T wp Oa il y T e x a n ■ / 9 v8 f '■ y o ^ «JJ, i .1 ' ' : e -111). . . a- ■ n o d t? I v -p—t—p_. Vol. 86, No. 48 UT community prefers White at polls student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Thursday, November 6, 1986 25c Nine student-heavy Travis County precincts report solid support for Democrat governor By JOHN BRIDGES Daily Texan Staff U n iv e rs ity students u n like the preferred m a jo rity o f le v in s ousted D em ocratic ( ,ov M ark W hite to G ov -elect Bill ( lernents in I uesdav s general ele. tion N in e I ravis C ounty precincts that traditional!;, contain large num bers of L I students voted so lid lv for W bite figures show V \hite, w in received in percent ot the vote statew ide, got 63 8 pore ent in the nine precincts Republican Bill ( leiru nts, w ho was tlie t hoice bv 5-4 percent in the rest ot the state received Vo2 percent ot the L I stu­ dent vote. Denun rat Ri p ' Jake '' Pi. kle won 65.3 percent ot the stude nt vote to Ri public an ( arole Keeton R\ landt r's 4 4 7 percent lb . rest ot fhe I < 't ft Congressional D istrict agreed, and Pickle w on re-election w ith 73 percent. I be mu. precinc t vott apparently reversed any Republican trend that may have started in P 'M w hen President Reagan w on 53 percent. A Dem ocratic student p o litical leader said he expos ted W h ite and Fickle the stude nt vote, w h ile his Republican counterpart to carrv said she was shocked W hite beat C lem ents in stude nt precincts. I hat d e fin ite ly does surprise me, said Joetta Keene, chauw-om- an of Y oung C onservatives of Tex- as- I w o u ld have said d e fin ite ly C lem ents and mavbe R ylander I w o u ld n 't have bbnked an eve " !t * vvere p re dictin g, ‘ eene said sin' li.nl expected more Republican students to vote have always said that a m a jo rity o t S t u d e n t s w h o voted were Repub luán, I was w rong Mavbe the Republican stu ­ dents are more a p a t h e t i c But I -till sav t h a t most s tu d i n t s w o u ld h a v e v<>t ed te»r ( l e r n e n t s . " slio said T guess Keene said the Republican Party It.td hoped to register r\ (HX) voters on cam pus, but it tell tar short .-I that goal Robert M ikios, history ju n io r and \ we prt si dent ot the >oung ! >emo- crats, said his organization also w orked to get o u t the student vote We just beat the hell out ot them in getting out the student v o tt," he said I he Republicans were really asleep <>n cam pus " tw o all-studen t ^ re cin its , At tin the voters were a p p a re n t­ how ever ly the ones sleeping O nly 19 per- cent ot t h e registered voters i n Pre cinct 147 at Jester C enter West voted, and 23 percent in Precinct 148 at Jester ( enter Last voted. I th in k a lot of people w h o were enthused by Reagan in '84 d id not tu rn the off presidential .nit v ear,' M ik I.>s said in vote w ere I hose d o rm ito ry residents w h o d id s p lit b e tw e e n ( lernents and W hite W h ite w o n by one vote in Jester East and by 14 in (ester West. Pickle w on b oth pre- cinc ts bv 133 votes. Ih ro u g h o u t the nine precincts, 32 8 percent o f the registered voters w ent tn the pi tils More than 44 per- cent o f registered voters tu rn e d out statew ide ' In m y p r e . met, I was real im ­ pressed and proud w ith the num ber of stude nts w tío show ed u p ," said Keene, w h o was an election c l e r k .it Precinct 436 where* people voted She estim ated 2sh? ot those voters were students. I th o u g h t 2(X) stu d i nts was good " O f in o u r p re c in c t," she said. course we should have had 10 tim es that am ount w ith all of the fra te rn itie s and dorm s in o u r precinct ' s o ro ritie s and Keene said lark of a presidential election was just one reason fo r low student tu rn o u t Clements credits win to economy, turnout By BARBARA LINKIN Daily Texan Staff N ew ly elected B ill C le m e n ts said W ednesday the I exas econo­ m y was the m a­ jo r tactor in his o v e r v ic t o r y M a r k W hite — the opp o n e n t w h o beat ( lernents fo u r vears ago. _ G o v . "T h e people of I exas are te rrib ly concerned about o u r e co n o m y," C lem ents said. T h a t was the d iffe r­ ence It was a u n ify in g tactor that pulled e ve ryb o d y to g e th e r," W ith 99.8 percent o f the vote ta l­ lied W ednesday m ornin g. ( lernents had 1,K04 065 votes, or 32 7 percent, to W hite's 1,575,740 vote - or 46 percent At an A ustin press conference t lernents said he w o u ld not waste tim e w o rk in g on the state’s prob i e m s of high u n e m p lo ym e n t and low rev enues C lem ents said h e w ill appoint an econom ic t a s k torce of about 40-50 m em bers to make rec- om m endations on creating obs and d e veloping business. to "W e 're already starting talk about it tins m o rn in g ," C lem ents said We w ill chivóse a chairm an and announce that chairm an proba ­ bly to m m o rro w . W e 'll im m ediately get to w o rk ." But w h ile C lem ents was m aking the defeated plans for his fu tu re W h ite refused to sav w hat he w o u ld be d o in g in lanuarv 1 II probably, som ew here b. law and selling tw een practicing barbecue fin d som ething to d o ," W h itt said at a brief C apitol press contereni t W h ite said he d id not v\ant to set a prai tice' of try in g to regain four the g overnor's m ansion v ea rs in 1 *hink it's a te rrib le tra d itio n to trv to come t ack and do it a g a in ," W hite said But then again some have done it successfully, and o th ­ er- m ig h t ' A lth o u g h W hite refused to -pe. u- latt on w hat causead his defeat, he d id say a larger tu rn o u t of our peo­ ple w o u ld have mad. a d iffe rt nee " Clements White Pickle Rylander 910(55%) 526(19%) 577 (25%) 436 (40%) 537 (26%) 395 (33%) 394 (25%) 902 (52%) 330 (35%) 133(15%) 248 (49%) 276(50%) 167 (40%) 258 (49%) 141 (38%) 214(57%) 213(24%) 113(36%) 740(85%) 262(51%) 277(50%) 254 (60%) 264 (51%) 229 (62%) 162(43%) 669(76%) 205 (64%) 811 (92%) 272 (55%) 319(58%) 276 (67%) 286 (54%) 244 (63%) 182 (49%) 215(56%) 233 (73%) 75 ( 8%) 222 (45%) 235(42% ) 139 (33%) 239 (45%) 141 (37%) 193 (51%) 168(44%) 88 (27%) Precinct Number Registered Number Voted 131 1 4 7 1 4 8 3 3 4 3 3 5 3 3 6 3 4 3 3 4 4 4 3 5 1662 2703 2345 1074 2038 1181 1576 1726 954 i i £ Number of voters registered Total Number of Ballots cast Pickle Rylander White Clements 15.559 4.9 7 7 (32%) 2,838 1,500 3,062 1.763 T m not here to review the elec­ tion ! m r e s u l t s ” W hite said giving to do w h a t 1 can to make cer­ tain tran sition there's an orderly' and w is h my o pponent w e ll." But others said W h ite 's defeat was caused by a num ber of factors George C h ristian a conservative Democratic p olitica l co n su lta nt in A u s tin , said an "a ccu m u la tio n of things o ve r the m onths and vea rs" brou g h t about C lem ents' victo ry C hristia n said education reform s t u uva non rerorm s Chris Ware tionaJJy D em ocratic In South Texas, w here W hite was expected to sweep the votes, C lem ents got 46 percent of the vote co n tin ue d to "p la g u e " W h ite , and the tax b ill passed d u rin g the last special legislative session also creat­ ed problem s for him , a lth o u g h c hristian said the special session i t ­ self could have been beneficial fo r W h ite Voter tu rn o u t all over the state was higher than o rig in a lly a n ticip a t­ ed b\ the secretary o f state s office Tuesday, Secretary o f State M vra M cD aniel estim ated percent figures but Wednesday' tu rn o u t from her office show ed actual tu rn - ( h ristian said C lem ents d id u n u ­ o ut close to 47.01 percent suallv w ell in counties that are tra d i- ~\Yith wire reports---------- sually w ell in counties that are tradi- 'The g o ve rn o r lust never fullv re­ covered fro m earlier p ro b le m s ," C h ristian said T h e voters decided they didn t w a n t turn as governor. 44 ÍT777? wire reports D em o crats revel in c o n g r e s s i o n a l q a i n s Associated Press W A S H IN G I ONI — D e m o cra ts re io ice d W ednesday in m idterm elections that restored them to pow er in the Senate and padded their m a jo rity in the House. P resident Reagan ottered cooperation w ith the 100th Congress and said " o u r agenda rem ains u n c h a n g e d " in his tinal tw o years in the W hite House. D em ocratic N ational C ha irm an Paul K irk de­ clared the results p ro vid e d a "tre m e n d o u s psy­ tor a p a rty tw’ice victim ize d bv chological lift Reagan's presidential landslides. "W e can say it all in four w ords The Demo­ " I t was a dynam ic crats are b ack / Kirk said victo ry, one that shifts the m o m e n tu m in ou r d irectio n as w e prepare fo r the next national election. "We expanded our base in the South and the West, which w as necessary following the 1984 election," he said. Democrats will hold a comfortable 55-45 ma­ jority in the new Senate, reversing the GO P edge of 53-47 in the old 99th Congress and giving them the control they lost in 1980. Democrats n ____. Reagan s coattails fail, see page 3. also w on at least 23s House seats to 173 for the Republicans, to r an increase ot at least five That was tar fewer than historical Standards w o u ld d u ta te a result that heartened Republicans lo u r House races were still too dose to cali long after the last ballots were cast Republicans heralded their impressiv < gains in gove rno r s races. They captured 11 seats c u rre n t­ ly held bv Democrats, in c lu d in g lexas Florida and Alabama and now control 24 o f 50 g o v e rn o r­ ships. I th in k w hat we did m the South and across the Sun Belt i- in d ica tive that we re still in p re tty good shape as the tw o parties look tow ard 1988, said G O P ( hairm an f rank I ahrenkopf. Reagan said the results p ro ve the political spectrum continues to move o u r w a y ” and sought to disabuse Democrats o f any ideas that he would serve o u t his term q u ie tly as a lame duck. Reagan traveled over 2 s i*(X) m i l e - i n hi.-i I his l .---- ---- 1 he conceded the outcom e vve sought But he added in a W hite H ouse speech to his staff, " O u r agenda rem ains unchanged, and iv v look fo rw a rd to its atta in m e n t " is not M ost the a tte n tio n was focused on tlie Sen­ ate races, w here ( ,OV Leader Bob D ole of K tnsas said, We took a b a th ." Republican leaders blamed th e ir loss on nega­ tive ad ve rtisin g a lo w vo ter tu rn o u t and defeats i n extremely close races th a t GOP candidates had w on six \ t -ars ago. I mal results s h o w . d that tell on first-te rm Republican senators s e v e n Tuesday, m ost ot them n arrow ly elected in l^ s i) on the strength ot Reagan s coattails D em ocratic Leader Robert Bvrd ot West V ir ­ ginia said, W e look fo rw a rd to cooperating w ith th< president But he also m ade it clear D em o­ crats inten d to pursue th eir o w n legislative agen­ da and said he means to enact farm and trade measures even it the pre sid en t resists I w o u ld hope that the president w o u ld read tin message that was sent bv the A m erican peo­ ple, Bvrd said. A n d that message is Look vo u r economic policies have not w o rke d in so President restates objectives after losing control of Senate Associated p^ess - W A S H IN G T O N P resident Reagan acknow ledged W ednesday the election d id not provide the o u t­ come he sought, b u t he asked his -ta ti to -tick w ith him in the tw llig h t o f his presidency- " to com plete the re vo lu tio n th a t we have so w e ll be- g u n ." In a subdued but characteristical­ ly upbeat speech to W hite H ouse aides a day after his 25,000-mile campaign to preserve a R epublican in d is a p p o in tm e n t, Senate ended Reagan said "F o r tw o vears more, mv triends, let us make history- to ­ g e th e r." And d ra w in g a line for his 1984 re-election cam paign pitch, he in­ sisted Washington "ain 't seen noth­ in yet " The president called Tuesday's the Re­ election results, in which publicans scored victories in im p o rt­ ant governors' races but lost the for which he had cam ­ Senate paigned h ard est, good n e w s" overall. "fairlv Reagan s chief political strategist, M itchell Daniels Jr., told reporters the loss of the Senate was just a T o ry o f close elections, and ou r good fo rtu n e ran o u t," He recalled that the Republicans had won 17 of the 21 Senate races decided bv tw o percentage p o in ts o r less in 1980, 19g2 and 1484 and said, Last n ig h t, Lady Luck evened the sco re." in is not the outcom e we This the p resid en t a ckn o w l­ sought, edged, bu* o u r agenda rem ains unchanged and I lo o k fo rw a rd ?vV its attainm ent Even this h o tly contested race, vve enjoyed w idespread sup­ p o rt on issues th a t we cam­ paigned on, Reagan said. He cited his econom ic policies, a p p o in tm e n t o f federal bench, and a strong defense espe­ cia lly SDI, the Strategic Defense In itia tiv e aim ed at d e ve lop in g a shield against nuclear attack judges to u g h the the to So in a sense, o u r m v-saet — that same message of lim ite d go v­ e rnm ent and a firm foreign p o lic y that vve enunciated fro m our first day in office — did get across and continues to get across " Reagan said, o ffe rin g his congratulations to Tuesday s victors and condolences to the vanquished. The 75-vear-old pre sid en t w h o d u rin g the first tw o vears o f his sec­ ond term defied attem pts to label him a lame duck, said his goals re­ main to make A m erica m ore p r o s ­ perous, more p ro d u c tiv e and the w o rld more peaceful " He pledged to strive fo r p e rm a ­ nent structu ral reform o f the e n tire th ro u g h enactm ent budget process o f a c o n stitu tio n a l a m e n d m e n t to balance the bu d ge t and legislation p e rm ittin g the p re sid e n t to strike in ­ d iv id u a l items fro m sp e n d in g mea­ sures passed bv Congress. U N I V E R S I T Y Info rm a to Just can’t get enough about sex that is According to one UT administrator, many students only know as much as grade-schoo! M s when it comes to sex Counseling and informa tionat classes are the key For more dirty talk, turn to page 5 W E A T H E R Weather or not to bundle The Aus n forecast calls for increasing cloudiness hursday with a 30 percent chance of "a ' bV a\e afternoon and 50 percent f by evening Highs wil be nea’ -har nly I was thinner, I'd he perfect,' " she said A woman who suspects she has an eating disorder should come in for counseling, O 'B rie n said. "There's no ideal way of taking care ot an eating disorder," she said. Counselor-facilitated groups are not as good «is leaderless support groups, she said, because support groups allow group members to ex­ ercise more control over the pro­ ceedings. "The benefits ot group work can be just phenomenal," she said. "Automatically, the isolation stops, and it does a tremendous amount to assuage the guilt and the shame " Helen Spear, counseling specialist at the Counseling and Mental Health Center, said the center offers one eating-disorder group per se­ I he first 12 sessions are mester. free, and most insurance plans — including the University's new stu­ dent insurance plan — completely cover the cost of additional ses­ sions, she said. EVERY WOMAN’S CONCERN Coafidm tial, Professional Raprodactiva Cara • Free Pregnancy Testing • Problem Pregnancy Counseling • Abortion Services sine» 1978 P S I R B • Birth Control « P a p Test I l l M I I Lh £ I K S I REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES • B o a r d C e r t if ie d Ot> G y m « c o lo « to ta : £ £ £ £ £ £ . • o.O M d. 458-8274 1009 E. 40th. hard to pick up that phone...isn’t it? To tell a stranger . . . “ I think I’m pregnant.” But, it's hard to keep the fear, the uncertainty to yourself. The problems... the secret pain is under­ stood at The Austin Crisis Pregnancy Center. Your Confidentiality is guaranteed. A free pregnancy test can be provided, with results while you wait. Call our 24 Hour Hotline, 4Í54-2622. Vlfe care about you. There is help and understanding on the other end of the line. 