12 22 26 14 Calgary 58 45 Los Angeles 16 31 13 13 39 11 37 Colorado 341 243 215 213 245 264 236 284 193 284 (Tog tour In aocti dtoteton qualify tor Stanley Cue ptoyofts.) swe Basketball Southwest Canter ene» By United Praaa IntemoBeitel Quebec 4. Montreal 3 N Y islanders 5, Chicago 1 St Louis 3. Toronto 2 Detroit 6, Colorado 3 Calgary at Vancouver Arkansas Houston Texas A&M W L Put w L Pet 792 714 19 5 4 780 667 19 6 5 680 667 17 8 5 Boston at Hartford, 7 35 p m Chicago at N Y Ftangers. 6 35 p m Edmonton at Buffalo. 7 05 p m Toronto at Minnesota 7 35 p m •Wb i*. 4 Philadelphia at Winnipeg, 8.05 p m Detroit at Los Angeles. 9 35 p m. Thursday's Games Quebec at Montreal Pittsburgh at N Y Islanders St Louis at Washington Vancouver at Calgary D etro it........................ Colorado................................... 0 2 J 1 - 1 0 1 2 - f i First period — 1, Detroit, Ogrodnick 2| (Blaisdell, Kirton), 0 29 2 Detroit. Nedo mansky 8 (Vail, Lofthouse), 2:37. Penaltis — Schoenfeld, Det, major. 0 10. Quenne ville, Col, major, 0:10; Lofthouse, De 11:10. Second period — 3, Detroit, Larson 1) (Kirton), 4 42 4, Colorado. Quenneville (Malinowski, MacMillan), 5:58 5, Detroitjl| Blaisdell 19 (Kirton, Larson), 7:42. 6, Del# troit, Blaisdell 20 (Nedomansky, NolanM 13:20, Penalties — Cameron, Col, 12:04j* Nicholson, Col, 17:42 Third period — 7, Colorado, Maxwell ♦* (Malinowski, Ramage), 1:52 8, Colorado!* Foster 10 (Ashton, Broten), 9 37 9, Detroit!! Nolan 4 (unassisted) 15:53. Penalties Nolan. Det, 1 18, Lonmer. Col, 1.18, Os«8 borne, Det, 3 29. Ramage, Col, 11.36. B a r i rett, Det. 14 45. Shots on goal — Detroit 11-17-19—4 7 * Colorado 7-6-6— 19 Goalies — Detroit. Gilbert Colorado — ■ Resch, LaFerriere A — 6.550 T o ro n to ..................................0 1 1 St. Louie..................................1 1 1 First period — 1 St. Louis, Babych 1 (Pettersson, Dunlop), 14:11. Penalties Pavese, StL. 2 51, Baker, StL, double mi nor, 14:38, Higgins, Tor, major, 14 38 Second period — 2 Toronto, Salming,? 12 (Martin, Paiement), 8:20 3. St. Louis,! Mullen 14 (Federko, Sutter), 16.28 Penal-I ties — Vaive, Tor, 2 50. Babych. StL, 9 47; I Gavin, Tor, 11 16. Third period — 4 St. Louis, Mullen, 15 (Federko, Turnbull). 1 24 5 Toronto, Vaive 39 (Salming, Derlago) 3 58 Penalties — Kea. StL, 3:35, Salming, Tor, 4 09; Paie­ ment, Tor, 7 38 Shots on goal — Toronto 10-6-7—23. St. Louis 10-15-14—39 Liut A — 11,256. Goalies — Toronto, LaRocque St Louis, Montreal Quebec. 1 1 1 - 1 2 1 - First period— 1, Quebec, P. Stastny 37 (Rochefort, A Stastny), 7:59 2, Montreal, Tremblay 25 (Gingras, Picard), 9:22. Penalties— P Stastny, Que. 8:39; Picard, Mon, 9 42, Tremblay, Mon, misconduct 9 42. McRae, Que, misconduct, 9:42; Rise- brough. Mon, 13:27; A Stastny, Que, 13:27; Rochefort, Que, 18:40 Second period—3, Quebec, Hunter 17 (Hoganson, Goulet), 7:56 4, Quebec, Au- bry 7 (Cote, Lacroix), 13:34 5, Montreal, Napier 29 (Lafleur), 14:15 Penalties—Tar- dif. Que, 6 29, Mondou, Mon, 11:32; Na­ pier Mon, 16:31 Third period—6, Montreal, Nilan 7 (Eng- blom, Gainey), 13 56. 7, Quebec, Cloutier 25 (Hunter, Rochefort), 17:43. Penalties— Dupont, Que, 4 31; Hunter, Que, 11:18. Shots on goal— Montreal 7-10-10—27. Quebec 8-8-6— 20. Goalies— Montreal, Wamsley. Quebec, Bouchard A— 15,330 C hicago .................................. 1 0 0—1 NY Hangars............................... 0 3 2—• First period— 1, Chicago, Secord 39 (Marsh, Lysiak), 12:01 Penalty—Nystrom, NYI, major, 14 41 Second period—2, NY Islanders, ToneW 29 (Potvin, Bossy), 7:11; 3, NY Islanders, Bossy 45 (Langevm, Trottier), 14:33; 4, NY Islanders, Trottier 41 (Tonelli, Bossy), 15:10. Penalty— Hutchison, Chi, 8:31 Third period— 5, NY Islanders, Carroll 0 (Trottier, Langevin), 7:26; 6, NY Islanders, Trottier 42 (Bossy, Persson), 11:09. Penal­ ties—Hutchison, Chi, 4:41; McEwen, NYI, 7 09, Secord, Chi, 7:46; Persson, NYI, 18 11 Shots on goal—Chicago 10-8-2—20. NY Islanders 11-14-12— 37. Goalies—Chicago Bannerman. NY Islan­ ders. Melanson. A— 15,011 Top 20 NEW YORK (UPI) — The United Press International Board of Coaches Top 20 col­ lege basketball ratings (first-place votes and won-lost records in parentheses): . 1 Virginia (38) (26-1)...................... 598 2 North Carolina (22-2)................... 543 3 DePaul (2) (2 5 - 1 )....................... 521 4 Oregon St. (20-3) . 437 5 Missouri (2 3 - 2 )...................... 355 277 6 West Virginia (23-1) 247 7 Iowa (19-4) 236 8 Idaho (23-2) 9 Kentucky (19-5) . 234 10 Tulsa (19-4).................................219 11 Georgetown (21-6)....................... 192 169 12 Fresno State (22-2) 162 13 Memphis State (20-3) 157 14 Minnesota (18-5) 76 15 Arkansas (19-5) ............... 61 16 Alabama (19-5) 50 1Z San Francisco (23-4) 46 18 Tennessee (18-6) 47 19 Kansas St. (18-6) 28 20 Wake Forest (18-6) NOTE: By sgrssmsnt with the National Association of BaahetbaH Coaches of the United States, teams on probation by the NCAA are ineligible tor Top 20 and national championship consideration by the UPI Board of Coachaa. Those teams on probation for the 1M1-02 season arte Arkansas State, Now Mexico, South Florida, Texas Christian, UCLA, WIchNa State. . Texan Top 20 The Texan Top 20 is weekly feature voted on by a eight-member panel of the Dotty Texan Sports Staff First-place votes are in parentheses Idaho 1 Virginia ( 6 ) .......................... 2 North Carolina (1) DePaul (1) 4 Oregon St 5 Iowa 6 Kentucky 7 Tulsa 8 Minnesota 9 Missouri 10 West Virginia 11 12 Georgetown 13 Memphis St 14 Fresno St 15 San Francisco 16 Alabama 17 Tennessee 18 Wake Forest 19 Kansas St 20 Arkansas 158 152 140 131 115 114 107 101 83 82 78 72 62 60 42 32 31 30 26 22 Other teams receiving votes in alphabeti­ cal order are Houston, Illinois, Indiana, Louisville UCLA, UTEP Wichita St Wyo­ ming Transactions Tuesday*» Sports Transactions By United Prose international Baltimore — Named Mike Westhoff as­ sistant offensive line coach and weight training coordinator St Louis — Signed kicker Neil O'Do- noghue Hockey Hartford — Called up defenseman Marty Howe from Binghamton of the American Hockey League I Wednesday, February 24, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN By GREG BEAL Daily Texan Staff “Shoot the Moon” ; directed by Alan Parker; with Albert Finney, Diane Keaton and Karen Allen; at the Lakehills and Highland Mall Theaters. “ Shoot the Moon” is a strangely uneven movie — provoca­ tive and disquieting, but ultim ately not entirely satisfying. The Dunlaps — George (Albert Finney), a successful w riter, and Faith (Diane Keaton), his wife — sit uneasily in a restau­ rant after her fath er’s burial. Suddenly, they’re digging a t weaknesses, scream ing about the o th er’s new sexual partners. When an unfortunate diner attem pts to quell the verbal brawl, the two ignore him a t first. But then, as suddenly as the fight began, George and F aith take on the interloper and his wife. The scene — which occurs midway through the film — is chillingly horrific. The snipes, the jibes draw n from their years together, are brutal, but you can’t help laughing at and with George and Faith. The best moments in “ Shoot the Moon” are like this one — a t once painfully funny and exquisitely terrify­ ing. The m ovie’s strengths are numerous: the telling scenes of a family falling ap art; the four precocious daughters, dutiful and adoring when not a t each others’ throats; the bloody