T h e Da il y T e x a n S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The Uni ver si ty of Texas a t Aus ti n Austin, Texas, Thursday, August 17, 1978 Sixteen Pages Vol. 77, No. 201 Copyright 1978, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved Balloonists fly over Atlantic 3 Americans succeed in historic crossing Fifteen Cents News and Editorial: 471-4591 Display Advertising: 471-1865 Business Office and Classified: 471-5244 - ■ R f - I OUI ‘ s'eH'8^ •o’ a XOS 9 e ^ „* ° V o -m xx 2 / U N I T E D PRE STATE * ' I i NEWFOUNDLAND SCOTLAND “ The goal is to land on European she said. “ It looks really good. soil, I ve got a great feeling.” “ Where they would like to land and where they might land are two different things. Almost anything on the Euro­ pean continent will do,” Ms. Bernard said. “ W E ’R E NOT looking at an exact touchdown. They would ideally like to land in a body of water, but the Double Eagle II does have the capacity to touch down on land “ They aren’t going to be picky at that point.” she said. “ It could be anywhere. When they hit the surface winds, they could be blown for miles and miles. “ They are sounding good and are get­ ting anxious,” Ms. Bernard said. She said they fired up two heaters inside the passenger gondola and snuggled into thermal clothes to keep them warm. Abruzzo and Anderson made a previous attempt to baloon across the Atlantic last year but were forced to ditch near Iceland after 66 hours. SHANNON, Ireland (U P I) — Three American adventurers from New Mex­ ico Wednesday became the first men to successfully cross the Atlantic Ocean in a balloon, passing over the west coast of Ireland and heading for an expected lan­ ding in England. The air radio station at Shannon reported that Double Eagle II, the 122- foot balloon, passed over the Irish coast at Louisburg, County Mayo, shortly after 5 p.m. Austin time. The pilots of a British jumbo jetliner and a U.S. military transport sighted the American trio off the coast of Ireland but said a northeastern wind was pushing the giant balloon toward Scotland. A Shannon Airport spokesman said that given the balloon s current speed and altitude, the earliest it could come down successfully would be Thursday morning. The three American adventurers turn­ ed off their battery-powered radio equipment to conserve energy and turn­ ed on heaters inside their gondola in an effort to keep warm. T H E THIO, who lifted off from Pres­ que Isle, Maine, last Friday, surpassed the old endurance record of 107 1/2 hours of free flight in a balloon at 8:13 a m. Wednesday. Balloonist Ed Yost set the previous record in 1976. At least seven persons, including a woman, have died trying to cross the Atlantic in balloons. The last of the 17 known attempts was an effort last month by two Englishmen who travelled farther than the Double Eagle ll but ditched about 110 miles off the coast of France. The pilot of a British Airways jumbo jet sighted the 112-foot Double Eagle II at 11:50 a m. 200 miles off the coast of County Donegal, Ireland. The pilot said the black and silver balloon was drifting at 6,000 feet and was being blown northeast on a course which could carry it past the tip of Northern Ireland and force it to cross the Irish sea before making a landfall in northern Scotland. A PHOTOGRAPH of the balloon also was taken by the crew of a U.S. Air Force Hercules based at a Royal Air Force base at Bentwater, England. “ The earliest it could come down, given its present course and speed, is early tomorrow morning,” a spokesman at Shannon airport said. In a London hotel room, the wives of Ben Abruzzo, 48. Maxie Anderson, 44, and Larry Newman, 31, were packed ready to dash to wherever their husbands were likely to come down. “ They're awfully keyed up to get out there, but the trouble is they don’t know where there’ is yet,” a spokesman said. Spokeswoman Sue Bernard at the crew’s land headquarters in Bedford, Mass., said it was not important where the balloon landed. KB fires manager i — UPI Telephoto Double Eagle ll nears possible landing site in northern Scotland. UT officials reopen legal questions on insurance ad aimed at students By MARK DOOLEY Daily Texan Staff The University System’s Office of General Counsel and the Texas In­ surance Board are investigating the possibility that National Lloyds In­ surance Co. of Waco is misleading students with its advertising. Although National Lloyds’ orange and white brochure for “ Student Personal Property Insurance and Bicycle Floater Insurance” pictures Jester Center and contains the words, “ For Students At The University Of Texas — Austin,” the policy is not endorsed by the University, nor is the company in any way affiliated with the University, according to the dean of students office. The brochure is mailed to students whose names and addresses appear on computerized lists purchased from the University. “ T H E U N IV E R S IT Y is concerned ... whether or not the company implies any endorsement that has not been given,” said David McClintock, assistant dean of students. Galinsky says McClintock said the dean of students office has referred the matter to the System s general counsel, which is in­ vestigating the possibility that the com­ pany v io la te d in su ra n ce board regulations. “ I ’m not prepared at this time to say what we’re going to do,” said W O. Shultz II, associate general counsel. Last year National Lloyds printed a similar brochure and later complied with the insurance board’s request that the company retract its printed claim that “ The University has investigated this program and the company un­ derwriting it and fully recommends it to all bicycle owners.” NATIONAL LLO YDS retracted the statement through newspaper adver­ tisements and letters to students who had expressed interest in buying policies. The insurance board investigation was prompted by queries from students about the company’s affiliation with the University and the quality of National Lloyds’ policies. The claim was “ what we felt to be a Museum story errs visory group,” he said. “ We advise the acting director and the dean of fine arts, Dr. Peter Brockett, on general issues. In no way are we involved in the museum’s operations.” Sutton said the museum had com­ pleted its “ searches through the file cabinets” and was just beginning to compare what it had “ on paper” with the objects it had on hand. He also said faulty identification of items could cause some to believe those items were missing. “ In the museum's search so far, some poor identification and multiple titles given to objects have become ap­ parent,” he said. “ One thing we hope to do in the future is to have an actual photo of all objects in the museum,” Sutton said. “ That would remove any ambiguity we might have.” “ is in complete compliance” with state regulations since the company deleted its claim of University endorsement. “ It s really not a problem” that National Lloyds is using the words “ For Students At The University Of Texas — in its brochure since “ this Austin” would be a blanket policy,” Borsheim said. “ THAT’S A T R U E statement and I can’t refuse them the right to use true statements in their advertising,” she added. Borsheim also said the company is free to print its brochures in any colors it chooses and said, “ I don’t believe there s any problem" with picturing Jester Center in brochures. However, if the insurance board determines that National Lloyds has violated any regulations, the insurance commissioners will hold a public hear­ ing on the matter. Borsheim said. lf the commissioners were to rule against National Lloyds, the company could then appeal the decision to the board and eventually in district court rather than complying with the board’s request for a retraction or paying any fine it imposes, she added. Borsheim said the board also is in­ vestigating Citizens Fidelity Insurance Co.’s advertising of its policies as part of “the o f f ic ia l endorsed and recommended student life insurance program.” misleading B o rs h e im , ministrative assistant. implication,” said Linda in su ran ce board a d ­ She said the advertisement “ implied that the University recommended or en­ dorsed the insurance ... which was not the fact.” However, Borsheim said, “ They (National Lloyds) were most anxious to comply with our requests.” She added, “ A lot of these statements were true for other colleges” and said the company had unintentionally used an endorsement claim where an en­ dorsement had not been given National Lloyds spokesman Mike Lanham said last year’s brochure was misprinted and was not intended to mis­ lead students. “ W E F E E L L IK E we’re doing a ser­ vice for the University to offer them in­ surance,’’ Lanham said, adding, “ Texas University is the only one we’ve ever had a problem with. “ We don’t want any trouble with the University of Texas and certainly not the board of insurance.” Lanham said National Lloyds makes little profit selling its property in­ surance to students and said the com­ pany would gladly discontinue selling such policies. He said the company’s current brochure contains no claim of Universi­ ty endorsement, nor is it intended to mislead students. Borsheim said the new advertisement -thursday ■ H o t ... Austin temperatures will be in the high 90s Thursday with partly clo ud y skies. More weather, Page 15. By CARL HOOVER Daily Texan Staff Dr. Karl Galinsky, chairman of the Department of Classics, said Wednes­ day a newspaper article attributing the loss of Rembrandt etchings thought to be missing from a University collection to inventory error was inaccurate. The article, in the Wednesday mor­ ning edition of the Austin American- Stateman, implied that the idea was Galinsky’s and that it was novel, Galinsky said “ That idea has been around for the last few months, and it s certainly not mine,” he said. “ It’s even been men­ tioned in the Texan.” Galinsky said that several inventory systems used in the University Art Museum could lead to a museum object being catalogued more than once. As a result, he said the number of missing Rembrandt etchings could seem larger than it actually was. “ There s a possibility of its happen­ ing, but there’s no way of saying whether it is true or not,” Galinsky add­ ed. “ I ’M NOT IN any position to say what the museum staff believes is the reason. They haven’t even completed their in­ ventory yet, so I doubt they have settled on any reasons yet themselves,” he said. Dr. Shirley Alexander, acting director of the museum, was unavailable for comment Galinsky. one member of a com­ mittee appointed by President Rogers to study museum administration said the committee is an advisory body whose function is to help Alexander ad­ minister the museum. The committee, not the Department of Art, will be bringing in consultants in September to help determine how the museum should be run, Galinsky said. He added that the committee is not in­ volved in the inventory the museum is conducting or an investigation by the Travis County district attorney’s office. Dr. Eldon Sutton, vice president for academic affairs and chairman of the committee, agreed with Galinsky. W e ’re very d e fin ite ly an ad ­ By Lynne Dobsun, Daily Texan Staff F o rm er m anager D aniel M ansker and daughter Sharon move their belongings from their apartment. By DONYA CANNON Daily Texan Staff K B Property Management, an apartment management firm which has been the subject of numerous ac­ cusations by residents in the last few months, has fired the manager of one of its properties who himself complained about the units he managed. Daniel Mansker, manager of Porto Espanol Apartments, 5820 Berkman Drive, said he was fired Friday by K B Property Management for complaining about the condition of the apartments. “ I had to call the management several times a day about needed repairs I had residents coming to my apartment complaining from early in the morning until late at night every day. “ I was told Friday by my supervisor’s wife that I was fired, and I had to move out of the apartment that day. I asked if I could work at least to the end of the pay period since we had no money, but she told me to leave immediately,” Mansker said TWO R EA SO N S for termination given by K B Property were that vacant apartments had not been leased, and the grounds had not been kept properly, Mansker said. “ The only vacant apartments that I didnt lease were the ones that had to be cleaned I won t rent an apartment that isn t fit to live in, and I always kept the grounds picked u p .” Mansker con­ tinued K B Property representatives were contacted several times but refused to comment In previous Daily Texan reports, residents from Cloisters. Racquet Club, ( r e e k H a u s a n d B r o o k h o llo w apartments also have complained about (See K B , Page 15.) TA rule to swell class sizes; most departments adjusting By j o h n McMil l a n Daily Texan Staff Most departments will have little difficulty complying with University President Lorene Rogers’ plan to curtail the use of graduate students as teachers in the fall, administrators say. Among the mentioned effects of the prohibition on teaching by graduate students lacking master’s degrees will be larger lecture classes taught by faculty members and the recruitment of more temporary instructors with master’s and doctoral degrees. Rogers announced last spring that, as of this fall semester, graduate students must take a teaching methodology course and have a year of teaching experience and a master’s degree before they can teach courses on their own Under the new rules, the duties of teaching assistants — graduate students without master’s degrees — will be confined to augmenting regular classroom instruction, by conducting laboratories or review sessions. “ I THINK theres been enough lead time that (the departments) are pretty well adjusting to it,” William Hays, vice president for academic affairs, said Wednesday. “ We don t see any problems emerging.” echoed Gerhard Fonken. executive assistant to the president, explaining that the requirement had been discussed extensively with deans and department chairmen as a proposal in January Irwin Lieb, vice president and dean for graduate studies, said administrators from “ one or two” departments have requested waivers of the teaching prerequisite of a master’s degree for certain graduate students, but only “ a few” exceptions have been granted Administrators say the departments which will have to make the most adjustments to comply with the new rules are either the ones which in the past have offered several sections of a course with high enrollment — such as finance and mathematics — or departments which have relied on teaching assistants to conduct small classes requiring individualized in­ struction — such as English and foreign languages. “ We have been very heavily using TAS having sole respon­ sibility for lower-level classes.” said Dr James Daniel, chair­ man of the Department of Mathematics. Three courses — 603A, 603B and 305G — containing a total enrollment of 3800 students have accounted for all of the teaching assistants in charge of classes in the past, Daniel said During the fall, assistant instructors, many of whom were recently promoted from being teaching assistants, will conduct the courses, which will be distributed among about 130 sections (See TA, Page 15.) Page 2 □ THE DAILY T E X A N □ Thursday, August 17, 1978 vMc*\£. P ioodjAb Like Noah before him, evangelist Jim Bakker (not to be con­ fused with Allen Bakke, or Jim Bakke, for that m atter) is b attl­ ing floods. The difference is that Noah, as the story goes, fought for sur­ vival against the Lord’s 40 days and 40 nights of w ater, while Bakker says he’s up against S atan’s flooding of Charlotte, N.C. You see. Bakker and his PTL (“ P raise the Lord” ) Club are building and building and building in Charlotte, which has become a very soggy city in recent weeks. In the first 15 days of August, m ore than seven inches of rain ‘has fallen on Charlottites (C harlottians9), while rainfall for the entire month usually is less than four inches. As the Charlotte w eatherm an answ ered my question, “ My gracious, it s way above (n o rm al)!’’ Bakker would have his television viewers believe that all this w ater has done for PTL’s H eritage Village and its Total Living Center what fire and brim stone did for Sodom and Gomorrah. On this basis, Bakker has increased both the quantity and •quality of his TV appeals for money, money, money, to buy, buy, buy and build, build, build. AT TH E SAME tim e, Bakker and his disciples regularly proclaim that the apocalypse is ju st around the corner. Indeed, they argue that nearly all the B ible’s prophecies have com e true already and it is just a m a tte r of m om ents before Russia a t­ tacks Israel in the ultim ate w ar between the good guys and the bad guys (none other than the com m ies). The seemingly obvious question is why in God s nam e (literal­ ly) is Jim Bakker building a Total Living Center? Is he worried he and his followers won’t be able to get accom m odations in heaven? Doesn't he know that he can ’t take it with him? It doesn t really m a tte r why Jim B akker’s PTL Club does what it does, though, since his program offers the best televi­ sion entertainm ent short of Bugs Bunny cartoons. Where else but on PTL Club can you regularly view TV ministry in action? On what other show do people perform m iracles and speak in tongues? And, PTL also offers Bakker sidekick Henry Harrison, perhaps the best straightm an in the business. THE SINGLE unentertaining thing about PTL is what Bakker serves up as entertainm ent. Listening to his wife T am ­ my sing is enough to m ake angels wince. She m ay well be one of the Cherry Sisters reincarnated. Last night on PTL club. Bakker entertained by railing against the country’s bankers, who loan money to Mother Russia but won t help finance H eritage Village or the Total Living Center. Well, Bert Lance is out of work. Anyone loans money to Bert Lance. Everyone loans money to B ert Lance. And, Lance is ho­ ly He’s the obvious choice for the job. A Bakker-Lance twosome would be m ore than any devil could combat. Lance could borrow and Bakker could keep buying and building. It’s a m atch m ade in heaven. Then, those who can ’t get past the pearly gates could enjoy total living right here on earth in soggy Charlotte. When the end of tim e does come, we can all look forward to the night when Jesus guest-hosts the PTL Club. I t ’ll be one hell of an evening. Pro-race faction may petition A m ajor petition drive by in­ dividual re sid e n ts m ay be started to reinstate the drag boat races on Town Lake. The referendum drive, if it is u n d e r t a k e n , w i l l b e spearheaded by Austin resi­ dent Bob Byland. Charles Cantwell, who is associated with Aqua F est, said Wednesday that he was unsure if any such drive would The Daily Texan a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published bv Texas Student Publications. Drawer D, University Station, Austin. Tex 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and F ri­ day. except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin. Tex News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 136( Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3 200 (471 5244) and display advertising in TSP Building 3 210 (471-18651 ............... The national advertising representatives of The Daily Texan are National Educational Advertising Service. Inc , 360 Lexington Ave., New York, N Y ,10017, and Communications and Advertising Services to Students, 6330 N Pulaski. Chicago. 111.. 60646 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association, and American Newspaper Publishers Association. Copyright 1978. Texas Student Publications THE DAILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES SUMMER SESSION 1978 Picked up on cam pus - U T students/faculty staff Picked up on campus general public By mail in Texas By mail, outside Texas within U S A ONE SEMESTER (FALL OR SPRING) 1978-79 Picked up on campus basic student fee Picked up on campus - U T faculty staff Picked up on campus - general public.................. By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within U S A TWO SEMESTERS (FALL AND SPRING) 1978-79 $ I OO 4 00 850 900 I 65 I 65 7 50 14 50 15 50 I 330 Picked up on cam pus - U T faculty staff 15 00 Picked up on cam pus - general public 26 50 By mail in Texas 28 50 By mail outside Texas within U S A Send orders and address changes to TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS, P O Box PUB NO. 146440 I) Austin Texas 78712. or to TSP Building. C3 200 th a t be u n d e r ta k e n . He c o m ­ m e n te d th e r e w e re already two petition drives go­ ing, “ but I couldn’t pinpoint their origin.” Cantwell stressed that as an individual, he believed that Austin needed the boat races and that he would support a referendum . The Cham ber of Commerce and Aqua Festival m em bers said they were not sponsoring t MARILYN MITCHELL Beauty Consultant fo r Aziza C osm etics w ill give make-up demonstrations and answ er your questions at S k i l l e rn s Drugs 2338 G uadalupe F ro m 9 :0 0 AM tu 6 :0 0 PM on FRIDAY, AUGUST I S\ 1 Free gift f o r Isl 25 cust omers l u i t h p u r c h a s e o f 4zi za< I product s! any referendum on the boat races. h a s “ The support is there ... the number of phone calls I have b e e n r e c e i v e d phenom enal,” Cantwell said, adding that within three days, enough signatures could be gathered to force a referen­ dum. “ I don’t want to divide the city, but Austin needs the boat races,” he said. M ayor C arole M cClellan said a referendum action would divide and polarize the city. “ They have a perfect right to petition ... and I won’t do anything to stop them ,” she said, but added, “ a referen­ dum is divisive; it polarizes the city; it is counterproduc­ tive.” to m ak e It is the council’s respon- sib ilty th e h ard decisions as well as the easier ones, McClellan said, adding t h a t C ity C o u n c il is a representative dem ocracy. “ And the v o ters have a referendum every other year (electing the m ayor and coun­ cil m e m b e rs),” she com ­ mented. AMSTER MUSIC Dortha Barrett Pianist, Organist Accompanist, Teacher lf You Want Recorders, Recorder Music, Irish Tin Whistles, Latin Per­ cussion, Balalaikas, Sitars, Chim- B S ., M.M., Texas Tech U n iversity tas, Cuicas, Hand Drums, Talking A n n ou n ces the o pen in g o f a Studio of Music • Piano • Guitar • Organ • Voice • Piano Accordion Beginners Accepted 459-5147 A llan dale A rea Drums, Zali Drums, Osi Drums, Krimhorns, Kortholts, Bagpipes, Tablas, etc., etc., etc., You have to come to us. WE RENT PIANOS TO STUDENTS 1624 Lavaca St. 478-7331 /-More affordable than everk Council hears residents Austinites request park facuities By J A N N SN ELL Daily Texan Staff Despite dem ands from Austin residents to cut this y e a r’s Capital Im provem ents P rogram and city budget. City C ouncil W ednesday nig h t listened to residents asking for num erous additions and in­ clusions to the CIP. A dditional tennis co u rts, ra c q u e t b all c o u rts , golf courses, softball fields and other park facilities were re ­ quested by resid en ts a t a public hearing on CIP, which funds m ajor city projects. A representative of the new­ ly formed Austin Citizens for Economic Energy, a group of residents opposed to funding the $47 million overrun on the South Texas Nuclear P roject, added some diversity to the subjects addressed when he questioned the council about in the $43 million provided CIP for stockpiling uranium for South Texas. TH E CAPITAL Area Ten­ nis Association requested a 16- to be b u ilt c o u rt fa c ility som ewhere in the city to m eet the growing needs of tennis p la y e rs . M em b ers of the association told the council there are not enough courts to teach young people how to p la y a n d a l s o p r o v i d e fa c ilitie s needed for to u r­ nam ents. th e At p r e s e n t, te n n is association m ust use private courts or those of the Univer­ sity or the Austin Independent School D istrict. A sim ilar request for new facilities was m ade by the Austin Softball Association. A representative said 500 people were turned away in one week because there was not enough field space to accom odate the players. Charles Matthews, a new the professor of Arabic at University, told the council about a wilderness area near his home and his fears that the area m ight be developed. He asked the council to obtain the land, if it could, as a donation from its owner or purchase the property to keep the un­ usual area intact. THE WILDERNESS area runs along Blunn Creek, which is south of St. E d w a rd ’s Drive, north of E ast Oltorf Street, and northeast of Saint Edward s University. With the boat races and Aqua Festival moved from F i e s t a G a r d e n s , R o m e o Rodriguez said he feared the council would neglect the area and not develop it as a park. He poin ted to in a d e q u a te lighting and toilet facilities on the east side of Town Lake. C o u n c il m e m b e r R on the a re a had Mullen said Bats invade UT stadium M emorial Stadium is well known as home of the Texas Longhorns football team but not so well known as the home of th o u sa n d s of M exican F reetail bats. T he sta d iu m , e s p e c ia lly Section 6, is inhabited by the creatures thousands of who congregate to raise their young d u rin g th e w a rm w eather before m igrating to Mexico for the winter. The bats have been a problem dur­ ing football season when rains have washed their droppings onto the stands, necessitating vigorous cleanups. One such scrubbing last fall cost $2,000. C harles Jam iso n , an en­ vironm ental health specialist with the University Safety Of­ fice. said. “ There is really no feasible way to get the bats out of the stadium . Screening would be the best solution but the stadium has too many cracks and crevices. If they w ere coming in just one win­ it would be different. dow. W e’ll to m ake friends with them , I guess.” ju s t h av e already received more than $1 m illion im p ro v em en ts (prim arily to accomodate the drag boat races) and $46,000 in in f a c i l i t i e s . The r e s t r o o m toilets were recently con- tracted for and should be com­ pleted in four months. ^campus capsule; Chemistry library opens at new location The Chemistry Library has opened in its new location,! Welch Hall 2.132. The library is in the new addition to Welch Hall. Form erly housed in an older part of Welch Hall, the Chemistry Library is a branch of the General Libraries. The new one-level library facility, which contains 11,- 900 square feet of floor space, has room for 77,000 volum es and seating for 155 readers. At present, the collection includes more than 38,000 volum es covering subjects such as chem istry, biochem istry, chemical engineering, nutrition and food sciences. Beginning in the fall sem ester, the library’s hours will be 8 a.m. to l l p.m. Monday through Thursday. 