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A332 Jester, M-F, 9-5, Oct. 29-Nov. 7. Classes are free and non-credit; most last four weeks and begin Nov. 10, unless specified otherwise. 471-3614 ♦ C O U N S E L I N G , L E A R N I N G , A N D C A R E E R S E R V I C E S The Daily Texan/Thursday, November 6 1986/Page 3 GOP senators \ fall off coattails Reagan's magic fails By DONALD ROTHBERG Associated Press W ASHING 1 O N The battle for the Senate this year w as a mirror image of the 1980 election in which Republicans seized control on the strength ot Ronald Reagan s coat­ tails. C fnly this time, there w ere no coattails, a n d voters turned the ta­ bles on the G O P a n d restored the Democrats to pow er. In state after state w h e re a D em o­ crat was challenging a shakv R epub­ lican incum bent, voters o pte d tor a change the freshm an Reagan gave g en e rously of his time a n d prestige in an effort to save fit brought to W ashington with him six years ago. But in m a n y of the states w h ere he ca m p a ig n ed the hardest, voters turned aw ay from the R epub­ licans. senators Politicians, pollsters and a c a d e m ­ ics will sift th ro u g h th e m o u n ta in of returns in a search for an exp lana­ tion of w hat h a p p e n e d in this elec­ tion But there are more questions than clear answ ers this pom t lit It clearly w as a y ea r of ticket-split­ ting, particularly in the South, a re­ gion Republicans h a v e touted as the cradle of realignment. In Senate an d H ouse races, Sou thern voters cam e hom e to the Democratic Party they su p p o rte d so faithfully for generations But be­ fore the Democrats could celebrate their S outh ern resurgence, the same voters elected Republican governors in Alabama, Florida a n d S outh Ca­ rolina In Alabama, G u\ H u n t benefited I I • from ,i vicious split a m o n g D em o c rats to become the* fir st Republican governor of that state in 112 years Per h aps the la» k i a a national p a t­ tern w as the pattern for this elec­ tion, further evidence of H ouse Speaker I h o m as P ( ) Xeill )r.'s fa­ vorite saving, "All politics is local " I he best examples of that w ere in Alabama and Georgia, w here D e m ­ ocratic con gressm en w ag e d careful !v crafted cam paigns to upset Re­ s e n a t o r s w'ho m a d e p u b lic a n them selves m ore vulnerable th an they h ad to be O u t g u n n e d f i n a n c i a l l y , h am m ered by an im m ensely p o p u ­ lar president w h o ca m paigned hard ,(,i incum bents, Reps Richard Shelby ot Alabama and Wvcht Fowler of Georgia w on by exploiting local issues the G O P Neither Sen. Jeremiah D enton ot Alabama nor s, n . Mack Mattingly of Georgia seem ed to u n d e rsta n d some of the basic rules t >t political survival Both might hav e benefited from som e adv ice from Sen A líense D Amato, R - \ X , a n o th e r Reagan freshm an w ho sw ept to a landslide re-elec tion \ ic tore Only in Idaho, one* ot the most R e p u b lic a n , m o st c o n s e r v a t i v e states in the nation did the Reagan magic w ork I n d a n g e re d Republi­ can Sen Steve S vm m s clearly b e n e ­ fited from Reagan visits a n d held off a challenge from Democratic Gov. John I vans iÜ ■w, 3 i Sen. George Mitchell. D-Mame. left, and Sen. Robert Byrd. D-W Va celebrate new Senat*» rnntrni at a Waes > * Associated Press y ceieDraie new benate control at a Washington news conference Wednesday. w - w . cuMum m a *»d¡>ningion news conference Wednesd Republican losses set stage for Democratic spotlight in 1988 campalan Assoc,a,ed Press W A SH IN G T O N —-- The 1986 elections have scrambled the e qua tion for the 1988 presidential race, giving Bob Dole an d Jcu k K emp a stronger to challenge George Bush, while letting D emocrats take center stage to offer a n alternative agen da to President Reagan. footing Of all the possible c o n te n d e rs for the White H ouse, Sen. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., ap p e ared to have suffered the biggest blow from the D emocrats' takeover of the S en ­ ate, which pu t them in charge of both h o u s ­ es ot C ongress for the first time >ince 198( Laxalt voluntarily gave up a sat, Senate M'ui only to see it c a ptured by Democrats A Democratic win "could attect my fu ­ 1 axalt had ac k n ow ledged in ture plans, advance It w ould be a nt gative for me in 1988 ... (and) certainly is not going to give Paul Laxalt any brow nie points with G O P stalwarts. O n the Democratic side Sim Gary Hart of ( olorado did n t run t or re-election so he time for tht White could cam paign full H ouse His seat rem ained Democratic with the election ot Rep Fimothv VMrth . ................................................... „ „ .u With only one declared candidate - f o r ­ mer D elaware Go\ Pierre D uPont, a Re­ publican —- the 1986 race is m its infancy H ow ever it will pick u p s p e e d earl y n e x t year with the formation ot cam paign e x p l o ­ ratory com mitti i s a n d the n gathi * m o ­ m e n tu m over the next m o n t h s u t h decla­ rations of candidacy V\ith the D em ocrats m pow er m the S en­ ate, Wt re going to have an opportunity to .. to put into sh a rp t r f o c u s set the ag e n d a loseph Biden. w hat s at stake, D - D t : - u h i> is eyeing the president! u race V\ t* have laid the g r o u n d w o r k for taking said Sen ^ the White H o u se back tw o years from exulted Sen, Alan C ran sto n , D- n o w - Cahf., w ho w on a close race- tor a fourth term but has not declared himself a s a 1988 candidate Republican strategist John S c a r s , a s s e s s ­ 'best n ew s ing the election results, s a i d t h e was tor Bob Dole, w orst t or George B u s h . " W hen the l(X)th C o n g r e s s is seated in January, Dole will trade h i s tit!, of Senate majority leader for Senate minority leader in a position of le adership He -til! will hi but will not be tit d d o w n by having to run tlie Senate “ í í I he other side of the coin is that he w o n 't have the arm -tw isting p o w e r he had be­ fore, and the spotlight will be weaker. Dolt said the net result may be that it is easier tor him to run for p reside n t "I don t k now 1 will d o that, but I will not have the b u rd e n of setting the ag e n d a on a daily basis — first vine there in the m orning an d turning oft the lights in the e ve n ing " Dole said. While a p p e arin g on a telev ision s h o w , Bi­ d en said. It 1 w ere G eorge B u s h , I'd be worried about the tw o guvs 1 m on this p r o ­ gram with " Charges exchanged amid peace talks Associated Procc Assoc atea Press \ y I t \ A . Austria — I h e United State . ___ the Soviet U nion traded charges of h u m a n rights violations W ednesday a n d th e n held extended t al k s on how to carry out their Icelandic su m m it pledges for sh a rp reductio ns in nuclear w e a p ­ ons an ^Secretary ot sta te G eorge Shultz speaking at a nation conference aim ed at im proving rela­ a tragic tions betw een h u m a n rights situation existed in the Soviet I nion and a m o n g its Eastern allies He w arn ed that arm s control w o uld the perceiv ed ab u ses w ere correv ted l ast and West falter unless said \ r m s control cannot exist as a process in iso­ * t . lation from o th e r sources of tension in East-West rc lations Shultz said in a stern spet ch. He ad d re sse d foreign ministers review ing the 19 5 Helsink agree ment s prom ise or a tre e r ex­ change ot people and ideas across the East-West d i vide I he L m ted States the Soviet Union, Canada and .ill 1 u ro p e a n nations except Albania signed the Helsinki accords a n d arc- a tten d in g the con­ ference. ingful contribution It arm s control m e asures are to m ake a m e a n ­ to stability," Shultz said, they ta n only reinforce, never su p p la n t, efforts to resolve more fundam ental sources of suspi- cion a n d political confrontation," s hultz cited the confinem ent of Andrei Sa­ kharov, a physicist who won the 1975 Nobel to the closed citv of G ork\ and the i eace Prize im priso nm ent of m e m b e rs a Soviet activist g ro u p m onitoring the Helsinki accords. After the speech, in w hich he offered no n ew W estern initiatives Shultz took up the un fin ­ ished business of the Icelandic s u p e r p o w e r s u m ­ mit with Soviet Foreign Minister E du ard S he­ v a rd n a d z e a? the U.S E m bassy in Vienna. The Soviet foreign m inister invited the 35 n a ­ tions at the conference to st n d rep rese n tativ es to Moscow to meet on pro b lem s of " h u m a n con ­ tact inform ation culture a n d e d u c a tio n ." He lashed out at the U nited States, w here "viola­ tions of h u m a n rights are of a system atic and massive nature Church envoy denies government ties Associated Press L O N D O N - Anglican Church en voy Terry Waite said Wednesday that British press speculation that he was acting on behalf of go v ern ­ m e n ts in his mission to tree h o s ­ t a g e s in 1 eb a n o n h ad m a de his Mid d i e Hast contacts n ervous and could cost his life. th e re art certain speculative co m m ents no w mov ing a r o u n d that p erh a p s Mr Waite is used by or closely associated with g o v e rn ­ m ents, Waite, in a rare burst ot a n ­ ger, I o n d o n s reporters at H eathrow Airport. told Give m e a br£ak It is y o u r fel­ low journalist 1 am w orking for," he said, referring to Associated P r e s s reporter Terry A n d erso n , o n e of mx A mericans still missing in 1 ebanon. released by captors S u n d ay , Waite spt kt after r. tu rn in g from West G erm a n y , w h e r e American David Jacobsen, his 1 ebanese was reunited w ith his family Doctors at the U.S. Air Force has, jn W iesba­ the 55-vear-old Jacobsen den said had 'no m ajor problem s' as a result of his 17 m o n th s in c a p to itv but they follow-up t es t s advised routine Whilt in West G e rm a n y , Waite told reporters h e n eed s m ore tune to work for tlu* release of the rem ain­ ing hostages but vo w ed , "I'm going to see this th r o u g h ." that He said he w as ' cautiously opti­ mistic th e m issing tw o of Xmericans A nderson a n d educ ator Thomas S utherland will be re- leased soon. In 1 o n d o n , how ever, Waite said the speculation p rom pte d bv Jacob­ sen s release had m ade his contacts nerv ous an d it might be "quite some tim e" before he could p u r s u e his efforts to win the release of A n ­ derson an d Sutherland. He said he did not know w'hen he w o u ld re­ turn to the Middle East. All 1 can say to th o se p e o p le w h o write such speculative c o m ­ m ents is realize that that sort of life," co m m ent will cost me m y Waite said. He said that on past negotiating trips to Beirut the k id n a p p e r s c o n ­ taking him ho sta g e a n d sidered once th rea ten e d to kill him becau se they w ere not certain he w a s a non- political church envoy w ith o u t gov ­ ernm ent contacts An editorial in W e d n e s d a y 's e d i­ tion of 77ie Times ot I on don said . Mr Waite him self w o u ld seem to have been u s e d as decov in this af- ,li!r A n e w s report in the same edition said that th e U nited States had "u s e d Mr Terry W a i t e to ca p tu re public a tten tio n in the h o s ­ tage d ea l." At a n e w s conference at the U.S. Air Force base in W iesbaden Waite specifically d e n ie d reports that he w as b eing u se d by the I m ted States to divert a tten tio n from real negotia­ tions 1 have m y o w n contacts 1 am in­ d e p e n d e n t of a n y g o v e r n m e n t," he said. Waite d en ied any know ledge of rep o rted U .S.-Iranian talks to free the rem aining A m erican hostages He said m a n y peo p le .