verbal skirm ishes of a couple whose sarcasm can be so exact and so cutting. But somehow director Alan P a rk e r and screenw riter Bo Goldman falter. In “ Shoot the Moon,” the present is supposed to describe the past; little moments, a line of dialogue disclose the depth of feeling, the substance of this m arriage. And to a large extent the technique w orks; certainly we know about this m arriage. But we know little about his work, or hers. Does this successful w riter ever w rite? George m entions one deadline, and we see him once at a typew riter. Does F aith do anything other than take care of the house and the kids? Nor do we know what effect G eorge’s dalliance with Sandy (Karen Allen), to whom he flies a fte r F aith asks him to leave their gorgeous M arin house, had on the deterioration of the m arriage. Which cam e first — the collapse or the straying? But then we don’t know why George fancies Sandy either, other than that sh e’s beautiful, has a nice house on the ocean and plenty of sharpened pencils, and tells his daughters that m ak­ ing love is like eating ice cream . But the m ost disturbing elem ent in the story is F aith ’s affair with F rank, the working-class stud she hires to build a tennis court. The $12,000 court, planned for years, has been her dream ; and F rank, as we know from the firs t m om ent they speak to one another, is also a dream . But w hat draw s the two together? What allure does he have for her? The Lady Chatter- ley num ber seem s to be the film m akers’ fantasy, not F a ith ’s. If I ’ve been hard on “ Shoot the Moon,” it’s only because I like so much of the movie. Every scene with the four daughters is m arvelous; you know at once the joys and horrors of family life. And Dana Hill as Sherry, the eldest daughter, who feels betrayed by both her m other and father, is n ear perfect. I only wish the entire movie worked as well. The University of Texas at Austin College of Fine Arts Performing Arts Center ^ Monday and Tuesday March 1 & 2 0 8pm 0 Performing Arts Center Concert Hall Public $ 10. $8, $6, $4 CEC/PAC, senior citizens, children $5. $4, $3, $2 Tickets 10-6, Monday- Friday at PAC, Texas Union, Erwin Center; also 9-3 Saturday at Erwin Center. Charge- a-Ticket: Austin, 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 . Texas toll- free, 8 0 0 -2 5 2 -9 9 0 9 6 0 c charge per ticket for all phone orders. No cameras No recorders Further information 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 With the support of the Texas Commission on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts, a Federal Agency Experience the excitement of America’s fifth largest ballet company. "The joy of the company is in the freshness of its approach and the spontaneity of the dancing The final impression is overwhelmingly one of confident youth Clive Barnes, New York Post Chelsea Street Pub BASH NIGHT 3forl Drinks Wednesday, 9pm - Closing $1.00 Cover "Goodtime Country" LIV E ! Barton Creek Mall Highland Mall Northcro** Mall 72 >4345 X / Best Sellers 15% off 1. An Indecent Obsession, Colleen McCullough Reg $13.50............................................. „ • FICTION 2. Marco Polo, If You Can, William F. Buckley Jr . COOP $11.45. Reg $13.95.................................................................COOP 111.85. 3. Spring Moon, Bette Bao Lord. m p . . . Publisher’s Prices all listed hardback NON-FICTION 1. A Light in the Attic, Shel Silverstein Reg. $10.95.................................................................. COOP $9.30. 2. A Few Minutes with Andy Rooney, Andrew A. Rooney. Reg. $12.95..................................................................COOP $11.00. 3. Jane Fonda’s Workout Book, Jane Fonda Reg $14 95 r .................COOP $12.70. Reg $15 95 .................................................................. COOP $13.55. 4. The Hotel New Hampshire, John Irving 4. At Dawn We Slept, Gordon W Prange Reg $15 50 ..................................................................COOP $13.50. Reg. $22.95.................................................................. COOP $19.50. 5. N o r t h and South, John Jakes r>nnp«i9 7n 5. Pathfinders, Gail Sheehy. Reg $14 95 ..................................................................COOP $12.70. 6. No Time for Tears, Cynthia Freeman. Reg $14.95.................................................................COOP $12.70. 7. Noble House, James Clavell Reg $19 95.................................................................COOP $16.45. 8. A Green Desire, Anton Myrer Reg $14.95................................................................ COOP $12.70. 9. A Dean’s December, Saul Bellow Reg. $ 1 5 . 9 5 .............................................................. COOP $13.55. 6. The Lord God Made Them All, Jam es Herriot Reg. $13.95.................................................................. COOP $11.85. 7. The Walk West: A Walk Across America Z, Peter and Barbara Jenkins. Reg. $14.95................................... COOP $12.70. 8. Laid Back in Washington, Art Buchwald. Reg $12.95................................................................. COOP $11.00. 9. When Bad Things Happen to Good People, Harold S. Reg $13.95................................................................ COOP $11.85. Kushner Reg. $10 95 COOP $9.30. 10. Rabbit is Rich, John Updike Reg $13 95 , 11. Remembrance, Danielle Steel ............................. COOP $11.85. r n n P *i? ?n 10. The Cinderella Complex, Colette Dowling Reg. $12.95................................................................. COOP $11.00. 11. How to Make Love to a Man, Alexandra Penney Reg $14 95. ..............................................LOOP J1Z..U. Reg $10 0 0 .................................................................. COOP $8.50. 12. Masquerade, Kit Williams Reg $10 95. r n n p t a in COOP $ 9. JO. 12. Never-Say-Diet Book, Richard Simmons. Reg $14.95 13. Cosmos, Carl Sagan. COOP $12.70. 15 S £ - w j Ss “ K‘nS COOP 111.85. Reg. $22.95................................................................. COOP $19.50. “ 51" « S S k Th° raaSHamS 15. GoSlowly, Come Back Quickly, David Niven . . . . . . . Reg $14 95 ................................................................. ... COOP 111.85. Reg $9.95 ..................... COOP $8.45. 14. The Best of Dear Abby, Abigail Van Buren 15. Witness to Power, John Ehrlichman Reg. $17.50..................................................................COOP $14.85. a musical by U Ts own Tom Jonas 8t Harvay Schmidt February 19-20 — March 5-6 featuring memorable songs such as Try To Rem em ber" Doors opon at 5pm. Show begins at 9pm. J Tlckata available at ail UTTM outfits (PAC. Taxes Union. Erwin Cantor). D assart Thootro tickets available at door. Dinner served until -8:15. Dessert until 8:30. $8.00 Dinner & Show . . . . UT ID $10.00 Dinner & Show . . . Public $4.50 Dessert & Show . . . UT ID $6.50 Dessert & Show . . . Public VISA A MastorChorgo Welcome free 1 hr. parking w / $ 3 .00 purchase second level 2461 A Guadalupe (in the Terns Union). 