8 a.m. to IO Friday and 9 a m. to l l p.m. Saturday. Late registration fee increased Students registering late for the 1978 fall sem ester will pay an increased late registration fee. The charge for late registration w as increased from $5 to $15 at the April m eeting of the Board of Regents. Late registration will be conducted Sept. 5 through 8 in the foyer of the Academ ic Center. LBJ Library receives $7,500 grant Gulf Oil Foundation has presented $7,500 to the Endow­ ment Fund of the U niversity’s Lyndon B. Johnson Library. The grant is part of the Gulf Aid to Education Program , which will distribute more than $3.2 million this year to support educational programs at colleges and universities. The donation will be used to help support special operations of the LBJ Library. Library hours not extended University libraries will not be open extended hours during finals. The libraries will m aintain their regular sum m er hours. Perry-Castaneda Library will be open 8 a m. to IO p.m. Monday through Friday, 9 a.rn.to 6 p.m. Saturday and noon to IO p.m. Sunday. The Undergraduate Library will be open 8 a.m . to ll p.m. Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, and noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and noon to l l p.m . Sunday. 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I piece dress creates layered look with skirt ruffle ... w rap V neck enhanced by bias collar, full cut wing sleeves, sizes 5 to 13, 36.00 2406 G U A D A L U P E O N - T H E - D R A Gr Thursday, August 17, 1978 □ THE DAILY TE X A N □ Page_3 Hua takes historic trip Chinese leader visits Romania BUCH AREST, Romania (U P I) - Chinese Communist leader Hua Kuo- feng linked arm s with two pretty girls and danced the hora in Bucharest’s Vic­ toria Square Wednesday at the start of the first trip outside Asia by a Com­ munist Chinese ruler. Hua’s blue and white jet, splashed with Chinese characters, touched down at Bucharest's Otopeni airport at IO a rn., making him the first Chinese par­ ty leader ever to travel west of Moscow. R o m a n ia n P r e s i d e n t N ic o l a e Ceausescu rushed to the gangplank and warmly embraced Chairman Hua and Chinese Foreign Minister Huang Hua. THE TWO LEA D ERS drove into the capital in an open Mercedes, gaily wav­ ing to the more than 100,000 workers and schoolchildren who fluttered Chinese and Romanian flags, plastic flowers and colorful handkerchiefs. Along the route, Romania's famed forming taller gymnasts performed, and taller human pyramids as Hua clapped with delight. At Scinteia Square, Hua received the key to Bucharest and conveyed warm salutes from the people of Peking to the citizens of Bucharest. At Victoria Square, more than 1,000 teen-agers in ethnic costumes kicked up their heels in Romania's national circle dance, the hora CEAUSESCU TOOK Hua firmly by the arm and guided him into the circle. Hua did his best to keep up with the beat until rescued by Foreign Ministry of­ ficials. Hua’s trip is the first outside Asia by a Chinese party chairman since the late Mao Tse-tung went to Moscow in 1957. The trip coincides with exceptionally heightened tension between the Soviets and the Chinese stemming from the friendship treaty signed by China and Japan Saturday. A fter the re c e p tio n , Hua and Ceausescu began private talks expected to revolve around both nations’ concern in over expanding Soviet influence Europe and the third world. Romania, a Warsaw Pact m ember, is China’s closest ally in the Soviet cam p independent because of Ceausescu s stand against Moscow. HUA WILL spend five days touring Romania in what diplomatic analysts said was part of China's growing cam ­ paign to undercut Moscow’s position around the world. H is second stop is Y u g o sla v ia , shrewdly timed to concide with the 10th anniversary of the Soviet invasion of C zech oslovakia Aug. 21 in which Romania did not take part. Hua will spend nine days in Yugoslavia, three as a guest on President Tito’s private island. The 58-year-old Hua’s last stop is Iran — the very backyard of the Soviet Union To meet college costs Senate favors student aid WASHINGTON (UPI) — The Senate Wednesday approved an expansion of federal aid to college students — its second move in as many days to help Americans meet the burgeoning costs of higher education. This latest measure, endorsed by President Carter and ap­ proved 68-28, would pump more money into existing federal programs of grants, loan guarantees and other assistance to college students. The bill approved 56-41 by the Senate Tuesday carries income tax credits for college tuition, and Carter wants no part of it. Sen Claiborne Pell, D R I., chief sponsor of the grant and loan bill, said he believes Carter will accept his measure but veto tuition tax credits. “ WE HAVE shirked our responsibility in passing both bills,” said Pell. Sen. Henry Bellmon of Oklahoma, senior Republican on the Senate Budget Committee, sounded a sim ilar complaint: " I cannot imagine why we would pass two bills on two successive days to accomplish essentially the same objective.” And at the White House, deputy press secretary Rex Granum told reporters Wednesday the president remains “ strongly op­ posed” to tuition tax credits. Although conflicting figures were cited, it appeared the tax credit bill would cost $5 billion over the next five years; the Pell bill, $2 billion over the sam e period. THE SENATE tuition measure would provide federal income tax credits up to $250, with the maximum increasing to $500 in 1980 Pell said his proposal is better because it would concen­ trate aid more on lower and middle income levels and cost less overall. P ell’s measure, sim ilar to one in the House Rules Committee, would: • Make fam ilies with incomes up to $25,000 eligible for college education grants, as against the present income maximum of $13,000 The amount of grants would be on a sliding scale — for example, $1,300 for a family of four with income of $12,000, and $250 for the sam e size family earning $25,000 • Reduce the amount of tuition a family must contribute on its own, which sponsors said would make an additional 1.5 million students eligible for grants. • Remove the present $25,000 income ceiling for federal in­ terest payments on college education loans. • Expand a college work-study program and several other assistance programs. The issue of tuition tax credits now goes to a conference com­ mittee for a compromise between the Senate bill, which does not include elementary and secondary education costs, and the House measure, which does. Califano won’t give data; House charges contempt WASHINGTON (U P I) - A House sub­ committee Wednesday charged HB3W Secretary Joseph Califano with con­ tempt of Congress when he refused to surrender inside information on produc­ tion and pricing of generic drugs. With Republicans arguing in favor of Democrat Califano, the 9-8 vote follow­ ed four hours of q u arrelin g and parliam entary m aneuvering on the respective rights of the legislative and executive branches. If both the House Commerce Com­ mittee and the full House approve the contempt resolution voted by the over­ sight and investigations subcommittee, Califano could face up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine. But he told the com­ mittee he could incur the sam e penalty for revealing the information. “ I AM REFUSING to submit that por­ tion which the statute says I should not,” said Califano, who insisted he was not arguing the m erits of the informa­ tion. He produced an opinion by A ssis­ tant Attorney General Michael J. Egan warning him not to break a law protec­ ting trade information. The subcommittee had issued a sub­ poena for the Food and Drug Ad­ ministration records to support its con­ tention that some big drug companies slap their brand names — and high prices — on cheap generic drugs made under contract by smaller firms. “ I believe we should meet this challenge to legislative authority head on.” said subcommittee Chairman John Moss, D -C alif, in supporting the con­ tempt resolution by Rep Albert Gore Jr ., D-Tenn. “ Mr. Califano is caught between a rock and a hard place,” countered Rep Norman F. Lent, R-N.Y. “ I hope he will stick to his guns and follow the law its which this Congress passed wisdom.” in C a l i f a n o a n s w e r e d q u e s t i o n s for three hours and offered to supply some documents giving the names of large and small drug companies and generic drugs. But he refused to turn over specific in­ formation on the relationship between small and large drug companies and the so-called “ man in the shop,” which Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., charged the big companies use as a “ ruse” to claim quality control over generic drug production by sm aller firms. “ We are talking about the public’s right to know that it is perhaps being ripped off by drug companies,” said Waxman. “ If the secretary of Health, Education and Welfare — whether he is a Democrat or a Republican — refuses to give us that information, then we ought to go about getting it.” “ I THINK most of the members of the committee are trying to avoid having you share a cell with cigarette smokers and other nefarious characters in the local hoosegow,” Rep. Jim Santini, D- Nev., told Califano before voting in favor of contempt. is the Cali fano the second Cabinet member charged with contempt by the f i r s t bei ng s u b c o m m i t t e e , Commerce Secretary Rogers Morton in 1975. Before the full Commerce Com­ mittee could act, Morton backed down and handed over information about the Arab embargo against Israel. reduced energy use, said Schlesinger. Eisenhowers to return home with first child SAN C L E M E N T E , Calif. (U P I) — Ju lie Eisenhow er is expected to go home from the hospital with her daughter Jennie Thursday, barring any com plications from childbirth. The 30-year-old daughter of form er P resident Richard Nixon delivered the 9-pound-4-ounce girl Tuesday afternoon at San Clem ente G eneral H ospital with her husband David Eisenhow er assistin g. Stocks reach year’s high in active tradin DOW J O N t y t f E R A G E tist rials Closed at 894.58 NEW YORK (U P I) - Stocks, shrugging off investor concerns about tighter credit, climbed to a 12-month high W ednesday a fte r President C arter moved to slum pin g d ollar. re scu e the Trading w as active. Jo n e s The Dow in d ustrial a v erage clim bed 7.45 points to 894.58. Owner guards his store from looters during Memphis blackout. — UPI Telephoto Blackout stuns Memphis Looting heavy during 3 hours of darkness MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI I — A m assive blackout blamed on a drunken security guard at a power station triggered a wave of looting Wednesday in this river city, already hard hit by police and firemen’s strikes and swarming with tourists commemorating the death of Elvis Presley. Non-union p o lic e and s h e r i f f ’ s deputies, backed up by Tennessee National Guard troops, arrested at least 31 people fo r looting and curfew v io la tio n s d u rin g the th ree-h ou r blackout that lasted from about 12:30 a m. to 3 a.m. and cut off the city water supply. Most of the suspects were in their 20s, a spokesman at the sheriff’s department said. MINUTES A FTER the countywide blackout, which authorities said was caused by the guard pulling a switch at a Memphis Light, G as & Water substa­ tion, looters began stealing liquor and groceries from downtown stores and dashed off with souvenirs from a shop a c r o s s the str e e t from P r e s le y ’s Graceland mansion. S e v e ral shooting in ciden ts w ere reported. One man was slightly wound­ ed by a laundry employee when he allegedly smashed a plate glass and tried to enter, and authorities said at least one patrol car had been fired on, but no one was hit. The security guard blamed for throw­ ing the switch that blacked out the city was identified a s Richard Hyder. 29. He w as charged with interfering with power lines, a felony punishable by one to ten years in prison H Y D E R A P P E A R E D b e fo r e General Sessions Judge Buford Wells, who asked “ What did you do, trip just one breaker? I d hate to think the city of Memphis is dependent on one breaker. “ No sir, I hit a whole bunch of them. Hyder replied. “ I’m sorry I did it. I didn't know what I was doing. Wells released Hyder on $5,000 bond and set Aug. 23 as the date for a preliminary hearing. Detective Capt. L. M. Rose of the Shelby County sheriff's department said Hyder registered .14 on the taximeter A reading of IO is con­ sidered legally drunk Investigators said there appeared to be no link between the blackout and the city's labor strife. “ At this time there is no indication he (Hyden was involved with anything other than he was drunk on duty and committed this act on his own volition,” Lt. Guy Cain of the sheriff's department said. L E A D E R S OF THE police and firemen's union, who presented the city a proposed new pay package Wednes­ day, also denied any connection between the blackout and the labor strike that has plagued the city of 650,000 since 1,- 100 police refused to report for work F rid ay . M ost of the c ity 's 1,400 firefighters joined in the walkout Mon­ day. “ We had nothing to do with it," said Danny Hudson, a m em ber of the firefighters executive board. “ We were home obeying the curfew. Memphis has been flooded in recent days with tens of thousands of Presley fans, here to mark the first a n n iv e r ­ sary of the rock singer's death one year ago Wednesday, and Mayor Wyeth Chandler imposed the curfew on the city after union police officers walked off the job to back up demands for higher pay. THE COUNTER WAGE proposal presented to the mayor Wednesday by for the Memphis Police attorneys Association and Local 1784 of the Inter­ national Firefighers reportedly called for a one year contract with a seven per cent increase. The proposal also includ­ ed a guarantee there would be no reprisals against those who participated in the strikes. Ray claims he didn’t kill King WASHINGTON (U PI) — In a calm , sing-song voice, Ja m e s Earl Ray swore before a committee of Congress Wednesday that he did not kill Martin Luther King Jr . and was not even present at the murder scene. Telling his story publicly for the first time, he suggested a mysterious red-haired man he knew only as “ Raoul” had set him up to take the rap for the King assassination. He gave no indication he even knew a in murder plan was afoot when he met “ Raoul Memphis, Tenn. In retrospect, Ray described himself as the victim of a conspiracy involving lawyers, “ intelligence agencies (and) publishing em pires” and King as the victim of a conspiracy between the FBI and Memphis police. KING WAS SLAIN in Memphis on April 4, 1968. “ I did not shoot Martin Luther King J r .,” Ray said in a calm, matter-of-fact voice in his opening testimony to the House Assassinations Committee. In essence, he said he was blocks away, getting his white Mustang automobile serviced, when King was shot to death on a motel balcony. He said he saw police cars blocking the streets when he was returning to his lodgings, took off for neighboring Mississippi and heard on his car radio “ that Dr. Martin Luther King. Jr .. had been shot in Memphis.” In telling of how he cam e to be in Memphis that day, Ray sketched out a vague story that appeared to involve plans, arranged by Raoul, to sell a rifle to prospective weapons buyers. HE SAID HE BOUGHT that rifle — later identified as the murder weapon, with his fingerprints on it — at Raoul’s bidding, gave it to his chum the day before the killing and never saw it again. He made no mention of any advance knowledge of a King murder conspiracy. The committee was sure to probe that point in detail later. Ray seemed comfortable testifying before the com­ mittee and the television cam eras that beamed his per­ formance iive to the nation. He wore a subdued brown- and-blue plaid jacket, a gold wristwatch and short boots. HE CARRIED a plain, flat briefcase into the intensely guarded room and pulled out a long, rambling account of his whereabouts in the spring of 1968, which he read rapidly after apologizing for punctuation errors. He said he had typed it himself, and hurriedly. Ray s initial day of testimony was cut unexpectedly short, however, when his lawyer alleged at the start of the afternoon session that Ray had been m istreated by his guards and was too tired to continue testifying Wednesday. The panel granted R ay’s request for a recess until Thursday morning. His lawyer, Mark Lane, charged before the com­ mittee that Ray had been beaten Monday by the federal m arshals assigned to protect him, denied food for 36 hours and forced to sleep in a brightly lighted cell in the worst prison they could find anywhere around Washington” at Petersburg, Va. RAY SPENT two nights there after being transferred Monday from Brushy Mountain, Tenn., State Prison un­ der extraordinary security precautions. The committee has spent two years and $4 million in investigated murders reinvestigating history — King’s and John F. Kennedy’s. the most It was a defense Ray was never permitted to make publicly because he pleaded guilty to murder in Tennessee in a three-hour courtroom proceeding in 1969. He was spared a death sentence, given 99 years in­ stead and quickly started proclaiming his innocence, alleging he was framed by the shadowy Raoul, his former partner in crime. news capsules Dom inicans see first peaceful pow er change SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (U P I) — Amid shouts of “ Viva G uzm an! Viva B a la g u e r !” Antonio Guzman took the oath of office a s president Wednesday in the first peaceful tran sfer of power in the history of the Dominican Republic. Among those assem bled in Congress for the cerem ony were U N. Am­ b assad o r Andrew Young and Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. Guzm an, 67, a m illionaire cattle rancher, and outgoing President J o a ­ quin B alagu er, who cam e under U.S. p ressu re not to interfere with the vote count after he fell behind in the May 16 election, arrived together for the inaugural. D espite the apparent am ity between the candidates, Guzman s in­ auguration ad d ress at tim es sounded like a cam paign speech. He accused B a la g u e r’s R eform ist P arty adm inistration of taking “ unconstitutional, capricious and a rb itrary ’ ’ decisions and said there w as “ enorm ous cor­ ruption” under B alaguer. cuts. P olice arrested several persons, including a mullah (p rie st), Hadi G h affari, who w as addressing the strik ers. The strik ers were protesting the death of 15 persons in stem m ing from riots in Isfahan and Shiraz last week. No official figure for the number of a rr e sts w as given. House votes down effort to cut federal budget WASHINGTON (U P I) — A Republican effort to p ass a $10.5 billion cut in the federal budget failed by ju st five votes Wednesday a s the House w restled with the final resolution to set the nation’s spending lim its. A fter a four-hour debate that was clearly a prelude to this year s elec­ tions, the House voted 206-201 again st an amendm ent by Rep. M arjorie Holt, R-Md , that would have held federal outlays to $480 billion in fiscal 1979 instead of $490.5 billion. If it had passed, the entire congressional budget process would have been set back a s various com m ittees decided exactly where to m ake the Iranians use tear gas to break up anti-shah rio t T EH R A N , Iran (U P I) — Police fired te ar g a s in the c a p ita l’s bazaar Wednesday to break up a M olsem anti-shah riot which the government charged w as instigated by P alestin ians. Riot police waded into the mob of about 2,000 rad ical M oslem m erchan ts — who oppose the shah’s attem p ts to liberalize the regim e — and scuffled with them before lobbing te ar g a s to cle ar the b azaar area. Schlesinger says feds cutting energy use WASHINGTON (U P I) — Energy Secretary Ja m e s Schlesinger said Wednesday the federal governm ent cut its energy use 3.7 percent during the p ast two y ears while national consumption increased 7.3 percent. The federal governm ent is the nation’s larg est energy user. “ At a tim e when the nation is increasing its use of energy, the federal governm ent has an im portant role to play in charting the course for Caught in a blueberry haze By Anthony L*wi§ t a s t e s lik e you go h\ lr the country you catch the flash of blue that s what I always s a ' You can't r e a lh do it from a car hut biking Uke this, taking it slew you ll sec watching the side of the road it you just keep the blue like one but Riueberries They real!' are blue That s what you have to re m e m b e r If it oohs it s som ething else probably a huckleberry I like huckleberries all right and there a r e a lot m ore of them But th e re 's nothing like your tru e blueberry , that beautiful hazy blue it s black There — did you catch it" I knew there w e re some near that No Trespass mg sigr Wonderful. a r e n 't t h e ' " H e rr s a bat for you I hope you really wanted to pick M artha says I shouldn't ask guests but you can always say Once you sta rt you ll see I s hard to st or The^c s always just one more and you hate lo w aste it no Small" Yes. they a r e T h a t s what m akes it such hard work. To get enough wile blueberries for a pie takes a couple of hours I guess I used to toil people bow long their dessert took to pick. but M artha said I was compulsive about blueberries You don t see too m any people picking any m o re They re used to the easy life T here w ere two girls here the other day looking for blueberries in the woods They probably are the only real pickers around this year besides m e People think blueberries a r e the ones you get in the store as big as m arb les and they might as well be for all the taste they have Like cotton People have forgotten what a real blueberry firing line Nukes unnecessary t h e to the cost overrun of l e t t e r “ N u k e s In r e p l y the ne c e s sa ry ." is a South T ex a s N u c le a r P r o j e c t legitim ate concern Simply because cost overruns a re com m on to long-term projects does not m a k e the $47 million- plus overrun any less onerous The economical and quickly applied a lte r­ native of conservation (adequate insula­ tion. w eatherstripping and caulking, venting of hot air and other te c h n iq u e s1 calls into serious question funding of the overrun In general, much c an be done to con­ serve We c a n 't afford to w aste energy Yet a m a j o r it y of the ho m e s and buildings in Austin a r e poorly insulated and functioning without thought to con­ serving energy The m o ne ta ry and en­ v iro n m e n ta l c osts of building new power plants can well be avoided by a vigorous conservation prog ram t h e f a c t s The letter also argues that nuclear power is a safe, clean source of energy U n f o r t u n a t e l y , s e e m otherwise. Sabotage, meltdowns and serious accidents a re not the extrem ely rem ote possibilities we a r e soothingly told On March 22. 