¡re m uscling in on efforts to w in the captives' release . S e c u rin g th e lin e s A ssociated Press Chinese sailors secure the newly arrived USS Reeves, a guided missile frigate, to the dock as port call begins Wednesday The U S naval visit to a Chinese port, Qingdao, is the first of its kind in almost 40 years The last U.S. port call to China was in 1949 Tehran offers deal for aiding American hostage negotiations Associated Press NIC OSIA, C y p r u s — Two Iranian offi­ cials said W e dnesday that T ehran is willing to w ork for th e release of American a n d French hostages in L ebanon in return for w ea pons, unfreezing of Iranian assets in the U nited States an d freedom for political prisoners. A third official, Prim e Minister H ussein Musavi, said rep o rt broadcast by Tehran radio that there w as n o possibility of negotiating w ith the U nited States. in a But although Musavi s e em e d to rule ou t direct talks, his c o m m e n ts did n ot a p p e a r to contradict declarations by the oth e r Irani­ an officials that a deal could be m ade. The d i f f e r e n t in difference in e m p h a s is w as seen as p a rt of a grow ing internal struggle w ithin th e Irani­ an leadership. . I a rliam ent s p e ak e r H ashem i Rafsanjani ridiculed w h at he said w a s a mission to T e h ra n by fo rm e r N ational Security Adviser Robert McFarlane a n d four other A mericans to try to m e n d U .S.-Iranian rela­ tions. U.S. officials have not confirm ed the mission. But Ratsanjani signaled that rejection of the p u rp o rte d mission do es not m e an Iran will not help. If you w ant us to help vou, provided like others you d o not interfere w ith our job, we will help — if o ur friends in Leba­ n o n accept," he w a s qu o te d as saying by . Iran's official Islamic Republic N e w s A gen­ cy, m onitored in Nicosia. Rafsanjani is one of the most pow erful figures in Iran s cler­ gy-led g overnm ent. O f course, o u r friends in I e ba n on are free,' he w as quo te d as say ing, referring to Islamic Jihad, the pro-Iranian g ro u p that re­ leased American hostage Day id Jacobsen on S und ay. It claims to hold tw o other A m ericans a n d three Frenchm en Islamic Jihad has said it killed a n o th e r A merican a n d a n o th e r French hostage, but their bodies have not been found. In L ond on, Iranian charge d'affaires, Seyed Jala) Sadatian, said no deals had been struck w ith W ashin gton. But, in an interview w ith The Associated Press, he said it the I nited States e n d e d its hostility tow ard Iran a n d released Iranian assets, out of hum a nita ria n g r o u n d s w e are p r e ­ pared to d o w hatever assistance w e a re able to d o ." in a BBC radio interview, he noted that Iran had been dealing w ith A m erican c o m ­ panies to buy arm s d espite the U.S. arm s em bargo. Iran n ee d s w e a p o n s a n d spare parts to c ontinue its 6-year-old w ar ag ainst Iraq. crimes against Musavi said that because of A m erican the Islamic rev o lu tio n ," there could be no talks w ith th e U nited States o th e r th a n in the fra m ew o rk of ac­ cords reached after Iran's 1979 revolution to settle financial disputes. ^ Rafsanjani said McFarlane and his col­ leagues flew to T eh ran aboard an aircraft carrying military had b o u g h t in Europe. H e said the five m en w ere carrying Irish pas sp o rts u n d e r cover of being aircraft crew m em bers e q u ip m e n t Iran According to Ratsanjani. McFarlane id e n ­ tified himself to im m igration officials a n d said he had a m e ssag e from P resident Reagan Tht five w e r e detained at a h o t el tor five days an d expelled w ith o u t deliver­ ing the m e ssage o r m e eting any officials, Rafsaniani said H e did not say w'hen th e p u r p o r te d mis­ sion took place, b u t a Beirut m agazine, Al- Shiraa, said it w a s in S eptem ber Page 4 The Daily "exan Thursday November 6 1986 expressed The Daily Texan are "'O'-ec • the ea tor c- ■■ e u o- e an-c e and - necessa' . those of me Jrwers-ty admi'-strat-on the Board o‘ Regents or "ie '• . is a - b udeni ca* ons Board of Ooer r - q T- sree Don't get cocky The danger in recapturing the Senate So the D em ocrats have recaptured the Senate. It's about tim e. A fter six years of having a Sen ate that votes like President R eagan's yes-m an on alm ost every issue, it'll be nice to have checks and balances betw een the legislative and executive branches. And yet, there is a hidden danger. It's spelled out beautifully in retiring I Iduse Speaker Thom as “ Tip” O 'N eill's com m ent on the elec­ tion: " I f there was a Reagan revolution, it's ov er.” With that quote, it becom es painfully obvious what the D em ocrats need to rem em ber right now: D on't get cockv. It would be too easy to do. G oing from the low end of a 53-47 Senate split to the high end of a 55-45 split, after all, is quite a jum p. It's a victory, all right, but it's not exactly a m andate. And before the D em ocrats decide that it is, they ou ght to look at the other factors in 1 uesday's election, and at the lessons of the past few' elections. Let s start w'ith the im m ediate signs of I uesd ay's election. First, the D em ocratic victories: the Senate now belongs to them , and the House is still solidly in their hands. N ow , the gains thev did n't m ake: while they w ere picking up Sen ate seats, the G O P won 11 governorships. 1 hat doesn t mean the D em ocrats did n't score a partial victory Tues­ day night, but it d oes m ean they fell short of the total victory' they would need to claim a m andate. It also lends credibility to the arg u ­ m ent that the new D em ocratic Senate seats and the new’ G O P gover­ norships don t reflect a m andate for eith er side. The gains ju st prove w hat everyone knew — the Republicans had a lot of vulnerable Senate seats and the D em ocrats had a lot of vulnerable governorships. So w hat d id the D em ocrats get out of Tuesday night? W ell, a morale booster, for starters. A badly needed sign that people are still listening to the D em ocratic Party — in other w ords, a m odest sign of approval. And that s exactly the m essage the party should have gotten in 1982, when the D em ocrats recaptured the H ouse. Instead, m ost D em ocrats decided the election m eant there w as no real m essage in the 1980 election, and therefore there was no need for self-exam ination. Basically, the Dem ocrats got cocky. That mav have been one of the biggest reasons they nominated W alter Móndale — the embodim ent of the Dem ocratic Party's anti-progressive status quo — in 1984, and w’hv many lifelong D em ocrats even thought he would win. But there was a m essage in the 1980 election, and it was repeated in 1984. The D em ocrats sim ply had gotten cau ght in a rut. D espite what R epublicans have said since then, A m ericans had not grown tired of liberalism but they did see liberal program s going astray, and they didn t see any D em ocrats doing an yth in g about it. I robably the best sum m ary of the 1980 election appears in Theodore W h ite's A m erica In Search O f Itself. W hite describes the birth o f the Great Society, and the idealistic attitu de that launched it: If w e're the richest nation on earth, why can 't w e w ipe ou t poverty? W ell, the answ er is that life isn 't that sim ple. A nd, as W hite's book illustrates, the program s started during that tim e eventually proved life isn 't that sim ple, but the program s also becam e so entrenched that the D em o­ crats w ho launched them cou ld n 't adm it they needed reform . Now, two Republican landslides later, the Dem ocratic Party has fi­ nally entered a sou l-searching phase. Som e D em ocrats are realizing that it s time to re-evaluate m any o f the G reat Society program s, and that it the party that established the program s d o esn 't launch the re­ form s, the Republican Party will get the jo b by default. T h at's the real m essage of the "R eag an rev o lu tio n ." But the worst thing that can happen now is for the D em ocratic Party to adopt () Neill s attitude that, becau se the D em ocrats have the Senate again, the Reagan revolution is " o v e r ." If the party stops exam ining its policies now , 1988 is going to be ju st like 1980 and 1984 — and the D em ocrats will have no on e to blam e but them selves. — D avid X'ather Superfund C rises, protests and em o ­ tional outcries have a tendency to raise a lot of im portant issues. H ow ever, they do not tend to raise a lot o f solu­ tions. KEITH WHITTINGTON TEXAN COLUMNIST N ear the end o f P resid ent C arter's term of office, there w as a widely publicized case of con tam i­ nated w ater at Love C anal. This event led to the eventual passage of the Superfund in 1980 after long delays and political m aneu vering. The law has now run out o f m on­ ey, but C ongress, in its infinite w isdom , has revived and exp an d ­ ed this bundle of bureaucratic w aste. Like Frankenstein's m onster or ju st never legislation ja s o n , bad seem s to die. Now R eagan 's sig­ nature has guaranteed an oth er five years for this beh em o th . So w hat is so bad about a little en vi­ ronm ental en hancem ent? A bso­ lutely nothing, but there are right w ays and wrong w ays to do it, and this is the latter. I he Superfund started out with S I .6 billion to be used to study and clean hazardous w aste dum p- sites. So far, so good; but then som ething w'ent w rong. N o one could find w here the m oney wras going. By the time the law began to wind dow n in 1985, a grand to­ tal of six s i t e s had been cleaned to a safe level. Well six is not too bad, until it was discovered that the EPA considers 14,000 sites to be d angerou s in the United States, 546 of w hich were placed on the "p rio rity " list. O f these, only 170 investigated bv sites w ere even the EPA. The Sup erfund seem s to have been a bit m isdirected. Time re­ ported in February 1983 that $220 million had been spent to clean the first five sites. Later reports found that only 8 .6 percent of the $1.6 billion allocated had been spent directly on site-related activ­ ities. In 1983, charges of w aste and corruption abounded. W ashington w as abuzz over Sew erg a te." The EPA struggled under charges of accepting m oney from com panies not to clean the waste and m isallocating funds. O ver $53 million was unaccounted for in 1983. D irector Anne Burford lost her jo b over the affair, yet the Su p erfu nd 's perform ance never im proved. New ad m in istratio n reports stated that one-third of the sites could be cleaned under Sup er­ fund, yet they also stated that $40 billion would be necessary to clean all the sites. Finally, the original bill taxed the oil and chem ical industrv for the entire $1.6 billion even though studies have show n that these in­ dustries generate less than half the w aste. O f cou rse, this tax was imposed soon after the already de­ structive tax had been passed bv the D em ocrat­ ic C ongress under the urging of Jim m y Carter. "w in d fall p ro fits" L n d er the new Superfund, these same industries pay $2.75 billion, the rest being made up by im ported oil, other corporations and general revenue. Sen. Bob Packwood declared, "It vve have succeeded in writing a bill that neither the Am erican Institute nor the Grocery M anufacturers of America like', then I think we have done w e ll." the A m erican I his statem ent displays a d an­ gerous attitude. A punitive tax funding a bad program will only hurt econom y, while satisfying C ongress' envi­ ronm ental con science. Ihrow ing good m oney after bad can only industry and w eaken Am erican the environm ental m ovem ent it­ self. W hile Superfund creates a great deal of publicity, it does little to solve existing problem s and noth­ ing to prevent future ones. Indica­ tions in 1984 and 1985 show ed that the general public was ex­ trem ely toxic w aste cleanup, and those affected felt that they had been deceived by the federal g overnm ent into be­ lieving the problem s were being fixed. apathetic about , D espite civil liability under the new bill, there is no reason to be­ lieve that the EPA will clean sites into an any more efficiently or more effec­ tively ov er the next five vears than over the past five. Still, C ongress pumped $9 billion ill- conceived program , even though the EPA itself said that it cannot spend m ore that one-h alf of that effectively. I he new Superfund will accom plish the same things as the last: expanded bureaucracy, waste, corruption, a w eakened oil industry, a postponem ent of any real solution an d , of course, a good feeling for Sen. Packwood tor a job w ell-d one.' " C ongress must quit using the environm ent as a political toy, delegate the job to a more efficient group than the El A and find a better tool than the Superfund. While currently degraded sites need to be cleaned, C ongress has yet to legislate any realistic plans to reduce the pro­ duction of such hazardous w aste as create the contam ination prob­ lems in the first place. Instead C ongress severely re­ stricts current disposal m ethods without offering alternatives or encouraging recycling or treat­ ment of w aste, thus leaving no choice illegal dum ping and m ore expensive, equally unsound disposal m eth­ ods. industry but to Based on past experience, we should be able to see our $9 billion clean up, oh m aybe, 35 sites — ad ­ justing for inflation, of course. W hittington is a g o verm en t freshm an . B s u n n o s o 11 l.l I 11 111 t o r n n r l a i . r t I . Offering an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, an ear for a year I suppose that under our laws Ju d ge Prentice M ar­ lop off your n o s e ." After all, it w as Y am een's nose. And il he can do w ithout it, w ho are we to argue? allow his wife and children to com e here from Paki­ stan and jo in him in his cell? In oth er w ords, lock the family up with him . It might get a little cram ped, but at least they'd be together. shall's ruling was correct. But he sure passed up an intriguing deal. I m referring to a com prom ise that w as offered to Judge M arshall by a convicted drug sm uggler a few d ays ago. -------------------- — — — — _______________ i : ... \ i I . , . . (> ----- ----- . I he drug sm uggler, a native of Pakistan named 1 lap Y