471-5461. Fraa parking aftar S p.m. Entertainment Page 15 ‘Fire’ hot; ‘Wild’ weird; Barton burns on debu The Gun Club ‘‘Fire of Love” (Ruby Records). “ F ire of Love' „ an album that m akes you think. A punk reworking of basic blues pro­ gressions, the album produces all the fire and controversy of old blues records. Classic oiues them es such as the hunt and persecution of the black man and the m etaphor of love as a drug pervade the album as well. The Gun Club is not a safe band. On “ F or The Love of Ivy,” lead singer Jeffrey Lee P ierce utters the im m ortal linés, “ I was dressed ju st like an E lvis from H ell/I was hunting for niggers out in the dark/A ll the sudden I had a better thought/Go hunt Ivy.” Possibly P ierce is speaking out against the white supre­ m acist attitude that typifies a portion of the Los Angeles scene, from which he hails. “ F ire S pirit” and “ P reach­ ing The B lues” a re arguably the best cuts on the album. is a story about The first trying to m uster som e feeling and excitem ent life, while the second is a cover of a g rea t R obert Johnson anti- religion song, which is done adm irably here. from tend The band’s confusing direc­ tions to raise certain questions, though. Where will P ierce go from here? Is he ju st jibing a t C alifornia’s hard-core punk scene, or is he trying to rally his own “ white rio t? ” Or, is it that he just doesn’t give two flips what happens? Lou Ann Barton — D e n n i s N o w l i n ‘‘Old Enough” (Asylum Records) Although the recording in­ dustry has been kind to sever­ al Austin m usicians in the last several years, it has been m ore kind to none m ore than to Lou Ann Barton. Like other aspiring perform ers, Barton paid her dues the juke joints and roadhouses of F o rt Worth in the early 1970s. She la ter sang with the Fabulous in Thunderbirds Roomful of Blues in 1980. in 1975 and low-budget deals But, unlike so many face­ less perform ers offered one- shot, to record their first album, B ar­ ton had the incredible good fortune of attracting producer J e rr y W exler, com m only known as “ the godfather of rhythm & blues.” Along with W exler’s interest cam e the chance to cut a record in the famed Muscle Shoals Studio, with some of the music indus­ try ’s best R&B m usicians in result of attendance. The th e s e “ Old s e s s io n s , Enough,” is everything that the credentials would seem to indicate. the From “ Stop These T ear­ drops,” a standby of B arton’s onstage repertoire for years, to tear-jerker classic, “ M aybe,” the sound and m u­ sicianship of the record are simply impeccable. The con­ tributions of renowned ses­ sion guitarist Wayne Perkins, as well as those of co-pro­ ducer Glenn F rey and Fabu­ lous T hunderbird Jim m y Váughn, are equaled only by the sax and trum pet arrange­ m ents of the Muscle Shoals Horns. But the real credit should go to Barton herself. Known to sing without the aid of a microphone during her early years in F o rt Worth, B arton’s incredible vocal strength is fully “ E very Night of the Week.” Her twangy enunciation, one of realized on the m ost delightful elem ents of her style, is equally dis­ played on every cut. Although Barton’s future rem ains to be seen, one thing is for sure — she’s gotten off to one helluva sta rt. — Ch r i s J o r d a n The T eard ro p Explodes “ W ilder” (PolyG ram ) for Nothing on the Teardrop Explodes' second album is as exciting as “ R ew ard,” the best song on “ K ila m an jaro ", still, “ P ure Joy" is a g reat song with the silliest lyrics in quite a while: “ I ’ve got a good ca r but it’s not a good c a r /It won’t take me to P a r a ­ the day.” Julian dise Cope, lead vocalist and the brains behind Teardrop, is a strong singer, but his lyrics seem to com e out of some kind of drug-induced free as­ sociation. The album has m any jew els in the vein o! “ P ure Jo y ” and bears at leasl one listening for that reason. of travelogue V iew s “ S ev en Je ru sa le m ,” a that barely advances beyond a repetition of the title, strnd dies the boundary between si! liness and uselessness — the calliope a t a circus is m ore in­ triguing. In “ The Culture B u n k e r,’’ Cope w onder “ w hat went wrong" with “ The Crucial T hree,” a band he was in with Echo and the B u n n y m e n Ian McCulloch and crazed W ah; sin ger/guitarist P ete Wylie What w ent wrong was that three creative egos couldn i co-exist the Liverpool- based band, and in the case of Echo and the Bunnymen, and especially, Wah!, the world i better because of it. As for The T eardrop Explodes. I not so sure. While Juli t1 Cope’s style is certainly on* redeem ing factor of “ Wild e r ,” perhaps another is the fun one can have with e a r­ phones, m arijuana and this al­ bum. v o c a lis t in — D e n n i s N o n d in ★ MS P A C -MAC ★ D O N K E Y -K O N G ★ QIX GAMES ARAMA One Of The Largest Selections O f Video Games In The A ustin Area! FREE VIDEO GAME With this ad 607 W. 29th One h a lf block west o f G uadalupe -L im it one p er custom er- Geo<1 thru 3-6-S2 * F R O G G E R * PAC-M AN ★ D E F E N D E R NIGHTCLUB Presents... Following the Cars concert come to Angles for their own concert with the Cars. NO COVER ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 50* HIGHBA11S 9 -n gage 16 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, February 24,1982 Editor's note: It like the months of co—f i t TV viewing hive flntlly taken their toll on Robert Mead’s synapses. The fol­ lowing shook! be taken with a grain of salt. By ROBERT MEAD Daily Texan Staff I’ve set aside this week to deal with some of the let­ ters “Beyond Our Control” has received over the last few months. Most of them have to do with television, and all are sincere expres­ sions of public opinion. If you have anything to say to “Beyond Our Control,” place a plain white envelope with two dollars in unmarked coins (small change, please) in the la­ dies’ room trash can on the fourth floor of the PCL. That’s where I found these: Dear B.O.C., I think I’m in love. I have stayed up every night, spent long and tender hours till dawn, watching that delicious hunk of man on “The PTL Club.” The Reverend Jim stirs a yearning in me that I thought had died years ago, when my boyfriend, Rollo, got herpes. But my how it lives. Whenever I hear Jim do a sermon, or see him heal a cripple, I get Blue Bell-cold shivers down my creaky spine, and I can seldom resist the intense temptation to pick up the phone and call him, toll free at times, but mostly direct, because it’s faster. I know it’s wrong and I Will be punished on network judgment day, but how can any woman be expected to divert the flood of carnal imagination that rages every night from 11 p.m. to 4 a.m.? Alone and on the la m fr o m Ma Bell, L ucy WED- DR. P A T T IR SO N BApTpp AND ASSOCIATES THURSDAY- M O RRIS CODfHH HHH ‘ Back Room 201$ E. RIVERSIDE GO BANANAS LATE NIGHT By p o p u l a r d e m a n d tor t a s t y f o o d a f te r 10 t h e k i t c h e n at B A N A N A S w i l l k e e p s e r v i n g its g r e a t a n d t a s t y b u r g e r s , q u i c h e , M e x i c a n s p e c i a l t i e s , s p i n a c h s a l a d , a n d m o r e until 11:30. For t h o s e on a l i q u i d d i e t B A N A N A S b a r t e n d e r s h a v e a l a t e n i g h t H a p p y Hour 10 - 11 T u n s Sa t. n i g h t s , p l u s G O B A N A N A S H a p p y Hour G O B A N A N A S l u n c h , d i n n e r , h a p p y hour, a n d n o w LATE NIGHT 1» 4‘ P a r k i n g ¡7t h H i G u a d a l u p e a n d U n i t e d B a n k P a r k i n q G a r a g e R EST AURANT a n d BAR 1601 G U A D A L U P E 476-7202 Dear B.O.C., As star of the hit series, “The Fall Guy,” I think I have the privilege and duty of speaking out on all the important issues facing our