1975. the Browns F e rry nuclear power plant caught fire and burned uncontrolled for seven and a half hours. Sophisticated emergency devices failed totally for one of the two re a c to rs Only luck prevented a dis­ astrous release of radiation. In 1966 the F e rm i r e a c to r in Laguna Beach. Mich . had a partial meltdown of tw o fu el a s s e m b l i e s , a n a c c i d e n t p r e s u m e d v i r t u a l l y i m p o s s i b l e Although the F e rm i plant is a breeder from reactor, considerably different most nuclear plants, the fact that a meltdown occurred indicates that m e lt­ downs h ave m o re than e x tr e m e ly rem o te chances of occurring. In March of 1976 the NRC said there had been at least 175 actual instances of th re a ts of violence against nuclear facilities since 1969 The safety record of nuclear power is less than perfect and is cause for concern Jam es H. Hughes Graduate School of Business Patti for pope Several days a fte r the d eath of Pope Paul, a new and radical idea was born among the followers of new wave music . Od ahead try one Weir No. there i*n's viooh to it That s tru e They need ; sue... Some lemon is good, too . Bi best of all is blueberries, brown sugar and c r e a m am brosia, th a t ’s w hat I say ii v hard to know w hether to use them sresh 01 cooked M artha has a cookbook v* th recipes tor blueberry pudding and two recipes for blueberry flummery and blueberry actually flu m m e n c (sr id b iieberry grunt and blueberry stump and blueberry pancakes and. of b l u e b e r r y m u f f i n s a n d c o u r s e \n d we m a k e blueberry biuebern pie sauce for ice c re a m The flum m ery is probably best It s like English su m m e r pudding la y e rs of white bread and cooked berries, with . cc soaking into the bread, and lots I hi ot c re a m I \ e ne\ cr seen blueberries in England but we had a visitor from Lan­ non the other week who helped pick and said th e ' did have them , only they call them bilberries Yes my back hurts, too These bushes are sit low it really kills you. A few weeks ago I picked all morning and could hardly stand up for a couple of days I had to get something from the doc tor to relax my muscles But picking blaeberries is good for you anyway; mortifying the flesh. I say The trouble is that they never seem to get ripe all at once, so you have to pick them one a t a tim e I keep thinking that somewhere there s a perfect blueberry patch, with every berry ripe on every bush so you could just rake them in. You know they do that up in Maine. They use a scoop with teeth at the edge and just swing up through the bushes. They get a lot of leaves and twigs in there with the berries, but a machine takes them out. We don't have a m achine, so please try not to get any leaves or stem s in your bag It s the ha rd e st p a rt when you m ake ja m . picking over the berries first I ve m a d e 24 ja r s of ja m this year. I w as going to e n te r it in the fair, but I decided not to. They don't have a se p a ra te catego ry for wild blueberry ja m Putting you right in there with those big cultivated ones — it doesn’t seem fair. does it9 And then I d have had to give up two j a r s of jam . What do I think about when I'm picking9 Well. it ’s not the SALT talks, I can tell you. I suppose poets think up poems while they pick Actually, I think about blueberries. I had this d re a m the o ther night. There w ere these b ranches over my head with big, perfect berries, just out of reach — m o re like grapes, really. By the way. we have wonderful wild grapes here in S eptem ber I m a k e jelly. But they re not blueberries. Dostoevsky's “ The G a m b le r ” ? No, I never have. No. not "T h e P o ss e sse d ” either Why do you ask? I'm m ostly too tired at night to read much here. We've ju st about picked this patch out. I guess. Good, w asn 't it? Don't tell anybody where it was. T h e r e ’s just this bit over here Then we can go on up the road. and 1 11 show you a sight you won’t believe — high-bush blueberries, huge the and be a u tifu l, and bushes. You c a n 't believe how different they a r e I alw ays say; There s a lot to blueberries. they c o v e r * 1978 New York Tim es here in Austin I first heard it from Coyote Bob. a surrealistic musician who claim s to be the uncontested king of cockroach-rock He c a m e up behind m e and scream ed “ P a tti Smith for p o p e '" Naturally I was im m ediately intrigued by the possibilities of this wild. absurd notion P a tti Smith, the babbling rock poet the w orld's 700 million Catholics and God only knows how m any punk-rockers' ). leading Of course many pious Catholics would consider such an idea sacreligious but I prefer to think of it as a reflection of our changing society It is becoming a p ­ parent that the role of women in the religions of the future will be much g re a te r than it is today This cam paign is m e r e l y a m a n i f e s t a t i o n of th e changes happening around us P a tti Smith has about a s much chance of becoming pope as I had of being elected UT Sweetheart when I ran last spring It s not the victory that m a tte r s in these cases, it s the concepts and changes that can be generated. Until J e r r y Brown ran for president it had been considered taboo for someone un­ der the officially sanctioned age to run but he opened the way for reform E ven­ tually the Catholic church must face the fact that it either m ust reform or die. P a t t i ' s following l a s t a l b u m w a s c a l l e d 'E a s te r ' and it was sort of a r e s u r r e c ­ tion the broken neck she received during a stage fall last y ear Bolling Stone called h e r “ the most religious figure in rock music to day.” Many people consider h er to be a seer who is heralding a new age for religion and music. Though she chose to rebel against the teachings of Jesu s Christ, she was brought up as a Catholic and claim s to have direct experiences with God while on stage. AU told, she se e m s to be the perfect counter-culture choice for pope. What a great way to kick off the Aquarian Age' T h e C a t h o l i c c h u r c h w o u l d b e re su rre c ted by the new wave, the role of women in society would be strengthened r i t e s a n d p r a c t i c e s of a n d sham anism would be fused with w estern religion for the first tim e in history. It would be a trem endous victory for the a rtists trying to effect positive changes in our world t h e So get on the band wagon and w rite or telegram your favorite cardinal. Let s show em that the spirit isn t d e ad ' We turn the world may not be able to the shock-proof Seventies; around overnight but that doesn t mean we can't raise a few eyebrows It s p re t­ ty difficult to g e n e ra te controversy here rn if you re m orally offended by this c a m ­ paign. for God s sake w rite in and say so And R e m e m b e r. Pope Paul died for t h i s s o m e b o d i e s ' s i n s b u t n o t re p o r te r ’s. so Michael Warren McHugh ex-Communication student Summertime blues I seem to be in a d r e a m here. Houston well, unsettling, to say the least. I is think I a m victim to an insidious and dangerous stra in of c ulture shock F irst the w eather. Hell could be worse, it could be hotter, it could be for eternity, but at least it c a n 't be m ore humid. One. The worst p a rt is not the weather, though, i f s the attitude, the “ pace-of- life i f s m o re expensive — a pitcher runs $3 to $4 50. There a r e a few clubs where you can listen to live music, like Houlihan's. T heodore’s. T exas Opry House. Anderson F a ir, but th e y ’re not the sam e. Texas Opry House charges $1 to $2 m o re a head than an Austin club for the sa m e act. The “ Houston Sound — Don Sanders. Lynn Langham , Vince Bell and o th e rs - just isn't as diverse as it was a few y e a rs ago Most of the clubs still fe a tu re palatab le m ix­ tures of country-folk-rock, but it gets bland a f te r five or six identical bands with different names. I m ean, I want to hear Augie M yers and Asleep a t the Wheel, and I m ean bad. in I want to get back to Austin and I T —I now think of them as home Where I live now is just a place to bide my tim e and keep my eyes open and hassle with peo­ ple who have never w atched the sun set from Mt. Bonnell. or sw am the Littlefield Fountain, or skinnv-dipped at Paleface, or fed the squirrels on the West Mall, or ridden their bike without a shirt on. singing a t the top of their voice and laughing, or walked around cam pus at 3 in the morning, depressed about the m om ent but only melancholy about the future, or put azaleas in their hair. or wore shoes without socks, or sat on the g rass without brushing aw ay the dirt. or cried when they had to leave Austin like I alm ost did. Maybe som e of you understand. for home Davis Tucker Plan II P a g e 4 □ T H E D A I L Y T E X A N Z T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 17, 1978 © TMF FEAR AND LOATHING IN HISH 3 0 C/5 T / " - man for Manhattan By William F. Buckley lr. the silk stocking district of New York City, th e ganglion of 90 many of the m ise rie s of the republic, and not a few of its glories the congressional r a c e for the seat once occupied by Mayor Ed Koch and fo rm e r Mayor John Lindsay goes largely urn ted This is odd because the two D em o crats contending for :1k no m inil cm a r e interesting to w rite about, and the district incumbent one of Republican who last J a n u a ry in a special election defeated Bella Abzug. thus qualifying for national gratitu de and relieving him of a m future obligation to the republic, is the most vibrant m the United States. them wnll represent if he defeats the I c a m e close to granting a plenary indulgence to John Lindsay for all his sins when, as congressm an from the district, he replied y e a rs ago to a re p o rte r who asked why he had on that day voted both a gainst an anti-obscenity bill ami an anti- subversion bill. that subversion and obscenity w ere the prin­ cipal industries of his constituency That is hyperbolic, but so is everything in M anhattan, from the sk ysc ra pe rs to the lifestyle, and it is fitting that the d istrict should be re presen ted in Congress by one of the outstanding young men in the country. Allard Lowenstein Twice in < asons gone by I have w ritten about L jvenstem in­ furiating m any of my friends because, you see. Lowenstein is a liberal D em ocrat Why should a conservative Republican ad ­ vocate the election to Congress of a liberal D e m o c r a t9 Lowenstein is independent, thoughtful, in respect of not a few m a tte r s , an opsim ath whose belated recognition of, for in­ stance, the inherent rights of p are n ts to select the schools their children m ay attend, could lose him the editorial support of the New York Times. But m ost appealing is Lowenstein s ability to talk to people who disagree with him without inducing a shouting contest. As re p re se n ta tiv e in Geneva to the Human Rights Commission two years ago he actually caused that commission to consider — however briefly — the question of human rights in the Soviet Union More exactly, he induced it to consider considering human rights in the Soviet Union This m ay sound like a trivial achievem ent But if so why has no one else succeeded in this end eav or9 T here is in Lowenstein a quality of innocent good will that m akes the conventional defenses appear fustian and contrived Recently having been banned from traveling th e re for 20 years in punishment for writing an unfavorable book about the r a c e laws Lowenstein was invited to visit South Africa There, over the airw aves, he spoke simply and eloquently about th e f r a t e r ­ nal im perative, and lo high officials in the South African government instead of looking the other way and shooing him out invited him to return on the understanding that he would be free to continue to speak out against apartheid, but confident that his palpable integrity distinguished him from the fanatics who desire in South Africa less the restoration of black rights than the shedding of white blood. T here is. in Lowenstein. a hectic idealism which it is impossi­ ble to fail to be moved by There will be quite a few liberal D em ocrats in the next Congress So why not one whose integrity and w a rm th will at least repristinate a m o vem en t grown cynical, bureaucratic, and ineffective? The liberalism of the E a ste rn Establishm en t is grown hoary and bu reaucratic Its idealistic vision, filtered through con ser­ vative forms, would be an improvement on the existing situa­ tion the c ru c ifix io n .' W h itta k e r Cham bers once m editated, is liberalism Allard Lowenstein belongs sn Congress as de m onstrably as Nureyev belongs on the stage. ‘C h r is tia n ity w ithout 1978 W a s h in g t o n S t a r Shakespeare, sex and alcohol By Patrick A. Malone BELMONT. Mass. (U PI) Shakespeare as usual, said it best Talking about the paradoxical effect of alcohol on sexual desire, the p o rter tells Macduff in Act Two. Scene T hree of Macbeth “ It p ro v o k e s and u np ro v o k e s; it provokes the desire, but it takes aw ay the pe rfo rm a n c e; th erefo re much drink m ay be said to be an equivocator w ith lechery; it m ak es him and it m a r s him ; it sets him on and it takes him off it persu a d es him and d ish e a rte n s him... For y e a rs the usual explanation has been that alcohol unleashes the beast within but dulls skin sensitivity A new study of what happens in the testes — the body's chem ical factory for th e sex h o r m o n e t e s t o s t e r o n e — suggests that explanation is not only sim plistic, it s wrong in Sixteen healthy adult men in their 20s took p a r t the study a t M cLean H ospital’s Alcohol and Drug Abuse R esearch Center, a joint p ro je c t with H arv ard University few h o u r s . T h e E ach drank about four shots worth of IOO proof vodka and then had his blood intervals for the tested a t 20-minute n e x t r e s e a r c h e r s m e a su re d changes in the am o u n ts of alcohol, testosterone and another h or­ mone. luteinizing hormone (LH), in the blood in boys and T estostero ne is the chem ical which then produces puberty re g u la te s a m an s sex drive and potency the rest of his life LH is a chem ical se c re te d by the pituitary gland, a p e a ­ sized gland at the base of the brain, and serv es as a m e sse n g e r from brain to testicle the brain s work o rd e r to produce m o re testosterone. It c a r r ie s ‘F irst we found Dr Ja c k Mendelson, d ire c to r of the re se a rc h c e n te r, described in an inter­ view what the study found that testosterone levels fall with alcohol consumption and a r e at their m ost d ep ressed levels when blood alcohol levels a r e highest Alcohol is broken down in the liver but also in other tissues, including the te ste s Im ­ portant constituents of the te s te s which usually work in te sto ste ro n e production a re diverted to breaking down alcohol, and when the fall in te s to ste ro n e level occurs the com p en sa to ry resp o n se of the brain is to signal the p itu ita ry gland to put out a large am o un t of luteinizing t e s t o s t e r o n e h o rm o n e r a is e th e to levels The surge of LH activity we think is associated with increased sex­ ual d e s ir e .” Does that m ean that LH is the body’s own aphrodisiac? Not exactly. Mendelson said While LH seem s to m ake men m ore respon­ siv e th e testosterone which is necessary for the actual physical perfo rm an ce to s e x u a l s t i m u l i , is it T hus the c o n t r a d i c to r y e ff e c t of alcohol is a chain reaction: It cuts the testosterone level, the brain re a c ts by sending out a work o r d e r ” to the testes rn the form of LH, but nothing happens te s to s te ro n e -p ro d u c in g b e c a u s e cells in the testes a r e still preoccupied the w ith breaking down the alcohol But the its work o r d e r b ra in d o e sn 't know w asn't carrie d out. There is yet a third hormone involved with sexual arousal, the one which signals the pituitary gland to m ake the LH to send to the testes That is called GNRH. gonadotrophin releasing ho r­ mone. and it s secreted by the gland called the hypothalam us, the p a rt of the brain that regulates m any basic func­ tions like sleep and body te m p e ra tu re Ac cording to Mendelson. European in­ treated impotence by giving men a r ­ It hasn t vestigators have successfully m a le tificially produced GNRH been tried yet in the United States. Clean water and profits By LeRoy Pope NEW YORK i UPI I — F e w e r than 675 of the 4.500 m a jo r A m erican industrial firm s using processes that can pollute w a t e r sup p lies failed the federal deadline last su m m e r for put­ ting in suitable cleanup equipm ent to m e e t By con trast, two-thirds of 4.300 cities and tow ns w hose s e w a g e s y s te m s w ere polluting s tre a m s still a r e doing so, the federal governm ent reports The o ffe n d e rs include such huge metropolises as New York. Los Angeles and Detroit G overnm ent agents can haul industrial polluters into court and h a v e f i n e d ; p o l i t i c a l c o n ­ siderations m ake it hard to do that to municipal b u re a u c rats t h e m Congress has done what it considers the next best thing — m a d e alm ost $25 billion in federal funds available for w a te r cleanup by m unicipalities over the next five y ears As a m a tte r of fact, federal funds for this purpose hav e been available all along The catch was that the municipalities had to m atch 25 percent of the federal m oney and many just couldn t do it Now Congress has added a sw eetener by providing a way for localities to borrow th e ir 25 p ercent of the funds with a federal g uaranty T h e w a t e r p o llu tio n e q u i p m e n t m a n u f a c t u r e r s , which inclu de such f ir m s as F is c h e r & P o r t e r Co. of H orsham . P a.. E cody neof Lincolnshire. Ill . E nvirotech of Menlo Park. Calif . Dorr-Oliver division of Curtiss-Wright, Stamford. Conn . G eneral Signal of New York. Neptune International of Atlanta. Rexnord of Milwaukee and Peabody International of Stamford, see a bonan­ za of $6 billion to $7 billion in municipal ord ers in the next few y e a rs for pumps, ae ra to rs, filters, settling tanks, sludge incinerators and controls. The business will be a little slow to get rolling because m unicipalities can't or won t do things as rapidly as private in­ dustry Nevertheless. P e te r Lorenz, a Boston consultant who specializes in the field thinks the m a rk e t for municipal w ater cleanup equipm ent will reach at least $750 million a y e a r by the mid- 1980s C hairm an Jay H. Tolson of Fischer & P o r t e r said sales of w a te r and waste tre a tm e n t equipment contributed sub­ stantially to a rise in the com pany's in­ coming orders to a record of $81 million in the first half of this year F ischer & P o r te r m ak es flow and control system s for the paper, petrochem ical, m etal. mining, food and other industries \ num ber of the com panies in the w a te r tr e a tm e n t equipment business have additional reasons to welcome the move bv Congress to give municipalities incentive to clean up m o re financial their w a te r system s Some of these firm s also m ake air pollution control equipm ent and Wall Street analysts say this m a rk e t will be pretty flat for the next few years Also, a rise in o rd ers for municipal w a te r cleanup sy ste m s should offset the im p a c t on th e depression in the mining companies — normally among their best c ustom ers. th e s e c o m p a n ie s of T he n a ti o n ’s ro m a n c e w ith e n ­ vironm ental protection a p p ears to be only one la st re stle ss m iddle-aged fling before we finally go craw ling back to our first love, the bitch of Quick P rofits, p r e p a r e d o n c e a g a in to s a c r if ic e everything to h er needs. The environm ental rom ance is suffer­ ing from the sam e things th a t a fflict all late and e rr a n t rom ances — th e re m ay exist an abundance of sen tim en t and tender feeling, along w ith a wonderful sense of ad venture, but th e re a p p ears to be no co m m itm en t deep enough to m ake radical sa c rific e s accep tab le or fun­ dam ental new a rra n g e m e n ts bearable. The m ost re c e n t sign th a t our affair with n a tu re th a t began in the 1960s is breaking up is found in am endm ents to the 1972 F e d e ra l Insecticide, Fungicide and R odenticide Act (F IF R A ), which are expected to receive final approval by C ongress soon and then go to P re si­ dent C a rte r for his consideration. The th e b a s ic a m e n d m e n t s t r a n s f e r th e use of re g u la to ry pow er o v e r th e E n v iro n m e n ta l p e stic id e s fro m P r o t e c t i o n A g e n c y s t a t e t o governm ents. lf approved by C a rte r, the changes in the law a re sure to re su lt in increased u se of now r e s t r i c t e d chem icals and the re-introduction of chem icals th a t a re now proscribed by the federal governm ent. s e v e r e l y DDT, D ieldrin, C hlordane, Aldrin, Mirex — the nam es of evil knights in fantasy novels. But th e ir evil is no fantasy. th e ir n am es could be They do, indeed, kill w hat we ask them to kill — g rasshoppers, Jap an ese beetles, fire ants, chinch bugs, all the other c re a tu re s we p erceive as pests — at least until re sista n t stra in s of those “ p e sts” a r e selected out, and we have to call in e v e r m ore aw esom e killers. But th ese evil knights know no lim its to th e ir d e stru c tiv e pow ers. They p e r­ sist in the environm ent a fte r they have done th e ir jobs, ind iscrim in ate in th eir killing. Along with killing the harm ful ISTUPID,Asinine, uomtEsE FINALS... Insecticide changes are suicide By Monty Jones bugs, these expensive chem icals kill the beneficial insects and the birds which n a t u r e ’s m a g n if ic e n t w isd o m had provided the “ p e sts.” free of c h arg e to kill F or several y e a rs we seem ed to be m aking p rogress tow ard understanding and ap preciating the eleg an t n atu ral controls on insects th a t e a t plants or th e g ia n t sp re a d d ise a se . B ut now c h e m ic a l c o m p a n ie s — w illin g to sacrifice the eapth itself to th e ir in­ satiable hunger for quick p rofits — have had enough of all this “ environm ental ra d ic a lism .” T heir pow erful lobbies have brainw ashed C ongress into believ­ ing th at the E PA has been too “ ex ­ tre m e ' in its concern for the fragile fabric of life on this sm all planet. The chem ical com panies have cited the grasshopper plagues in th e W est, the spread of fire a n ts in the South and the in fe sta tio n s of gypsy m o th s th e N o rtheast as proof th a t fed eral controls on the use of insecticides have gone too fa r and th a t decisions on insecticide use would be b e tte r left to individual sta te s. in And C ongress, instead of looking into the n atu ral causes of the spread of these “ p e sts,” instead of prom oting n atu ral m ethods of controlling them , instead of exam ining the possibility th a t o th er ac ts of m an have contributed to th e ir spread, th e c h e m i c a l i n s t e a d of m e rc h a n ts th at a study of one su m m e r's insect population is not sufficient for d eterm ining w hat n atu ral pro cesses a re t e l l i n g working th em selves out — instead of taking any of these enlightened actions, the chem ical C ongress has accep ted co m p an ies’ propaganda. in P lacing re g u lato ry control over insec- t i c i d e s t h e h a n d s o f s t a t e g overnm ents will give the chem ical in­ d u stry ’s lobbies even m ore m anageable ta rg e ts ag ain st which to spray their propaganda. It will enable them to take m ore ad v an tag e of local sen tim en ts a g ain st w hat a re perceived as local pests. They will prey, for exam ple, upon the w idespread public in M ississippi in support of using M irex to “ c o n tro l” fire ants. ignorance If the use of environm entally d e stru c ­ tive insecticides becom es p rim a rily a m a tte r for s ta te g o v ernm ents to decide, then sta te s th a t a re held in the grip of ig n o r a n c e , su c h a s e n v ir o n m e n ta l M ississippi, can be expected to s ta rt d o u sin g th e ir “ p e sts.” th o s e c h e m ic a ls on And th a t will m ean dousing them , eventually, on everything th a t lives, not only in the s ta te responsible for their use, but also all ac ro ss the country. A nim als and p lan ts recognize no sta te boundaries; poisoned in one sta te , they w ill c a r r y th e m everyw here. th e p o iso n w ith The protection of the environm ent cannot be left to the s ta te s ; it is a national, and of course an in ternational, problem We ought to c e n tra liz e even m ore the a d m in istra tio n of law s design­ ed to save the e a rth from c o n tam in a­ tion, yet changes in the F IF R A a re about to do ju st th e opposite Living w ithout DDT and M irex and all the o th er earth -d estro y in g insecticides will re q u ire so m etim es difficult re a d ­ ju stm e n ts in the way we grow crops, in the way we m anage fo rests, in the way we think about our place am ong the c re a tu re s on this planet. Living w ithout them m ay be difficult for a w hile, but trying to live w ith them will be deadly. J o n e s is a s s i s t a n t to t he e di t o r . fmy semester... 