am een, had been found guilty o f bringing a big load of heroin into this country. W hen the m om ent cam e for him to be sen ten ced , Y am een, w ho is in his 30s, was given an opportunity to speak in his own behalf. Yam een said he realized he would have to be pun­ ished, even though the federal jury in Chicago had m ade a terrible m istake and he was really innocent. But since he had been found guilty, did the pu nish­ m ent have to be in prison? No, Y am een said, it d id n't. Y am een said that back in Pakistan, he had a wife and children w hom he loves dearly. II he were locked up in an A m erican prison, he would not see his fam i­ ly for several years. I ven w orse, he could not provide tor them , and in that im poverished country, thev might have diffic ultv sur\ iving. So he offered the jud ge a deal. MIKE ROYKO THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE "Instead of sending m e to p ris o n ," he said, "cu t off my n o s e ." Every tleaked me out, Pearl. jaw in the courtroom dropped. "It really said the federal prosecutor, Howard But Yam een wasn t finished with his proposal. My ears, to o ," he said, "an d a hand. And a foot. I hat would be punishm ent and 1 C ut them all off. could go back to my fam ily ." Judge M arshall, who had never before been offered a d efen d an t's nose, much less any ears, hand s or feet, explained that in this cou ntry we don't lop off noses or any other appendages. Yam een looked disappointed , but he quickly o f­ fered an other proposal. If he had to go to prison, would the judge please Once again, the judge had to explain. W e d on't permit the fam ilies of convicted crim inals to set up housekeeping in prison cells. Y am een would have to serve his sen ten ce by him self. And he sen tenced Yam een to six years in a federal prison. As 1 said, the ju d ge was undoubtedly correct. U n­ der our system of law, the removal of a nose would be considered cruel and unusual pu nishm ent. In­ stead, we send people to prisons w here their fellow inm ates can cut off their noses. But it m akes me wonder if we ought to think about Y am een's offer and some of the possibilities it pre­ sents. As everybody knows, our prisons are so ov er­ crow ded that we have to let crim inals out early just to make room for a new batch o f fiends. So maybe we should provide ju d g es and convicted crim inals, like Y am een, with options. For exam ple, when Yam een said, "C u t off my n o s e ," the judge tould have said, "O K , I'll lop off th ree years if you'll I hen Yam een could have said, "T h a t leaves me with three m ore years. How m uch are my ears w o rth ?" I he judge could have said, "I'll lop off a year for each e a r ." I hat leaves one year. 1 low about two big toes and we'll call it e v e n ." "Y o u got a d ea l," the judge might have said. I hat w ay Y am een could have returned to his fam i­ ly. If they really love him, they'll overlook his altered appearance. Besides, he could alw ays go to a noveltv sh op and buy one o f those plastic party noses that are held on bv a piece of elastic. And we would save the thousand s of tax dollars that we II now spend to keep Yam een in a cell I his could be a solution to the cell shortage, and it could also be a way of reducing crime. Especially sex crim es, if the offenders would agree to the removal of the appropriate appendages. N 8b b y th e C h icag o T rubune W e would M is-contraceptions exist like to clanfv som e points and respond to som e m isconceptions that w ere quoted in the article entitled "3 0 m inu tes or e ls e " ( Texan, O ct. 24). T he com m en t that w e m ay sabotage our m erch an d ise we take very seriously. It is u n thin kable that we couíd ever earn re­ spect or profits it we sold faulty products. W e only sell the finest nam e brand con tra­ cep tives in their original, tam per-resistant packaging. W e agree with M iss Tracy C o tto n 's q u ote that p eop le should plan their sexual activities in ad van ce. O u r business was in­ tended to serve th o se w ho plan ahead , al­ though we are cap ab le o f handling any e m erg en cy situ ation s. W e take excep tion to C otton s statem ent that we m ay also perform ab ortions. It is absurd to put that type of action in the sam e category as the birth control that we offer. O u r produ cts are not only a m ore sen sib le form o f birth control but also the only proven effectiv e p rotection against the spread o f sexu ally transm itted dis­ eases. We would also like to add that we are a legitim ate, legal and registered business and that we have received much support from the UT Stu d en t Health Center. Chris Tavlor C hris Bray Sid G ra e f I h e P rotection C onn ection Images of alcohol bad I would like to com m ent on the article, "A ttention cam pus police: only a d ru n k ­ ard could enjoy a night of Longhorn foot­ in the O ct. 17 issue of Im ages m aga­ ball, zine. In my op inion, it was tasteless. First of all, I think that we have enough arrogant drunkards at the gam es without the in­ structions on how to be one. Alcohol abuse is a serious m atter. The alcohol-poisoning death of Mark See- berger shocked the UT cam pus. D runk driving cau ses m ore than half of all h igh­ way deaths. By presen ting heavy drinking as being fun, the article may cause m ore deaths. M ost of the read ers of The Daily Texan are under the legal drinking age. John Russell's article gives advice on how to buy alcohol if you are under age. H e in sin ­ uates that there are stupid Austin liquor store clerks that have been, and will co n ­ tinue, to sell to underage students. It the article is supposed to be satire, if it is intended to exaggerate undesirable be­ havior at football gam es, it does n ot su c­ ceed. Instead of making fun of drunk, ob ­ noxious, loud-m outhed, rude, belligerent behavior, John Russell is recom m ending it to underage stu d en ts w ithout concern for the deadly consequences. A aron Farris A ccou n tin g Some more football tips finally w rote som ething of value — a guide for the true college "D rin k heavily' pretty m uch sum s things up, I have a few addenda for this genre. John Russell, you fan. A lthough football Mr. I irst, if it looks like it's going to precipi­ tate, bring a razor blade or sharp knife to shred the leading cause of blindness in the United States — th e um brella. Second, slan der the cheer, "G o , H orns, G o ," and substitute "H arass them , H arass 'em relinquish the b a ll" or them , make "In tercep tion , contraception, Stop that Ball. Your suggested cheers profane our Lord and exalt vulgarity. B esides, they lo­ calize your fortress of deviation and may cause you to be expelled from the gam e. Ih ird , expulsion from the gam e is fine (even honorable), but watch out for fem ale Ul cops. I think they spend Saturday m ornings w atching videotaped replays of Lady B lu e." I hey not only want to expel, but arrest, and their mean glares throw a stilt of reality into your buzz. R o b D'A m ic o Jou rn alism 'House' was too horrible My 10-year-old d aughter and I w ent to the Texas Union H ouse of H orrors on last Thursday night. a s "K id 's N ig h t," so I felt that it would be appropriate for children. It had been billed My d aughter and I walked into a very terrifying series of psychotic w om en in prison who "w an ted the ch ild re n ," a T ex­ as chainsaw m assacre set and a group of live person, w hile women d issecting a they ate her liver and intestines and drank her blood. I hese women w ere polite, though. I hi \ did ask the children in the group if they wanted to partake of the festivities My daughter was terrified. (I was terrified too, but had to keep it together for the sake of my daughter.) Finally, when w e entered what was being called the "K am b o R o o m ," we es­ caped through the walls of the set with the help of a very nice Texas Union em ployee. Ot the seven in the group that started this "tour ot h orrors," only three com pleted it I must accept responsibility tor taking my daughter to this exploitative, disgust ing display. How ever, w hen som ething is entitled "K id 's N ig h t," I feel that that is what it should be. Not everyone in this society is desensitized to the type of hor­ rors depicted at the Union. I he fexas Union Recreation Com m ittee and C am pus In teraction C om m ittee should be asham ed of what was presented in their House of H orrors. ( Jen n a DonneU UT s ta ff Students ‘fearful to ask" about sex By LISA G A U M N IT Z Daily Texan Staff I >r R u th W i sthei rner ft>< u sed a t­ tor a ten tion on h u m a n sexuality h w bru t h o u rs M o n d a y n ig h t w h e n shi sp o k i betori a t row d ot I ,800, but tin issue w a r rants m m h go a ter atten tio n in the I n iv e rs itv c o m m u ­ nity a d m in is tra to rs a n d co u n s e lo rs said W e d n e s d a y M is c o rn o p tio n s ru n high in this po p u latio n [tin U n iv e rs itv c o m m u ­ n ity), said D a v id D ru m , I I ussoci- ati vice ['re sid e n t tor stu d e n t affairs and d ire cto r " I the < o u n s e lin g and 'S tu d e n ts M e n ta l H e a lth C • -r*t. r in hav a g rad e s h«*ol e d u cata >n sexual in fo rm a tio n to ask but not ti > giv e it a trv I hev are tearfu l i h e college years are years w hen a lot of p e o p le are d is c o v e rin g w h o thev are, he said S tu d e n ts a re e ■ * in tht ir re la tio n sh ip s pi rim e n tin g w ith o th ers, a n d o ften "t h e r e are casualfit - in those e x p e rim e n ts ," he said D ru m said sexual p ro b le m s — it tli* v tire ig norud or su p ressed of- >• n i nter into o th i r as p e e ' of the stu d e n ts' 11 \ es, affectin g th eir r e la ­ tio n sh ip s w ith th eir ac u ­ dí mu pi rfo rm an ce and their fe e l­ ings et self w o rth friends, W e re lik e ly t u s , , t( sexual p ro b ­ lem .o a n o th e r p ro b le m ," he said “student ■ can i orm in t o r in d iv id- ual co n su lta tio n w ith c o u n s e lo rs, I he center also offers a I)r u m said n u m b e r of servit es and i l.i ■. - to h e lp di al w ith prob lem s associated w ith h u m a n sexualitv A lth o u g h m ost studi nts seek in ­ d iv id u a l co u n se lin g , therapy g ro u f ■> m eet w eek ls on how to o v e rc o m e re je ttio n o r deal w ith rapt , sexual ahust a n d incest D ru m said th ere are also g ro up s to help ga\ an d le s­ bian stu d en ts tieal w ith isolatio n. P a ts y Stice, a social w o rk e r a n d senior staff nn mber w h o has t on- d u cted workshop*- on h u m a n s e x ­ u a lity ten te r, said o ften w h e n stu d e n ts art e x p e rie n cin g a the tor pro b lem associated w ith sex u ality, th e y feel alo n e an d as it the\ c an n o t discu ss th e ir p ro b lem w ith frie n d s f or th ese people, th erapy or fa m ih g ro up s "s u rro g a te Su p p o rt f a m ily ." fu n c tio n as a ( )tln r st»r, it es the te n te r • rffers in clu d e classes on c o n tra ce p tiv e m eth od s a n d sexually tran sm itted diseases I he co n tra cep tiv e m eth o d classes are tau g h t b\ studen ts a n d art held t \ eral tim e s a w eek at th e cen ter an d at d o rm ito rie s a n d m e e t­ ings of stu d en t g ro u p s I he classes on se x u alK tra n s m it­ ted d iseases are taught at the re ­ fratern ities quest of d o rm ito rie s, an d " t ie r stu d e n t g ro u p s T w o tele­ phone se rvices are a v a ila b le the tt le p h o n e c o u n s e lin g p ro g ram a n d I ap e ’ p rt'g ra m , the w hit h prt a idt - ret c irded inti »r ma- tion and su g g e stio n s on selected í. i p il s I * It phi>m N a ta lie I id rid g t of the ce n te r s telepho ne c o u n s e lin g se rvice said p h o n e c o u n s e lin g is often the hr*-? pi ice student*- seek h elp w ith sexual prt>blt m s is ta u s e tin callers are a s­ sort d a n o n v m itv I Idrid g t said c a lle rs ash ab o u t to deal w ith sex u al e x p e c ta ­ how tions in a re la tio n s h ip ' W e get a lot of q u estio n s that fo c u s a r o u n d , 'Is w h a t I feel n o rm a l? W h a t sh o u ld 1 do on the fi r s t d a t e , w h a t s h o u ld n t I d o ? I'v e n e v e r h ad sex — is th e n so m e th in g w ro n g w it h m e ’ ' " sht said L ld rid g e said te le p h o n e c o u n ­ selors trv to he!f su c h callers " d e ­ v e lo p w h at th e y fee! co m fo rtab h w ith , w h at art th e b o u n d a rie s th e y feel c o m fo rtab le w it h an d a ffirm th.it s o they d<>n f feel so lo n e ly .” Sco tt Sp e ar, staff p h v s ic ia n at th e S tu d e n t H e a lth C e n te r, said the q u e stio n s s tu d e n ts ask hirr u s u a lly fall in to tw o g ro u p s th o se ab o u t re ­ la tio n s h ip s , a n d o th e rs abou t b io ­ logical m atters S p e a r said caller- o fte n ask q u e s ­ tions about se x u alK tra n sm itte d d is ­ eases, w o n d e rin g how thev can p ro ­ tect ag ainst c o n tra c tin g a d ise ase an d w h a t to d o if thev do g e t a d is ­ ease. dorm itories may get Soviet T V program m ing By JO H N C L A R K Da iy Texan Staff S o v ie t sit-com s c o u ld o n e dav hi s h o w in g in I n iversitv d i*rn u ttan s, M ic h a e l R a t/ co -ch airm an o f flu Dt p artm en t of S o v ie t an d I ast ! u ru p t at S tu d ie s , said M on- dav hi* is w ork ng to ob tain |s h o u rs a dav of S o v iet te le visio n tor th e I n iv e rs itv , w h ic h h r said w o u ld aid in language in s tru c tio n and h e lp Stu d en ts w h o studv S o v ie t c u ltu n and h isto ry I hi p n ’posi d -v stem , w hu h w ou ld be s>pt ra t­ ed hv the i I ( e n te r ter r e k c o n m u m c a tio n S e r ­ vices, w o u ld a ir o ve r tht i I cable* n e tw o rk c o n ­ c e iv a b ly e n a b lin g d o rm re sid en ts to w a tch the p ro g ra m m in g he said VNith a sa tellite- h o o k u p system d e sig n e d bv k< n neth S i hatter te'r ( o lu m b ia I n iv ersitv - í la r rim an th e U n iv e rs ity c o u ld re c e iv e broadcasts in R u s s ia n from the S o v ie t M o ln iv a satellites, he said In