great nation today. With Lou Grant and Ronald Rea­ gan running the country, actors’ opinions on great social dilemmas are in de­ mand. Now, I don’t want to sound like a braggart or anything, but I do know a thing or two about politics and the democratic way of life. For one thing, “Steel Nuts” extra-knobby mud tires and Bosch fog lights are exorbitantly priced, not to mention difficult to install. But what is perhaps the most pressing problem in America today, the one that weighs most on the minds and souls of the masses, is the plight of the unknown stuntman — the luckless chap who risks his very bones so that 8-year-olds will buy Burt Reynolds’ jumping out of a fast-moving bus. Think about that for a while. Yours truly, L ee Dear B.O.C., I suppose a critic of your kind would appreciate the fact that I hate my show. I admit it is stupid, boring and not too damn funny. About like the crap you write, I dare say, except I get paid $55,000 a week to do it. Put that in your typewriter and roll it, punk. R o bert S ta ck, " S trik e F o rc e ” Dear B.O.C., Is my television supposed to shut off automatically and explode in a fiery mess whenever “The Waltons” comes on? W orried and afraid, D ecatur SC H O O L OF MEDICINE • GIF A S U N IV E R S IT Y • “ CLASSES TAUGHT IN ENGLISH” The University in Santo Domingo, located D om inican Republic. Our M edical Program is tailored after the traditional U.S. Model of M edical Education and is fully accredited. is OPENINGS AVAILABLE “ O ur sch o o l is listed in Vol. 35, No. 4 of the W H O chronicle published by the World Health Organization." I < ir M o r i * I n f t i r m . t l u m , m d A p p l t t . i t i o n F o r m p l i . t s o w r i t # * t o CI FAS U N I V E R S I T Y SCHOOL OF M E D I C I N E O f A N O f A D M I S S I O N S l . ' H. ’ O W H I T I l f R HI V D S O I I I i • W H I r I If R C A l I f 9 0 6 0 ? I II I I II I II l l q Lo r ia Hear the Austin Civic Chorus sing Antonio Vivaldi's Gloria & Daniel Pinkhamfe Canticle of Praise at 8pm Saturday, Feb. in St. MartmS Lutheran Church, 606 W 15th St. Soloists, Suzanne Cate & jule Pruett join the chorus & the Austin Baroque Players. Tickets cost $4 at the door. Partially funded by the Austin Arts Commission. SUMMER CAMP JOBS For Faculty or Studonts Camp Waldemar for Girls Hunt, Texas 78024 Interviewing for Counselor* Wednesday and Thursday, February 24 and 25 Sign up for intorviow ot Liberal Arts & Sciences Placement in the Career Center Openings for teachers of: Aerobics Archery Badminton Basketball Camp Craft Camp Newspaper Canoeing Ceramics Aho jobs for trip counselor, comp nurse, office worker, and m utkiam for tm all stage band. All but band mombors must be at least 2nd semester sophomores. Swimming (WSI) Tennis Trampoline Volleyball Weaving, Stitchery, etc. Western Riding Gymnastics Ure-saving Metal S Jewelry Rifle Shooting Sketching Slimnastks Soccer Softball Charm Chorus Dance Diving Dra matics English Riding Poncing Oetf ‘Playland’ a som Zigal: toying with tradition By BERNICE COLLINS Daily Texan Staff Thomas Zigal compared “ Playland,” his first novel, to his previously published, shorter works and made a blunt assessment: “ At this point, I ’m probably a better short story w riter than nov­ elist ” In any case, Zigal’s literary accomplishments extend beyond his work with these two narrative forms: the Humanities Re­ search Center employee has taught creative writing and is fiction editor of both the P aw n R e v ie w , a small press journal, and The L i­ the b r a r y C h r o n ic le , HRC’s quarterly journal. Zigal does not consider himself a regional or Texas w riter; the broader con­ cerns of his characters transcend settings. their Many of his published works feature Texans or Texas locales, but their ac­ ceptance in magazines such as M ississippi M ud and the M innesota R e v ie w at­ tests to their universal ap­ peal. Zigal has also written a novel dealing with the oil refineries in Texas City and plans to center a future novel on the urban gentrifi- cation of Austin neighbor­ hoods. Much as his themes elude an easy categorization, his writing style defies all la­ bels. “ The editor of the M innesota R e v ie w calls By BERNICE COLLINS Daily Texan Staff “Playland” ; by Thomas Zi- gal; Thorp Springs Press; 216 pages ; $10. Sonny is searching for his uncle; his uncle is searching for anonymity and comfort. Daphne is searching for an al­ ternative to both her current life and her past. Throughout Thomas Zigal’s “ Playland,” these characters’ quests for answers and solutions, no m atter how specious, drive both them, and the reader, forward. To their searches, all three put aside their dreams long enough to become involved in one th at’s more bizarre: they partici­ pate, for a price, in the obses­ sion of a madman. finance The reclusive m adm an’s scheme — to turn Alcatraz Is­ land into a “ Disneyland of .Crime,” where adults can ex­ perience the thrills of antiso­ cial behavior — encompasses Sonny, his uncle Glenn (alias Neuman) and Daphne. “ P la y la n d ” s k illfu lly weaves together two narra­ tives: Sonny’s search for his uncle, which has brought him from Texas to the seedier side of San Francisco, and the un­ cle’s 30-year battle against the military. Although their their com­ paths converge, m itments never do. Neuman’s constant the monolithic agents of nuclear destruttion — his one-man guerrilla war against the es­ tablishments that corrupted his research and used it to de­ velop an atomic bomb — in particular provides a narra­ tive core. fight against “ P layland” ,works best when it creates short sketch­ es; Zigal has a fine knack for capturing the San Francisco milieu of crazies and eccen­ trics in which Sonny and Daphne are thrown together: self-righteous waiters, paper- pushing bureaucrats, a wom­ an sharing a mug of hot choc­ olate with Daphne. San Francisco was “ the edge of the Pacific shore, where one Glenda Huff, Daily Texan Staff Thomas Zigal it ‘crackpot realism ,’ ” he said, referring to his fusion of slightly surreal circum­ stances traditional structure. “ I write tradi­ tional narratives, Aristo­ telian resolutions.” and Unlike most first novels, is not thinly “ Playland” disguised autobiography, but several key elements are drawn from Zigal’s life. “ As a kid, the two greatest influences on my life were the atomic bomb and Dis­ neyland,” he recalled, and the confluence of these two feats of engineering lies at the heart of “ Playland In addition to his own writing, Zigal is equally proud of the work he edits. A the recent edition of Pawn R e v ie w won “ two and a half” literary prizes, he noted, with the “half” prize being an honorable mention from the presti­ gious Pushcart Prize com­ mittee. However, it seems likely that more awards — prizes for his own writing — are in Thomas Zigal’s fu­ ture. e ith e r touched down or drowned. She imagined that that was why the West Coast, and San Francisco in particu­ lar, was so full of eccentrics. It had become a harbor for America’s In contrast to the short charac­ ter sketches, the larger ele­ ments only gel when they maintain a human scale, and are often undercut by the ba­ lemmings.” surreal roque, that build to an apocalyptic con­ clusion. twists “ Playland’s ” ambitions are also on a grand scale; few novels attem pt such a fusion of the personal and political. Not since E.L. Doctorow’s “ Book of Daniel” has an au­ thor melded themes with as much success. Docto­ row’s novel also dealt with these the legacy of nuclear arms development, but without as much bitterness and cyni­ cism. In “ Playland,” there is no play, only greed and ma­ nipulation and inexorable cor­ at ruption. These motifs tim e s the bogging characterizations, the novel down in didactic passages of the bleakest exis­ tences. o v erw h elm ^ ■ b a n d ^ R TVE EFFECT U P o l M b A THE AUDIENCE IS D E V A S T A T I N G Saturday, February 27, 1982 Performing Arts Center Concert Hall 8:00 p.m. Public: $8., $6., $4., $3. CEC/PAC & Senior Citizens: $5., $4., $3., $2. Texas Toll-Free (800)252-9909 Charge-A-Ticket 477-6060 Sponsored by the Texas Union Cultural Entertainment Committee RIGOLETTO Innocent and evil alike are caught in the w eb of a malevolent fortune in Verdi’s haunting masterpiece. Enjoy a memorable performance in English by A merica’s outstanding touring opera company TEXAS EDPERA TH EATER M\ g r j n t s I n * » i t x l iu h 'w n u m l»»r I h t \ r t \ j f ttic r- il .