7H/5 5AHB MSM ME dOC/T/NEOF mm ' m m the mmcAL mu'NASH v * OF BOM E r I MOLLE CUN fufs SM-57W. A ' ^ J / I rn /IND UM MV D I M M E - .. £V£lW£fSmiM, vmcmrnL WED,# # # Q I T V r n T R W I editorials THE DAILY TEXAN I P a g e 5 Thursday, A u g u st 17, 19781 Tax credits would benefit all As congressional debate concerning tuition tax credits m oves onto the next stage, a conference com m ittee, it looks like the end package will reflect political considerations rather than its intended goal — a tax break from high education costs. Because education plays such an important role in the success of our society, we believe any steps which federal or local governm ents take to increase a ccess to knowledge would be beneficial. The watered down version the Senate passed Tuesday would provide tax credits to fam ilies with children at the college level equal to half the tuition up to a m axim um of $250. The m axim um would in­ crease to $500 by 1980. The House in June passed a sim ilar bill, but unlike the Senate version, it voted to extend tax credits from the college level to elem entary and secondary education. The best bill which both houses could send to President Carter for approval should in­ clude tax credits at all levels of the education spec­ trum. An all encom passing bill, opponents say, would create “ islands of black public schools and white acad em ies,” or will cause “ resegregation and will g iv e aid and c o m fo r t to th o se who op p ose desegregation of schools.” “ What they really want us to do now at the federal level is start financing those acad em ies,” one senator said. Public schools will be under­ mined, one argument goes, if tax credits were ex ­ tended to all levels of education, including both public and private schools. These argum ents are strong, but we believe the opposite affects would be realized if these proposed tax credits w ere approved. The dollar amount w e’re speaking about is so sm all that a parent would have to be crazy to pluck a child from a relatively inexpensive public school and pack him off to a $4,000- or $5,000-a-year private school, solely to gain a tax credit. Private institutions are not asking for federal sub­ sidies and public schools will not be short-changed by this program. While it is true this money will help defray educational expenses, it will go directly into the taxpayer's pockets, to be doled out at his discretion, not neccessarily to the school. Local school taxes will continue to be levied against residents, so a tax break at the federal level will have no effect on collecting local funds. The sam e amount of m onies will continue to flow into public schools. A valid argument against broad tax credits in­ volves relief to parochial schools; an alleged viola­ tion of the separation of church and state concept. F am ilies with children in parochial schools suffer no more and no less from the high cost of education bills than do the fam ilies with children hi public and non religious private schools. While the church and state concept is in question, is this the type of interaction its authors had intend­ ed this clause to prevent? It’s doubtful. The tax credits should be provided to all forms of education, both public and private. The easier an education is to get, the more informed our citizenry will be, and society as a whole will be the winner. Cuba's Picadura Valley: land of milk and revolution J ABKE P M I IT td rn a m m Amma! u w it rnH,TOC.JIL &£ A, HONK A ,rn A PIN... O f t . . O F . ) ■ T A . O— M - s i l T . DOTH8/TOITOI By Susan Allen C uba’s P icad u ra Valley w as once a rocky, b a rre n the green valley, dotted with palm tre e s and w hite fence posts, is one of th e show places of the island. land. Now, And the Cubans a re proud of it, show­ ing 20,000 v isitors a y e a r the changes in the valley since the Cuban revolution in 1959. D elegates to the lit h World F estiv al of Youth and Students toured the valley, th e e a s te r n se c tio n of H avana in province, with R am on C astro, F id e l’s oldest brother. B efore the revolution, the island im ­ ported m uch of its beef and milk from the U nited S tates, C astro said. How ever, C astro, closely resem bling his b ro th er with a touch of grey in his beard, said m ost of th ese products w ent to the rich Cubans and fo reigners in Havana In 1956, the C atholic U niversity A ssociation rep o rted th a t only l l p e r­ cent of Cuban p easan t fam ilies drank milk A fter the revolution, how ever, th e re w as a new dem and for beef and dairy p r o d u c t s W hen th e g o v e r n m e n t d eclared everyone equal, the p e asan ts w anted a sh a re of the beef and d airy p r o d u c ts . F ood in ­ troduced to equalize the low supply of products. r a tio n in g w a s Then the U nited S tates im posed the blockade, cutting off all its food supplies for Cuba. The blockade forced our children to go w ithout m ilk ,” C astro said. The country saw an u rgent need to develop m o d e rn , highly p ro d u c tiv e , m echanized d airy farm s. P icad u ra Valley w as chosen a s one of the sites for the new e n te rp rise because of its clim ate. S ituated in rolling hills approxim ately 700 feet above sea level, the valley is cooler and less hum id than low er are a s. F o r nine y e a rs the Cubans w orked in the valley, digging rocks out of the ground, bringing in top soil, planting p a stu re g ra ss and erecting the c o n crete fence posts th a t c rissc ro ss the a re a . Minorities victimized by capitalism By Glenn Scott the solution ohn P a rk e r s a rtic le “ On the Wrong Road to la lity ,” which offered to black nom ic inequality of g etting off the dole and on the really says m ore about P a r k e r ’s own political Iosophy than it says about any real life solutions to ial inequality. [is c e n tra l point concerns how m inority people, es- lally th e ir leadership, should stop dem anding [fare and public assista n c e , get jobs and m ove into m a in stre a m . 'irst, this advice is based on a very skew ed pictu re the U S. econom y, which im plies th a t th e re a re this nty of jobs to be had, especially iflation-causing” w elfare could be elim inated, ist econom ists realize, a s B ernard Anderson of the larton School of F in an ce recen tly said: “ this is the st generation with no unskilled jobs. Unemploy- te e n a g e rs is n e a r 50 p e rc e n t in •nt for black 'th e a ste rn urban c e n te rs. M inority peoples’ un- iplovm ent nationw ide is a t le a st tw ice th a t of lites What does P a rk e r suggest for all those peo- . who a re looking for em ploym ent and can t find it Secondy, w elfare and public a ssista n c e p ro g ra m s e not hobbling the p riv a te secto r, which would lerw ise be able to provide everyone a job and a a nee to get ahead, as P a rk e r im plies. W elfare and rial spending p ro g ra m s have been dem anded a s a if all right by w orking people — m inority and w hite — since the beginnings of industrialization, precisely because the p riv a te se c to r w as unable or unw illing to m eet people’s basic needs for health c a re , housing, tran sp o rtatio n , social secu rity , unem ploym ent, etc. It is am azing how P a rk e r can glibly call for an end to the w elfare and social spending w hile history of recessions and depressions in the U nited States before the institution of w elfare and public assista n c e p ro g ram s. Does P a rk e r have any real no­ tion of w hat it w as like for the m illions of people throw n out of w ork in the 1930s w ithout unem ploy­ m ent, social secu rity , m edicaid or o th e r public program s? ignoring Thirdly, P a rk e r d raw s on the old (som e would say d e a d ) A m erican d re a m ethic th a t if you ju st get a job and work hard enough you’ll get ahead, a ssim ila te , be a success. This m yth m uffles over the re a litie s of ra c e and class in our society. The 19th ce n tu ry E u ro ­ pean im m ig ran ts P a rk e r uses as exam p les of op­ pressed people who “ a ssim ila te d ” m anaged to m ove into the m iddle c la ss because they c a m e into a ra p id ­ ly growing, expanding c a p ita listic econom y. And even in th a t period the assim ilatio n had a ceiling to it. Very few im m ig ra n ts m ade it into the upper class. A fter all th e re is only so m uch room a t the tip of a triangle. The m obility also had a ra c e b a rrie r to it. T here w as little room in the m iddle class until a fte r WWI1 for blacks. C hicanos, L atinos, A sians and native A m ericans. Today the p e rc e n ta g e of m inority people w ith incom es g re a te r than $20,000 annually is fa r below the p ercen tag e of w hites w ith th a t incom e. And these inequalities a r e becom ing m ore rigid We a re no longer in a young expanding econom y; today we face stagnation w ith high inflation and high un­ em ploym ent W hereas m any of the second g e n e ra ­ tion E uropeans m anaged to rise to the m iddle c la ss in the early 20th cen tu ry , the children of the 5th and 6th generation blacks face 50 percen t unem ploym ent. f a l l This does not m ean in to th a t I, and m any o ther t h a t P a r k e r s o c i a l i s t s , th e c a m p c h a ra c te riz e s a s favoring “ higher ta x e s and a ballooning w elfare s ta te .” B ecause w elfare and public a ssista n c e p ro g ra m s have been fought for as survival m echanism s does not m ean th a t they don t have problem s The problem s of who pays for th ese p ro g ram s and how effectiv e and accountable they a re m ust be ad dressed. B ecause of unequal pow er relations in our society, corporations and industry have increasingly placed m ore and m o re of the burden of taxation for social spending on m iddle and lower incom e w orkers. T herefore, sim ply calling for m ore w elfare and m o re social serv ices w here low and m iddle incom e people pay a d isproportionate sh are will increasingly m e e t with justified re sista n c e from tax p ay ers. Any new approach to w elfare and public a ssista n c e pro g ram s m ust dem and th a t c o r­ porations pay a g re a te r sh a re of the cost. And this doesn’t m ean sim ply raising th eir ante, but also challenging th e ir spending priorities. We don’t need 50 new v a rie tie s of toothpaste. We need decent health care. Also a d m in istra tiv e top heaviness, w aste and red tape should be trim m ed and g re a te r accountabili­ ty to local co m m unities strengthened to c re a te m ore effective p rogram s. F inally, I think it s im p o rtan t not to think ol P a r k e r ’s a rg u m e n ts as sim ply m istaken ideas S im ilar ideas a p p e a r reg u larly in the Public In te rest, B usiness Week, T im e m agazine, NBG new s, Dick T racy ca rto o n s and som e Texan colum ns. And they serve a purpose w ittingly or unw ittingly — to p e rp e tu a te the basic beliefs and basic inequalities of a c a p ita list society. This is w here P a r k e r ’s a rtic le fits right in He trie s to sav th a t black people a re the problem . They m ust get tiff w elfare and get a job. In other words, th e problem s of ra c ia l inequality have nothing to do with the p riv a te e n te rp rise system In reality when P a rk e r says he is providing a solution to racial ine­ quality, he is actu ally trying to find a solution th at will tak e p riv a te e n te rp rise off the hook. ___ S c o tt is a f o r m e r U n i v e r s i t y g r a d u a t e s t u d e n t a n d m e m b e r o f A u s t i n N e i r A m e r i c a n M o v e ­ m e n t . T h e D a i l y T e x a n _ ... .... . i- J’' A ssistan t M anaging E ditor A ssista n t to the Editor N e w s Editor A sso c ia te N ew s Editor S p o rts Editor Associate Sports Editor Alts and Entertainment E ditor Im a g e s Editor Campus Activities T catur e s Editor P hoto E ditor ( Jenera! Rep4a leis ..................................... Gary Fendler .......................................Victoria Loc Mark R ichardson Monty Jon es J anet P ea v y M artha M cClure Laura Tum a Da m ood B enningfield K elly Kay M ary Day >s E d ito r .........................................................Teresa Sheppard Scott B o w les Jim T hom as Mark D ooley, Carl H oover. Donald Howard M ichael Hurd. John M cM illan, Jann Snell, M argaret'Watson, Janet Wilson i Sco tt A w brey, Marilane Nattier, Scott Ticerr Issu e E ditor N e w s A ssistants E d itorial A ssistan t E n terta in m en t A ssista n t A ssista n t Sports E ditor M ake-up Editor W ire E ditor Copy E d ito r s. A rtists P h o to g r a p h e r s .............................................................................Audrey ( ielinski Mark M cK innon, Ann Spillm an, Susan C ollins V icky Thomas ...........................................................Anne Telford Deborah K Mann Thom as K essler T eresa Sheppard ........................Kitt W alker, Tom B aker .................... Scott Bieber, B erke B reathed N u n V allbona. G lover Johns. Jim T hom as i i p l v l M f , I . v t SIt t i t i- i i i I ,,| piiiltihiiiil vs ii I. iii.- * vpi i—i- p. amission .ii texas Student Cubit! alums r u W i r , . l i o n s Ki-priHlix tnni , . | .my pjrt a l this publu . I l i o n t ' < ( p i l l i o n esp! i - .iii i i i f i l e I tails IV*.in are those til the editor or the writer of Ihe art i i Ie and ale not i i i i i ss.uals those ut the I diversity administration the Hoard of Moments ut the Texas S Indent I • U l l i n a l l o d s H o a i d ol OpeiallllH trustees On letters fir in g line lette rs should • be typed and trip le spaced • bo 30 lin es OI less MI c h a r a cte rs [HT line • address issues mil person.dines • include nam e a d d ress and phone num ber of contributor Mail lette r s lo T he F iring Line T he Daily Texan. D raw er I). CT Station Austin Tx THTI.; or bring le tte r s lo the Texan office in basement of the T SP building The Daily Tex,in reser v es the right to edit lette r s to the ed itor tor proper length and clarity On columns E d ito iial co lu m n s should • Iw typed and triple spaced • he HO lines ut less tit) characters [ht line • include nam e add ress amt plum e num ber of contributor Mail c o l u m n s to E d ito ria l D epartm ent The D aily lex a n . D raw er D, I I Si i \iisiin Tv THTI:!, or bring co lu m n s to the T exan o ffic e in the bas" lion irutit ol Hie T SP building Tlu* D aily T ex a n reser v e* th e right to ed it all co lu m n s lot propel length and cla rity At the tim e, th e re w ere two breed s of c a ttle in Cuba — B rahm an Zebu and. Criollo — how ever, they produced oui one to two lite rs of m ilk a day. im ported H olstein The governm ent c a ttle fro m C an ad a to boost m ilk production. But the H olsteins suffered from the hot c lim a te and w ere suscepti- * hie to tropical diseases. C astro said by cross-breeding the the Zebu H olsteins w ith tificial insem ination, new c a ttle w ere developed w hich produce a high q u a n ti­ ty of m ilk and good beef yield. through ai P icad u ra V alley is one of 15 m ilk- producing e n te rp rise s in the province. C astro, who is d ire c to r of developm ent for the valley, said 700,000 lite rs of m ilk a re produced daily the province. T heir goal, he said, is to reach one m illion lite rs p er day by 1980. in S m iling, C a s tro said th e “ g r a n d ­ d a u g h te rs” of the best C anadian bulls have been born in Cuba and a re fully acclim ated “ Some of them have reached a lop production of 48 lite rs of milk a day, he said. The c a ttle a re p am pered to achieve top production C astro said the calve s a re fed yogurt and c o n cen trated c a n n e d i milk The cows a r e not m ilked until they, a re old enough to be of sufficient w eight and size to produce. P riz e H olstein bulls a re kept in special barns and all the c a t ­ tle a re housed under h e a t-re sista n t ro o t­ ing which has helped ra ise production. C astro said by using efficien t Swedish m ilking equipm ent, each d airy em ploys only five w orkers who ra ise and c a re for the calves. He said th e ir cattle-b reed in g expel tise is being shared with o th e r coun­ tries. including V ietnam . Looking out over the valley, C a ste ) said, T hese lands w ere useless (befoi e . the revolution). They w ere rocky. It took a lot of e a rth to cover this land and m ake it usable ” He said the fa rm e rs who lived in thatched houses now live in a m odern com m unity, re fe rrin g to new a p a rtm e n t buildings c o n stru c te d for 128 fam ilies i i the valley. Even though m ilk is still rationed in Cuba. C astro said he th.it P icadura V alley has helped (rib a live up to one of the prom ises of the revolution “ E ach young child is guaran teed a liter of m ilk ev ery d a y .” is proud ______ A l l e n is a s e n i o r in the S c h o o l of C o m m u m e a t ion. Page 6 □ T H E DAILY T E X A N □ Thursday, August 17, 1978 SOFTEE SANDWICH BREAD BEEF STEAKS CHOPPED 3 PER COOK-OUT 4k FRANKS SWIFT PREMIUM _ 112-LB. LOAF JKH ________ _ a MEAT OR REEF $ 4 2 Q 12'0UNCE package H.E.R. HOT DOG RUNS PACKAGE OF 6............. I ■ 891 LIMIT S PLEASE. ADDLS. REG. PRICE. P O U N D ift . *a*to4kk. MARGARINE MARGARINE SILVER 9 Q C VALLEY WALDORHISSUE 79 ; BATHROOM ASSORTED COLORS TEXAS FRESH GREEN rn A JALAPENO . £ | U v POUND QUARTERS 4-ROLL P A C K A G E ..................... FRESH WHITE M U S H R O O M S * I £ m J Q CELLO POUND ® HASS FANCY AVOCADOS FRESH RED RIPE TOMATOES 4 COUNT TRAY FRESH GREEN CUCUMBERS 70 SIZE EACH W M # POUND HULK J O r RE BEAN SPROUTS P O U , - OO P 3 * PEPPER POUND W m GIANT LEAF A A ivy Q Q < " " PORT 4 INCH POT 2 5 * LASTIC VU FOLDERS 33* 25* 44* 39* $109 PACKAGE KRAFT ALFALFA SPROUTS 59( bLUE BOOKS MACARONI DINNEI NTS O I C HU R 31 c ATSUP M O Z BOTTLE VILLAGE PARK a a . KE LLOGG FRUIT COCKTAIL mon 4 1 C ORN FLAKES h o e . . o x 57* TUNA CHUNK STYLE 6'/> OZ. SIZE OO S PL AZA STARKIST TREFT ALTINES POUND BOX » r /"DEAM a sso r t ed f la v o r s RK M A N O R e t V . l \ t A I Y 1 Vt GALLON a, _ A a P A * 1 “ l< LUNCH MEAT . p o u n c e ROYAL MAID PARTY DIPS 8 OUNCE CARTON OJ H Lo o k A g a in ® K n e e -H i h o s i e r y X O O t R° VAL MAID OMO. MILK GALLON 92* SH A M P O O FLEX , BALSAM Cr PROTEIN i OILY, NORMAL TO DRY. saw FLEX OR TINTED TO BLEACHED SBSI FORMULAS SSS* l r Jr . x l ^ 1 6 - O Z . B O T T L E . . . C O M F O R T T O P S A N D A L F O O T O N E SIZE FITS A L L 4 - P A IR P A C K A G E ............. TODDLER........................... * 2 CT PKG 2 . 1 2 r HANDY STORAGE BAGS A ZIPtOC QUART SIZE 50CT PKG I . 4 1 0 „ 0 AJAX CLEANSER I ................................................ 21 OZ CAN . O Y r SCOH PAPER TOWELS A n A DECORA TED OR ASSORTED.. .85 SF ROLL . OU r WET ONES TOWELEHES A „ ...........................................70 CT PKG 1 .07 P NORTHERN NAPKINS .......... . » LUNCH. I AJAX CLEANSER LIQUID . 140 CT PKG . 55 40 OZ BTL 1.59 Our Price Piotection Policy guarantees these prices to be effective from Thursday August 17th thru Wednesday August 23rd 1978 Copyright 1078 by luchy Stores Inc All Rights Reserved Prices a e discounted except on government controlled items Limit Rights Reserved on Commercial Soles P COFFEE CREAMER A (- LADY L E E ...................................11 OZ JA R . O D ORANGE JUICE LADY LEE CONCENTRATE..............12 OZ C A N . / 4 I CARNATION POTATOES A A FRENCH FRIES..........................32 OZ PKG . O D r JENO’S PIZZA 6 dVARiFTitt 13oz pkg . V / P r o d u c e HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE LARGE 0 RIPE. SEEDLESS GRAPES U.S. N O 1 ____ EA .79 LD .58 LD .39 ITALIAN PRUNE PLUMS REFRESHING ROMAINE LETTUCE CRISPY FRESH.............................................. EA . O O CHERRY TOMATOES SALAD FAVORITE AQ I ? OZ BASKET............... EA .4Y ...what discount is cill about. TO index cards rr^Qcf ; ii’ Eagle Guarantees * the Lowest Food Total 'Pu rch ase 25 different items or more worth $20 or more. O nly one item of each type may be used for the purpose of this comparison. Then take your shopping list to any other store of your choice. Compare item for item, price for price. Y o u don’t have to buy anything a second time. If the other store’s total is lower W E ’L L R E L U N D Y O U D O U BLE THE DIFFERENCE O F T H E T W O T O T A L S . HRS: M o n .-Sat. 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Sun. IO a.rn.-7 p.m. v * - 70 COUNT THEME BO O K MODEL 05-5430 I 3x5" INDEX CARDS l ' FOR HOME OFFICE AND SCHOOL RULED. k DATACENTER 6 SNAP LOCK POCKET CLOSURE TA -vi BUILTIN ( -'BOARD . i i i . R ..HY P A !'- A N E A O O 4 1 . Y Y OQ . 