stitu te, Iw e lv e colleges n a tio n w id e , in c lu d in g H a r ­ vard U n iv e rs itv , h a v e in stalled the svstem A n ­ o th er IN ) h a v e ex p ressed interest in o b ta in in g the system I he p ro g ra m m in g is e q u iv a le n t to th at of pub- lu b ro ad castin g statio n s in the U n ite d States, 1 his station has n e w s w e a th e r, d o c - k t/ s a id e n te rta in m e n t, p o litical u m en taries, a n a lysis, featu re Stories an d film s ," h i said. A lso , the S o v n ts a n c o n sid e rin g the possibility Ot p ro d u c in g situ atio n c o m ed ies Katz said n atu re , The U n iv e rs itv could h a v e access to R u s s ia n a s ¡t is spokt r in the Si v n : U n io n " he said . Sh eila F itz p a tric k directo r of the In te rn a tio n a l S tu d ie s p ro g ra m a n d c o - ch a irw o m a n o f the De- p artm en t o f S o v ie t and hast I u ro p e a n S tu d ie s , ' It said there is a d e fin ite need for th e n e tw o rk w o u ld be h e lp fu l for e v e r y b o d y in te re ste d in w o rld a ffa irs ” sh e said Katz said he is h o p in g tor a $15,000 grant from the W illia m a n d M a ry G re v e F o u n d a tio n , w h ic h focuses on p u b lic televisio n a n d art e d u c a tio n " I h a v e had in d ic a tio n s from th e c o lleg es of liberal art- and c o m m u n ic a tio n that the rest of the m o n ­ ee w o u ld be fo rth c o m in g ." The in itial cost of the e q u ip m e n t a n d in s ta lla ­ tion w o u ld be ab o u t $45,000, he said BU Y, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471-5244 Coping w i t h ufes every­ day p r o b l e m s THURSDAYS a t MOOPf WE CARE, WE CAN HELP FOOD ioA THOUGHT TODAY’S TOPIC GUILT: YOU RR€ TH€ JURY Texas Union Eastwoods Room, 12-1 30 Total Hair Restoration kledicct>or program S c o ip io c k . V ocu- Derm Haw P rog res­ sion Fusion Bonding Han Pieces Wigs We repair and Ser­ vice alt hob replace­ ments like: Hair Ciufc Monte Carlo Apo#o, Mew Man. UfeWce. Tay­ lor Topper *■— 'A Sponsored by Counseling, Learning and Career Services Medical Hair Center 4 7 2 - 6 7 7 7 soot 30»>atB*dti*rM»2ll W a tc h out, W im b led o n John Moore Daily Texan Staff Su ited up for the heat of the g a m e and no* the crispness of if e air G ary Emanuel a former UT student, grim aces as he hits a forehand during a i It 3t th6 Caswel1 TenniS Center Wednesday afternoon He said he plays there every day. h THE PERRY SCHOOL 41st a n d Red River (Near Hancock Center) English as a Second Language Specialized Classes in: Conversation Grammar Composition Small Classes {5-10 pet class) Concerned competent instructors Next classes begin Dec ^ I-20 s available (Student Visa Status) Pleasant atmosphere For information caM 458-1211 Nina Cooper or Sandra Lawrence INTRC )I)UCING DONOVAN, OÍ R N F.W COI.I.FXTK )\ FROM PARIS FROST BROS. Donovan naturals, soft stonewasbed denims to lire in, set the face in. The brown on cbambray belt and chain print shirt, s mI, 58.00, with a breezy button front denitn skirt. / to 12, '2.00. The cowboy shir of soft blue cotton, s m -l. 5HAH), worn over the perfect elastic waist jean. 5 / oo And the grand finale, a denim duster coat, 12b (III Expressions SHOP FROST’S NORTHCROSS MALI MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 10:00 UNTIL 9:00: SATURDAY 10:00 I-NTH. 6:00: SINDAY ,-O O .W .l 5:00 ft K WELCOME TIIE AMERICAN EXPRESS* C Page 6/The Daily Texan/Thursday, November 6, 1986 PACKARD BELL VT286 Business Computer UT hosts linguistics sem inar By PAUL MATULA Daily Texan Staff I Fie large reception room seems tilled, although there are few er than 40 people gathered outside the K n o p f L ib ra ry in the Peter I . D a w n A cadem ic Center. I he professors have broken up into a dozen small groups, w here they smoke m usty pipe tobaccos and carry on anim ated conversa­ tions on the reconstruction of the proto-language and the principles of etym ology. The U T Linguistics C onference is taking a coffee break. Ed g ar Polom e, the C hristie and Stanley E. A d am s Jr. C entennial I rofessor in Liberal A rts, said he ar­ ranged the conference to honor W .P , Lehm ann, retiring chairm an of the Departm ent of G erm an and founder of the H um anities Research ( enter. He had initiated an exchange program, alternating visits of lead ing scholars between the Soviet U n ­ ion and the U nited States " said Po ­ lome. Po lo m e said the conference, w hich centers around comparisons in Indo-European languages, is a com bination of Lehm ann's two leg­ acies. Six Soviet linguists were to have attended the conference but had trouble entering the country on travel visas, he said. O n ly Í. V. C .amkrelidze, a linguist from the Soviet A cad em y of Science in Ib ilisi, Soviet Georgia, arrived in time for the conference. leading I olom e said a second lonferonce next w eek w ill accommodate four more Soviet linguists scheduled to arrive from M o sco w and Kiev. I articipants the conference in from the U n ive rsity, H arvard U n i­ versity, the U n iversity of M issouri, W e st G e rm a n y and the Soviet U n ­ ion w ill d i s t o ss topu s on changes in Indo-European languages I i ic I lam p, a linguistics professor from the U n ive rsity of Chicago, said linguistics involves the study of his tors and cultures "Lan g u ag e is a constantly chang­ ing th in g ," I lam p said. " B u t the changes are dictated by absolute rules. Ihrough the course of time, w ords are l o s t or change in m ean­ ing. fake a w ord like 'anticipate,' w hich less than 100 years ago im ­ plied seizing or stopping som ething in advance I odas the definition im ­ plies more the opposite of th a t." said H a m p la n g u a g e s offe r unique samples of different cul­ People are genetically sim i­ t u r e s . lar, he said. "La n g u ag e i s one of the primary cultural differentials am ong m e n ." The Texas U n ion Wants To G ive You A PACKARD BELL Significantly faster Processing and Throughput. 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N o w it’s tim e to m ake your m o v e to Dr Pepper, the soft drink in a class by itself. Just clip ou t this ad and redeem it for a FR EE LARG E DR PFPPFi^ I hen you 'll w o n d e r w h y yo u held out so long. Available at the following Texas Union D ining Centers: Round-U p Food Mall Eeyore's Armadeli C actus Cafe CBA Snack Bar Law School Snack Bar Fine Arts Snack Bar Expires N ovem b er 7, 1986 , Lor>3horn r . ,arSest selfr, try at the r , J he * a 3 . w ^ ‘° n of o r a n g e a ™ ° P hás the G e t y l exp* ™ e ? ™ d'^teQn — And Di.-.* Id Dflr.*____ your souvenirs and We're ireupfo> ZUynn3 the G ^ 3dme s o u v e n ir s b -St^ e n t , T Lon3Horn sn - N O V . 8 . H n C n tSA s^ a t , o n n : ^ s a t t, e ° m «he stan s t a d 'u m , w e s , * * * * * w e s t H°ust0n a i aat Austin Í Longhorn Clothing • Longhorn Souvenirs • Back Packs • Announcements • Class Rings Longhorn Barwear and Glasswear • Greek Souvenirs LONGHORN COUNTRY • M AIN LEVEL UNIVERSITY CO OP M a j o r i n g I n S e r v i c e S i n c e i b » 6 2 2 4 0 G u a d a l u p e • 4 7 0 - 7 2 1 1 F r e e P a r k i n g 2 3 r d 8c S a n A n t o n i o w i t h S 3 P u r c h a s e —mm ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ The Daily Texan/Thursday, November 6 1986/Pagt / Officials clash over deficit borrowing R \ j J O H N R R i n c c c By JOHN BRIDGES Daily Texan Staff __________ fhc states Cash Management Committee, disregarding objections from Comptroller Bob Bullock, voted 2-1 Wedne sday to borrow $600 million to offset an expected revenue crunch in January In a meeting that pitted C.ov Mark Whit, and Ire usurer Ann Kic hards against the comptrol­ ler, the* committee chose to issue temporary cush-munagement notes instead of increasing borrowing from dedicated state f u n d s Ih r State will accept competitive bids lor th< notes, w hich will be sc>1 cl to the public, and put the $600 million into its general it venu. fund this month I he stati* must repay the money by il Aug Because of a statute that permits the tempo­ rary use of surplus funds the state Iras bor­ rowed $70 milium from more than 2(H) depart merits m the last two years, Ric liar.Is said But there is nothing temporary about i t ” she said. 'It has become daily borrowing ot any money we can find " But Ric hards said issuing the "revenue antic i- pation notes would not eliminate interfund borrowing I he differente is that we are going to borrow more cost effectively," she said ' The question before you today is whether the State of Texas should issue* revenue-antic ipation notes to mini­ mi/e the cost of the borrowing that we do ." W hite answered "yes" to swing the vote for The question is simply, are you going to borrow from an expen­ sive source or a cheap source? I vote for the cheap source.’ — Gov. Mark White Richards Ric hards " I h. question is simply, are you going to bor­ row from an expensive source or a cheap source?' White said " I vote lo r the- cheap sourc e " But C hu í IX*puty Comptroller Jack R o b e r t s , representing Bullock, said the cash-manage- ment notvs were* not needed. V\v do not believe as a matter of public poli- i v that this committee should issue debt — and that s what it is — unless it has to do so," Rob­ erts said " W e strenuously object to it, and we do n.>t feel it is m*. essarv Roberts said the state will need $1,37 billion the month ot greatest need - and in January can get si m billion through interfund borrow­ ing leaving a $1K ' million c ushion. V\. are convinced that the State ot lexascan meet all <>t its obligations and all of its payrolls," Roberts said. ‘ There will be no hot checks.” But Ric hards said the state will need $1.5 bil- Bullock lion in January and can get d d billion thruugl interfund borrowing, but doing so would not give any leeway for unexpected expe nditure s Paul Williams, associate deputy "It is obvious that it makes n. sense to bor­ row every dime you have md pav the market rate, leaving no room for any contingency w hen you have an opportunity to acquire i cushion at tin- c heapest rate on the market ' Rn hard - said trea urer, said issuance of the note- will save* the* state $12 8 million because the not. - yvould he mak ■ mg money while in state bar k account- \Ko. the state would avoid paving 8 pera nf mtc rest tor delaying payment to r* tire merit -v*.-, - s. h. said L t .G o v Bill Hobtn a non-y otmg member ot the committee, said he supported issuing the notes but that he did have rest ry iti. i i. Hobby said he would favor Ri -hards' plan h< cause would be a substantial savings to the state ' the issuance of cash-managc ment notes !8 J I f * n ‘Ht h i i l r < ut s 08S< Z ? s t B' ^ J i i CHRISTIAN BOOKS & ARTS Mor* Sat % 30-5 30 12 Bicxac* South Ot Campu* FREE GARAGE PARKING Sar* jmc.mto 4 7*h 477-9837 Hancock Shopping C e n te r Discover the Convenience in Shopping Stars, Beatts, ‘DiCCards and many more IH 35 & 41st On RR Shuttle ■ %.................................. f r ............ ............ ¡g Apple-Manufactured - ~ ! External Drives A & | 1 . : - - —J - j i j j --------- jjj Macintosh j j 40QK, Used External jjj i Disk Driues $65 I $ m ' ■ 1 ^ Suspect tu rn s h im se lf in a fte r sh o o tin g incident B y THANHHA LAI Da; / Texan Staff A 32-year old Austin man, ac­ companied by In s father and several other family members, turned him­ self m at noon Wednesday* in con­ nection with the M ondav shooting ot an off-duty p.ilice officer. I mo Victor ( lari* of 3005 I 12th 3( surrendered at the 1 ray is Coun­ ty Sheriff s ( )ffice after hearing an attempted capital murder warrant had been issued t o r his arrest late I uesduy night, police said. He said hi knew about the war­ rant and wanted to turn himself in " -aid Aust n Police Department Sgt George M ek ( lark, who was taken to A P D headquarters is being held in city jail in lieu of $125 poo bond tor questioning, ITu wound» d officer, 4$- war-old Sgt Hugh Mills, remains in Brack- enridgt Hospital in good condition vv,fh wounds to the net k and bay k Mills, who live- in ] hree fountains X partments at M 5 f Wonslev Dnvi*, was sh.it at ibout 7 35 p.m. Mon fay in a parking lot at that complex Mills works as a part-time securi­ ty guard at the complex but he was not on duty at the time of the shoot­ ing Police said M ills noticed two men inside unit 12$ and went to investi­ gate. Police said the men were ap­ parently burglarizing the apartment because a television set w*as later re­ port. *d missing. Mills approached the apartment, and he and one suspect struggled in a parking lot outside the unit, police said. Authorities said the suspect over­ powered Mills and then shot him with a 38-caliber revolver. Police believe the suspect who fought with Mills fled on f< tot The warrant is sealed to protect key witnesses, police said. And al­ though details which led to the w ar­ rant are confidential, witnesses identified one of two baseball caps found at the scene of the crime as Clark's, police said. Authorities said they have not de­ cided if Clark's family will receive the S I,000 Crime Stoppers award and the $6,000 Austin Police Associ­ ation prize Crime Stoppers money is aw ard­ ed if a person gives authorities in­ formation that leads to an arrest and indictment. The A P A prize requires an arrest and a conviction. ~ j Registered Jeweler American Gem Society THE CLASS RING Early orders w ill assure delivery tor Christmas Order Now! $6875# Including one-sixth carat fine diamond Full name engraved inside All available options at no extra cost. Call 713/523-7948 Send Check/Money O rder for $ 65 plus $3 96 (tax) to N Khan P Q Box 2 7 9 5 2 Houston TY 77227 79f ? Highland Mall T H E o H E F T A L L CO. JE W E L E R S G E M O L O G IS T S 2236 Guadalupe Emergency Care for the Student It’s just a Jew blocks off campus. It’s something every student should know about.' It’s Sr. Da\ id’s 24-hour Emergency I Vp. imnent. j It’s close. A t IH35 and 32nd Street, St. David’s is just around the comer from the t University and I T neigh­ borhoods. And that counts when you need help fast. It's professional. The facilities are first- rate— just what you’d expect in a major hospital. And St. Dav id’s is staffed hy highly-trained medical experts who can treat minor or major emergencies. It’s affordable. W hen it’s a minor emer­ gency, ii should he a minor fee. So if it s a sprained .inkle, we won't charge you an arm .and a leg. W e also accept I T Health Insurance and all major credit cards. ST DAVIDS COMMUNITY HOSPITAL St. David’s free physician referral serv ice: 397-4141 SÍDAVIDS COMMUNITY HOSPITAL ‘ 1 as6 St. IAivki’> Comrminirs H,«fwt.il \ourVideo Class Rin- Center Catch a FREE T-Shirt! WIN a Compact Disc Plaver! SAVE $25 on a gold Ring! C atch th is! November 3rd through Novem ber 8th, the first fifty students to try out the B a lfo u r C o lleg iate Express, the new video class nng center, will catch a F R E E t-shirt, too! Find out how much fun you can have designing your Balfour College Ring, and register to win a Com pact D isc P la y e r at the same time. Best of all, there’s no Catch-22! No purchase necessary, and no obligation to buy! But if you go for the gold and buy a 10,14, or 18K Gold Balfour College Ring, you’ll save $25. But hurry! To catch this golden opport­ unity. you’ll have to catch the Balfour Collegiate Express at: Hevo’s Bookstore 2300 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 78705 Balfour, Page 8/The Daily Texan/Thursday, November 6, 1986 THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY. And they’re both repre­ sented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you’re part of a health care system in which educational and career advancement are the rule, not the exception. The gold bar on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you’re earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713, Clifton, NJ 07015. Or call toll free 1-800-USA-ARMY. ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALLYOU CAN BE. States conflict on busing Local attorney says AISD should not be affected by rulings By CHRISTINE JUHNG Daily Texan Staff The Austin Independent School District should not be affected by re­ cent court rulings in Oklahoma and Virginia that dispute when school districts are integrated and may stop busing students, an Austin at­ torney said Tuesday. Gabriel Gutierrez, attorney and former member of the Mexican- American Legal Defense and Educa­ tion F und, said A IS D will remain an "integrated school system ." Gutierrez said Austin will contin­ ue to "demand busing as in the O k ­ lahoma C ity case." A federal appeals court in Okla­ homa C ity agreed with a lower court decision that after a school system is declared desegregated, school officials must continue run­ ning an integrated system. But a court in Richmond, Va., said once a judge rules a school sys­ tem has desegregated, its obligation to integrate ends. "In my opinion, the ruling in Norfolk, Virginia, will not affect fexas until the Supreme Court de­ cides one way or the other," Gutier­ rez said. 1 he Supreme Court refused to hear the two appeals, however. The justices gave no explanation for their decision to pass up the two cases. "T h e Supreme Court let the case of busing or no busing' be decided by each federal circuit," Gutierrez said. "1 don't think Austin will be ENTER EXCITING W IN A N EW 19" GEN ERAL ELECTRIC COLOR T.V. HOLIDAY O N E W IN N E R IN EVERY STO RE! D R A W IN G W IL L B E H ELD , SATURD AY NOV. 15, 86 O FFIC IA L EN T R Y BLA N KS AND CO M PLETE DET A ILS A R E AV AILA BLE AT ALL H-E-B S Beef Patties F R E S H GROUND, FAMILY PACKAGE 00 1 •j; Pork Roast 50 LEAN AND MEATY. BOSTON BUTT1■ LB. HERTIAGE BRAND AMERICAN SINGLES. 12-OZ PKG 1 00 LB P O R K S T E A K , S L IC E D B O S T O N B U T T S 1 75 LB Pascal Celery FR E SH , C R ISP. G R EEN BONELESS Top Round Steak STEAKHOUSE BEEF Franks MARKET W R A PPE D Oranges CALIFORNIA NAVEL, SMALL SIZE 12FO R If ) RIPE Tomatoes f a n c y > u n t c e l l o t u b í n - — i C I S A L U H * • . ,M A ., 3;2 U S *1 t a s t y Red Potatoes LA F I EU R E TTE £ - CALIFORNIA F R E S H B U N C H E S Green Onions ^ f o r X on $i 5^1v / f o f l X CALIFORNIA S W E E T EXOTIC Kiwi Fruit Cilantro F R E SH G R E E N BU N C H ES ¿ I W f O F — Carnation Bouquet ■ ST EM S WITH GRE E N E R Y AND h ah • - b r e a t h f ^ Q Q J <£i Golden Pothos* pot Groceries FO R 12 OZ. PKG. B O N E L E S S R U M P O R B O T T O M R O U N D R O A ST . 1 75 LB W IS C O N S IN . L O N G H O R N C H E D D A R C H E E S E F U L L M O O N. 2 00 LB “ •OR 4 $1 7. Sl JL 3o„$l 3 " H E 8 P R EM IU M OUALITY C h o r iz o LINK O R BULK D E C K E R S Sliced B aco n S IL V E R VALLEY BRAND. R E G U L A R O R HOT S m o k e d S a u s a g e L in k s PLANTATION S l i c e d T u r k e y B o l o g n a J 00 2 50 2 0 0 2 0 0 K R A FT S V e lv e e t a S lic e s 12 0 2 PACKAGE S W IF T S B R O W N N S E R V E T J ' i r b - T - -i-1- — . o i k ______________ O R COUNTRY j u u s u y e k l u r o -u ¿ ORIGINAL 8 E E F HEAVY B E E F B e e i S h o rt R ib s _________________ "GOOD FO R YO U R HEART F re s h F lo u n d e r l 75 2 0 0 2 0 0 9 9 ~ 7 ’. 'PARK*- «EMULA K?E (¿R E A M M A N O R L i — 1 i ‘SSQB ^ rf P A R K ’ - Wjjgüj-A K¿eU (¿ R E A M ' M A N O R j, y. ■- ' f ( ■ * PARK MANOR Biscuits 8-OZ T U B E S VILLAGE PARK Whole Tomatoes REG U LA R OR NO SALT. YOUR CHO ICE Imperial Sugar LIGHT AND DARK BRO W N OR PO W D ER ED PARK MANOR Ice Cream HALF GALLON FOR PA R K MANOR Milk 14 5-OZ CANS FOR AUNT JEM IM A P o u ch M ix es m ; Ca-BTMUKjf W H OLE. 1’v % AND 1 .>% I B l i I p a n c a k e , c o r n b r e a d b i s - ’C U I T S O R B L U E B E R R Y M U F F IN 1-LB B O X E S FOR VILLAGE PARK Macaroni & C h e e s e 714-OZ PKG FOR R ED BA RRO N Pizzas ALL V A R IET IES "■ m J u ^ O A - '- 9 : HALF GALLON CARTON 6&7-QZ E N V E L O P E S FOR “Tis The Season For SAVINGS” Don’t Miss Our Exciting Christmas Tabloid In Your Local Paper MOUNTAIN D E W SLICE P e p s i o r D ie t P e p s i 2hter bottit MOt vE M VF D is h w a s h i n g L i q u i d C a tS U P 1202 BOTTLE TMEF TOP A p p l e J u i c e 32 OZ B O H l E . p,,-, 1, - p j - 1 i nn 1 1 Q 0 J[ G e la t in * F AV ■■/. . 4 „ “ Jfci- i. X ’ h a p p e y s £ _ P in t o B e a n s r « * ^ 8 T A . 0 0 PRICES GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY. NOV 12,1986 IN AUSTIN AND ROUND ROCK You Get What You Want 4 ^ At H-E-B L IM IT R IG H T S R E S E R V E D sind'00 ----------STUDtMT TMAVtL NETWORK CALL US: (214)360-0097 6609 H illcre st A v*. • Dallas 75205 affected because loxas is not in the same circuit as Oklahoma or Virgin­ ia." Dan Roberts, A IS D assistant di rector of transportation, said, " I don't know at this point if we will be affected bv the court Lases I to venture a don't even want guess." Roberts said busing h a s been going on m Austin tor six years and hi1 considers the v 11\ s school sys­ tem to he desegregated. Debbie Ray, A M ) superintend­ ent, saiit there are about 13,000 out ot h i,000 students who are being buseil to various places in the city. She said as a result of integration, minority achievement test scores have improved. "B u sin g is something w e've received national recognition tor." Roberts saiil. " W e are no longer considered .1 segregated district we're considered integrated." Ray saui s|h- did not know it A IS I) will discontinue busing in the future. In the Norfolk i.isr, a lower court required black parents to s h o w th.it the school board plan stemmed to discriminate, from an which to prove. In the Oklahoma City case, however, no proof of discriminatory intent was considered necessary. is extremely difficult intent O nly Supreme Court Justice By­ ron W hite wanted to hear the cases. I cn of Norfolk's 35 elementary schools have become at least 45 per­ cent black under the city's neighbor­ hood schools plan. The Richmond federal appeals Court ruled that the plan was "a rea­ sonable attempt bv the sl hool board to keep as many white students as possible and so achieve a stably in­ tegrated school svstetn." W ith w ire r e p o r t s TONIGHT S oul N ig h t Domestic Pitchers $3.25 Frid ay O m a r & th e H o w le rs o p en in g : The Mannish Boys S a tu rd a y R eg g ae Ja m w/ The Killer Bees 4» Mmts 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open 11:00am Mon-Sat Open Sun 3:00pm Happy Hour Mon-Sat 5-7 \UniversitvBeachCluh WINTER BREAK ! A C A P U L C O W eek Air F u ll H Y A TT R EG EN C Y only $3 65 nexf^meeting B a t o ' s (26th + Rio Grande) W e d . N o v . 1 9 at 7 : 3 0 pm LLawzi3Aly.£ e&ojb£lu£„ D o b i e M a l l 4 6 9 - 5 6 1 9 coupon. ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO for CUT BLOW DRY 15339 Burnet 55 : 458-2620 I In clu ded The Daily Texan/Thursday, November 6 196€ No. 6 Longhorns sweep Houston By STEVE DAVIS Daily Texan Staff Iexas completed its series sweep of Houston Wednesday beating the C ougars tdi the second time tins season, 15-8, 1S-H, 15-10 at Gregory Gym The C ougars (10-10, 3-5 in SW C ) gave the sixth-ranked I onghorns (1/-4, 7-0) about as tough a contest as a three-game matt h can be I exas coach VI n k Ha lev said that's not un­ usual. They always plav better the sec­ ond time,” Haley said. "T h ey tell the players this is the last chame they II have to beat Iexas, and that they have already seen u s once." Ilouston s v k tory over Iexas m second match ot the 19K4 series was the last time a Southwest ( (infer­ en». e team heat I ex.is Senior captain Jals led I exas in hitting per- tentage at 500, Iexas fell behind earlv each In game 2. the Longhorns game could not catch Houston until the game was tied at 13 I rom there, an Anna Maria dt* Ybarrondo block and kill gavt Iexas its final two game-clinching p»onts Longhorn Karen Kramer tries for a block during victory over Houston ----- — -----— — . . . .iviwijr u vci nousion. Morns Goen Da y Texan Staff Pain familiar to Cougar linebacker McGuire □ w i r r c By JEFF BECKHAM Daily Texan Staff Houston Cougar linebacker G ary McGuire is no stranger to pain. G iving it or taking it. As a running back at Silsbee High School, he was running a sweep to the right side and was hit high and low at the same time. The impact of the injury destroyed nearlv everv part of his right knee He missed his entire senior year of high school football in rehabilitation "It was very serious,” M cGuire said. "B u t it made me want to play even worse. I spent a lot of time and effort rehabilitating it.” I hree years later, \1c( .uire is no longer taking the pain. Instead, hi* is dishing it out as one of the top linebackers in the Southwest Confer­ ence. He led Houston in 1985 with 155 tackles the third highest total in U H history7. Last week against IC U , the 6-3, 235-pound |unior recorded 21 tackles (15 unassisted), but he had his best game Oct 18 against S M U . In the Cougars 10-3 loss, M cGuire had 17 solo tackles, assisted on five more, had two tackles ter a less, defies ted two passes and caused a iumbli for his t tfort he u.is named Deft nsive Player of the Week bv sports Illustrated Now McGuire and the entiri Houston team are going through another kind o t pain. The pain of losing. The (. o u g a r s are 1-7 overall and win less in the SWC They haven t won a game since Sept 2 0 hut held S M I s c o r e l e s s for three quarters before losing 10-3 and k» j t conference front-runner Iexas A & M from s c o r i n g an o fte n - sive touchdown in a 19-7 lo s s W e re very young,' Mc( a.ire sa,d "W t r< re building in both the offensive line and the dt fen- SIVe Tne We lost a lot of people acadcmicalh and that hurt But that s about it t hi the good side we re going to have a lot of people coming back next season W e're looking forward to our last thret games and wt re going to trv to come out and plav Iexas Tech and Rut tough.” I v t a n s , ot his knet injury M cGuire placed on I If o n p K irrK c r L . u d i. v , o L J l \ J J » . t a r»*dshirt year as a Houston freshman, limited action in 19*4, and you have nearly three years without any cam. experience Still, the C ougars wt rt willing to take a chante on him He has what makes anvbodv a good line- : ■" T v . Houston C oach Bill Yeoman said "H e 's large, strong and has good speed. And he works real hard at trying to do better.” So tar in 19Kb M cGuire leads the team in tac­ kles with 127, just ahead of fellow linebacker Robi rt I larper w ho has 122. In his 19 games as a starter he has missed getting double f i g u r e s in tackles onlv four times. M cGuire still hasn t escaped pain however. Hi s all-out stv le ot play earned him the nick­ name ' I he Frt light Train of Pain " But McGuire said ht has added something to his game this vear other than a catchv nu kt ame T h is vear 1 think I ve become more of a lead­ er, McGuire said. "I definitely know more 1 tan predict and react better to s tuations than I Ih.it s as important as placing could last vear. Nowlin decision may be appealed By ED SHUGERT Daily Texan Staff U S District Judge James R N o w ­ lin's order Tuesday that the N C A A and Southwest Conference disclose information requested under the Texas Open Records Act (TO R A ) will probably not be the last shot tired in a battle started la s t spring between the N C A A and Texas me­ dia. Wednesday, the N C A A and S W C were taking a wait-and-see position on the ruling that would force it to make public documents covering its investigations into N C A A rules v i o ­ lations by member schools W e re not going to comment on any of it,” N C A A Director of Media in Relations Shawnee Mission, Kan. Jim Marchionv said But S W C Commissioner Fred Jacoby indicated an appeal of the ruling is likely. "I think it's the view of the N C A A to appeal the decision and we [the SW C ] will join in that ap­ peal," Marc hiony and Jacoby both stressed they had not seen a copy of the order as of late W ednesday and would wait until they and their at­ torneys had read the 35-page order before making a final decision