«gt « h ' J»t*l I h i lv \< is < iim m m H N M M !1h \rt> SUNDAY FEBRUARY 28, 3:30L8:30p.m $1.75, $1.75, $7.75, $6.75 CHARGE IT BY PHONE 472-5411 713 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E P A R K IN G A T . t h e . - , , P a rk in g G a ra g e [A V A IL A B L E U t t l e f e l C l S08 B ra /o s WED. NICKEL BEER NIGHT featuring PEOPLE'S CHOICE $3.00 M*n/$2.00 Ladies FRI. PEOPLE'S CHOICE SAT. DEMAIHE 5337 Hwy. 290W (Oak Hill) 892-3452 The University of Texas at Austin College of Rne Arts Performing Arts Center The soul of the Polish people in song and dance Wednesday, February 24 Spm Performing Arts Center Concert Hal Family Night! Children's tickets half pnce' Public $12, $10. $8, $5 CEC/PAC. Senior Citizens $9, $7 50. $6. $ 3 7 5 Children 12 and younger $6. $5. $4. $2 50 Direct...from Poland Tickets 10 6. Monday Friday at PAC, Texas Union. Erwin Center, also 9 3 Saturday at Erwin Center Charge a Ticket Austin. 477 606 0 Texas toll free, 800 252 9909 115 dancers, singers and m usicians in a once in a lifetime experience you can't afford to m iss' All of the m usicals of Broadway put together could not offer the |oyous zest, the dancing skill and the wondrous costum es 6 0 f charge per ticket for all phone orders Further information 471 1444 of Mazowsze New York Daily News No cam eras Ho recorders W ed n esd ay , F eb ru ary 24, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ P age 17 ¿ i m e THEATRES T I M E S S H O W N F O R TODA Y O N L Y TW I-LITE S H O W S LIM IT E D TO S EA T IN G R E D U CE D P R IC E S FOR S T U O C N T S A S E N IO R C IT IZ E N S WITH A M C C A RO A M E R IC A N A r/ 4 5 3 - 6 6 4 1 ??D0 HANCOCK Min ■BEATTY. DIANE KEATON, JACK NCMLSH. fiOMH GLOBE IWARO WINNER BEST BMECTBR IPfClftl IH IM W II EDS 7:30 A Q U A R IU S 4 M AKING LOVE (5:15/$1.90)-7:45 THE B O O G E N S (5:45/$1.90)4 40 r/.4 4 4 - 3 2 2 2 isoos nemmt m io «8 ARTHUR (fc00/$ 1.90)4:1 S HOUSE OF W A X (5J0/$1.9O)-7JO IM O RTH CRO SS 6 HOUSE OF W A X (5:45/51.90 )-7:45 TAPS <5:15 $1.90) 7:45 NIGHT CROSSING (5:45/5 4 5 4 - 5 1 4 7 MOftTHCHOSS « AMOfRSOM t ARTHUR (440/51.90)440 THE B O O G E N S (540/51.90K745 RAIDERS «""■ LOST ARK (540/51.90)440 ♦ SOUTHWOOD 2 M O VIES TIME BANDITS I NEIGHBORS 5:507:45 I - 4:154:15 M IS T IN 6 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml S OF M0NT0P0LIS PHONE: 385-5328 2 4 H O U R A D U L T T H E A T R E C O M P L E X VIDEO TAPE RENTALS & SA LE S LARG EST SE LEC T IO N - LOW EST P R IC E S SEE UP TO 6 MOVIES ON SEPARATE SCREENS FOR THE PRICE Of ONE MISBEHAVEN KINKY LADIES OF BOURBON STREET TEENAGE CHEERLEADERS EXPOSE ME LOVELY BEL AMI DEEP THROAT 0FVH. & MISS JONES DISCOUNT MILITARY • STUDENT • SENIORS • COUPLES GENERAL CINEMA THEATRES A A NON THtU SAT All SHOWINGS K rO R 4PR. f i . V V SUN I HOLIDAYS FN5T MATHU SHOWOWY HIGHLAND MALLCT ^ A 4 5 1 - 7 3 2 6 H IG H L A N D M A L L BLVD. "SHOOT THE MOON” Albert Finney Diane Keaton | 12 4 5 - 3 0 5 - 5 2 0 - 7 4 5 - 1 0 0 0 ( R) Ja ck N ic h o ls o n in ‘THE BO RDER’ 1 1 0-3 15 - 5 .2 0 -7 2 S - 9 3 0 (■ ) ■ Bane misses; ‘We’ reminisces; Fonda thrills; ‘Unborn’ chills fashion (i.e., nurses, doctors, CIA agents, so ld iers). T here a re stories of the first drug experience, the first view of death and last view of V ietnam , a sight none w ants to see again. They ran g e from the fairly h e a rtw arm in g to the grossly tragic. the for S om etim es one sto ry en­ com passes both poles, as in the case of the soldier who fell in love w ith a V ietn am ese widow and taught E nglish to orphans in a sm all village. He th ree m onths and left cam e back to find the village leveled by the V iet Cong, and not a soul left alive. In an o th ­ e r story, a w ell-m eaning but ignorant w om an asks a sol­ dier a t a cocktail p a rty if he the w ar. killed anyone in sp reading sexist office p ra c tic e s and co rp o ratio n s, m ultinational th e w ord sh e ’s about physical fitness. H er book is n 't the usual “ Shape Up to be the Ideal F e m a le ” ex ercise p ro g ram , but ra th e r a guide to ex ercisin g for gen­ eral good health and w ell-be­ ing. sa m e a s Is Ja n e F o n d a ’s m ethod of getting in shape v ery d iffe r­ ent from the dozens of sim ila r books on the m a rk e t today? The ex ercises th e m se lv e s a re those m uch the taught in a e ro b ic s c lasses, health spas and in books such as “ M iss C ra ig ’s 21-Day F it­ ness P la n ,” but F o n d a ’s a p ­ proach to fitn ess and ra tio n ­ a le an fo r m a i n ta i n in g ex ercise p ro g ra m a re m uch “ You have no idea of the di­ m ension of your question, ” he replies. “ You ju s t th rew th a t out like, ‘Did you e v e r d eliv er new spapers a s a k id ? ’ ” This is the kind of g rief and a n g er th at followed v e te ra n s hom e and stayed buried until they had th eir chance to spill out th eir feelings th is book. While som e of the sto rie s a re m ore b itte r than o th e rs, all a re definitely ag ain st this w ar of attritio n , a w aiting g am e in w hich they and th e ir frien d s w ere the ones sacrificed . in — D e n n i s N o w l i n “ Jane Fonda’s Workout Book” ; by Jane Fonda, with photographs by Steve Schapi- and Schuster; Simon ro; $17.50; 200 pages. she J a n e Fonda has not lost her c ru s a d e r’s has zeal; m erely channeled it in a new (and quite p ro fitab le) d ire c ­ tion Now, to w arning the w orld about the d an g ers of n u c le a r pow er, in addition m ore serious. Like th e o th er causes she is c o m m itte d to. she ap p ro ach es fitn e ss a s an im p erativ e, and, m o reo v er, as a n atu ral s ta te th a t the Big C orporations a r e co n stan tly underm ining. Along w ith step-by -step in­ stru ctio n s for e x e rc ise s, F o n ­ da has w ritten c h a p te rs cov­ ering health, n u tritio n and n u tritio n a e s th e tic s . H e r is w ell re se a rc h e d , c h ap te r heavily footnoted and laden with quotes fro m T ex as p o liti­ cian Jim H ightow er, a u th o r of “ E a t Y our H e a rt O u t," a study of industry. th e food F o n d a’s lengthy discussion of the sham of the “ ideal fem i­ nine p hysique” tr a c e s h er own stru g g le to co nform to the sta n d a rd s of the ea rly 1960s and h e r g rad u al aw ak en ­ ing to the sexual p o litics of the stan d ard s. D uring h e r col­ lege y ears, she w ent through a period of binge eatin g , now re