2 V ^TYPING J T p a p e r , A q a 200 COUNT GO O D QUALITY PAPER . . . . • M r WIRE BOUND DATA CENTER o Ell ING POCKET Mi Iii c CON vt RS ON A A PAPER FOR NOTES AND MORE PENTEL ROLL-N GLUE SAFE NONTOXIC ODOR t SS W A kHABi E MANY USES 3 0 0 1 . 1 / J L A . O Y 5555 NORTH LAMAR BLVD. AT KOENIG, AUSTIN 'iisr WOMEN S PULLOVER SWEATERS HOODED TWO STYLES 1 0 0 % ACRYLIC AND 7 0 % ACRYLIC. 3 0 % POLYESTER BLEND ASSORTED COl ORS SIZES S M L EACH 44 NAVY DENIM KNIT PANTS TWO STYLES 7 0 % ACRYLIC 3 0 % POLYESTER BLENDS DOTH WITH El ASTIC SHIRRS D BACKS ASSORTED SIZES * 94 f ACH f i t - . sports THE DAILY TEXAN P a g e 9 T h u r s d a y , A u g u s t 17, 1978 Astro B o b W atson pulls hamstring. dives for homeplate... * '! -•> ; > ' " • W ' ' V -S * J * ? ', * \ ' ' jw I ♦ . . ’ ‘ V , V b ‘H -; i y a ** -ft. f* f ' I ^ ^ . , - lf 4$js ‘.f.* • y N , ' - , '' %' % ' A* *. L ■ ^ .**>«& » ' ’’ .,,, Texas swimmers aim only at best By DEBORAH K. MANN Daily Texan Staff Coach E ddie R eese has decided to end a Texas swim te a m trad itio n . In stead of plan­ ning his season around b eating a rc h riv a l SMU, R eese ju s t plans for th e team to do the b est it can. And w ith this y e a r’s re c ru its, th e best m ay be all it will take. Beating SMU is not one of my big goals. The biggest is to be th e b est we can be each year. It en tails keeping people well and g e t­ ting th em to im prove a whole lo t,” the first y e a r coach said. One of R e e se ’s w o rries is the n u m b er of fresh m en the te a m will have to depend on — and how those freshm en will re a c t to the colorful world of college life. ‘‘WE HAVE 12 freshm en who will probably m ake th e team . T hey’ve had th a t thum b on them b ecause they w ere a t hom e. Now the lot of th u m b ’s gone and the d ifferen t w a y s,” he said. ‘‘You supervision off and don’t know w h ere th e y ’ll jum p. I know I won t be checking them in every night. I don’t believe in th a t.” they can go a take R eese does believe the te a m will be m ore co m p etitiv e w ith conference cham pion SMU. th is is o n e of ‘ O b v io u sly , th e b e s t recru itin g y e a rs T exas has had, but SMU had one of th e ir best ones, too. T h ey ’ve got q uite a sta rt on us. It will ta k e tim e to g e t up th e re and get close to th e m .” How m uch tim e? About tw o o r th re e y e a rs to be “ very c o m p e titiv e ,” R eese predicted. IN THE m ean tim e, this y e a r ’s te a m will be strong in sprinting w ith th re e fresh m en , Je ff P o rte r from Illinois, Ju stin K aufm an from New York and Ned Stack from W ashington. Senior D uncan H aw thorn and sophom ore G ary T u ttle will re tu rn for th e Horns. T exas also will be strong in the b ack stro k e with V ictor V assallo from M ission Viejo, Calif., and v e te ra n Longhorns Robbie R o b e rt­ so n , a s e n i o r , a n d D o u g H a r lo w , a sophom ore. O n e o f t h e w e a k e r s p o t s w il l b e b re a ststro k e , but R eese said he would not be su rp rised if it ended up being one of the stro n g e r events. R e tu rn e r G ary G rim sb y has ‘‘com e a long way and looks good,” R eese said. R e c ru its M ark F rid ric h s e n fro m N ashville, Term. and Kevin McKinna from C alifornia a re having good su m m ers, R eese added. DISTANCE FREESTYLE m ay also be weak, R eese said, but walk-on G reg L arson from Mission Viejo will help reliev e the p re ssu re there. U nlike la st year, T exas will not be w eak in b u tterfly . R eese recru ited Dan Shipm an from R ichardson, while junior Ronnie Paul and sophm ores Scott M cTier and John H enry will re tu rn for Texas. The individual m edley also could be a strong event for T exas w ith Kelly R ives from Houston and John Kenny from P ittsb u rg h joining the team . JOHN LAJOIE from Chicago will sw im m iddle-distance freesty le for T exas, R eese said. L ajoie w as th e No. 2 high schooler in the country in the 200-yard freesty le. Auburn tra n sfe rs Scott Spann and Philip Nenon will be ineligible to sw im in NCAA com petition next season but w ill be sw im ­ m ing with the AAU Longhorn Swim Club. Of course, the walk-ons will not be slouches lit up and he sa t e ith e r. R e e s e ’s e y e s stra ig h te r in his ch a ir when he added th at Todd C rosset, M ark Shaughnessy and Scott Schw andt will be walk-ons from Auburn. RETURNING DIVERS for T exas include John V egard, Ted Doyle, Mike Cook, Tom m y P e te rs and Danny Kelly. Steve Braun from St. Louis, Mo., will join th e team . R eese said he w ants to estab lish a p ro g ram th at will be perpetually co m p etitiv e, “ so we a re conten d ers each y e a r for th e top five in the nation o r the conference title .” “ T h a t’s w hat I look upon a s stre n g th ,” R eese said. “ Dual m e e ts a re im portant, but when the season is over, the only thing th a t counts are the conferen ce m eet and n atio n als,” R eese said “A labam a beat T ennessee in a dual, but every one forgets th at. T ennessee won firs t a t n atio n als,” he pointed out. “F o r our quote riv a ls’ we ll definitely try to be ready, but w e ’ll ta k e them in o rd e r.” Is he optim istic? “ I ’m optim istic all the tim e ," R eese answ ered w ith a grin. Pastorini may make game p la y e rs who had been w aived Tuesday. Those p lay ers w ere co rn erb ack G ary Woolford, tight end R ichard In g rah am , who played la st y e a r, c e n te r Ted Hand and w ide re c e iv e r Sam Lisle. for T exas The c u ts reduced H ouston's ro ste r to 59 p layers. In th e O i l e r s o f f i c e s , negotiations on a new c o n tra c t for wide re c e iv e r Billy John­ son w ere rep o rted near com ­ pletion. Joh n so n ’s agent, Tom W illiam s, said he expected an th a n a g r e e m e n t no Thursday. l a t e r (U P I) HOUSTON - P ro q u a rte rb a c k D an P a s to rin i W e d n e sd a y s a id a “ n o n ­ p u n c tu re ” acu p u n tu re t r e a t­ m ent relieved the pain in his left leg and m ad e it probable th a t he will not m iss any w orkouts in p re p a ra tio n for the Houston O ilers third ex ­ hibition gam e. “ I know I ’ll be read y (for S a tu rd a y 's g a m e ),’’ P asto rin i said. The O ilers W ednesday a n ­ nounced the re le a se of four , smm • w * • C O M I C B O O K S • F A N T A S Y . * a Os S C I E N C E F I C T I O N B O O K S • P O S T E R S • M O V I E I T E M S TUES - S A T FROM IO T o 6 • bu i. fc>jTCMie~-7e Now you can beautify your tires with the unique Tire Custom i/m q Service The tires rem ain on your car and m ost custom izing only takes a few m inutes Prices start at $ 3 50 per tire • Repair Curb Damage Old w hitew alls can be made to look like new to beautify youi car • Whitewall Blackwells Any black w all can be custom ized to a w hitew all tor added flan • Color Racing Stupes Any color stripe is available tor your tires to accent your car's color • TIRE LING 0 Lettenng Personalize your tires with any saying oi slogan you wish. JIM PEARSON’S AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE AND TIRE CENTER 3300 So. Lamar, Austin, Texas 78704 ( 5 1 2 ) 4 4 2 - 7 2 7 5 A uthorized I* * C h1 tow n/m g S d*-> idt> t Tilt Co motukiqy im Oaii.f 1p m ^ I I (— Bring in this coupon and get one tire — | customized i— ■ FREE! w i n \ ^ Before After Offer only good Aug. 17-19, 1978 J — i I I - ■ j c o m e s up in pain... ...collapses after scoring run. — U P I Te le ph o to Astros swing past , 4-2 Washington leads White Sox to victory over Rangers ST. LOUIS (U P I) - Bob th e winning W atson scored run ag ain st th e St. Louis C a r­ d inals W ednesday by craw ling ac ro ss in sev ere pain. the p la te W atson doubled to driv e in Jo se Cruz w ith th e Houston A stro s’ second run in the third inning of a 4-2 v icto ry and ran fo r hom e w hen A rt Howe singled. W atson w as rounding th ird when he pulled a h a m str­ ing m uscle. W atson lim ped tow ard the p la te , th e n c o lla p s e d an d craw led a c ro ss th e plate. He then w as c a rrie d off the field on a stre tc h e r. ‘T h a t’s one of the w orst I ’ve e v e r h a d ,” said h u rts W atson, who will be o u t of a c ­ tion for about th re e w eeks. “ It felt like som ebody stu ck a hot knife in m e .” Winning p itch er Jo e N iekro, 10-9, said, ‘‘He really showed m e som ething — craw ling into hom e p la te to sco re th a t ru n .” N iekro held th e C ard s to six hits, stru ck out four and w alk­ ed one in his seventh co m p lete g am e of the season. G eorge H e n d ric k b ro k e N ie k r o ’s shutout with a tw o-run hom er in the eighth. St. Louis s ta r te r Silvio M ar­ tinez, 6-6. w as helped by two double plays in the firs t two innings before Houston scored th e th re e runs in th e third. led off with a T e rry Puhi sin g le , took seco n d on an e rra n t pick-off a tte m p t by M artinez and sto le third. Puhi s c o r e d on E n o s C a b e l l ’s ground out b efore W atson’s hit drove in Cruz, who had sin g led an d sto le n seco n d . Howe drove in an o th e r run in the eighth when he singled hom e Cruz, who had singled and stolen second and third. ★ ★ ★ ( U P I ) A R L IN G T O N - Claudell W ashington singled, t r i p l e d a n d d o u b le d a n d scored th re e runs a g ain st his f o r m e r T e x a s t e a m m a t e s W ednesday night to help Ross B au m g arten to victory in his m a jo r league pitching debut and give the Chicago White Sox a 6-2 triu m p h over the R angers. AMERICAN L E A G U E By United Prat* International Eaat NATIONAL LE A G U E By United Preaa International Eaat B o s t o n ..... New Y o rk . Detroit M ilw aukee B altim ore C le v e la n d . Toronto .... K a n sa s City C aliforn ia T e x a s ......... O a kla n d M innesota C h ica g o S e a ttle .. W L ..... 74 44 67 51 65 52 65 52 64 54 Weal 53 65 46 72 W L 64 53 66 55 59 58 61 61 53 66 48 70 44 76 OB - Pct. 62 7 56 8 55 6 .556 5 4 2 10 4 4 9 21 3 9 0 28 7 814 814 OB Pct. - 547 - 5 4 5 5 50 4 514 5 0 0 1214 4 45 407 1614 367 2114 Wednesday's Results M inn esota 5-7, K an sa s City 1-11, M ilw au kee 8. Toronto 1 Detroit 2, C le v e la n d 0 C h ic a g o 6, T e x a s 2 w P h ila d e lp h ia ..... ......... 63 C h ic a g o ............. ....... et M o n tre a l........... 58 Pittsburgh 54 New Y ork 49 49 St. L o u is ........... L 53 57 6 2 6 2 70 71 OB Pct. 543 — 517 3 7 483 9 466 412 1514 408 16 Watt Lo s A n g e le s S a n F ra n c isc o C in cin na ti San D iego Houston. Atlanta ....... W L 50 51 5 2 59 6 2 64 .......... 70 ......... 69 68 ......... 61 ......... 56 ....... ........ 55 W adneday* Result* Pct. 583 575 567 508 475 462 OB _ 1 2 9 13 141} * Houston 4, St L o u is 2 San D ie go 2, New York 1 Atlanta 9, C h ica g o 0 Pittsburgh 13. C in cin na ti 2 L os A n g e le s 5. P h ila d e lp h ia 2 M ontreal I, S a n F ra n c isc o 0 76ers trade McGinnis to Nuggets PH IL A D E L PH IA (U P I) th e big G eo rg e M cG in n is, th e fo rw a rd w ho b r o u g h t to Philadelphia 76ers back re s p e c ta b ility th r e e y e a rs ago, w as tra d e d W ednesday to th e D e n v e r N u g g e ts fo r forw ard Bobby Jo n es, guard Ralph Sim pson and an ex­ change of first round d ra ft choices. The tra d e has been rum ored since early Ju n e but w as not fin a liz e d u n til W ednesday f o r b o th w h e n a t t o r n e y s McGinnis and Jo n e s received som e concessions from both sides. Both p la y e rs had no- tra d e clau ses th e ir con­ tra c ts. in In addition to th e p lay ers in­ volved, the N u g g ets received the 76ers’ No. I d ra ft pick in r e c e n t c o lle g e d r a f t. th e D enver will give up its No. I d ra ft selection fo r a season betw een 1980 and 1984 which will be desig n ated la te r. T H E N U G G E T S m u s t notify the 76ers 30 d ay s before e a c h y e a r ’s d r a f t a s to w hether they w ish to re lin ­ quish th eir d ra ft choice for th a t p a rtic u la r season. Jon es and Sim pson w ere not p resen t at a new s co n ference w h e r e S i x e r s ’ g e n e r a l m an ag er P a t W illiam s fo r­ m ally announced long- rum ored trad e. the J o n e s w i l l a r r i v e in P h ila d e lp h ia T h u rsd a y and the 76ers said they w ere still trying to c o n ta c t Sim pson. in W illiam s apologized for the delay in w hat he said w as “ the the tr a n s a c tio n lo n g e st h istory of pro s p o rts ” but n o te d t h a t M c G in n is an d Jo n es had n o -trad e clau ses and they needed to get w ritten perm ission. He said they did not obtain th a t fro m McGinnis until 4 p.m . T uesday. WILLIAMS ALSO explained that both p la y e rs had th eir c o n tr a c t s e x te n d e d w h ich m ean s th at Jo n es now h as a five-year p act w ith the 76ers. S ix e rs c o a c h B illy C un­ ningham said the acquistion of Jones, who will te a m up with Ju liu s E rving, will give the Sixers “ a b e tte r b alanced a t­ ta c k .” Jo n es is noted for his defen­ sive ab ility and Cunningham said th a t w hile the 76ers did not have any tro u b le scoring points la st season, “ We felt we needed m o re defensive s tre n g th .” W illiam s, noting th e th a t to o b t a i n S i x e r s ' d r i v e th r e e y e a r s ago M cG innis “ w as q u ite a s a g a ,” said th a t w hen th e forw ard “ I think a t th a t point pro b asketball tu rn ed around in P h ila d e lp h ia .” they did o b ta in BUT PHILADELPHIA had been trying to unload the 6-8, 235-pound M c G in n is s in c e th e ir elim ination in the NBA sem i-final playoff se rie s by th e W ashington B ullets. The loss w as the S ix e rs’ second s tra ig h t playoff disappoint­ m en t and it showed m an ag e­ m en t th a t M cGinnis, a dom i­ n ant sc o re r throughout his c a re e r, could not effectively team w ith Ju liu s E rving a t forw ard. M cGinnis w as all but head­ ed back to his hom e sta te of Indiana before the NBA d ra ft la st Ju n e 9 when th e 76ers ca m e close to finalizing a deal w ith in re tu rn for the No. I pick in th e college d raft. But W illiam s vetoed the d eal becau se the P a c e rs ’ asking p ric e was too high. th e Indiana P a c e rs A fter sta rrin g a t Indiana U niversity, M cG innis signed a fte r his sophom ore y e a r with th e P a c e r s of th e d e fu n c t A m erican B asketball A ssocia­ tion. He av erag ed alm o st 25 points p er g am e in the four y e a rs w ith Indiana, winning th e s c o r i n g th e lea g u e ’s m ost v alu ab le p layer in 1974-75. t i t l e a s BUT IN 1975, M cG innis jum ped leagues and signed a six-year. $2.9 m illion c o n tra c t th e 7 6 e rs, w ho h ad w ith d ra fte d him in 1973, th e senior y e a r of M cG innis co lle g e class Buoyed by th e p resen ce of a proven leader, the S ixers tu rn ­ ed th e ir team around from the 9-73 sq u ad of 1973-74 to a playoff team in 1975-76 even though they lost to th e Buffalo in a p r e lim in a r y B ra v e s series. M cG innis averag ed 23 points th a t season. But th e 76ers, backed by f r e e - s p e n d i n g o w n e r F . E ugene Dixon, p u rch ased E r ­ ving in a $6.5 m illion d eal with th e New York N ets one day before th e s ta rt of the 1976-77 season and M cGinnis had to find a way to a d ju st his g am e to th a t of the high-flying E r­ ving. JONES, WHO s ta rre d a t the U niversity of N orth C arolina, fo r p la y e d f o u r s e a s o n s in D enver and is considered one of the the top fo rw ard s A m erican B asketball A ssocia­ tion He played with D etro it in the NBA in 1976-77 and split his playing tim e betw een the P i s t o n s a n d D e n v e r l a s t w inter. Free adidas - Flyer with purchase of Adidas product w h i l e s u p p l y lasts BACK TO SCHOOL SAVINGS A,,. 17-19 Baja reg. $18.95 now $1 4 . 2 5 Ba f c , 5 0 bio cotton/50% polyester, variety of colors Rom reg. $28.95 n o w $2 4 ” € - l l . R o m P adding for h eel and A ch illes tendon C u shion in g around ankle Orthopaedic arch su p ­ port Saw tooth profile sole Rubber toe cap M onterey reg. $23.50 NOW » 1 6 » Monterey 100% p o ly e s te r kn it t e n n is s h o rt s trip e s o n b oth le g s a d id a s v ir S L 76 Superlight nylon uppers Long w earing traction tread sole Built in nylon heel cup E a sy -lace clo sing W affle foam tongue Si 76 reg. $31.95 now ‘ 2 4 ” Dragon reg. $21.95 NOW *18” D ra g o n Featherlight shoe, smooth uppers Leather reinforcem ent of stress areas Padded tongue, top edge and arch support Non slip saw profile sole NEW FALL STYLES OF ADIDAS W ARMUPS The Sandra & Superstar ( l i m i t e d s u p p l y ) THE JOCK SHOP O N THE DRAG 477-6443 Page IO □ THE D A ILY TEXA N □ Thursday, August 17, 1978 W hole Session and Second Term Final Exam Schedule Summer Session, 1978 (Saturday, August 19 and Monday, August 21) G rade sh eets fo r courses h av in g no scheduled m eeting tim es will be due in th e d e p a rtm e n t by 9:00 a.m., W E D N E SD A Y , A UGUST 23. G rade sh eets for courses h av in g scheduled m eeting tim es but which indicated “ NO E X A M IN A T IO N ” will be due a t th e sam e tim e they would have been due had ex am in atio n s been scheduled. G rade R equest f a r d s fo r all d eg ree candidates a re to be retu rn ed to the academ ic deans b efore 1:00 p.m., W E D N E SD A Y , AUGUST 23. CLASSROOM BU ILD IN G S Biological L ab o rato ries ACA U n d e rg ra d u a te L ib ra ry a nd Academic C en ter AHO A n n a H iss G ym nasium ARC A rc h ite c tu re B uilding A R T A r t B uilding ARX A rc h ite c tu re A nnex (E 2 6 ) BAT B a tts H all BBC B a p tist Bible C h air E E B B usiness A dm inistratio n -E co n o m ics B uilding BEL L. Theo B ellm ont H all B E N B enedict H all BIO BTL B a ttle H all BUR B urdine H all CA L C alhoun H all CBC C atholic Bible C h air CCB Church of C hrist Bible C h air CMA Com m unication B uilding (academ ic) CMB C om m unication B uilding (stu d io s) CSC Catholic S tu d en t C en ter DOB Dobie C en ter DRM D ram a Building E C J E rn e st Cockrell, J r ., H all ED A E ducation Annex EDB E ducation B uilding E N L E n g in e e rin g L ab o rato ries B uilding (ren am ed W . R. W oolrich L a b o ra to rie s) E . P. Schoch L ab o rato ries E x p e rim e n ta l Science B uilding B eauford H. J e s te r C en ter L u th e ra n Bible C h air Lyndon B. Jo h n so n L ib ra ry E N S E n gineering-S cience B uilding EBS E SB EXB E xtension Building G AR G arrison H all G EA M ary E. G earing H all (fo rm e rly Home E conom ics B uilding) GEO Geology B uilding ORE G regory G ym nasium GRG G eography Building GSB G rad u ate School o f B usiness HBC H illel Bible C hair HMA H ogg M em orial A ud ito riu m HRC H a rry Ransom H u m an ities R esearch C enter J E S LBC L B J LTH L ab o ra to ry T h e a te r M EE Music B uilding E a s t MEZ M ezes H all M US M usic B uilding N U R N u rsin g B uilding (1700 Red R iver) P A I PA R PA T FBC P E B P H R P h a rm a c y B uilding R A S R ussell A. Steindam H all R E H R ecital Hall RLM R o b ert Lee Moore H all R R N Rifle R ange SKH SSB S E T SW B School of Social W ork B uilding TA Y T ay lo r H all TBC W AG W a g g e n e rH a ll W CH W ill C. H ogg Building W E L R obert A. W elch H all W OH W ooldridge H all W RW W. R. W oolrich L ab o rato ries (fo rm erly T. S. P a in te r H all P a rlin H all J . T. P a tte rso n L ab o rato ries B uilding P re sb y te ria n Bible C h air P etro leu m E n g in e e rin g B uilding Sid R ichardson H all S tu d e n t Services B uilding (fo rm erly Speech B uilding) S utto n H all T ex as Bible C hair E n g in e e rin g L ab o rato ries B uilding) W TA W ichita IN D E X ^ E X A M I N A T I O N PE R IO D S M T W T H F 7-8:30: M onday, A u g u st 21, 7-10 p.m. M T W T H F 8:30-10: S a tu rd a y , A u g u st 19,9-12 a.m. TTH 8:30-10: S a tu rd a y , A u g u st 19,9 -1 2 a.m. M T W T H F 10-11:30: M onday, A u g u st 21, 9-12 a.m. TTH 10-11:30: M onday, A u g u st 2 1 ,9 -1 2 a.m. M T W T H F 11:30-1: S a tu rd a y , A u g u st 19, 2-5 p.m. TTH l l : 3 0 - l : S a tu rd a y . A u g u st 1 9 ,2 -5 p.m. M T W T H F 1-2:30: M onday, A u g u st 21, 2-5 p.m. M TW TH F 2 :3 0 -4 : S a tu rd a y , A u g u st 19, 7-10 p.m. L ate a fte rn o o n and evening classes: M onday, A u g u st 21, 7-10 p.m. SA TU RD A Y A u g u st 19, 9-12 a.in. (C lasses meet ag M TW TH F 8:30-10, TT H 8:30-10) G rade re p o rts fo r these classes a re due in th e d e p a rtm e n ta l office by 9 a.m ., W ednesday, A u g u st 23. 21470 ACC s311: BI I ft 108 21500 A C C s312: EEB IGI 21610 ACC s364: WAG 101 21666 ACC s384: BEU 154 21780 ACS s382: DEB 253 43920 ADV s345J: CMA A3112 03960 ARA s507: GAR 3 30630 A R E w329: EGT 5.410 30670 A R E w362: EGT 3.306,3.302 30720 A R E s379: E G I 1.204 06360 AST s308: WRW 102 20810 B A s381T: GSB 2204 20860 B A s383T : BER 155 20880 B A s386T: GSB 1216 22420 B C s324: EEB 151 22600 B L s380: GSB 1214 06700 BIO s304: PA I 302 00250 C C s302: WAG 302 00290 C C 8347: WAG 302 31520 C E w421: GEO 111 31510 C E w 329: EGI 5.410 31560 C E w 3 3 1 :E C J 1.202 31580 C E w354: BUR 134 31630 C E w362M: EGJ 1.214 31640 C E w363: EGJ 3.306,3.302 31750 C E W.391Q: E C J B102 08620 CH s610B: PA I 248 08770 CH s391: GEA 114 31140 CH E w317: WAG 420 31150 C H E w 454: WAG 201 01080 C H I 8507: GAR 5 36930 DRM s301L: DRM 1140 36980 DRM s313K: DRM 1148 01850 E s307: PA R 301 02030 E s314L: PA R 203 02090 E s321L: PA R 104 02110 E s342: PA R 201 02140 E s360K : PA R I 32150 E E w318: W EL 319 32180 E E w321K: E N S 302 32190 E E w321K: E N S 302 32200 E E w323: W E L 218 32290 E E w 3 5 lK : TAY 317 32810 E M w306: TAY 139 32840 E M w311: GEO 103 32890 E M w319: BIO 301 13570 ECO s302: BUR 112 13590 ECO s303: CAL IOO 26320 ED A s380G: ED B 416A 26330 26370 26420 25740 25780 25836 27090 27130 27170 17800 21990 22000 22017 22030 02590 02592 02620 02660 09590 03320 03321 03330 00430 00440 14700 14710 14720 14730 14740 14750 14760 14770 14780 14790 14900 14980 13920 10160 10170 10180 04240 04380 15440 15470 23560 44320 44410 46500 46550 00860 15820 15830 11380 11390 11540 11890 11900 EDA s382T: EDB 238 EDA s383: EDB 558 EDA s391K: EDB 458 EDC s671BI: ED B 284 EDC s382: EDB 370 EDC S384P: EDB 524 F D P s3G2T: ED B 324 F D P s.381: ED B 330A E D P s3S2L: ED B 240 ETS s310: W AG 214 FIN s354: DEB 150 F IN s357: ACA 21 F IN s374: GSB 2210 F IN s397: GSB 2218 FR s407: G A R 200 FR s407: G A R 309 FR s312K : SU T 101 FR s341K : B E N 318 GEO s404: GEO 104 G ER s305: BEN 212 G ER s305: BHB 266 GER s4 0 7 : BEN 116 CK w 804: W A G IO GK w412: W AG IO GOV s312L: BUR 106 GOV s312L : BUR 106 GOV s312L: BUR 106 GOV s312L: BUR 106 GOV s312L: BUR 106 GOV s312L: BU R 106 GOV s312L: BUR 106 GOV s312L: BUR 106 GOV s312L: BUR 106 GOV s312L: BUR 106 GOV s3 3 0 K : BUR 116 GOV s381L: GAR 313 GRG s301L: GRG 316 H E s203: E SB 223 H E sl0 3 L : BUR 136 H E s304: E SB 333 H E B s712: RLM 5124 H IN s612: PA R 210 H IS s315K : BAT 7 H IS s345L: BEB 166 I B s378: BEB 152 J s314: CMA A5136 J s376: CMA ASI24 L S s3 8 4 K : H R C 4106H Ii S s388K : HRC 4250 LAT s507: GAR 111 LIN s321L: PA R 104 LIN s373: GAR 7 M w 808A : RLM 4102 M w808A: RLM 4102 M w427K: W CH 14 M s302: W E L 15 M s603A : RLM 5104 11910 M s603A : RLM 7104 11950 M s603B: BEB 51 11960 M s603B: BUR 220 11970 M s603B: TAY 315 12050 M s305G : W RW 113 12090 M s608EB: BEB 254 12091 M s608E B : RLM 5116 12110 M S.316K: ESB 137 12120 M s316L: TAY 217 12170 M s340L: RLM 6104 12172 M s340L: RLM 5210 12200 M s665A : RLM 5118 33490 M E w328: GEO 112 33500 M E w335: T A Y 138 33600 M E w366K: RLM 5122 33750 M E w 3 8 8 R : RLM 6116 23230 MAN s325: GSB 1218 34050 MET s320: E C J B112 07370 MIC s429: BUR 208 37780 M US s612B: W OH 211 28260 P E D s360: B E L 850 28270 P E D s376: B E L 204 41660 PH R \v225K: E SB 115 41690 PH R w333: G EA 105 42380 PH R w368K: BUR 224 42500 P H R w573M: BU R 212 42900 P H R s310K: RLM 6118 12860 P H Y s302L: P A I 442 05260 POR s612: MEZ 208 16250 PSY s3 0 1 : B E N 222 16270 PSY s317: BEB 261 44770 R T F s332K: G EA 127 05010 RU S s407: CAL 419 30020 SED s371: ED B 104 30040 SED s371: EDB 278 30080 SED s380G: ED B 278 30110 SED s383: E D B 426 30163 SED s393: E D B 524 30170 SED s394: E D B 418 16740 SOC s308: BTO 112 45250 S P E s304: GRG 424 45260 S P E s305: CMA A5134 05910 SPN s312L: BAT 318 05920 SPN s312L: GAR 215 22960 S T A s3 0 9 : HRC 4252 23000 S T A s3 1 0 : GSB 1212 07860 ZOO s316K: BU R 130 SA TU R D A Y A u g u st 19, 2 -5 p.m. (C lasses m eeting M TW TH F 1 1 :30- 1, TTH 1 1 :30- 1) G rade re p o rts fo r th ese classes are due in the d e p a rtm e n ta l office by 9 a.m ., W ednesday, A u g u st 23. 