on whether to appeal. H owever Austin attorney Jack Balagia Jr., who represented The Dallas Times Herald in the suit, said he iv sure the N C A A and SWC will appeal N ow lin's decision. "There's no doubt in mv mind they'll appeal,” Balagia s a id They alreadv announced that thev a re going to appeal earlier ruling’s that they fell under the Texas Open Records Act " The N C A A has 30 days to file a notice of appeal in the case with the 'th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans identifying The only exceptions to disclosure Now lin made were that the names information and any their about student-athletes and families should be deleted from the documents as well a s some pri vi ­ leged attornev-client material. That means coaches, boosters and school officials would be identified under the ru lin g Now lin, while acknowledging N C A A and SWC arguments that in­ dividuals named in the documents had a legitimate right to privacy, agreed with the position that the public lias an overriding interest to know about what goes on in college athletics and the people involved in rules violations. Now lin's order read in part. "Dis­ closure of improper activity or re­ cruiting practices, will necessarily aid the general public, parents, ath- letes, coac hes, teachers, counselors, recruiters, alumni and boosters in understanding specific violations and preventing violations and ill e ­ gal practices before thev a r e con­ summated " The N ( A A and S W C have ar­ gued that what Now lin is ordering them to do — if it stands — will kill the organization's ability to effec­ tively investigate and punish those who are guilty of breaking their rules. I hat argument has special signifi­ cance in Austin because Texas and the NC A A are in the middle of their own investigations into rules viola­ tions in the University football pre- dram a Jit ged bv The Dallas Morning New v last spring " I don't know how we will do it [investigate] in the future it we can't protect people's confidentiality," Texas Athletic Director Deloss Dodds said. re trying to improve college athletics, but the N C A A can't make people talk — it doesn't have sub­ poena power. 1 think all it [Now lin s order] will do is, the people who violate tht ruit s won t tais and the people who told on them won't talk either. 1 think it will really hamstring the NC A A s investigative powers.” But Balagia said lie believes the order will have positive effects for college athletics it it is allowed to stand The heart of the thing was the judge agreed with our v iew that the publication of the names of people actively involved [in rule- viola­ tions] would help deter those activi­ ties in the future,” Balagia said CLASSES BEGINNING NOW DAY OR NIGHT SESSIONS AVAILABLE INTENSIVE ENGLISH & 4S- Ü $ ANGLAIS INTENSIF &S. INGLES INTENSIVO • j W f l l L C L A S S E S , I N D I V I D U A L A T T E N T I O N • N E W L E VE L E V E R Y 4 W E E K S • A U T H O R I Z E D U N D E R FEDERAL L A W TO E N R O L L N O N - I M M I G R A N T A L I E N S T U D E N T S 1-20 F O R M D U R H A M - N IX O N - C L A Y COLLEGE 119 W. 8th at C o lo ra d o 4 7,8:1602 478-34' t £ X A $ T LONGHORNS 2nd HALF SALE 1st HALF > « Stadium Blanket Mug-A-Phone Stuffed Football Pocket Binoculars 64 oz Tapper ’86 Football Glass Hook ’Em Koozie ’T exas” Visor WHILE QUANTITIES LAST C T F. X A S U I \ I O \ AMIH S S T O k K 2nd HALF $14.95 7.45 6.45 3.45 3.25 1.50 1.25 1.00 ( P a g e 10 The Daily Texan/Thursday, Novem ber 6, 1986 The Incredible o 15-Story Lasagne. Incredibly delicious at *9.95 couple. • per C om e enjoy 15 incredible layers of Italian sausage, rich m eat sauce, R icotta, R om ano and Provolone Cheeses, Lasagne Noodles, herbs and spices. H om em ade m inestrone soup or San Francisco fresh salad, plus hot com pletes this sourdough bread delicious taste Á M ! experience. Astros’ Lanier named NL Manager of the Year Associated Press H O U S T O N — Hal L a n ier, w h o g u i d e d th e H o u s t o n A s tr o s to th e N a tio n a l L e a g u e W e st title, b e c a m e W e d n e s d a y th e first ro o k ie to be n a m e d th e N a tio n a l L e a g u e 's M a n a ­ g e r o f th e Year by th e B aseball W rit­ e rs A s so c ia tio n of A m erica. L a n ie r receiv ed 19 of a p o s s ib le 24 first-place v o te s w h ile r u n n e r u p D a v e y J o h n s o n , w h o m a n a g e d th e N e w Y ork M ets to a v ic to ry o v e r th e A stro s in th e NL. p la y o ffs a n d o n to a W o rld S eries c h a m p i o n s h i p , g o t th ree. R o g er C raig of th e S a n F ran cisco G ia n ts received th e o t h e r t w o first- place vo tes. O v era ll, L an ier f i n is h e d w ith 108 ‘I congratulate Hal Lanier. He did a great job all year, and his team really bat­ tled us in the playoffs.’ — Mets’ Manager Davey Johnson p o in t s to 62 for J o h n s o n , 42 for C raig, t h r e e for J o h n Felsk e o f th e P h il a d e lp h i a Phillies a n d o n e for Jim L e y la n d o f th e P i t t s b u r g h Pirates. J o h n s o n w a s fo u r th in t h e v o tin g last s e a s o n a n d s e c o n d in 1984. L a n ie r w a s not av ailab le for c o m ­ m e n t W e d n e s d a y a f t e r n o o n , clu b s p o k e s m a n C i n d a D o n o v a n said. I h e first-year m a jo r le a g u e m a n a ­ g er w a s p r e p a r i n g to fly to Fiji on I h u r s d a y w ith his w ife, M ary , for a b e la te d h o n e y m o o n , s h e said. I h e c o u p l e got m a r rie d last sp r in g . J o h n s o n , r e a c h e d in Tokyo w h e r e he is m a n a g i n g a U.S. All-Star te a m a g a i n s t a J a p a n e s e All-Star te a m , said h e d i d n ' t e x p ect to w in. "I c o n g r a t u l a t e Hal L a n ie r ," J o h n ­ s o n said. " H e d id a g re a t job all y e a r, a n d his team really b a ttle d u s in th e playoffs. The w a y th e a w a r d h as b e e n g o in g , it s e e m s really h a rd for th e m a n a g e r of a te a m p ic k e d to w in , to w in th e a w a r d . H o n e s tly , I w o u l d n t tr a d e w h a t w e w o n last w e e k for a n y in d i v id u a l a w a r d . " L an ier, a f o r m e r infielder, s p e n t five y e a rs as a coach w ith th e St. Louis C a r d in a l s before ta k in g th e A stro s' job. He look o v e r a 1 l o u s t o n te a m th a t in 1985 fin ish ed tied for th ird in th e W est, 12 g a m e s b e h in d th e c h a m p i ­ o n Los A n g e le s D o d g e r s w ith a n 83- 79 rec o rd a n d led t h e m to a 9 6 -6 6 m ark , 10 g a m e s b e tt e r th a n second* place C in c in n a ti H e dire< te d a n a g ­ g re s siv e g a m e , b u ild in g team a r o u n d p it c h in g a n d t u r n i n g his p la y e r s loose o n th e b a s t s in the m a n n e r of th e 1985 t a n im a ls . th e I he A stro s p u s h e d th e M e ts to six tight g a m e s in t h e playoffs, lo s in g in 16 i n n i n g s in th e sixth g a m e after h o ld i n g a 3-0 lead e n t e r i n g th e n i n t h in n ing . * O ffe r e xp ires N o v . 15, 1986. ( I I H 111 t l I t d in n e r o n h 34th & Guadalupe 453-TRIP DARE TO BE DIFFERENT SKI AUSTRIA $795° ° 7 Nights, Hotel, A ir from A ustin & Meals. ’ Subject to Restriction's & A vailab ility JOHNNY MOORE: “Texas has a solid basketball program, a fantastic facility, talented players, and a great coaching staff. All they need now to attract top recruits is a home court advantage.” ACHIEVEMENT. É There are many ways to acknowledge it... one lasts a lifetime. Your College Class Ring— from Balfour! UP TO $100 OFF! Select Yours at: % L . * * . 7 V Johnny Moore NBA Guard. San Antonio Spurs UT 7 6 - 7 9 , AU-SWC 79 “Texas is compet- ing for some oí the top high school % m and junior col- « .. M lege basketball L ^ players in the country and, with increased tan sup­ port, will have a com­ petitive advantage in recruiting. Filling the Drum more often should be the highest priority of Longhorn fans because all the other as­ pects of the program are in high gear This is the year to buy season tickets.. .good seats won’t be available forever. Order sea so n tickets now. Call 471-3333 for more information YOU can be the home court advantage. t ¿ I 98 6 - 8 7 B A S K E T B A L L T IC K E T A P P L IC A T IO N Your C actu s is w a itin g . P i c k u p ’8 6 a t TSP 3 . 2 0 0 . D eadline: Sat., N ov. 8 Order your caps and gowns today! ® C IT Y ____ STATE I Phone (H) ZIP 10) | CREDIT CARD PAYMENT AUTHORIZATION ■ CARDHOLDER _________________________ ■ N A M E ___ ■ ADDRESS CARD NO EXP DATE No Eckels An . C C A c n u T ir i/C T n o n r n SEASON TICKET ORD ER Type Arena Cost S9( 00 M e n a m n e 75 00 P o sta g e & H an d ng ? 00 TO TA L Caro Type Cardholde* ■ Qrtaluff __ _ Masftsrtt'Q IS. BANK USE I 1 ■ I I I I I No one remembers in so many ways. Total Amount Due S_ _______________ __________ L o n g h o rn B a sk e tb a ll P O B o x 7399 A u stin T X 78713-7399 B e v o ’s B o o k s t o r e 2 3 0 0 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 6 -7 6 4 2 D o b i e M a l l 4 7 6 -0 1 3 3 B e v o ’s 8 2 4 E . 2 6 t h U P T O $ 5 0 .0 0 O F F alfour. .n G H Í I -y - W hen you’re ready for lots of fun and great tasting food, for a whole lot less money. 117 W. 4th St. at Colorado 476-4059 ALL > EXCUSES ACCEPTED I didn’t see the Texan ad. It was raining on my day and my h air was frizzy. We decided to go to OU weekend early. I’m a sophomore but I got a freshm an card. I came at 12:05 and you were closed already. I had a black eye from intram ural football. I’ve been out of town for the last four weeks. v Friday, Novem ber 9 is the last day to be photographed for the 1987 CACTUS yearbook. Use any of the above excuses or choose your own, but be sure to come to TSP 4.112 (corner of 25th and Whitis) and be included in the only permanent photographic record of the UT school year. Hours: 8:30 a.m. - noon, 1 - 4:30 p.m. Sitting Fees: $3.50 for graduate students and graduating seniors — $2.00 for seniors, juniors, sophomores and freshmen. The Daily 1 exan/Thursday November 0 1986 Page 11 ‘Sid and Nancy’ captures junkies’ real-life nightmare By GREG SMITH Daily Texan Staff Sid a n d \a n c y lingers like a nightmare dreamt to conclusion — too unsettling to forget, too funny to take seriously and too real to dismiss entirely. Director Alev Cox makes the factual history of Sid Vic tous and Nancv s pungen the skeletal framework of his film and fleshes it out with oral anecdote and speculation. I ike a nightmare, S id an d N a n cy isn't real, hut the images and the in-jokes started in reality, making them, and the movie, all the more unshakeable. Cox leaves behind the satirical tantasv of his tirst film, Repo M an, in favor of hard-hitting reality I he earlier jokes about methamphetamine, California pop philosophy and teen-age sex are parlaved in h id and ncy into strong statements on heroin, 20th centurv nihilism and that four-letter word, love. W ith S id and N ancy, the director leaves behind the soft* confines of cultdom. He steps on a multitude of toes with his subject mat­ ter alone — the romantic affair of ex-Sex Pistol Sid V i­ cious (Garv ( )ldham) and groupie-evtraordinam Nani v Spungen (C hloe Webb). Every self righteous "p u n k ” will bitch about the liberties Cox takes with the two public figures Such complaints are irrelevant there has never been a couple more worthy of exploitation Originally entitled Love K ills the movie depicts the physical dec av of two people who just do n t t are B o re dom K ills would have been more- appropriate Bore­ dom drives Spungen to heroin, boredom drives V k ious to Spungen and boredom drives them both to a dead­ end death. It's to Cox's credit that he presents the apa thy without alienating the audience. See Sid de stroy a Rolls-Royce; see Sid beat journalist (in reality English music critic Nick Kent); "Dick Dent and see Sid bash his head against the wall to impress girlfriend-to-be Nancy Spungen. It takes an innocent soul sueh as \ icious to ac t out the public's whims Ife has been monumentalized in remittance for his efforts The truth is found in the old maxim, "O n ly the bor­ ing are bored." Vicious believes he has no place in Eng­ land s rigid class system, not to mention an escape from it. Spungen turns her back on her upper-middle- class roots and whatever advantages that may be gained from it. These are two stupid people who be­ lieved it when they were told thev had no future They proceed to live nihilism out, even if thev have no idea what it was called. After the break-up of the band wfhile on their North American tour, Sid Vicious is no longer a rock -tar and Nancy Spungeon is no longer a groupie They're sim­ ply a couple c >t 111nk a*s with glamorous pretensions and a deadly habit They form a menage a trois with heroin; with Su I and N ancy, ( ox parodies everv romantic con­ vention in the ( inematu library Nancy, the Jewish American Princess, ..ills her mother to tell her that she and Sid married, whi. h they did do in a very' comrnon-law sense. But the call is basically a request for money to buy smack Mom re fuses to comply and Nancv utters her best line, "M O- OM! W e re n o t going to buy DRU-UGS' ' It’s a bold- faced lit*, just as their lewe is A trip to Paris and a t helsea hotel lovers' hideaway prov ide only more fodder tor the* C ox cannon Sitting in .1 sidewalk cafe Nd heaves on a fairk offensive music critic while experiencing withdrawals Nancv carries him off, attacking the* journalist lor making him sick As they nod off in their C helsea apartment, an unat­ tended cigarette sparks a pile of garbage. As the- in­ coherent couple is dragged from the burning room, C ox attempts to capture the sight through their eyes lie fills the wide screen with tuzzv flames communi­ cating completely the removed horror of this feeling, I .ove does finally kill the lovers, but Cox shows he is as much a popular movie maker as an artistic filmmaker with the ending Sid does a little dance, makes a little love* and then does indeed get down