fe rre d to a s b u lem ia, and to re m a in la te r used d ru g s e x e rc ise thin. N ewly a w a re of the d an ­ g e rs of th ese abuses, she now reco m m en d s and self-confidence as m o re a p ­ p ro p ria te w eapons a g a in s t the fe a r of being less than p e r­ fect. D espite u n relen tin g h er e a rn e stn e ss, F onda has a s ­ sem bled a volum e th a t com ­ bines all the e le m e n ts n eces­ sary for advancing a fitn ess reg im en : easily understood in stru ctio n s, p hotographs of the e x e rc ise s and lots of e n ­ c o u rag em en t. The co v er pho­ to alone — J a n e F onda, in h er m id -fo rties, looking g r e a t — should provide enough m o ti­ vation for all but the laziest. — S u e Clleti S h e p p a r d “ The Unborn” ; b y David Shobin; Bantam ; 301 p a g e s; $3.25. E x p e c tin g b e li e v a b il it y from a book like “ The U n­ b o rn ” is like looking for c re d i­ bility in “ S ta r T re k ” — it ju s t w ouldn’t be any fun. And “ The U n b o rn ” trill ra ise the h a ir on your neck — if you let it. The sto ry rev o lv es around S am an th a, a young stu d en t who is unw ed, p re g n an t and broke. To e a rn som e e x tra cash, she signs up for a sleep e x p e rim e n t in w hich the p a r­ ticip an ts a r e hooked up to a s u p e r - a d v a n c e d c o m p u t e r w hich s to re s the w o rld 's m e d ­ ical know ledge. D uring the e x p erim en t, som ething goes w rong and th e c o m p u ter feeds its e n tire m em o ry bank into S a m a n th a ’s unborn child, who in turn begins to ta k e over and d estro y h er m o th e r’s body. The only person who c a n is Jo n ath an B ryson, th e d e d ic a t­ ed young d o cto r who runs the e x p erim en t, and who, n a tu ra l­ ly, has fallen in love w ith her. S a m a n t h a h e lp The sto ry really is n ’t as sil­ ly a s it sounds. If you can a c ­ the co m p u te r p rem ise, cept is p re tty exciting. the re s t Since Shobin is a gynecolo­ gist, his m ed ical d escrip tio n s — p a rtic u la rly in w hich the baby is about to be born — a re a c c u ra te and chill­ ing. This one isn 't going to be a c lassic, but it is e n te rta in ­ ing, light read in g th a t's w orth a look. th e one — .John R i c h a r d s Original, uncut version A neo-realist masterpiece BLVD. KNIGHTS 5:30, 9:20 STATE ARC A D E C O N Q M M 3*01 OPEN S 4 7 M 2 W WANDERERS 7:20 ¡v a r s it y 1 2 4 0 3 QUAOAl UPE • 424-1391 S H O W M A N 9 1 5 W M “ White Boy Singin’ The Blues” ; by Michael Bane; Penguin; $5.95; 261 pages. free-lan cer, W hat a w aste of good trees. B ane, a fo rm e r ed ito r of C o u n t r y M u s i c and v eteran m u sic subtitles his book “ The Black R oots of W hite R o ck .” “ A R am bling P o le m ic ” would have been m o re like it. In the prologue, he announces his intention to w rite about the battefield on w hich black and w hite m usic “ com bined, assim ilated and ... q u ite literally changed the w o rld ” ; to look a t “ the sw eep of pop ular m usic, from the slave ships to the discos and beyond.” O nce sta te d , Bane tak es this idea (w hich has alread y been the basis of sev eral w orks of sustained subtlety) and d ra g s it around b re a th ­ lessly, a s if racing to m ake dead line a t a w eekly a rts sup­ p lem en t. W riting in a d read ­ ful enlightened-good-ole-boy sty le, he advances m any in­ knocks te r e s tin g th em around to fit his p re ­ conceived notions and then m oves on to a truly incom ­ p e te n t ap p ra isa l of popular m u sic since the 1960s. “ W hite B oy” is also riddled w ith fac­ tu al e rro rs. n otions, the re s t of B a n e ’s b est idea, which is to exp lain M em phis’ v a st im ­ p o rta n c e to A m erican m usic by rev ealin g it to be out of k ilte r w ith the co un try, acco un ts for the few c h a p te rs . He in te r e s tin g should have shelved this half- baked p ro je c t for a history of M em phis m usic and cu ltu re, re search , w ith photographs, n a m e s, sp elled c o r r e c tly thoughtful essays w ith well- developed arg u m en ts — the w orks! — C h r i s W a l t e r s “ Everything We Had” ; by AI Santoli; Random House; $12.95. S an to li’s book is a profane acco u n t of the V ietnam w ar; it is also p erhaps the m ost a c ­ c u ra te of the flu rry of to m es about the m ost confusing w ar A m erica ev er fought. R a th e r than telling the tale in his own w ords, Santoli p re se n ts the reco llectio n s of 33 people who in V ietnam in som e serv ed Luchino Visconti's LA TERRA TREMA A v a s t a n d v e r y b eau tifu l canvas" lot e ntirely on location Sicily w ith a la rg e cal & n o n -p ro fe ssio n a l ast R E B E L ©riw-ln « 6 9 0 2 B u r le s o n R o a d R a d io S o u n d S y s t e m 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 P riv a c y of Y o u r A u to X X X O rigin a l U n c u t / * "Surefire!' fxsfstssfM . ^ J L a * TRULY, THE BALL1 OF THE WILD! LE C H E R OPENS 6 30 STARTS I 00 a L A D D C O M P A N Y AMO W A R N E R BR O S « lE A M A WARNER COMMuN*CA1 IQNS COMBAN* V # FOX TRIPLEX 1 i c u V KXCLUMVK SHOWING I T I H M I ■ FOX TRIPLEX 454-2711 6757 AIRPORT BLVD 1 THEATRESAUSTIN liVílíllüMáiiai 892 2775 4608 W ESTGATE BL | | 1 Chariots of F ire (pg) (5:15)-7:30- 9:50 ATLANTIC CITY «i (5:15)-7:15- 9:15 ON GOLDEN POND (PG) (5:25)-7:40- 9:45 THE BORDER (R) (5:30)-7:30- 9:30 ABSENCE OF MALICE ( p g ) ( 5 : 10)-7:20-9:30 BARBAROSA (PG) (5:00)-7:00-9:00 I C O M IN G THIS S U M M E R -"R O C K Y III'' A B I A D E R U N N E R | | FOX THEATRE 1 1 | | ALL FEATURES IN (B R A C K E T S )-C A P A C IT Y ONLY REDUCED ADULT ADM ISSION ■ 1 | | ROBERT DE NIRO ROBERT DUVALL £ Two brothers trapped by a murder... 5:50-7:50-9:50 CiNIMA ‘WesT I A TO U C H OF S O U T H E R N C O M F O R T I DALLAS I schddT ETCWSjVMstRUN^! GIRLS V V S o l a r \ I m o s p h e r e I l u ' M e I n r M o vM V V ki p 11 o r O cl v s s c v + astronomy FILM SERIES r / i Student and M onthly memberships now available float to relax 4501 Guadalupe, Austin, Texas 78751 458-8435 W e dn e sda y f o b 2» R I M 4.TO-* 7:iO |>m I f " N I I E I i m s A Double Feature o f n j VINYL t ersion <»/ 4 n t h o n \ Rurgess t The First Film ed C L O C K W O R K O R I M i l " A N D Y W A R H O L ’s in cooperation with 1 i i J A i l s r i n » Chr BA TTS AUD. 7 p .m . $ 1 . 5 0 TIME BANDITS ...they d i d n ’t m a k e h is t o r y , t h e y s t o le it! 5:00-7:15-9:30 Loves of Ondine P G I s . L JALL SHOWS $1.00 _A. 'TRUE CONFESSIONS"- " T w o O s c a r -c a lib e r p e r fo r m a n c e s ." - Fred Yager, A.P. ■ BRUCE DERN \ TATTOO MAUD ADAMS |r | X When they met they heard be Is And that was ¡ust round one. CONTINENTAL DIVIDE |pg) JOHN BELUSHI BLAIR BROWN M ID N IG H T E R Page 18 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, February 24,1982 FOR SALE FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMS SERVICES TYPING \ c \ , / > / ZIVLEY S FOR SALE 1980 S U Z U K I GS-550L, 5,700 m iles. Good condition. 9 months old. Asking SI,650 negotiable. Call 477-8771, 453-0989. Bicyclo-For Solo S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T M any used b i­ cycles. Checked by mechanics. Test ride 10, 5, 3 or 1 speed New bicycles, repairs South Austin Bicycles, 2210 South 1st. 10am-5pm 444-4819 after 5 p.m S C H W IN N C O N T IN E N T A L . To-speed, 27“ wheels, good condition w/accesso- ries. $100. Sturdy, dependable. Bob 447- 3904 PU CH 10-speed virtu a lly unused, *350 474-7076 before 7:30 a.m . or after 6:30 p.m. FOR S A L E : Lotus "Le g en d " 112 speed fram e, Shimano bicycle, Chromoly 600EX Reasonable offer. 