21520 ACC s312: B U R 108 21530 ACC s326: BEB 151 21550 ACC s3 2 7 : B U R 112 21560 ACC s329: GSB 2210 17190 AMS s325: PA R I 43280 ARC s856B: ARC 307 30690 A R E w266: E C J B116 34810 ARH s301: ART 1102 20830 B A s281S: GSB 2204 20864 B A s384T: GSB 1218 22430 B C s3 2 4 : BUR 116 00260 C C s303: WAG 101 00300 C C s352: W AG 101 31570 C E w .341: E C J 1.214 31590 C E w 356: E C J 5.410 31720 C E W.383P: E C J 9.236 08774 CH s3 9 1 : GAR 215 01900 E s307: PA R 301 01910 E s307: PA R 104 01940 E s307: PAR 105 01950 E s307: PA R 303 01990 E S.312M: PA R 101 02020 E s314K : PA R 306 02050 E s317: PA R 206 02120 E s348: BER 161 02170 E s371 K : PA R 204 32210 E E w 325: TAY 317 32250 E E w435L: E C J 1.204 32254 E E w435L: E C J 1.204 22820 E M w 306: RLM 5104 2.2860 E M w311: GEO 104 32900 E M w319: GEO 111 32960 E M w 390E: T A Y 137 33020 E M w 392: TAY 141 13600 ECO -303: BUR 208 13602 ECO 8303: BEB 157 13607 ECO s333K: BEB 158 25660 EDC s332S: ED B 458 25730 EDC s671A I: ED B 284 25820 EDC s384P: EDB 370 27100 E D P s 3 7 1 : ED B 324 22014 F IN s357: BEB 155 02640 FR s312L: BAT 101 03360 GER S.312X: BEB 357 14600 GOV s3l OL: B U R 106 11610 GOV S01OL: B U R 106 14620 G O V s310L : B U R 106 14630 GOV s3 10L: BT TR 106 1 1640 GOV s310L: B l TR 106 14650 GOV s310L: B U R 106 14669 G O V s310L : B U R 106 14670 G O V s310L : BU R 106 14680 GOV s31 OL: BUR 106 14690 GOV .‘ 3101,: TTT* 106 14950 GOV s355K : BUR 224 13940 GRG s3 2 4 : GRG 316 10230 H E s322: WCH 14 15850 L IN s3 9 1 : PA R 208 11420 M \v808B: PAT 248 11430 M \v808B: PA I 248 11940 PT s603A: RLM 4102 32020 M s603B: RLM 5120 12022 M s603B: RLM 5118 12030 M s603B : RLM 5116 12080 M 8.3050: RLM 6104 12140 M s316L: RLM 5122 12150 M s325: RLM 5124 12160 M s328K : RLM 6116 33440 M E w319: TA Y 212 33540 M E w339: TA Y 206 33560 M E w345: TA Y 212 33562 M E w345: TA Y 139 33610 M E w 366L: T A Y 112 33714 M E w384Q: E N S 145 23270 MAN s372: GSB 4108 19100 M ES s310L: GRG 424 23760 MKT s337: BER 150 37210 M US w605B: W OH 211 03820 OAL s310: GRG 424 3438 4 P E N s383: P E B 300 01670 P H L s3 1 2 : GSB 1216 41770 P H R w341: PAT 302 41900 P H R vv346: RLM 7104 42030 P H R w359: BUR 212 42280 P H R w 367: GEA 105 42390 P H R w 3 6 8 L : BUR 216 12900 PH Y s608BI: PAT 442 16260 P S Y s3 0 8 : B E N 222 16300 PSY s339: CAL IOO 30010 SED s371: EDB 416A 30050 SED s372: ED B 238 16760 SOC s323: W E L 218 16780 SOC s333K: CMA A2320 45284 S P E s319: CMA A3112 45290 S P E sl4 0 L : CMA A5134 45320 S P E s368K: RLM 6118 05840 S P N s407: BAT 318 05890 SPN s312K: MEZ 208 22980 ST A s309: BEB 166 23020 S T A s3 1 0 : GSB 2218 Printed a s a courtesy of 23430 TR s370: GSB 1214 07870 ZOO s321: ESB 115 SA TU RD A Y A u g u st 19, 7-10 p.m . (C lasses m eeting M T W T H F 2:30-4) G rade re p o rts for these classes a re due in the d e p a rtm e n ta l office by 9 a.m., W ednesday, A u g u st 23. 20870 B A s385T: GSB 1218 31620 C E w360K: E C J 1.204 32130 E E w411: RLM 4102 32390 E E w371M: E C J 1.214 27080 E D P s332E : EDB 330A 33510 M E w335: TAY 112 33520 M E w336: TA Y 206 33602 M E w 366K : B U R 134 33604 M E w366K: BUR 130 41780 PH R w l41K : BUR 116 42140 PH R w 366M : BUR 108 42400 PH R w368L: BUR 112 30100 SED s383: ED B 284 MONDAY A ugust 21, 9-12 a.m . (C lasses m eeting M T W T H F 10-11:30, T T H 10-11:30) G rade re p o rts fo r th ese classes a re due in the d e p a rtm e n ta l office by 9 a.m., F rid ay , A u g u st 25. 21480 21510 21540 21580 21600 21620 21664 21670 43910 43970 17170 13240 30394 30400 30410 06370 06400 19790 20820 20850 22440 22590 47720 06690 00270 00277 00280 00287 31550 31660 31690 31830 08560 08660 08720 08760 31160 31260 36940 37030 01840 01870 01880 01890 01970 02040 02060 02070 02150 02200 32140 32230 32270 32280 32850 32870 32950 33034 13580 13581 13594 13610 13636 25650 25690 27120 27180 17810 17850 22010 22020 02600 02610 02630 02650 03340 14590 14800 14810 14820 14830 14840 14850 11860 14870 14880 14890 14891 14910 14940 13930 13960 10210 10220 15430 15460 15490 02830 44310 44360 44380 44450 46450 46470 00870 11400 11410 11920 11550 11930 11980 11990 12000 12010 12040 12060 12070 12100 12130 12190 33420 33450 33530 ACC s311: BEN 222 ACC s312: BU R 112 ACC s327: W AG 201 ACC s360: BUR 116 ACC s362: BTO 112 ACC s364: W RW 102 ACC s384: BEB 259 ACC s386K: BEB 52 ADV s3 4 2 J: CMA A6104 ADV s3 7 0 J: CMA A6202 AMS s310: MUS 105 A N T s302: BUR 108 A SE w 380P: W RW 113 A SE w380Q: TA Y 217 A SE w396: RLM 6122 A ST s308: B E L 328 A ST s309N : GSB 2210 B A w 380N : GSB 1218 B A s280S: BEB 155 B A s282S: BEB 161 B C s325: BEB 153 B L s 3 2 3 : ARC 105 BIB s301: CBC BIO s303: P A I 302 C C s306: E SB 115 C C s306M : GAR 203 C C s336: E S B 115 C C s336M : GAR 203 C E w 3 2 9 K :E C J 1.202 C E w 374K : E C J 3.402 C E w 377K : E C J 3.302 C E w 397: E C J 3.306 CH s302: BUR 106 CH s618B : W E L 319 CH S.354L: W E L 218 CH s3 8 6 J: W E L 113W CH E w 363: BUR 220 CHE \v384: RLM 6124 DRM s301L: DRM 1140 DRM s378: DRM 1134 E s306: PA R I Of, E s307: PA R 206 E s307: PA R 104 E s307: PA R 101 E s.308: PA R 306 E s314L: PA R 208 E s320L : PA R 304 E s321: PA R 203 E s3 6 1 K : PA R 204 E s377K : PA R 303 E E w212: TA Y 317 E E w 331: PE B 311 E E w338: GEO 111 E E w 3 3 8 K : E C J 1.204 E M w 311: GEO 112 E M \v314: TA Y 315 E M w 388F: E N S 109 E M vv397: E N S 145 EGO s302: E SB 333 EGO s302: BER 253 EGO s303: BEB 152 EGO *34OK: REB 166 EGO s362M : BEB 158 EDC s332S: EDB 284 EDC s370E : EDB 370 E D P s380P: ED B 330A E D P s384: EDB 558 E T S s320: PA R 308 ETS s374: BER 157 F IN s357: GEO IOO ETN s375: GAR I FR s407: PA R 210 FR s310L: BEN 212 F R s312L: REN 116 F R s324L: BAT 115 G ER s310: BAT 307 GOV s310L: PA I 248 GOV s312L: BETT 150 GOV s312L: BEB 150 GOV s312L: BEB 150 GOV s312L: BEB 150 GOV s312L: BER 150 GOV s312L: BEB 150 GOV s312L: BEB 150 GOV s312L: BEB 150 GOV s312L: BEB 150 GOV s312L: BEB 150 GOV S.312L: RLM 7116 GOV s336L: PAT 442 GOV s350K : GAR 109 GRG s305: ACA 21 GRG s334: GRG 316 H E s311: GEA 105 H E s320: GEA 4 HTS s,309L: BUR 136 H IS s320R: WCH 14 H IS s366N : BATT IT E s312L: BAT 105 J s312: CMA A4114 J s325: CMA A3120 J s360: RLM 4102 J s382: RLM 7118 L S s382L: HRC 4252 L S s382L: HRC 4256 LA T s312L: GAR 313 M w808A: E N S 302 M w808 A: E N S 302 M s603A: E SB 223 M w427L: RLM 6104 M s603A :R L M 5104 M s603B : BUR 134 M s603B: BU R 224 M s603B : RLM 6120 M s603B: RLM 5116 M s304E: RLM 5118 M s305G: RLM 5120 M s305G: RLM 5122 M 8311: RLM 7104 M s316L: RLM 5124 M s362K: RLM 6116 M E w 3 U : RLM 6118 M E w320: E C J 1.214 M E w338: TA Y 212 33570 M E w353: BU R 216 33590 M E \v365K: TAY 139 33700 M E \v383S: E S B 137 23240 MAN s335: BEB 151 23280 MAN s374: BEB 255 07380 MIC s340: E N S 637 07390 MTCs360: BUR 130 23770 M KT s338: GSB 1216 23780 MKT s360: GSB 2204 23800 MKT s372: BEB 56 37760 M US s302L: M US 200 37770 MUS s411B: W OH 211 10350 N T R w 390: GEA 127 28190 PE D s325K : B E L 204 28200 P E D s325K: B E L 204 28210 P E D s325K : B E L 204 34390 P E N s383: PE B 300 04660 P H L s304: W AG 210 04680 P H L s318: W AG 214 04690 P H L s329L: W AG 302 41640 P H R w 320H : W E L 15 41800 P H R w 3 4 5 : BU R 212 42110 P H R w 465N : BU R 208 42420 P H R w 3 7 0 : RLM 7120 16280 P S Y s319K : B E N 318 16330 P S Y s355: CAL 100 22290 R E s386: BEB 459 23920 R E S s326: ED B 104 44740 R T F s322K: CMA A2320 44800 R T F s360,T: RLM 4102 29140 SE D w 697P: E D B 416A 30060 SED s374: EDB 458 30090 SED s382: ED B 426 30120 SED s383: ED B 454 30124 SED s385: ED B 278 45270 S P E s306K: RLM 7122 45280 S P E s319: CMA A3112 45308 S P E s360K: RLM 7124 45410 S P E s393D: RLM 5114 05830 S P N s407: BAT 318 06010 S P N s364L: BEB 51 22970 STA s309: W AG 101 23010 STA s310: W AG 420 23030 STA s362: GSB 1214 17580 U C s358: GAR 301 07880 ZOO s333: BIO 301 MONDAY A u g u st 21, 2-5 p.m. (C lasses m eeting M T W T H F 1-2:30) G rade re p o rts fo r th ese classes a re due in th e d e p a rtm e n ta l office by 9 a.m ., F rid a y , A u g u st 25. 21490 ACC s311: BEB 161 21570 ACC s329: BEB 166 21630 ACC s364: GSB 1216 21650 ACC s365: BEB 150 21660 ACC s381: BEB 52 43960 ADV s369J: CMA A6102 17180 AMS s310: GAR 301 13250 A N T s324L: BU R 130 30640 A R E w345Q: E C J 1.214 30660 A R E w259: E C J B112 30280 A S E w311: TA Y 317 06410 A ST s350: GAR 109 19800 B A w380N: GSB 1218 06680 BTO s302: PAT 302 06990 BOT s411K : BIO 112 07050 BOT s420: BIO 112 31510 C E w211K: E C J 3.306 31600 C E w357: E C J 1.204 31610 C E w 3 5 7 : E C J 1.204 31611 C E w357: E C J 1.204 09074 C S w360: E C J 1.202 08230 CII w369: W E L 218 31300 C H E w 3 8 5 J: E N S 615 32690 DRW s201: TA Y 300 32700 DRW s201: TA Y 308 01920 E s307: PA R 203 01930 E s307: PA R 104 32160 E E w 3 2 1 : RLM 5104 32170 E E w 321: RLM 5104 32240 E E w 335K : RLM 6104 32330 E E W.360L: E C J 1.202 32370 E E w264: BUR 108 32380 E E w364: BUR 108 32430 E E w 3 8 5 J: E N S 615 32830 E M \v306: TAY 217 32880 E M w314: TAY 139 32910 E M w319: RLM 7104 32940 E IM s385,T: E N S 615 26350 ED A s383: EDB 458 25848 EDC s385G: ED B 284 27140 E D P s.381: EDB 558 22024 F IN s380: GSB 2204 14960 GOV s360N : BUR 224 10200 H E s i0 5 L : GEA 127 15450 HTS s315L: BUR 106 22150 IN S s357: REB 155 44340 J s320R: CMA A4202 46460 L S s382L: HRC 4250 46560 Ti S s397: HRC 4102 11440 M w898B: REM 4102 11450 M \v898R: REM 4102 33550 M F v/344: TA Y 315 33 670 M F w381 R : W R W 113 33720 M E w 385J: E N S 615 07400 MTG si 60K: BTO 301 37790 M US s221K: M US 106 37796 M US :,330K: M US 105 37810 MUS s354: W OH 219 37810 M US s7^9K : EDA F17 34370 P E N s320: PE B 311 34380 P E N s383: P E B 300 41670 PH R V-331: BU R 220 41760 P H R w.338: ESB 137 42090 P H R w 363K : BUR 136 42100 P H R w l65L : E S B 115 42120 P H R w366L: E SB 333 4 2 11 0 PH R w369M: BU R 134 42430 P H R w473: BTTR 112 16310 PSY s342: BEB 151 16320 P S Y s352: B E N 222 22262 R E s358: BEB 255 14730 R T F s314: CMA A2320 44820 R T F s3 7 0 : CMA A3112 28508 SED w379: EDB 330A 28610 SE D \v387: EDB 426 30070 SE D s374: EDB 524 30130 SE D s386: EDB 370 30140 SE D s387: EDB 416A 30150 SE D s388: EDB 238 16720 SOC s302: BUR 212 16750 SOC s317L: BUR 208 16770 SOC s325K: BUR 116 06000 S P N s326K: B E N 212 22990 STA s309: GSB 2210 M ONDAY A ugust 21, 7-10 p.m. (C lasses m eeting M TW TH F 7-8:30 a.m., late afternoon and evening classes) G rade re p o rts fo r th ese classes a re due in th e d e p a rtm e n ta l office by 9 a.m., F riday, A ugust 25 31790 C E w396L: E C J 7.202 26343 E D A s383: ED B 458 46480 L S s 3 8 4 K : HRC 4102 33620 M E w366L: RLM 4102 42220 PH R \v366T : BUR 112 42230 P H R w 366T : BUR 108 30174 SE D s395: EDB 458 Texas Student Publications sports shorts A A U says suit challenges tradition LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A lawyer for the Amateur Athletic Union argued Wednesday that a suit filed by champion high jumper Dwight Stones challenging his suspension by the AAU threatened a 100-year-old tradition of American amateur sports. Stones has sought a preliminary injunction and reinstatement in the AAU which suspended him after he received money for appearance on a television program, “ World Superstars 1978.” AAU attorney John R. McDonough said the money earned by Stones classified him as a professional. He said that if Stones wants to keep the fee he should “cross the lin e” and become a professional like Olympic decathlon champion Bruce Jenner. Stones filed the suit July 20. He said the m oney had been given to the Desert Oasis Track Club, a non-profit organization owned by his family. He charged that the AAU w as a self-serving organization seeking a monopoly in am ateur sports. McDonough said the am ateur system in the United States has “ stood the test for over IOO y ears” and that approval of Stone s action would create “confusion and uncertainty.” Superior Court Judge Dell was expected to rule in the case later this week. Foucault goes to Kansas City DETROIT (U PI) — Steve Foucault, the Detroit Tigers’ top relief pitcher last season, was waived Wednesday and claimed by the Kansas City Royals. To replace him on the roster, Detroit purchasd the contract of right-handed reliever Dave Tobik from its Evansville farm club of the American Association. Tobik had a 5-4 record with nine saves and a 3.38 ERA in 33 gam es with the Triplets this season. Foucault, who will be 29 in October, was acquired from Tex­ as for slugging outfielder Willie Horton at the start of the 1977 season and compiled a 7-7 record with 13 saves and a 3.15 ERA in 44 gam es for the Tigers. However, this season he had been sparsely used, pitching only 37 innings. Foucault had only four saves, a 2-4 record and 3.37 ERA. Downey, Jordan lead tennis fields MAHWAH, N.J. (U P I) - Third-seeded Robert Van’tHof of Downey, Calif., led the field into the quarterfinals of the national m en’s 21-and-under t e n n i s c h a m p i o n s h i p s Wednesday with a 6-4, 6-3 vic­ tory over John Rast of St. Petersburg, Fla. With the top two seed s already eliminated, 19-year- old Van’tHof, a Junior Davis C upper who a tte n d s th e U n i v e r s i t y o f S o u th e r n California, broke R ast’s ser­ vice in the 10th gam e of the first set and took a 4-0 lead in the second set. to Fourth-seed Chris Mayotte o f S p r in g fie ld , M a s s ., a University of South Carolina se n io r , a d v a n c e d th e quarterfinals with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over Craig Wittus of B lo o m fie ld H ills , M ich. M ayotte scored a se r v ic e break in the opening gam e and rallied from 0-3 in the second set. OTHER SEEDS winning third-round m atch es w ere Cary Stansbury of Tiburon, Calif.; Marty Davis of San Jose, Calif.; and Buddy Bow­ man of Little Rock, Ark. Stansbury, seeded sixth, beat Mike Brunnberg, Miami, Fla., 6-3, 6-4; No. 7 Davis elim inated Chip Hooper, Sun­ nyvale, Calif., 6-2, 6-1; No. 8 B o w m a n d e f e a t e d F r it z Buehning, Shorts Hills, N .J., 7-6, 6-3. The quarterfinal bracket was filled by three unseeded players: Jeff Robbins, Salt L ake C ity ; M el P u r c e ll, Murray, K entucky; Robert Rosello, Mineola, N.Y. R O B B I N S B E A T Brent Crymes of Savannah, Ga., 6-3, 7-6. Purcell defeated Blaine W illenborg, M iam i Shores, F la., 6-3, 3-6, 6-2. Rosello eliminated Marcel Freeman, Port Washington, N Y., 6-3, 4- 6 , 6- 1 . ★ ★ ★ MAHWAH, N .J .(U P I) - First-seeded Barbara Jordan of King of Prussia, Pa., and Barbara Hallquist of Arcadia, Calif., the No. 2 seed, Wednes­ day reached the quarterfinals of the national wom en’s 21- a n d - u n d e r t e n n i s c h a m ­ pionships. J O R D A N D E F E A T E D M c C a l l u m , R o b e r t a Pittsburgh, P a., 6-4, 6-4, and Hallquist beat Robin Lucey, Portland, Ore., 6-1, 6-4. Other third-round results: Kay McDaniel, Shreveport, La., beat Colette Bennett, Lin­ colnwood, Illinois, 6-1, 6-1; Sherry Acker, Kalam azoo, M i c h , d e f e a t e d F l o r i a Falterm eier, Irvine, Calif., 6- 3, 5-7, 6-4; F elicia Hutnick, Wethersfield, Conn., defeated Mary Johnson, Sacramento, C a l i f . , 6-2, 6- 2; S h e i l a M cln ern ey , R o m e, N. Y. , defeated Julie Filkoff, Sher­ man Oaks, Calif., 6-3, 6-1; Joyce Portman, Miami, Fla., defeated Tracey Tanner, Las Vegas, N ev., 4-6, 6-2, 6-4; and Susan Gibson, Miami, Fla., defeated Donna Rubin, Rye, N .Y , 6-3, 2-6, 6-3. Dibley upsets Zednik in Canadian Open TORONTO (UPI) — Stiff winds took all the punch out of a battle between the owners of the world’s two fastest serves in the $210,000 Canadian Open Tennis Championship Wednesday as A u s t r a l i a n Col i n D i b l e y u p s e t V l a d i m i r Z ednik of Czechoslovakia 3-6, 6-3, 6-1. Dibley, winner of four out of five fast serve contests, has been clocked at a record 148 mph. Zenick holds the second fastest tim e at 144 mph. “ We both like to serve and get into the net, but in a wind like this you can’t serve well enough for that,” Dibley said. Dibley broke service for the first tim e at 4-3 in second set to turn the match around. “ I WAS LUCKY to get back in the m atch,” he said. "I felt I w as hitting the ball terribly in the first set. It was just flying everyw here.” Third seed Manuel Orantes of Spain, apparently disturbed by the gusty conditions, was upset in his first match here by Australian Paul Kronk. Kronk, who made it into the tournament after a withdraw!, defeated Chile’s Pat Cornejo in the first round while Orantes had a bye. “ It s an excellent win for m e ,” Kronk said. “ I thought he might chop m e up.” Depite Orantes lack-luster play, Kronk said, “he never gives up. He might be disgusted but he doesn’t know how to give up H e’s an old-time sportsm an.” THE WINDS and a rain delay were also factors in a 6-3,6-7,6- 2 upset by Colin Dowdeswell of Switzerland over Spaniard Jose Higueras, seeded eighth. Higueras seem ed to tire in the last set, serving badly and frequently hitting into the net. I beat him three out of four tim es last year, so I knew I had a good chance,” Dowdeswell said. Chris Lewis of New Zealand, seeded 14th, won a second round match 6-1, 6-2, over Australian Bill Lloyd and Chile’s Hans G ildem eister defeated American Butch Seewagen 6-3, 7-6. IN WOMEN’S play top seed Mima Jausovec of Yugoslavia suffered a twisted ankle in the early going but held on to defeat American Betsy Nagelson 2-6, 6-3, 7-6 in a second round match. Nagelson seem ed to give up after running into a linesm an’s chair during the third set tie-breaker, hurting her leg. Earlier, she seem ed in control at 4-2 in the final set when she double faulted three tim es to let Jausovec break back. Both women relaxed with ankles wrapped in ice-packs after the match. Second seed V irginia Ruzici of Roumania trampled Japanese qualifier Sonoe Yonezawa 6-0, 6-1 and A m erican Pam Teeguarden beat Hana Strachanova. of Czechoslovakia 6-2, 6-2. Great Britain s Michele Tyler was upset by Australian Lesley Hunt 7-6, 6-1. Thursday, A ugust 17, 1978 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ P a ge l l New ‘volleywacT sport could catch on fast It m ay not be the biggest gam e in town yet, but it is g e t­ ting there. “ I t ” is an am azing new sport called volleywad, and it could easily replace baseball (or fo o tb a ll, depending on your point of view) as the national pastim e. fact, those acquainted with the sp o rt ag ree it is only a m a tte r of tim e before th e re is a volleyw ad craze the likes of w hich you have never im ­ In agined. (A uthor s note: I, as th e in­ ventor of the sport, am being com pletely fair and unbiased. E v e ry volleyw ad e x p e rt I know has told m e w hat a hit it will be.) it c o u ld ONCE YOC understand the gam e, it is not difficult to see w hy th e national fancy. J u s t tak e a look a t all the adv an tag es it offers. t i c k l e Anyone can play, everyone has th e n ecessary equipm ent right th e re a t hom e, and it can be played indoors o r out in any season. Size and speed a r e not re a l m a k i n g a d v a n t a g e s , volleyw ad probably the only sport in the world which does not re q u ire excessive ath le tic ability. One of m y favorite fe a tu re s is th a t the p articip an t, even one a s in h e re n tly and un­ avoidably clum sy a s I, does Am ateur golf Daniel leads tournament Sem ple w as elim in ated by L eslie P earso n of P lacen tia, P a ., 3-and-2; P o rte r yielded by 2-up to Tegw en P e rk in s of C ardiff, W ales, a m e m b e r of the B ritish C urtis Cup. not risk bodily harm . I know it sounds too good to be tru e But re st assu red it is true. Volleywad in co rporates the precision of figure skating t h e b a s i c s k i l l s of w i t h v o l l e y b a l l a n d t h e c o n ­ venience of checkers. I KNOW IT is difficult to grasp, so let m e explain m ore fully Volleywad is played with a wad of paper. It sounds sim ­ ple, but don’t be deceived. The a r t of w adding is m o re d if­ ficult than you m ight im agine. The wad m edium is one of the first decisions you m u st m a k e . N o teb o o k p a p e r is is it w idely used b e c a u se du rab le but p ra c tic a l. You m ight w ant to try o th e r types of paper for v ariatio n . For instance, for a m ore colorful gam e use a sheet of SER V IN G YOU IN 8 STA TES laura tuma c o n s t r u c t i o n l i g h t w e i g h t paper, or if you are feeling rebellious, try a page out of the telephone book ALLOW YOURSELF four or five trie s before you expect to p ro d u ce a c o m p e titio n - quality wad. But don’t be too h ard on yourself if you still h aven’t gotten the knack. A wad of th re e to four in­ ches in d ia m e te r is probably ideal, although you m ay find th a t you p re fe r a slig h tly sm a lle r wad. Once you have a good wad, you m ust se t the p a ra m e te rs of th e court. U se w hatever n a tu ra l boun­ d a r ie s p re s e n t th e m se lv e s. F or exam ple, you m ay let a w all serve as the rig h t boun­ dary. while a cbffee table a c ts as the left one. A GOOD RULE of thum b is if a player m ust risk e x trem e pain to re trie v e a wad. it is considered out of bounds. Select a point som ew here betw een the players to serve as a “ n e t” and you a re ready to begin the gam e. and a m atch is the b est two out of th re e gam es. PERHAPS THE m ost in­ novative rule of volleywad is th a t the player who suggests the gam e has th e authority to m ake ju d g m en t calls. Don’t be bashful, take advantage of this rule w henever you can. F ro m here on out, the rules a re m uch like volleyball, w ith only a few variatio n s: • p la y e rs a r e allow ed to touch the w ad with only one hand. This includes serving; to • p la y e rs a r e allow ed touch the w ad only tw ice on a volley, and only the player who serv es sco res; • a gam e is com plete when one play ers scores 17 points, Now th a t you know th e basics of volleywad, th e re is no lim it to w hat you can do. Look a t it this way, you can get in on the ground floor of a sport th a t has now here to go but up. Ju st think ... In tra m u ra l ... O lym pic ... The World v olleyw adding volleywading Series of Volleywad ... PLYM OUTH M E E T IN G , Pa (U P I) — Defending c h a m ­ p i o n B e t h D a n i e l o f C harleston, S C ., shot a 3- under-par 69 W ednesday to gain the third round of the U.S. W om en’s A m ateur golf cham pionship with a 6-and-4 victory over C hrista Johnson of A rcata, Calif. D aniel’s perfo rm an ce w as the best so fa r in the m atch play to u rn am en t a t the Sun- nybrook Golf Club. DANIEL, WHO shot a 3- under 33 on the front nine to take a 3-up lead, birdied the first hole from six feet, the se ­ cond from 18 and the fifth from 15. On the back nine, she b ir­ died the seventh hole from 25 feet and won the 13th and 14th holes w ith p a rs to end th e m atch. ‘‘I drove real well to d a y ,” said Daniel, trying to win the title for the second stra ig h t y e a r and the third tim e since 1975. “ I m ade four good putts. The ball w as rolling m o re to ­ d a y . th a t so m u c h .” I d o n ’t lik e IN THURSDAY’S rounds, one in the m orning and one in the afternoon, D aniel faces P a tric ia O ’B rien of P ittsfie ld , M ass., w inner by 1-up over N a n c y F i t z g e r a l d of I n ­ dianapolis. In addition to Daniel, o th e r m e m b e rs of the U.S. C urtis Cup te a m who advanced to the th ird round w ere Judith O liver of P ittsb u rg h ; P a t C ornett of S alinas, C alif; Carolyn Hill of P la c e n tia , C alif.; and Cynthia Hill of Colorado Springs. The two Hills, unrelated, m e e t T hursday m orning. FO RM ER CHAMPIONS elim in ated w ere C arol Sem ple of Sew icklye, P a ., the 1973 w inner, and D ottie P o rte r, 1949 cham pion, from R iv e r­ ton, N .J. Tournament picks leave Lopez 3rd DEARBORN, Mich. (U P I) — The second rich est event on the LPGA tour, w orth a total of $150,000. finds Nancy Lopez no b e tte r than the third choice behind Joyce K azm ierski and Bonnie L auer. T he reason, of course, is th a t K azm ierski and L auer t h e a r e b o th n a t i v e s of m etropolitan D etroit a re a and will have th e ir own su b sta n ­ tial rooting sections T hursday when the Ladies P rofessional Golf A ssociation re tu rn s for the first tim e in m ore than two decades. “ This is going to be a super w eek,” predicted astrology buff K azm ierski, who got a d ­ ditional m otivation Monday from her 33rd birthday. “ If I win, it ll be kielbasa for all — not cham pagne. “ I WANT to have fun this w eek,” she said. “ I w ant to enjoy com ing hom e and enjoy a to u rn am en t I ve w aited IO y e a rs for. I played C olum bus (Ohio) l l y e a rs as my hom e course — it w as a s close to hom e as we g o t.’ K azm ierski, who w ent to M ichigan S tate, has finished second enough tim e s to r a te a serious contender. L auer will have h e r follow ers, too. But Lopez will be the one the golfers will be trying not to follow. She has alread y won in­ eight tim es this season, cluding th a t fa n ta stic five-in- a-row stre a k , and in m ore than $140,000. taken Though she finished tied for 13th in la st w eek’s tour event, L o p e z t h e a u t o m a t i c favorite in every to u rn a m e n t she en te rs. She won two w eeks ago in E urope. i s MOST OF the top 50 m oney w inners on the tour have sign­ ed up for a shot a t the o v e r­ sized purse. Joanne e a r n e r is th e only one whose sta tu s is uncertain. P ro ceed s from the to u rn a ­ m ent, sponsored by Stroh s beer, will benefit the L eader Dogs for the Blind. mm. i n PIONEER CASSETTE PIONEER RECEIVER SANSUI RECEIVER PIONEER TURNTABLE PIONEER S newest cassette deck is loaded with features. a class by itself. PIONEER A M /FM Stereo Receiver with 45 watts/channel at .1% THD. Power meters, low filter and much more put this in SANSUI'S newest receiver line is their best ever. The G6000 has A M /F M stereo, 65 watts/channel at .025r# THD. 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Huntland Store dual magnet 95 Includes • Preener • Dust Bug • Stylus Cleaner 195 UDXl I or ll 90 min. i99 • C O A X I AL • 4" SIZE MODEL C-9851 BASF 8 track Studio Series 90 min................ Performance Series 90 min................ PIONEER HEADPHONES • SE 205 95 MAXELL REEL UD 35-90 1800' ...... UD 35-90 IO " Reel • 19’* SLIDE BRACKET for UNDERDASH CAR DECKS $649 B K SPEAKER Formula 5 Demo ............ B K SPEAKER Formula 6 Demo ............ B K SPEAKER Formula 7 Demo ............ M A R A N T Z PRE A M P Model 3700 Demo M A R A N T Z PO W ER-AM P Model 140 Demo SAN Y O RECIEVER SO watt Demo ......... SA N SU I RECEIVER 40 watt Demo ........ SA N SU I RECEIVER 60 watt Demo ........ SAN SU I RECEIVER 85 watt Demo ........ SAN SU I RECEIVER 110 watt Demo ....... ECI Demo, Scratch ond Dont Speakers - save to 60% B K SPEAKER Formula 7 Demo ............... 74.95 SA N SU I A M P AU 5900 Demo ............... 169.95 S A N SU I TUNER TU 5900 Demo .............. 159.95 M A R A N T Z RECEIVER 57 watt Demo .... 759.95 M A R A N T Z RECEIVER 130 watt Demo ... 439.95 M A R A N T Z RECEIVER 185 watt Demo ... 779.95 PIONEER RECEIVER 160 w a n Demo ....... 499.95 617 W. 29th phone: 472-5471 104 E. Huntland phone: 454-5474 SPECIAL STORE HOURS Thurs. | p r j QUANTITIES LIMITED O N M O ST ITEMS, SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS! I X n o o n CUST0MHIF1 Discount Centers A A z > ST Z Ti H r n r - rn 33 £ " > o o c / > > c / > * OOO O C 2 I - 33 > ° “ > > H — O > N 0 * 0 Z > OI C T ) 33 rn c o Ca ) r n i d ‘Blue Country’ ...enticing view of life " B l u e Count ry, " wr i t t en and di r ect ed by J e a n - Ch a r l e s T a c c h e l l a; at t he D obie Screens. By STEVE DAVIS Daily Texan Staff The dog days of August m ay already be here, but Jean- C harles T ac h e lla ’s new film “ Blue C ountry” is as refreshing as a spring show er in May. It is a celebration of life and love in the best F ren ch tradition. D irector and screen w riter T acchella, whose wonderful and successful “ Cousin, Cousine” lit up m ovie screen s a few y e a rs ago w ith its uncom prom ising ch arm , scores once again in this look a t love, friendship and hum or in a sm all F rench village. Blue C ountry — the nam e for the locale in which the film is set — is a p asto ral p arad ise out of an im pressionistic painting. The sim ple, idyllic life inherent th ere provides substenance and c ontentm ent for its inhabitants. They have rejected the tem p ­ tatio n s of m oney and opportunity of city life, p referrin g instead the dom estic tran q u ility and day-to-day existence of country life. TACCHELLA has peopled his village with a troupe of varied and fascinating c h a ra c te rs. T h e re ’s the delicate and im pec­ cably dressed m other-in-law , fresh from P a ris and unused to the life of the country, who begins her day by sitting in a c h a ir in a field and applauding the sunrise a t dawn. H er best friend, Zoe (D in ette G arcin in a p e rfe c t perfo rm an ce) is a w orldly wom an who w as once a tra p e z e a r tis t in h er youth and is now the v illa g e ’s self-appointed tre e surgeon and songstress. T here a re o th e rs who inhabit this com edy of hum an n a tu re — th e rich and handsom e businessm an who re tu rn s to the village looking for a w ife; the author who lives in the Blue C ountry for the quiet, w riting atm o sp h ere, but finds laziness m ore appealing; the very bourgeois p ro p rie to rs of the local th e a te r and to u rist shop; and so on. THE FOCUS in this rich and textured c a st of c h a ra c te rs c e n te rs on the couple of Louise and M athias, a free-sp irited duo m uch like the joyously devil-m ay-care a d u lte re rs of “ Cousin, Cousine. Louise is the village nurse, a com pulsive e a te r and a w om an who has decided to live alone for the re st of her life. M athias is a fa rm e r, co m m itted to the ru ra l life and afraid of the chains of m a rria g e . B rig ette Fossey and Jac q u e s S e rre s a re delightful in th e ir roles a s the singles who find a b e tte r a lte r ­ n ative to love and to g etherness than in m arria g e . T he direction is sly and sh arp under th e deft hand of T acchella He is fa st becom ing an im p o rtan t F rench film m ak er with the c ritic a l and co m m ercial successes of “ Cousin, C ousine’ and “ Blue C ountry.” Som e m ay dism iss his cin em atic e ffo rts a s “ fluff,” but T acchella has a bouyantly fresh style un m atched in the field of hum an com edy. “ Blue C ountry” is as good, if not b e tte r, than any A m erican com edy in recen t m em ory The sim ple values and back-to-earth happiness depicted in “ Blue C ountry' will appeal to a v ast m a jo rity of m oviegoers cau g h t up in the rig o rs of m odern life. The F rench zest for liv­ ing depicted in both “ Blue C ountry” and “ Cousin, C ousine” is indeed enticing. P e rh a p s the F rench governm ent should enlist Jean -C h arles T acchella a s head of its B ureau of T o u ristry ; un­ der his leadership, the country would probably e x p erien ce a surge of tourism and em ig ratio n unequalled in its history Auditions set Z a c h a r y S c o tt T h e a t r e C enter will hold auditions for its p ro fe ssio n a l re p e rto ry com pany a t ll a m. Aug. 28 and 29 in room 300 of the A ustin C o m m u n ity C ollege Rio G rande S tre e t cam pus. Known a s the In teracto rs, the ZSTC com pany tours from school to school around the com m unity, giving m orning and afternoon p erform ances. F o r the fall, the a c to rs chosen will p re se n t a m odern laguage version of S h a k e sp e a re ’s “ A M idsum m er N ight’s D re a m .” T h e I n t e r a c t o r s p u b lic school p rogram is funded by the C ity of Austin, the Ju n io r League of Austin and the T ex­ as C om m ission on the A rts and H um anities. A c c o r d in g to D i r e c t o r M arg aret B ecker, auditioning a c to r s should p r e p a r e one s o n g s h o r t m onologues. t w o a n d HOME OF THE ^ PROGRESSIVE OMELETTE OPEN EVERY DAY 7 :0 0 A .M . to 9 :0 0 P.M. T h e O m e le t t r y 4811 Burnet 4 5 3 -5 0 6 2 USE T E X A N CLASSIFIEDS Frt. Aug. 18th HOT S IZ Z IIN ' ROCK 'N ' ROLL KITZINGER M on. Aug. 21st UFO Fri. Aug. 2 5 t h DICTATORS SKUNKS Thurs. Aug. 31st THE GREAT GUITARS ( B a r n e y bessel, H erb Ellis, A C ha rl ie Byrd) f l* 1/ , BARTON SPR IN G S RD. 477-97*1 SEAFOOD RESTAURANT Belly d p to Our New O rleans-S tyle Bar And See How You Look On The H alf Shell! IM SHOAL ( k l I K Pl A / A OM A N D ! RSOM I A MI A k HAL CONI S 3300 ANDERSON LH 453-9945 Steaks French Cuisine Courtyard & Bar The most unique dining experience in Austin Open H a m until 2 at night The Old Pecan st Cafe 314 East 6rh Sr. Opera excerpts to play in UTOPIA The U niversity O pera T h eatre, d ire c te d by P rofessor of Music W alter Ducloux, will presen t th re e evenings of opera ex­ c e rp ts T hursday. F rid a y and Sunday. P e rfo rm a n c e s will be at 8 p m a t UTOPIA T h e a tre , in the E ducation Annex Building at 20th S tre e t and San Ja c in to B oulevard. Adm ission is free. On T hursday, th e p ro g ram will include e x cerp ts from (from Act I), B ritte n ’s “ A M idsum m er N ight’s D re a m ” Ponchielli’s "L a G ioconda” (Act IV), M ozart’s “ Idom eneo” (Act III, scene I) and M o zart’s "T he M arriag e of F ig a ro ” (Act IV). ON FRIDAY, e x c e rp ts will be p resen ted from D onizetti’s “ E lixir of Love” (fro m Act I), M ozart’s “ Don G iovanni” (from Act I), “ Idom eneo” and “ La G ioconda.” The pro g ram Sunday will include e x c e rp ts from “ A Mid­ su m m e r N ight’s D re a m ,’’ “ Don G iovanni,” “ E lix ir of Love” and “ The M arriage of F ig a ro .’’ Some roles will be a lte rn a te d . 'Porgy and Bess’ at Center Stage C enter Stage in conjunction with the Houston G rand O pera A ssociation, Inc., will p re se n t m e m b e rs of the 1976 Tony and 1977 G ram m y A w ard-w inning p r o d u c t i o n o f G e o r g e G e r s h w i n ’s “ P o r g y a n d B e ss,” tw o n ig h ts only. P e r f o r m a n c e s will be given a t 8 p.m . F rid a y and Saturday a t C en ter S tage T heatre. in c o n c e rt fo r T h e c a s t wi l l i n c l u d e T h o m a s C a r e y ( P o r g y ) , Naomi Moody (B ess), B etty H a r r i s ( C l a r a ) , S h i r l e y Baines (S erena), C arol B rice ( Mari a) , G eorge R o b ert Mer- vitt (Crown) and G lover P a r- (S p o rtin ’ L ife). Julian nam R eed, a fo rm e r D allas Civic S y m p h o n y m e m b e r , will p ro v id e p i a n o a c c o m p a n i­ m ent. S elections from G ershw in’s m u s i c a l i n c l u d e s c o r e “ S u m m e rtim e ,” “ My M an’s G one N ow ,” “ I Got P lenty O’ N othin,” “ It Ain’t N ecessari­ ly So” and “ I L oves You P o r g y ,” a s w ell a s o th e r fa m ilia r tunes. T ickets for this benefit a re $15, $25 p er couple, and are av ailab le a t the C en ter Stage box office, 320 E. Sixth St. T ickets m ust be purchased in advance. ‘Fire’ added The Austin group St. E lm o ’s F ire has been added to the p ro g ram for the “ C atch a R is­ ing S ta r ” series a t 8:30 p.m . F riday in Symphony Square. Les T re s Bons, a c la ssic a l group, was a lre a d y on the program . Les T re s Bons will s ta r t th e th e p r o g r a m of m u s ic a t scheduled tim e. St. E lm o ’s F ire will perform from 9:30 p.m . to m idnight w ith a total th re e or of two sets. Selections will in­ clude four pieces from th e ir two rock ballets “ R a sp u tin ” and “ C aliban,” as well a s som e of th e ir m ore co n tem p o rary m usic. Sym phony Square is a t Red R iver and lith s tre e ts. There will be a full moon F riday night to add to the enjoym ent of the m usic. T ick ets have been repriced a t $3 THETEXAS TAVERN Depressed About Finals? COME CRY IN OUR BEER! Disco Sound by Professionals • High quality equipment • Some of Austin’s finest D.J.’s • Music to suit your taste You’ve wanted a high quality system, now it’s available H. Hunt Armistead 471-1774 Gordon Bodner 472-5268 P.O. Box 7071 Austin, Texas 78712 A lonely vigil at Barton Springs pool on a summer day. By Nuri Vallbona, Daily Texan Staff Loneliness: a common problem The Village Voice. T his is her first book W O V E N A R O U N D t h e a u th o r 's own e x p e rie n c e s , in co rporates “ B itte rsw e e t” m a n y p e r s o n a l s t o r i e s to c re a te a book th at is not a t all the how -to p re a c h y o r of genre. R ath er, in its s tru c ­ turing of c h a p te rs by d egrees and types of loneliness, it en co urages the re a d e r to think and co n trib u te to the book’s basic prem ises. “ But m ainly, inevitably, it is a personal book, and my ty p e w rite r se rv e s as a so rt of co arse sieve betw een w hat people tell m e and w hat I tell you,” Schultz say s in the first title d “ P e r s o n a l c h a p te r , N o tes.” Schultz covers the fa c e ts of lo n e lin e ss th ro u g h a ll a g e groups and grow th cycles. In h e r honest recounting of h er own fe a rs and failu res — how she overcam e them in som e c a s e s a n d how s h e s t i l l stru g g les with them on occas- sion — she in te rje c ts a note of hope into a book th a t could easily have becom e bogged down in dism al rhetoric. “ B itte rsw e e t” is in te rsp e rs­ ed with quotes and sto ries from Schultz’ friends, som e nam ed, som e anonym ous, and f r o m p s y c h o l o g i s t s a n d th e ra p ists, as if to m ake the point th a t no one is im m une fro m lo n e lin e s s . “ I o n c e w ondered who am ong us is lonely Now it seem s th a t the an sw e r is: we all a re a t som e tim e People who say they a re never lonely a re sim ply not in touch w ith th e ir feelings, or unw illing to give in to th e m ,” Schultz says. S C H U L T Z to s e l f a n d u s e s “ B itte rsw e e t,” a s a tr a m ­ p o lin e o ff of w h ic h sh e bounces her ideas of love and sex, seen from a stric tly p e r­ sonal and fem ale p erspective. T hese basic ideas a re then ex­ plored for th e ir m eaning in r e l a t i o n to loneliness. She also d iffe re n ­ tia te s betw een aloneness and loneliness: “ You feel co m fo r­ tab le when you a re sim ply alone. You choose to be alone. When you a re isolated from o th er people and still feel whole, when you feel a t ease with yourself, c e n te re d , then you a re sim ply a lo n e .” On the o t h e r h a n d , s h e s a y s , “ (loneliness) includes a feel­ ing of discontent and re je c ­ tion. “ It is a se n se of being helpless, trap p ed in a physical or em otional lim bo It com es when you feel th re a te n e d by being alone, when you feel som ething is m issing. It is a d e sire for som ething outside yourself: you believe an o th er p e rso n , a n o th e r p la c e can m ake you feel h ap p ier than you feel now .” Schultz has tackled an a m ­ bitious and, by its very n atu re, an often unm entioned topic. through h e r p e rso n a l B ut ta le n t for observations and in fo rm a tio n and g a th e rin g presenting logical se­ it quences, she has c re a te d a m oving and relev an t book. in nSoap Creek Saloon COMING FRI. & SAT. LONE STAR RECORDING ARTIST STEVE FROMHOLZ 7 0 7 Bee Caves Rd. A_____ 3 2 7 -9 0 1 6 —>tA_ " B i t t e r s we e t , S u r v i v i ng a n d G r o w i n g f r o m L o n e l i n e s s , ” b y T e r r i S c h u l t z ; p u b l i s h e d by Pengui n Books; $2.50. By Anne Telford Daily Texan Staff is Heading “ B itte rsw e e t” like carry in g on an in terio r monologue, dredging up your fears and loneliness and p u t­ ting them in w ords — a gift of yourself, precious and painful and so necessary for survival. T e r r i S c h u ltz 's work on social and sexual tre n d s has previously a p p eared in such d i s p a r a te p u b lic a tio n s a s H a rp e r’s, Penthouse, Viva, Cosm opolitan, Redbook and The old disco, too C L E V E L A N D tapped and ( U P I ) - fingertips av e ra g e age is 78, p a rtic ip a te in the p rogram Toes snapped. if th a t It was proof the s p irit’s willing, th e body w on’t h e sita te to follow — even for the elderly living a t a nursing hom e on C le v e la n d ’s W est Side. A s p a r t of a p h y s ic a l th erap y and nursing d e p a rt­ m en t ex e rc ise p ro g ra m a t St. A ugustine M anor, people who had been unresponsive now a r e re a c tin g to th e disco beat daily. “ The response to the m usic w as im m e d ia te ,” said Helen P au p er, d ire c to r of nursing, who notes th a t even those con­ fin e d to w h e e lc h a ir s a r e cau g h t up in th e “ S aturday N ight F e v e r” atm o sp h e re . About 50 residents, whose AND WORK schedules of s ta ff m e m b e rs h av e been arra n g e d so m ost of them can be w ith the resid en ts during t h e h a l f - h o u r m o r n i n g sessions. Licensed P ra c tic a l N urse Donna M iller said 86-year-old B ernadette Kinley could h a rd ­ ly stand up when the program began two m onths ago. “ Now she is one of the best d a n c e rs h e re ,” M rs. M iller said of Mrs. Kinley. who a d ­ m itted to being at le a st 16 and said: “ I like the m usic very m u c h .” TH E MANOR’S executive d ire c to r, F re d K rizm an, said m any nursing hom es usually “ offer tra d itio n a l ac tiv itie s such a s potholder m a k in g .” too m any tonite RICK STEIN Longest H a p p y Hour in Town Double Shots - 2 for I 11 a m -8 pm N ever a Cover Charge Now in our now building in Rivortowno Mall f r i g h t b e h i n d th e O ld Back Room) Hot Road Show, IO p.m . Thursday, August 17 Ernestine Michael Andrews Kitty Litter AUSTIN'S TOP DISCO 705 REDRIVER 472-04 IS Thursday Night Special Sirloin Steak Night ALL YOU CAN EAT! 5-10 PM * 4 5 0 Served With Salad Bar, French Fries, & Hot Bread N ow Serving Cocktails! T H E B R A N D I N G I R O N 6 VS M ile s Pas* O a k H ill on H w y . 71 W e s t 2 6 3 - 2 8 2 7 V t " 1 ■ THE POSSE Barbecue Specials All Week Long /Mon. — Free Side Order of Beans or Potato Salad w /a n y Sandwich Tues. — Beef Plates Wed. — Sausage Plates ................... $ 1 . 4 9 Thurs. — Smoked Ham Plates . ..............$ 1 . 7 9 Fri. — M ixed Plates ....... ...................$ 2 . 1 9 ..................$ 1 . 7 9 Happy Hour 12-7 Daily 24th & Rio Grande T hursday, August 17, 1978 □ THE DAILY TE X A N □ Page 13 3 m il** West of Mopac on FM 2222 Jo»OMO<^ .LAMO a ^ M A R IN A A PRESENTS WED & THURS > V 1 345-2187 THCCOBRAS j Ken Russell v Double T H * M V & C Feature U 9 V & & ___________________ VARSITY 2402 QUADALUPE • 474-4351 Last Day! [Women: 6 :0 0; 1 0 :10 Music: 8 :2 0i P G is l»ere! 4 5 4 5147 e»0Mt MC R055 VA 4501 USON 1451 5 RUHM T HO •UHiWlillililiJiimiliEfc HSra&BE&r JST ill WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS' r P R E S ID IO T H E A T R E S ^ WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS' itw> B u a t iro n . Cuter Space „ 12:20-2 45 5:10 7 35 9 55 J AUDIENCES dust HK WITH stAL* toreiot rio t' Kl raj :> / R l* * tE D \ G I Z M O . l f 12:30-2:05-3 40 5:15 6:50-8:25 10.00 WALT DISNEY productions MEWIS © 1:00 3:15 5:30 7 45-10:00 VILLAGE A 2700 ANDERSON • 451-8352 12:15-2:40 5:05-7:30 9:55 IATI IM ONEAL CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER In te rn a tio n a l v e lv e t m (tie Sflet frow Cuter Space 12:20-2:45 5:10 7:35-9:55 WALT DISNEY productions © © C D Q fl) 0 3 ® 19-’R Wan Chewy Pioduet* 12:15 2:40 5:05-7:30 9:55 LAKEHILLS 2428 BEN WHITE *444-0552 ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ Tonight at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. J * * Texas Union Theater $1.25 with UT ID - WILLIAM HOL DCM LEE GHANI e k m ie n omen i i . K ? **» oS,.v6rst tim e was rNilv a w a rn in g . - ■ £ * 7 ' 1:10 3:20 5:30 7:40 9:50 S T E R E O RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5689 12:20 2:40- 5:007:20 9:40 T I&HMSI8 M MM rn .......... I mmm REDUCED PRICES UNTIL 6:00 MON. THRU FRI. ADULTS $275 CHILDREN $1 50 STUDENTS WITH AMO CARD $2 25 INDICATES TWI LITE SNOW TICKETS ON SALE IO MINUTES PINON TO T U T HE R E V E N G E OF THE PINK P A N T H E R 12 45 I 45 3 00 4 00-5 15 (TLS6 IS I 7 30 8 30 9 45 IO 45 JAWS 2 1 2 :3 0 - 1 : 4 5 3 :0 0 4 : 1 5 - (T L S 5 :30 ) 6 :4 5 8 OO 9 : 1 5 - 1 0 . 1 5 P G UP IN SMOKE S T I R W A R S ( T L s V w 8 ° 3 0 - 1 0 : 3 o | 12 1S J, ^ < TLS| 5 °°> 7 30 9 5b______ I P U B REDUCED ADULT ft STUDER! MUCK FDD TIS TKKETS UMtTED TD S U H M STARTS TOMORROW 2 -4 -6 -8-10 2 m a mVOO PtlASAMt vault ROAD 444 -J??? The world w atched... IK. C amber hunt Leslie bovee ' I WI RANAVISION* X V ' A.*7cS|(I A BSCH Ute I V ,N‘ ’ j v . . - fytiiA?1 1 C*ffK° >H[ -Ata*' STARTS TOMORROW! CiNEJYLA "WesT 2130 S Congress • Open 11 a m • 442-571* H A UNIVERSAL AMUSEMENT A D U L T T H E A TR E S The F in est In Adull M o tio n P icture E n tertain m en t X H E G R E E K T \ C X 0 ) N An 4bHai I tltiis Pfiulur non • A Universal Release • let him nim * '' H, p re s e n ts TONIGHT O N LY Jean-Pierre M elville's SECOND BREATH (1966) In Burdine Aud. 7:00 ONLY Only $1.25 Vt m a n has u n iv o n e c h o ic e w h e n he is h o rn th e c h o ic e o f h is d e a t h ." - M e lv ille HELD OVER! LAST D A Y ! She w as so young, but she w as old enought to p la y "CARNAL GAMES" S tarrin g c j LAING Plus SHI UNBUTTONS THS CLOTHING Of HS* PAST AHO KSVSALSO smmiHG CONFESSIONS Starring CINDY JOHNSON JOHN LESLIE*Color \ — .......;— ......■ BBmm MJI I rn mm— y ' Q ^ - STARRING HIGH S O C IET Y 'S GLORIA LEONARD Plus "H IG H RISE" IQ S C o n g re s s • O p e n l l a rn • 4 42-5711 I Matinees Daily No One Under 18 Admitted Late Shows Friday & Saturday. Sundays Open Noon Ploase Bring I.D.’s Regardless Of Age ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S first Hollywood film; based on the novel by Daphne Du Maurier. REBECCA Laurence Olivier Joan Fontaine " I h e m e la n c h o ly o f a g o th ic n o v e l in 2 0 t h c e n t u r y s u rro u n d in g s . " Audio Brandon * A t a t 9 :0 0 * A a if ; JI In Burdine Aud. Only $1.5 25 g e n e r a l , c i n e m a t h e a t r e s I ALLCINEMAS-EVERY DAY TIL 1:30 P.M/-S1 SO | DISCOVER Q u ality Food & Service Reasonable Prices The a ll R c 3% m a t o Quality Italian Food 476-7202 1601 Guadalupe {Steamboat! I Springs § presents Thurs I CHRISTOPHER I | CROSS I | I I F r i - S a t MOTHER OF PEARL I ] I La Promenade Center § E711S Burnet Rd. 459 4318= ffllllllllllllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllir? BOX-OFFICE OPEN 8 0 0 "N A U G H T Y CHEERLEADER' — /* /u s — HIGH s c h o o l GIRL" Southside twin drive-in fit K IIN WHIT! HYO 444 2111 "THE BETSY" — Plus — "LAST SUMMER' showtown usa NWY til ft CAMMON RO Ut. ASHA "JASON & THE ARGONAUTS" - Plus "SINBAD EYE GER'' A BREATH OF SPRING!*' A WTM ( R ISI New Yof* P«*i p / :' ONE O I TH E MOST JOYOUS FILMS IN YEARS” Win (AM WOU Cue vtagw f.. Starring BHK,ITT* FOSSEY and JACQUES SF RRf S 5 4 5 -7 :4 5 9 :4 5 --------- ' ■ * * 1 r K M X M W Kl ITH ( AKKAI U VE. SI SAN SARANIX )N URI KAKE SHIELDS 6 OO 8 :0 0 1 0 :0 0 FEATURES: $1.50 til 6:00, $2.00 after MIDNIGHTERS: $1.50 X S, X ^ "D e lig h tfu l French rom antic com ed y." "BLUE C O U N T R Y " — Joe Gelmis, N e w sd ay ye*, vt CcasJ- +Lc*A .I l\* u F ¥ < ’ MYRA (RECK! NKI IX .I MIDNIGHTER i It was the Deltas against the rules the rules lost! ^ F A N T A S T IC P L A N E T MIDNIGHTER 1:30-3:30-5:30 7:40-9:50 FEATURE TIMES 1^15-3:15-5:30 7:45 AND 9:55 JO IN IN THE FUN A new comedy thriller from khe creators of "Slyer Steak? I Goldie Haujn Chevy Chase SOUTHWOOD ll? 44171)1 Ml) w Me etriTf $2.00 T il 6 T O D A Y (PG) BURT REYNOLDS SALLY FIELDS FEATURES -1.90 -2:50- .4 40 6 3 0 -t:20 -10:10- 52 OO til 6 TODAY FEATURES .1 2 0 -3:30 MARK HAMILL ALIC GUINNESS _ -5:40 -7:50 .1 0 0 0 AQUARIUS-4 444)11) JJN HUSOM V4UIT IO P G SD R L M R S * $2.00 I I I 6 TODAY "A DAMNID GOOD MOVIE." NfW TIMES HI HAH! HHYDh . 1 2 0 - -3 30- c Ari 5 BLUE COLLAR« -looo- BIG DOUBLE FEATURE 1 :0 0 -5 :0 0 -9 :0 0 'JA S O N AND THE A R G O N A U T S "^ ) "SINBAD & THE EYE OF THE TIGER" ?:SS-6:SS (G) a JMBA!