327-7765. Stereo-For Solo E L E C T R O P H O N IC C O M P O N E N T ster eo system with G irra rd turntable Good condition. *95. 452-1707 after 6 p.m ., be­ fore m idnight D B X -1B X D Y N A M IC range expander Excellent shape Sell for *120 Call Scott 327-7206 G R E A T S T E R E O M aran tz 75 watts per channel. Receiver and a pair of Altec- Lansing Model 7S. For m ore info call G ary a fte r 4:30 p.m . 459-1561. Musical-For Solo P S Y C H E D E L IC A L B U M S and 45's bought and traded. Alien Nation Re­ cords, 307 East 5th 11-6 p.m Thursday, Frid ay, Saturday. 472-3058. 3 BACH S T R A D IV A R IU S years old, gold finish, excellent condi­ tion *400 4M-5707. trum pet G IB SO N S-G Custom. 1971, w hite with gold hardw are. 3 D iM arzio pickups 445- 4140 PIC C O LO FOR sale Y am aha, model YTC-31 Good condition, *200 Call 835- 3561 before 2 p.m. or 445-6497 afte r 2:30 p.m , E A R T H P R O D U C E R head in good con­ dition, also speaker cabinet that fits 4xl2's, best offer for both. 445-5356. G IB SO N LES Paul recording model with protector case for sale Bids start for at *450. Call 445-0042 afte r Chuck. five S E L M E R SIG N E T oboe-new, *800; Li n- ton Bassoon, wood, *800. 447-2142. H E A V Y D U T Y Roger's drum s. 7 piece set, *700. Weekdays 452-4215, ask for Nancy. Weekends 452-6749. Photography-Fof Soto __ CANO N AE-1, 35m m autom atic, 1.4 lens, $225. Polaroid 195 Land Cam era, variable shutter and aperture settings, $250. Polaroid SX-70, *80. All three in very good condition Package deal *525. (before 10am Call David at 474-6288 best)._________________________________ Pet*-For Solo G R E Y P A R R O T, gray eye baby, lov­ able pet, ability to talk, hand tam e. Call Paul 444-7628. BE A Ü T I F U A D O R A B L E mi x ed Shep- erd puppies. Only two left! 459-7345. ______ Homo*-For Solo______ B E A U T IF U L , FU L L Y -ren o v ate d , all brick home in desirable neighborhood. Owner cannot finance, so lowest price asked. M ust see. 4613 Shoalwood 447- 7903,467-9354 __ ______ Condo*-For Solo FOR S A LE student condominiums. 3000 G uadalupe Place. Furnished. *38,500, f i­ nancing available. 478-1500. 255-3705. _ _ _ 2513 S E T O N condo-large 1BR com plete­ ly furnished. Pool, parking. Two blocks from U T. (713)468-4606 ____ W ALK TO UT-Spacious Tloor plans, se­ cured electronic access. W asher/dryer, fireplace, hot tub. Don't w ait. *58,500. 472-0903, 926-5767 Richard, broker NO C O M M O N W A LLS-A II brlck~one bedroom by M opac. Quiet and secure. *45,400 Owner-broker, M a ry Nunnally, 345-2071 FOR SA LE, student condos. IB R , 1BA, furnished, 3000 CA /C H , ceiling fans, Guadalupe Place *38,500, owner financ­ ing. Call Bill K. 478-1500 Greenwood Towers a s s u m p tio n N o n -e s c a la tin g l l 7/e% . 3 ye a r ro llo ver. O w ner w ill c a r r y second lein. L arg e IB R , 1BA, $53,950. B.J. Hopkins, o w n e r/b ro k e r 345-3832, 345-2100 Condos-For Sale Miscalianoous-For Sala B E A U T IF U L , P R IV A T E L Y ow ned, stone, 2BR co n d o m in iu m . C a the dra l ceilin gs, fire p la ce , e le c tric door, double garage, pool, tennis courts. Q uiet, 10 m in . fro m cam pus, n orth. 837-3316. University Area Condos O ran ge T ree 3-3 & 2-2VÍ2 Seton Ave. 1-1 G reenw ood Tow ers 3-2 C a m b rid g e T ow ers and W est End M a rs h & Box Co. 472-1000 Jean F r a n k lin 327-1165 nights, V irg in ia F le m in g 472-3120 nights Walk to class 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo a t 18th and L a v a c a . P riced at $75,000. S e c u rity b u ild in g s , pool and hot tub, plus covered p arking . C all L in da Thom pson, 346-4786 C haparral Realtors L O O K IN G FOR L O C A T IO N S ? T ry the Stonesthrow C o ndom inium s at 2311 Nueces fo r a super, fu lly equipped o n e b e d r o o m , i b a t h . F i n a n c i n g a v a ila b le C all G in g e r A yd a m , 474-5659 ______ Tickett-For Sol* FO U R E IG H T H ro w C ars tic k e ts . *40 each. 447-9288. _ CARS, B U F F E T fix . E x c e lle n t arena. B ought re asona bly p rice d . Ph. 476-1499. too m any, v e ry CARS T IC K E T S F o u r arena seats, sev­ flo o r Rhonda 475-3008 en row s a fte rn o o n s /e v e n ­ m o rn in g s ; ings. 345-0161 fro m SAN F R A N C I SCO r o u n d trip a ir T i n e t ic i et fro m A u stin . M u s t be used before A p ril Is*. *210 C all E va n 467-2480. CARS T IX . Best arena a v a ila b le sec­ tions 21 and 22. C a ll M a rk o r Scott a t 471- 2194 a n y tim e D IS C O U N T E D A IR L IN E tic k e ts . Round t r ip D a lla s to Los Angeles. C a ll Lee at 475-7805 or 444-5318. P O L IC E , GO GO'S, Joe 'K in g ' C a r­ rasco. T h re e shows in one. F ro n t and back flo o r. C ra ig 474-5837. P O L IC E T IC K E T S : E xce l le n t’ fro n t flo o r seats. 441-6018. Miscallonaout-Fof Sola S A L E ! I N D I A Ñ le w e ir y is 25% o ff! N e l­ son's G ifts , 4502 S. Congress. 444-3814, 10-6, closed M ondays. C H IN E S E SHOES, w oks, n a tu ra l soaps and sham poos, L ib e rta ria n books, s c i­ ence fic tio n . P A C IF IC S U N R IS E , 1712 S. Congress. 441-4565. S T O K A M O K O , TW O new su rfb o a rd s tw in -fin , single, pseudo-punker designs. M u s t sell $200 each or best o ffe r 836- 4337 A N T IQ U E O AK w a rd ro b e , *300 Oak b u ffe t/s te re o cabinet, *200. C a ll Ann 474- 9950 a fte r 5 00, weekends. 2 P A IR snow skis, boots and poles. M ust sell. *160 o b.o 452-8491. ___ _ HP 38C c a lc u la to r, one ye a r old Best o f­ fe r. C all 477-7783 o r 477-7784 D IL L Y 14 foot boat t r a ile r , less than one ye a r old. *200 Sell w ith fre e sunflo w er s ailboa t. C o nta ct Scott 327-7206. FO R S A LE B row n ru n S V i'x ll'. N ylon fib e r R u bber backed. G re a t fo r d o rm room *15 445-2672. If y o u 're 5 '6 "- M E N 'S W A R D R O B E . 5 '9 ", 135-155 lbs., lik e nice suits, sports- coats, sla cks and s h irts (G ucci, Polo, G riffo n ), and w a nt to buy (ch e a p ) c a ll Stephen 892-3665. FOR S A LE M a tc h in g ru s t couch and a rm c h a ir *100 C all D iana o r T in a 467- 0253 _______ M E N 'S R O L E X w a tch . Stainless steel and gold M in t c o n d itio n . M u s t sell. 472- 3992 C Y C LO N E S A IL B O A R D w in te r sale. C a ll M a u ry a t 475-5433 or 479-0497 a fte r 5 and weekends 3 P IE C E Yves St. L a u re n t m a n 's suit. Bought *400, sell *65. W orn 6 tim e s . L ik e new 452-1669. U S ED 14 in. Royal ty p e w rite r M anual, good w o rk in g o rder. *50 836-7113 E X T R A F IR M M A T T R E S S S E T S89.95 L im ite d q u a n titie s new fa c to ry w ra p p e r F u ll-size d e x tra f ir m m a ttre s s set Both pieces fo r *89 95. B u t h u rry . in T E X A S F U R N IT U R E O U T L E T 1006 S. L A M A R BE ST P R IC E F U R N IT U R E 6535 N L A M A R 5 -P IE C E D IN IN G S E T $79.95 A few sets o n ly le ft a t th is a m azin g low p rice . W oodg rained table , com ple te w ith fo u r uph o lste re d c h a irs in d e co ra to r colo rs A ll fiv e pieces o n ly *79.95 w h ile they last. B E ST P R IC E F U R N IT U R E 6535 N. L A M A R T E X A S F U R N IT U R E O U T L E T 1006 S. L A M A R WE BUY GOLD S ilv e r, E s ta te J e w e lry D iam o nd s and Coins High P ric es Paid SANDCLIFFS J E W E L R Y Dobie M a ll 2nd Leve l 2021 G uadalupe FURNISHED APARTMENTS W ALK TO CAMPUS IB R , 1BA, C A /C H A c t A p ts., Pecan Square A p ts., and T hree O aks Apts. Ed P a d g e tt Co. 454-4621 W ALK TO UT OR ACC CAMPUS A v a ila b le now. F u rn is h e d 2BR, 2BA. *425 plus e le c tr ic ity . Pool, la u n d ry room , p le n ty of p a rk in g space. Cres R e altors, 346-2193 o r 478-7598. Unexpected Vacancy 2BR, $310 plus E La Casita Apts. 2900 Cole (3 blocks to L a w School) 258-2152 I B R a p t. $235-275 F O U N T A IN T E R R A C E APTS. L a r g e f u r n is h e d , w a lk - in closets, w a ll to w a ll ca rp e t, ca b le TV , s w im m in g pool, w a te r and gas paid W a l k i n g d i s t a n c e N o c h ild r e n /p e ts . 