* TURE Wit SENISE ION PL TEWS PRGCX* N • AN SVN KUEHNER TI M FAYE DUNAWAY TOMMY LEE XWES ‘ EYES OF LAURA MARS' Win. HR Ai»i X AHT • HE NI AUX Ut i f * ■ I? J -♦•lytvXDHNCAfJPINTrP *k)LYV\4D2E 4C. GA X OMAN• '-Ay U > HI. ■ AMTU' -MI x H t(AIX4 • A-vj. rite !*y j» * - LAURA/ISWN • *<• '•'itN *A4N XiTM-M ...ti r*7fT*-frort *1 /us al laurj Mi m' !*■< a * -f,; 1 XrtQ by BARBRA STT! 7.AM I • KAjs* r v A/^f x AM Hurly SotXXUKlI X Q u art* I by X IN PE URS I ' . - * * ' # » ) * • I X.! 4 * ! lins frtrnf!. jyb*- *•« ■■ - ' ' . • * ' farxlltv 's n r H - * mc % t ric tio ZZ .MHN* 11 M fytft I fciW'M1 R N o o n e a d m itte d o n c e the film begins P k l w n LAST DAY STARTS TOMORROW HIGHLAND M ALL I H 35 AT KOENIG LN. 451-7326 I ca„ ; NATIONAL L A M P M H s N A L I W I I t l A comedy from Universal Pictures THE MATTY SIMMONS IVAN REITMAN PRODUCTION NAHON AL LAM POON 5 ANIMAL HOUSf JOHN BELUSHI TIM MATHESON JOHN V I R N O N VERNA D L(X>M THOMAS H U K E cmd DONALD SUTH! R IA N O « . nnin.,. Produced b y MATEY SIMMONS o n d IVAN REHMAN Austc b y ELMER BERNSTEIN W rifien by HAROLD RAMIS DOUGLAS KENNEY O CHRIS MILLE R iona ANIMAL MC XJM Comptjw^j and lYfttxrTKNj tiy SU Pill N 06MOP * m u m m u m b I** ■ * r ~ : •• . * I - Mc* S b l ^ n f .............................................~J I Ik x J - I • A' "M * N pw W MM+. ■ - .. 1 - k H #iK. l f ' J I I— ' f m R i RESTRICTED •ct© *“ Ja2* VILLAGE 4 2700 ANDERSON • 451-8352 STARTS TOM ORROW ! AT BOTH LAKEHILLS 2428 BEN WHITE * 444-0552 Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Thursday, August 17, 1978 FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES TYPING 59 VW V A N , ra re double doors, 1600cc, 12 volt^$795 385-0741 C H E A P ! C O U C H $20; 2 chairs $5 aal 452- 3480 For Sale-G araae EL CHAPARRAL F A L L L E A S IN G IBR - 170 407 W. 38th 451-1353 2 blocks t o shuttle F A L L L E A S IN G , w a lk U T, spacious lb r, excellent storage, sw im m ing pool, laun­ dry, $205 476-7614, 459-0156. lb r, SPA N ISH OAKS - 45th 8. D uval, C A /C H , pool, cable, on shuttle, $175 plus E, 458 5558 2 B R S T U D IO $249 on shuttle, p riv a te patio and balconies, frost free refrig era to r, beautiful pool shag carpet, CA CH, all built-in kitchen, w ater-cable paid. 2124 Burton D rive. 444- 7880, 451-6533 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T IE S INC. B U L L C R E E K area, sm all quiet com ­ plex Easy access to M o -P a c . Pool, laun­ lb r, d ry room, w a te r and cable paid, $180 2br, $225 454 7500 or Real W orld P roperty, 443-2212. G I A N T G A R A G E S A L E Sponsored by the Anderson High School Boosters Club, 8403 Mesa D r., dawn til dusk, Saturday. August 19th. Thousands of bargains a v a ila b le at the season's to school clothes, largest sale Back toys, sporting goods, books, bicycles, im provem ents, TVs, furniture, home appliances, and much, much more. Miscellaneous-For Solo N E LS O N S g i f t s ’ Established 1945 Indian Largest selection jew elry 4502 South Congress. 444-3814. Closed M ondays. reservation ___ SCUBA G E A R Tank, regulator, spear Sun, vest, belt, accessories $175 firm . (eve, 441-8372 evenings. T E X A S L O N G H O R N A rm a d illa Texas in s olid b ra ss . W r ite : Tex a s seal, Buckles, free illustration, Box 1395, N or­ man, OK 73070 TV 'S C H E A P . 459 3020. Rentals, sales, service. 19" C OLO R TVs, rem ote control. E x ­ cellent condition, buy one or 40. $125 each 3401 Guadalupe, 459-3020 SA IL B O A T, 15 "feet, Finn, SISO, tra i ler, extra sail 452-6221 M O V IN G F U R N IT U R E ’ sell low prices’ End tables, beds, desks, lamps, stereos, dressers, call a fter 5 pm, *54-9009^ MTSC FO R sale, stereo sys7em, upright piano, and fu rn itu re. Call a fter 5 30, 441- 4 0 5 4 . _______________________________ _ F I L E - C A B I N E T qu ickly I Rick, 472-4279 d e s k , m u s t s e ll M U S T S E L L 8- x 30' tra ile r in MS hous­ ing, AC, shed, deck, garden $1750 454- 6583 a fter 6 C O L D S P O T R E F R IG E R A T O R , good condition, dependable, $50 Call a fter 6 pm, 451 3578 __________ TW O P A R D swim tickets, good at any Austin pool 33 and 35 swims $9 90 and $10 50 H alf reg ular admission. No ex­ piration, 476-1403 Q U E E N S IZ E pastel yellow and green hidebed $60, Danish m odern round din­ large footstool $10. 478- ing table $40, 3976, 458 8274, Freda TA P E ST R Y , P E R U V IA N , handwoven 6' x 5'. $110 447-2451 G R A D S T U D E N T leaving state F rid a y must sell desk, modern design, w alnut grain, a ll wood construction, 5 draw ers ( I la rg e ), lock, keys, accessories, like new, cost $150, sell $110. Call 471-5181 anytim e, leave message G R E A T W A T E R ski 68" E P Comp-x2, used one sum m er back boot case ski *200,_hst $290, 476-5442 VW 600-15 tires, 2 Dunlops, like new, $18, 4 others $3 each. One 7.75-14 tire $3. Sears 800 washing machine, 3 cycles, everything works, $20 476-1403 SUNFISH L IK E sailboat w ith com plete $600, a m o u n t rig g in g and negotiable C all 474-5614 t r a i le r je w e lr y , W e b u y je w e lr y , e s ta te diamonds, and old gold Highest cash prices paid. C A P IT O L D IA M O N D SHOP 4018 N L a m ar W A L K TO CAMPUS fu rn itu re, new appliances, new New carpet, C A /C H 4-lbr's, $185, water, gas, AC paid 10-lbr's, $185, w ater and gas paid g arage a p t , $145, w ater paid 2806 H E M P H I L L 4 7 2 -0 6 4 9 I br-S165 plus E 2711 & 2721 H E M P H I L L 477-0066 ED P A D G E T T CO. 454-4621 VILLA SOLANO APTS. N o w S ig n in g Fall Leases • I BR FURN $200 • Pretty Courtyard • Shuttle Corner • Intramural Field Across Street • Water & Gas Paid 5 1 s t & G u a d a lu p e 4 5 1 -5 8 6 5 ' SUNNYVALE APTS. Fall Leasing N o w ! 2 BR FURN *245 • Water, Gas, TV Cable. Paid By Owner • Small Friendly Complex • Shuttle Bus 1304 Summit 441-3086 MARK V APTS. - S ig n in g Fall Leases - I BR FURN $200 • Water, Gas, TV Cable Paid by Owner. • Shuttle Bus • Small Friendly Complex 3 9 1 4 A v e . D 4 5 2 - 8 5 3 7 LA PAZ A DTC A r l b . - S ig n in g Fa ll Leases - I BR FURN $195 • Water & Gas Paid • Shuttle Bus • Quiet Complex 4 0 1 W . 3 9 4 5 2 - 5 4 9 1 EL CID APTS. Fall Leasing N o w ! I BR FURN. $190 • Shuttle Front Door • Water, Gas & TV Cable Paid • Small Friendly Complex 3 7 0 4 S p e e d w a y 4 7 2 - 4 8 9 3 ‘ 160 THE ESTABLISHMENT • Large Furn. Efficiency • Small Friendly Complex 4400 Ave. B 451-4584 FURNISHED APARTMENTS - S ig n in g Fall Leases - Village 2101 Burton Dr. 447-4130 I BR, 2 BR, 3 BR Prices subject to c h a n g e • 3 swimming pools 2 lighted tennis courts • Shuttle bus stop Plenty of parking Exercise rooms • His & hers saunas Furnished & unfurnished • Putting green Professional management E O IIort C L A S S IF IE D A D V E R T IS IN G R A T E S 15 word m inim u m S 13 Each word one tim e .. S 30 Each word 3 tim e s ........ $ 37 Each word 5 tim e s ........ S 61 Each word IO tim es S 90 Student rate each tim e $4 18 I col x I inch one tim e $3 96 I col. x I inch 2-9 tim es I col x I inch ten or more tim e s $3 75 DEADLINE SCHEDULE 2 OO p m M onday Texan Friday l l OO a m Tuatday Texan M onday l l OO a rn W ednatday Texan Tuatday Thursday Taxon W ednesday 11 OO a rn. 11 OO a .rn Friday Texan Thursday i n (ha avant of a rra u m ad# in an advertisem ent im m edia te notice m u tt ba given a t tha p u b lith a rt ara ra tp a n tib la far anly ONE incorrect in ta rtia n All claim s far thould ba m ada net later a d |u ttm a n tt than 30 days after p u b lic a tio n ." S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y /S T A P F R A T E S J 90 15 word m in im u m , each day E ach additional word each days Ob I col x l inch each d a y $3.07 "U nclassifieds" I line 3 days SI OO (P rep aid , No Refunds) Students, facu lty and staff m ust pre­ sent a current I D and pay in a d ­ in TSP Bldg 3 200 (25th 8. vance W hitis) from 8 a m. to 4 30 p.m. M onday through F rid a y . R SALE I, m inor body '70 M U S T A N G M A C H dam age, loaded; '71 M a v e ric k , AC, low m ileage, $950 each, 471-5648 77 T O Y O T A C O R O N A 4hdr 5-sp. A M - F M , AC, 18,000 m i. See to appreciate, below book $4295,385-0741 '70 SAAB 99, carbu retor model, 4sp, A M /F M cassette, AC, Sem perit radials, __________ $1495 385-0741 TOTf O R D E C O N O L IN E van, windows, looks and runs great. standard, 6 cyl $995 385-0741 75 HONDA CVCC new tire’s, looks and runs great, $1995 385-0741. '75 black M onte Carlo, M U S T S E L L , perfect condition, tires, shocks, w a rra n ­ t e d , A M / F M , c a s s e tte , 441-1244, message at 453-4285. ' 77 VO LK SWAG E N B E E T L E , excellent con dition, good tire s , new stan dard transm ission, body like new, $1350, 476- 5059. 1976 T O Y O T A C O R O LLA AC, A M -F M , 33,000 m iles, good condition, $2,750. C all leave message, or Yves, day 471-3211, 471-5104, evenings 345-8168 '74 R A T 128 Sport, AC, A M -F M , must s e ll $1800, 476 8075 M U S T SE L L '69 Chev el Ie V~8 w ith 4 sp H urst engine and body in g re at condi­ tion $650 477-5035 a t t e r y pm VW 1973 Super Beetle, A M F M , a ir, good shape, runs w ell Phone 472-5216. 1976 F IA T 1 3 1 -4 drs78500 m i,Tike brand fa cto ry w a rra n ty , autom atic, AC, new A M /F M , 476-6424, 451-2390 1975 V IS T A C R U IS E R wagon, absolutely must sell, excellent condition, great fa m ily c ar, loaded, $2900 459-5009 a fter 5.___________________________ __________ 1972 T O Y O T A CORONA, $1000, 56,000 m iles 255-7389 M U S T S E L L '73 P lym outh F u ry I I I , PB, PS, AC, F M tape, nice Keep trying, 459- 9345 _ ________ C L E A N M C B G T E xcellent condition, $1795 453-8166_ _____ 1969 R A M B L E R 58.000 miles, great for around town $300 M ik e , 442-5622 nights M U S T SELL before Aug 28. '71 Toyota Corona wagon, AC, A T , A M -F M , $1425or best offer, 443-5814, keep calling 76 B M W 2002 m e ta llic blue, A M /F M , AC, m in t condition, $6500 or best offer 475-7093, S e d r i c _ ____ '74 C A P R I 4 speed w ith sunroof, $1500 Call 838 7298, a fte r 6 and weekends 327- 4652 _______ '*» V A L IA N T , 1114 r u n t f l a t . 385 8956 M U S T S E L L 1972’ Pinto Runabout, AC. standard, excellen t condition, beautiful red^ $1025, negotiable 471-7362 1964 F O R D F A IR L A N E , SW, excellent leaving running condition, m ust sell, tom orrow , reduced to $200 474-2802 Motorcyde-For Sal* '75 Y A M A H A R D 125, excellent running condition, like new, 2600 m iles, perfect for student, $360, 474 5405 a fte r 8 30 pm 1973 Y AMAHA TX 750. AiT whit’eTm’any extras E xcellent condition, sacrifice, $800 or best offer 459-6328 1971 H O N D A CB 350, 15,000 m iles, fine shape, $400 or best offer 476-5855 Bicycle--For Sal* FO R SA LE m an's 10-speed, Peugeot bicycle, in excellent condition and with m an y accessories. $150 477-5750. _____ _______ Stereo-For Sal*_______ E N J O Y B IG quad sound, qu alify four channel equipm ent for sale. C all To m m y at 453 5094 P IO N E E R SX 626 receiver, 25 watts, $125 Sherwood 6800 A receiver, 65 watts, $160 E lectro-voice speakers, $120. 451- 6086 D U A L 1212 turntable $25, Kenwood 2500 am p $30, 2 Ambassador speakers $30. 385-8956 O N E P A IR A ltec-Lansing Voice of the Th eater PA speakers. Concert sound $700 459-0695 6 pm Musical-For Sale G E M E IN H A R D T M2S silver flute, $300, tood pads, etc 608'a E lm w o o d , by astwoods P a rk ___ A L T O SAX C H E A P , Rick, 472-4279 G O E T Z E B AB Y grand piano, 20s vin­ tage, good condition, $750 444 9576 m o r­ nings or evenings ________ P«t»-For S a l * _______ F R E E ! FO R adoption to good home on­ ly. Tw o 3-year old long-haired cats Blue f e m a le Both R u s sia n m a le c a lic o neutered 452-3480 Home«-For S al* T R A V E L T R A IL E R for sale! 2bdrm , in ­ I b a , w indo w AC, s em i-fu rn is h e d cluding desk, plenty shelf space, UT ideal for T ra ile r P a rk , close shuttle, coup le/sing le 476-5672 T R E M E N D O U S B U Y ! 20 x 33 ente rta in in g -m u sic room . Close schools, tennis, sw im m ing nearby 454-4721 U T ext 72, 926 0104 H IS T O R IC A L L Y RESTO RED V IC T O R IA N 2 story classic home built in 1894 3br, rem o d ele d kitchen 2ba M a k e this H yd e P a rk hom e a ll the d re am house you could ever want. Call qu ic kly! c o m p le te ly 454 6633 JO HN B SAN FO RD R E A L T O R S 458 9000 Reel Eitate-For Ski I* _____ E A N S D E L I G H T * - s p a c io u s 3-3, r iv a te c u l de sac, 2 la s, fire p la c e s, wet la rg e covered patio w ith te rra c e, ar, a lk in g d is ta n c e U T . C a ll C a p ita l ational Bank T ru s t D ep t., 476-6611, ext. Mc____________ ________ \A K E Y O U R y e a r s a t U T d o u b ly in an O ra n g e Tree rofitable ondom inium L a rg e e fficiency, secure a rk mg, patio $35,000 C a ll o w n e r- gent, 282-0587 a fte r 6 pm Invest Kingsgate Our a partm en t homes can be your castle, they speak for t h e m s e l v e s . O u r e n d l e s s in clu de: s o c ia l a c t i v i t i e s r a c q u e t b a l l a n d h a n d b a l l courts, pool parties, softball and football team s , cookouts, trips and more. Come see for yourself. The unique a p a rt - ment community ... We care. 2005 WILLOW CREEK 44 1-5 465 LEASING OFFICE A MODELS OPEN 7 DAYS I V A U S T IN T A T IO U S A P A R T M E N T L O C A T IN G Free service, run by students fo r students. Free room m ate m a t c h i n g s e r v i c e . C a l l D'Anne at 458-4049 or 458-4352. F A L L LEASIN G LAR G E E F F . N E A R U T A N D C IT Y BUS RT HANCOCK III 4100Ave A \p t .106 , 452-6071 , A BP Eft., IB R F ro m $160 5 blks. from Campus Now leasing for sum m er and fall 2408 Leon 476-3467 IBR 190 W alk to Campus fu rn itu re and drapes, Beautiful new full carpet, built-in kitchen, C H /C A , pool, each apt. has its own balcony or patio, water, gas, cable paid 3301 Red R iver 474-8530, 451-6533 C entral P roperties A V A IL A B L E SEPT" I, shuttle U T, F L w ater-gas-cable-disposal paid $149. 700 Hearn, 476 0953. • • • • • • f * * * * * * * * * * « Free Service Parking Transportation HABITAT HUNTERS f r e e a p t lo c a t o r s e r v ic e A s p e c ie h iin g in c o m p le x e s w it h a c c e s s to s h u ttle Preleasing For Summer A Fall C o b i a M a l l SU,la SA . m a . rn S M 474-1532 e e e e e e e * * * * * * * * * * * ' V.I.P. APTS. W alk to U.T. or Shuttle a t door. T w o or Three BR-Two Bath, Large Studio. Design­ ed for Three or Four M a tu re Students. N e w furnishings luxury com plex. Q uiet, in ele g a n t, secure atm osphere w ith pool. Free C a ble-G as & W a te r Paid. Corner of 33rd & Speedway 476-0363 Los Brazos Apt. 7500 N. L a m a r laundry W alk-in closets, cable, pool, facilities, furn and unfurn. no children, no pets 451-4605 ABP E F F . C A/C H , shuttle or w alk UT, S149. 2215 Leon 477-8511 or 474-7732 W AN T SO M ETH IN G D IF F E R E N T & W ITH STYLE Balconies, windows trees, lb d rm , $199 8. E 8. up S K A N S E N A PTS., 4205 Speedway M E S Q U IT E T R E E A PTS , 2410 Longview 451-6672 F A L L JE R R IC K APTS. W alk or shuttle to UT E ft./lb d r m fro m $155 104 E 32nd, m anager No 103, 476-5940 4105 Speedway, m anager No. 203, 458- 4037 M A U N A KAI 405 E. 31st W alk to campus, shuttle and c ity bus. E fficie ncy, $169.50 plus E. 2br, 2ba E fficie n cy, $250 plus E. No pets. 472-2147 MANOR OAKS 2BR e xtra large 2503 M anor C ircle $195 m anager Apt. B-14 928-0526 PARKSIDE APT. 4209 B U R N E T RO. turn or unfurn Large, w e ll­ lb r apt jogging kept Tennis, swim m ing, and in R am sey P a rk across the street P refe r serious students only. No pets - children 452-2622 454-8450 H-35 at 32nd Eft. lb r >160 ‘ 185 ‘ 245 2br 2ba X .* * J & up pool 4 7 2 - 7 6 0 4 CIRCLE VILLA APTS. I BR $175 • Water & Gas, TV Cable Paid By Owner • Shuttle Bus 2323 Town Lake Circle 444-5003 CAMINO REAL APTS. 2810 Salado 4 7 2 -3 8 1 6 4 blocks from campus N o w loosing tor tall IB R UNFURN. $195 & E. 1 BR FURN. $210 & E. 2 BR UNFURN. $250 & E. 2 BR FURN. $270 & E. We pay gas, w ater A t.v. cable, gas stove, oven A w ater heating system, pool w ith w aterfall, clubroom, lighted courtyard w ith SBO pits. HYDE PARK APTS. - Fa ll Leasing N o w ! • Large Furn Efficiency $160 • Large Furn I BR $175 • Shuttle Bus Front door • Park & Tennis Courts Adjoin Complex 4413 Speedway 45 8-2 0 9 6 L A R G E I A N D 2br, newly redecorated, C A /C H , $165-1195 plus electric and gas, shuttle-bus, shopping center, 1200 E. 52nd. M an a g e r Apt 102A 453-6239. C A S T LE A R M S T and 2 bedroom, s ta r­ ting $165. 3121 Speedway, 477-3210 IOO/ W 26th, lb r tu rn , $160 N E A R U T $190, discount tor tim e ly paym ent, 477- 2696 or 472-9147 S H U T T L E - E N F I E L D - M o P a c -L ake l l, S149, no pets, children Austin Blvd 700 H earn, 476-0953 G R E A T OAK APTS Across fro m law lu xu rious, 2-2. school. Q u iet, large, Laundry, sundeck, pool, cable Sum m er $225 plus E . School te rm lease, $325 plus lease, $300 plus E . 2900 E I y ea r Swisher, 477-3388 2 2, U T, $285 W ater, gas, cable, disposal paid, 304 E 33rd. Speedw ay/Du val 478- 6928,472-8648 _ _ A V A IL A B L E NOW 6 blocks to shuttle. Trees, balconies, patios, excellent 2br's, S250 plus E Oak Knoll, 620 S 1st, 444 1269._____ _______________ ____________ 502 W E S T 35TH St. Large lb d rm studio.’ full kitchen, walk-in closet, Casablanca ♦an in living room, $195 plus E . Also large eft tor $155 plus E, very nice. 452- 5967, 476-6330, 444 2750_ for fa il. L A R G E O N E bedroom apt W alk to cam pus, pool, $200 C all 476-9284, Jeannette N E A R C A M P U S . Plush e ffic ie n c ie s , cable, gas, w ater paid $145 400 W 34th, m anager 206, 459-6845, 678-6084. i-1 W E S T , convenience, shuttle, shop­ ping center, buses, no pets, children, 700 H e a r n $ l4 9 476-0953- FO R R E N T two adjoining efficiencies connecting kitchen and bathroom $99 month plus electric, free cable 2/10 m ile east I H-35 off M anor Road. C all F r a n ­ cisco, 471 2553, 441 8724 N E E D 2 P E R S O N S to share apt G reat view, pool, 3br, 2ba, need car. $140 A B P. 345 7253 in a ttra c tiv e old A T U T E fficiency building Quiet person w ill appreciate. AC Bills paid. $175 1902 Nueces 476 8683 476-3303 I, E F F IC IE N C Y A V A IL A B L E ’ Sept w ater, gas heating, cooking, paid by ow ner. $115 plus E, balcony, no children, no pets 451-5442. UNFURN. APARTMENTS STOP Do All These Ads D rive YOU BANANAS? A partm ents, Duplexes, Homes 24 H ours/7 Days All over Austin Real W orld Properties Cam pus 443 2212 North 345-6350 F re e Locating Service T R A V I S H O U S E A P T . 1600 R O YAL CREST I & 2br Choose fro m 4 floor plans. D i s h w a s h e r , g a r b a g e d i s p o s a l , carpeted, CA CH, pool, party room 1st stop on RC shuttle route P riced fro m S165-S240 for sum mer 442 9720 Q U IE T , S C E N IC , seclusion, on Lake large I and 2 bedroom apt. $225 Austin and $285 plus ele c tricity No children, no pets 1801 W estlake, 327-0479 2 ROOM E F F IC I E MCY, close to U T, SI OO mo w ater paid Contact Ron Bird, 3506 S New Braunfels, San Antonio, 78223, 534 2070 IB R duplex’ CA CH. $180 plus Q U IE T bills Only one occupant, no children, no pets, I block from shuttle C all Tom 8- 4 30 at 928 6000 ext 4139, a fter 5 472-8422 LOST & FOUND L O S T 8 M O N o ld f e m a le G o ld e n R etrie v e r " D a g m a r " was hit by car 8 13 78 at 32nd and King St and ran away 472 2746, leave message, or 702 W 32nd, R E W A R D LOST - S Y R IA N passport last week on or lf found please contact near cam pus Law rence - C astilian 1307 South, tel. 478- 9811 LOST T H R E E rings in Com m unication Building A, fifth floor bathroom . For rew a rd please call 459 1071 th r e e R O O M M A T E W A N T E D bedroom house in C restview area. 451- 0556 a fte r 7 pm. fo r F E M A L E LA W student m oving to San Antonio needs room m ate. C all P a tty, 471-5467.____________ ___________________ lb a A V A IL A B L E NOW , room a p a rtm e n t for friendly knowledged per­ son V ictor, 444-3690 in 2br, fe m a le grad R O O M M A T E n e ’ e D E D, student preferred, quiet, nice home $125 A B P 928-2475^475^5070 W A N T E D L IB E R A L student to share three bedroom house, $125 plus bills. C all M a rk at 453-0514. S T U D IO U S B U T fun fe m a le room m ate wanted to share 2 bedroom p a rtia lly fu r ­ nished apt CA CH, DW, covered patio and garden, on CR shuttle, call Lisa, 454- 8166, $120/mo. ____ F E M A L E IR O O M M A T E to share 3/2 for fa ll, 4 blks UT, $130 plus '/J E 474-2079, M ichelle, anytim e day or night. fe m a le s tu d e n t! Q U IE T , M A T U R E Share furnished house, N E , w ith sam e $125/mo. Va utilities. 452-3582 days. G R A D S T U D E N T seeking maTure room ­ m ate P refe r house. 451-7776 (ho m e), 397-2314 (w o rk ) a fte r 7 pm, Steve. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed, big 2br duplex N orth. $100 plus Vt bills. 837-6731 evenings D R E A M G IR L S like to trav e l? A ll ex­ to m e e t y a ! p enses p a id A c h in g G eographically easy! Call George 512- 722-2234, a fter 7 pm to share W O M A N W O R K E R /G R A D spacious older house on park. W alk U T, $175 plus Va bills 477-8528 a fter 6. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D now for 2br apt. to cam pus, $87 50 plus Va E . W a lk liberal, no disco Responsible, clean, fre aks, 478-4299, 471-4568, Ed. R O O M M A T E FO R e x tra b e d ro o m , $100 plus U niversity area, D avid, 258 2847. la rg e one 'a e le c tr ic it y . Q U IE T M A L E m in u te s A nytim e, 474-8596 or 476-7396. fo r fr o m c a m p u s tw o b edroo m 5 $90 A B P . E X - S T U D E N T I S T a 1FT n e e ds housemate M /F , $147.50 A B P , un fur­ nished, pets ok, 4 7 2 - 8 4 8 3 . ________ F E M A L E TO share 2-2 apartm ent. Close to cam pus. L aura, 474-7696 H Y D E P A R K : A rt teac h e r/m u s ic lover needs liberal, responsible fem ale room ­ m ate, 24-30 P riv a te entrance, fenced - dog w e lc o m e , no c ig a r e tte y a r d smokers A vailable Aug 20th, $168 A BP, $30 deposit. 452-7972. M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to locate for fa ll. Responsible, neat, 2bdrm apt considerate P re fe r gay student, no ferns please Joe 441-0126 L A R G E 2br furnished R O O M M A T E house, H yde P a rk , $125 A B P , prefer non­ c igarette smoking veg etarian, 472-9871. Q U IE T F E M A L E to share 3 bedroom on NR (own room ), $107 plus ele c tricity. 443-6829 a fter 5 pm F E M A L E S H A R E 2bdrm m obile home $100 a ll bills paid Call 443-6127. li b e r a l G O O D L I V I N G s p a c e housemate, $79 mo. plus '/a bills. Close to shuttle 451-3559 a fter 5. fo r F A L L - M A L E room m ate wanted to share two bedroom, split level, furnished a p a rtm e n t w ith fireplace. M inutes from campus, any tim e of day, No gays. Call a fter 4 OO pm 926-2942. G R E A T D E A L s h a re 3 b r h o m e , appliances, dishwasher, washer, d ry er, shuttle, $125, share utilities, 459-9345. F E MIALE R O O M M A T E ’ needed ta li’ '78 Own bed/bath SI 10/mo. Va bills, shuttle, prefer non-smoker. C all C arrie, 512-379- 4044 M A L E R O O M M A T E needed share two br apt. near shuttle Alan 452-0381 ext. 418. f e m a l e H O U S E M A T E consid erate liberal person to share 2bdrm house $75 plus Vt bills. 451-6608, keep trying F E M A L E ’’ n o n s m o k e r to share 3b- d rm house 4 blocks north of campus. 478- 5377. F E M A L E ’ SH A R E 2b’r 2ba $132.50 plus E. N eat, non-smoker, Riverside, Call Cart, 443 6345 ___ F E M A L E TO platonically share fu r­ nished 2bdrm , 2ba, Riverside, shuttle, SUO. Vt elect., w rite Todd White, 1201 M cB rid e, Corpus Christi, Texas, 78407 1- 883 4197 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D , nonsm oker, m ale or fem ale, 24-30 years, $86/mo. 3 bdrm house E rnie, 474-5095, keep tr y ­ ing. M A L E N O N -S M O K E R to share nice 2br duplex near shuttle Neat, responsible, gay preferred 441-4231 a fte r 7 pm. P R E F E R C O U P L E to share rent houses on C um berland. 441-4797 very late or e a rly Keep trying. ROOMMATE^ W A N T E D three bedroom house near northeast side, older non­ smoker preferred $65, Vs bills. 476-7150. F E M A L E W A N T E D to share 2 br house north near shuttle, $115 plus