610 W 30th A p t. 134, M a n a g e r to U T 477-8858 472-3812 ABP IB R , C A /C H , c a rp e t, L a rg e d ish w ash er, disposal. W a lk or shuttle to U T . 2212 San Gabriel $360/month E L C I D APTS. F u rn is h e d 1 bed roo m , *270 plus E, 3704 Speedway, 459-0267 LA PAZ APTS. F u rn is h e d 1 bedroom , *280 plus E, 401 W 39th, 451-4255 Pool and on IF s h u ttle O L D M A IN A p a rtm e n ts , 25th and P e a rl. IB R , e ffic ie n c ie s F o u r blocks UT, sh u t­ tle, cable, pool. 476-5109 W A L K TO cam pus. C ity & sh u ttle bus. F u rn is h e d or u n fu rn is h e d . 2B R-2BA, e f­ fic ie n c y IB R 472-2147 CONDOS FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS r k DO ALL THESE ADS DRIVE YOU BANANAS? WE RENT AUSTIN, FREE! a p a r t m e n t s d u p l e x e s . & h o m e s ail ov er 4B21 E RIVERSIDE DRIVE NORTH 4 5 8 - 6 1 1 1 SOUTH 4 4 3 - 2 2 1 2 NORTHWEST 3 4 5 - 6 3 5 0 5 1 2 3 8 5 5 8 4 0 PAUL S. MEISLER PROPERTIES C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G Consecutive Day Rates 15 w ord m in im u m E ach word 1 t i m e .........................* .20 E a ch word 3 tim e s ......................... J .44 E a ch word 5 tim e s ......................... S .54 E ach word 10 tim e s .....................$ M 1 col. x 1 inch 1 tim e .....................55.69 1 col x 1 inch 2-9 tim e s ................*5.49 1 col x 1 inch 10 or more times 55.20 $1.00 charge to change copy F irst two words m ay be all cap ital letters. 25‘ for each additional word in capital letters S T U D E N T /F A C U L T Y /S T A f F (P r iv a te P a rty Ads Only) Consecutive Day Rates 15 w ord m in im u m E ach word, 2 T im e s ............................ 17 27 Each Word. 5 Tim es Each W ord, Each Addti T im e 054 1 Col. x 1” , 1 or M ore T im e s ......... 3.IS 5C charge to change copy. First two letters. words m ay be all capital Each additional word in capitals, 25'. All ads must be non-commercial and prepaid DCADUNS SCHCOUU M * « d o y T e x a n ........................M d o y 2 p.m . Tueedey T e x o n ....................M onday 11 a.m . W ednesday T e xan ..............Tuaeday !1 a.m . Thursday T e xa n ............Wednesday 11 a.m . T axan.......................Thursday 11 a.m . in the event o f e rre n m ade In an a dver­ tisem ent, im m e d ia te notice m ust be given a t the publisher» are rsspent ib ie for only ONC incorrect insertion. AH d a im i for a d ­ ju stm ents should be m ade not la ter than 30 days a fte r publica tio n AUTOS FOR SALE L 8. M Volksw erks new and used VW parts. Rebuilt engines S629 installed, ex­ change. We buy VW 's any condition. 251- 2265 79 P O N T IA C F ireb ird . F M /A M stereo, a ir conditioning, V-8, low m ileage. *4,500 or best offer, 477-5400 ext. 30. 1980 D O D G E Colt 38 mpg, power stick, air, A M /F M stereo, excellent condition. 447-7412. __________ __ _________ 81 H O N D A Prelude. 5-speed, AC, A M / F M stereo cassette, sunroof *7,995 255- 0675 72 H O N D A 600 . 40 mpg, A M /F M stereo cassette R ebuilt engine. *1,400. 478-7018. 73 O LD S Cutlass Supreme, loaded, per­ fect student car S1800. M ust see to ap­ preciate. 836-8370. 75 V W Dasher Wagon M ust sell *1795. 453-2764 197H T O Y O T A Célica G T Liftback. 5- speed, AC, A M -F M stereo cassette. 54,700 477-5780. FO R SA LE 1974 G rem lin Good condi­ tion, 54,000 m iles. *800. Call after 6 471- 7919 or 345-9637 _________ 79 M U S T A N G . Rare’,’ V *, 4 speed, AC,’ low m ileage, T R X A M -F M , sunroof, handling package, excellent In and out. *5200 479-8571 or 478-0472 (ask for Jon). 81 C H E V E T T E , 4-door, 4-speed, hatch­ back, low m iles, AC, tinted glass, cus­ tom interior, roof rack- *4950. 453-3340. 1979 TO Y O TA SR5 pickup. A M -F M c a í sefte, AC, excellent condition, m any ex­ tras, must see to appreciate. Only *4995. Call M ik e 471-2438 1967 T R IU M P H TR4A Very good condi­ tion, new top, paint, tires. Good engine. *2800. 443-8840 ________ T Í F I A T B rav a. AC, PS, A M /F M cas­ sette, 5-speed, excellent condition M ust sell, below book. Contact M a rk at 441- 9180 a fte r 6 p.m . tT m O N T E C arlo 68,600 miles, 350 cu. in. 4 barrel, good highway machine. *1250 478-2206. ______ 72 2002 BM W Runs excellent, new tires, battery, exhaust, and m uffler See at Wheels and Deals, corner of I83N and *2950 and negotiable Don Burnet Rd ______________________ 474-9091 M U S T S E L L Í 1975 Chevy Monza Towne Coup. Low m ileage, good mpg, g re a t stereo Best offer. Scott 442-4656 afte r 5 00 FOR SALE MotpfcycU-For Sola low 80 PU CH M a x i m ileage, excellent shape. Call Keily evenings 467-2458 II Moped Cheap, 1976 Y A M A H A RD400. 2,700 ‘miles,' good in­ liability condition Also cluded *800.474-9530 insurance FOR SALE 1979 Puch Moped Newport. L lock and helm et included Call Terry 454 6092 after 5 1980 PU CH M axi Lux Cheap to run, low m ileage, fun to ride, buddy seat, collaps­ able baskets, top condition. $500 Even­ ings 288-2391 1980 M O P E D Excellent condition S5Q0 or best otter 926 6337 M U S T S E LL 1974 Honda MT2S0 D!rt7 street Recently rebuilt, runs good. *400. Phone 473-8801 C O N D O S FOR SALE ★CONDOSTk HOMES-DUPLEXES If you want to live within easy dis­ tance of campus, call the UT area specialists, *39,900 to *120,000 THE UT AREA SPECIALIST John B. Sanford, Inc. Raaltan 451-7262 454 -6 6 3 3 “ O R A N G E T O R N U E C E S P L A C E , TH E G AZEBO, T H E T R E E H O U S E . H Y D E P A R K OAKS, P A R K E R SQUARE and H Y D E P A R K are iust a few of the U T condos we have available FO R SALE and FOR LE A SE Call inform ation about us these and others We re the condo specialists. for m ore UNOA ING RA M ANO ASSOC. ___________ 47f c - li? l_____________ Luxury 1 BU-1 BA condominiums, only I hroo blocks from campus, coiling fans, balconies, all appliances, and reserved park­ ing. In excellent condition. For loaso. $ 3 7 ,5 0 0 or sala or $ 3 6 0 / m o n t h . F in a n c i n g available. 477-4113. K)7«% financing I $34.950 1 BEDROOMS, LOFTS AND 2 BEDROOMS RACQUET BALL. POOL AND JACUZZI 5 M IN U T E S F R O M DOWN TOWN , Marketed tW - PAUL S. MEISLER “ . . . J a : ---------- r i i O l T K H E S " 3 0 7 We»f M I K 1 block from campus 4 7 9 - 6 6 1 8 We've Done Your H o m ew o rk Servicinjf nil of Auetin npecializinfi in campu* and I J nhuttle arcan. Walk over or < all before your parent* come to make a ¡¡re rieu mg appointment 479-6618 im part CmdmMuw U’s an investment for the future. Before you invest in a condominium, visit Pecan Square. After you com pare ouality, location, and cost, vouil be glad you looked at pecan Square. Located at 2906 West Ave X bedrooms available I Mocks north of UT QMet neighborhood ProfcMkmally decorated Fireplace it microwave Swimming pool 52” ceiling fans * íPn