tonight I he conc luding scene is a minor masterpiece in a work lull of memorable ones It relieves the* audience* of the terriblv oppressive passages e>t heroin injections and perverse love* I he* director reassures his audience* that it was all |ust a mov ie* thanks them tor their atten­ tion and sends the*m out of the theater in a c old sweat. s/d an d \a n c y should be* run as a double* feature with Otto Preminger s Ih , Man Wi t h the ( , olden A rm , an equally powerful talc of heroin addiction and love I hen mavbe someone can figure out whv l o v e , after the passage of the 30 years between the two films, isn't considered a saving grace any more, but a homicidal one S id a nd N ancy, directed by Alex Cox, opens Friday at the Village 4, 2700 Y\. Anderson Lane. Gary Oldham does it Sid Vicious* inimitable way In Alex Cox's - • Punk rock may never be the same . v v n m a y I I C V C I Ü C I I f t ? b d l T i e . M onkees com m unicate spirit of ’60s, consum erism of ’80s D u & / A T L H c rc rix i u ^ r r r By KATHLEEN McTEE Daily Texan Staff The stupendous success of the Monkee revival has made some prime artifacts of '60s pop culture available again — along with Rhi­ no's reissues of The Monkees' records, RC A Columbia is releasing episodes of The M onkees and their classic feature him, Head, on video­ tape. At the same time, however, the financial success of the Pre-Fab Four's hasty resurrection ha*, creat­ ed a Monkee monster. The "m usical" reunion of Peter Tork, M icky Dolenz and D a w Jo n e s continues. Their package tour with The Grass Roots, Garv Puckett & the Union Gap and Herman's H er­ mits remains on the road, with five 1V3H TIM E ot their October show *> listed among the nation's top-grossing ai ts in Bill- hi \ird I hen & Now ... Jhe B t‘st of the M o n k e e s , the compilation ot M onk­ ees hits with new songs by Tork, Dolenz and Jones, also clings to the top 50. Although the single That k.is Then, I hi sl - . Vow dropped oft the charts, D aydream H e lie \e r has climbed from #mo to All ot the publicitv surrounding the Monkees reunion attests to the tact that thi group appeals to let n- agers at least as much as to the band so w n generation. I he ©rig nal group that is — marketeers have al­ ways hit the jackpot with a tried and true formula based upon the unlimitt d appt a] of funnv hip guy s w th guitars to Am. nca - largi pop ulation of squt aling t. - • age girls 1 his same strategy w . * * - tor con­ temporary bands such as a-ha and Duran Duran, especially when ex­ ploited through \ ideo A-ha - 1 lip ot l ast ( ]n M e mash rtuilv uses every young girl s tantasties of absorption into the world ot her dream dates These new pop stars vvjll age, thi ir hair refusing to hold its shape tor any amount ot mousse their col­ tightening or-coordinated outfits o v e r early n u d d S e - a g i s p r e a d s T h e M o n k e e s , however, have an advan­ tage —■ pre-established video im- mortaJitv forget todav s wrinkled Mickv I )olen/ giass\ -eved Peter Tork and wi/i ned I >avy |. mes, now fathers ot their I he voung s e l v e s . Micky, Peter, Daw and Mike, p re - infinitely elei tromcally, serv ed resurrect the spirit ot b6 former f he Monkees exotic Nehru jac k­ ets and lov t bc*ads don't hurt their appeal — but what thev re really selling is the power of vouth which w constantly eroding todav, as America grows older and apathy toward anything but money be­ comes the norm among those* under 2* Simon I e Bon may set m prettv but he II m ver represent an exciting decade. Luckily, tit*, new Monkees show is not yet completed — while the old senes has been the victim of overkill it's still tunny For those Monkeephiles who haven't alreadv taped the series, R C A Columbia has packaged eight episodes into four 50-minute cassettes with a list price t t $20 each until Jan. 1. 1987, when the price goes up to $30 I h a d , released along with these episodes, stands as The Monkees finest 86 minutes. The film is a sur- real, circular journey through a M onk eeland of bácklots and deserts, wild parties and haunted mansions, a trippy montage of scent s very unlike the* comparative­ ly staid halt-hour format of the se­ ries. it they suggested their dissatis­ in comedy faction with later episodes of the series, here they proclaim and shuck off their identi­ ties as manufactured obiects once and tor all. It's ironic — or perhaps fitting — that I he Monkees best moments came as they ridiculed themselves as consumer products, while two decades later th;s non-band has be­ come one of the hottest "item s" on the market Since the Monkees were pre-tab from the beginning, thev were easier to repackage the second time around Unfortunately, m u ch of their new* audience only knows the cute, puppet-like Monkees, an image the revived "b a n d " thrives upon The originality and depth or their humor has been lost at the cash register ‘Vibes-President’ Hampton to jazz Austin By SLIM CHAPMAN Daily Texan Staff Lionel Hampton singlehandedly legitimized the use of the vibra­ phone as a primary instrument in jazz. Combining aggressive swing, soulful ballad interpretation and a flashy extroverted performance style, Hampton attracted large audi enees (both white and black) and commanded top dollar in the finest clubs in the swing era of the '30s and early '40s. Hampton has been the primary source of influence tor many players in the current ja/z crop, including vibraphonist Milt Jackson and pia­ nist Herbie Hancock. Although now in his seventies, Hampton still re­ mains active on the |azz scene, lead­ ing a touring band comprised of up- and-coming voung players. in Lionel Hampton was born Louisville, Ky. in 1913. Hampton soon moved to Chicago, where he spent his early vears in one of the most impressive jazz cities in the world. He got his start in the music business at the age of 13 plaving drums for Paul Howard's Quality Serenaders It was with this band that Hampton recorded his first vo­ cal, a song called M o o n lig h t Blues. A later move to the West Coast linked Hampton with The Spikes Brothers Band, a Los Angeles-based group It was in 1930 that Hampton had one of the first of many brushes with greatness playing drums for the Eddie Elkins Band, which was fronted bv cornetist Louis Arm ­ strong. Hampton then did stints with Les Hite's big band as well as Charlie Echols' band of 1934. Hampton then led his own band in and around the California area until 1936. It was during a gig as the house band at Hollywood's Para­ dise Club that Hampton caught the Vibraphonist and bandleader Lionel Hampton has kept the swing jazz tradition alive for several generations eye of Benny Goodman and Gene Krupa. Goodman (encouraged by impresario John Hammond) asked Hampton to join The Bennv Good­ man Trio on vibes. At that time, black artists were beginning to be accepted as individual players only if they were aligned with popular white acts. Hampton played with the Good­ man Trio until 1940, when he left to more actively pursue his bandlead- ing. In the 40s Lionel Hampton led a big band with an ever-evolving per­ sonnel policy. This arrangement proved to be one of the nation's b e s t breeding grounds for future jazz greats. Some notable Hampton graduates include guitarist Irving Ashby, pianist M ilt Buckner and tenor saxophonist Arnett Cobb Though this music w as called "re ­ bop and boogie-woogie" and at­ tracted a large swring audience, peo­ ple really came to hear Hampton and his soloists. And as these so­ loists came and went, the music gradually became less and less pop­ ular. \nd although swing died out, this decade created manv pieces which stand the* test of time (F lyin g Home, M illio n -D o lla r h m ile , Beu­ lah s Boogie, A irm a il Special and Boogie 1 Voogn X o.2 all recorded on the* Decca label), and fostered such greats as guitarist Charlie C hristian Lionel Hampton, 8 p.m. Thurs­ day at the Performing Arts Center Concert Hall. ‘Shanghai’ a study in Hollywood hype By SEAN S. PRICE Daify Texan Staff In a lot of wavs, S hanghai Surprise was inevitable. The idea of plopping Sean Penn and M a­ donna in the same movie simpiv has too much campy, People mag­ azine-type appeal for Hollywood to pass it up. 1 he only question that might have cropped up along the wav is w hat genre should be used to capi­ talize on America's photogenic darlings. The light-hearted roman­ tic adventure landed on would have been just swell if it weren't saddled with jerky pacing, lousy direction and a script that achieves inconsistency only in its better moments. they Given the obstacles, Penn and Madonna would have had to giv e performances reminiscent of Bo­ gey and Bacall to make S hanghai Surprise work They didn't, and it doesn't. is Part of the problem that Shanghai Surprise peaks |ust a wee bit too early. The first scene is it's one middling moment — part­ ly because neither Penn nor M a­ donna is in it and partly because it is somehow fairly w ell-written. The movie opens in 1937 with a big-time Shanghai opium dealer named W alter Faraday (played wonderfully by Philip Saver) flee­ ing before the oncoming Japanese armies with a verv marketable horde of opium. In quick succes­ sion, though, Faraday manages to anger a greedy police captain, have his opium stolen get shot and mysteriously disappear. 1 he* rest of the action occurs one year later when Miss Tatlock (M a­ donna), a prim and proper mis­ sionary, and her boss trick Penn into helping them find "Faraday's flowers. opium wounded soldiers Sure They want to use the for to make morphine I enn, w ho plays a sort oi sleazy small-tim e m erchant nam ed Wasey, gets kind of hacked off when he finds out h e 's been had. But eventually get this) he finds he* has the hots tor Madonna, and they go opium hunting into the sunset. k lichés like rickshaw chases and locals who speak nothing but pidgin English are bad enough, but Shanghai S urprise is also load­ ed with some dandv situational non sequiturs Probably the silliest example comes when Penn teach­ es a basebali-crazv Chinese gang­ ster how to throw a knuckleball in exchange tor vital clues to finding the missing opium bure, 1 he one scrap of redemption the script has is its utter unpredictabil­ ity. Unfortunately, it's unpredicta­ ble tor all the wrong reasons. Plot twists are supposed to be accom­ panied by some logical transitions. Shanghai S urprise s are accompa­ nied only with th e realization that continuity has been bludgeoned and left for dead. And though most of the movie may have some grasp on un­ predictability, the ending sure doesn't. By then, though, nobody cares how Sean and M adonna get to live happily ever after. Shanghai S u rp ris e , starring M a ­ donna and happy-go-lucky Sean I enn, at the Riverside Theatre 1930 E. Riverside D rive. ÍL R.Ko ? ? UGlAS LA,,RENCE OLIVIER JEAN SIM M O N S CHARLES LAUGHTON PETER USTINOV JOHN GAVIN I X k .lA ^ \/ C TONY CURTIS T o d a y a t 2 & 7 p m U n i o n T h e a t r e ¡.n h | 2 .5 0 U.T. 3 .0 0 N o n U T L STARTS TOMORROW J 2 for 1 Student Rush with ID One Hour Before Curtain "“VMRflTY2402 GUADALUPE 474-4351 C O C A i f Fajita Flats OPEN MIKE U V E M U S IC E V E R Y T H U R S . 7 - 9 p m 512 W. 29th Your Cactus is waiting. Pick up '86 yearbook s at TSP 3.200. ¡LIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIE T| = 2130 S C o ngren « O p r , I j , ni • 442-5716 =• 1 = | T A B O O A M E R IC A N STYLE II /P LU S/ TICKLED P IN K (X) ADULTS O N LY (X) V M S S a le s & Rental 7illlllillllllllllllllllllllllll||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||f?; 1 = = ¡ CHEERLEADER ACADEMY S P Y S 1 / 2 PRICE SPECIALS! TU ESD A YS AND SU N D AYS ADULT VIDEO S A L E S & R EN T A LS L O W E S T P R IC E S -M A G A Z IN E S VIDEO P E E P S IN A 6 CH A N N EL (X X X ) (X X X ) "ONE OF THE MOST * EXCITING AND JOYFUL MOVIES EVER MADE." —Pauline Kael THE MYSTERY OF I t ’x not w hether you live or die, it ’s how you p lay the gam e. STUDENT DISCOUNT Directed by M ac W illiam s S t a r r i n g Pe te C a l h o u n M ichael C ostello hursday-S unday 8 p .m . 3 1 1 Nueces 472-71 34 7 V- 1 eCAC/ (. U / i l '< A r i A N D HAM TONIGHT Kenville New Folk Winner H al M ichael K etchu m no cover Friday Stackabones Reunion no cover Saturday Twin Bill E ric Taylor and H ud son & Fran k e A STREETC AR NAMED DESIRE By T EN N E S S EE W ILLIAM S D ir e c t e d Bv BOYD VAN CE O C T 3 0 t h - N O V 2 2 n d Wed thru S at 8 pm Sundays 2 pm Vi Price Students w/ID Wed Thurs Sun CAPITOL CITY PLA YH O U SE 472-2966 214 WEST 4th LAST NIGHT S H E ’S G O T T A H A V E I T TODAY: (5:30 $2.75)7:30,9:30 Belizaire The Cajun TODAY: (5:15 52.7sf7:15, 9:15 / — — •s. T H U R S D A Y 'S T IM E S T O TWI LITE SHOWS & MATINEES EVERY0AY ALL SHOW S BEFORE 6 PM C R O C O D ILE D U N D EE |> <;i '<-131 ( 5 : 4 5 S 2 . 5 0 ) - 8 : 0 0 - 1 0 :0 5 71 J U M P IN 'J A C K FLASH ( 5 : 3 0 5 2 . 5 0 ) - 7 : 4 5 - 9 : 5 5 K TRICK OR TREAT k ( 6 : 0 0 $ 2 . 5 0 ) - 8 : 1 5 - 1 0 :1 5 bp on the % 2 0century JSS \ j 1 -J n » - . ; ' 4_ H K IN G D O N O V A N ANOTHER HIT BROADWAY MUSICAL! Join an all-star cast aboard the wackiest tram ever to ride the rails. Lively music, a fast- paced plot, and a laugh-a-minute script keep this comedy vehicle right on track! Sun, Nov. 9 - at 8 p.m. Performing Arts Center Concert Hall E ve n ings: $24, $17, $12 C E C and Seniors: $21, $14, $9 Sunday Matinee at 4 p.m.: $20, $13, $10 C E C and Seniors. $17, $10, $7 Tickets available at all H E B Superstores, the PAC, Erwin Center, and all UTTM TicketCenters. Charge-a-Ticket. 477-6060. Information: 471-1444. Call 471-1446 for your personal invitation Q Performing Arts Center College of Fine Arts The University of T exas at Austin Page 12 The Daily Texan/Thursday. Novem ber 6, 1986 ^ G e n e r a l C in e m a A R T T N BARG AIN MATINEES-EVERYDAY ALL SHOW S BEFORE 6 P M $ 2 75 HIGHLAND MALI H IG H L A N D M A L L BLVD. 4 9 1 - 7 3 9 * JUMPIN JACK FLASH 2 10- 4 3 0 - 7 0 0 - 9 2 0 ________ SOUL MAN D’l-i 'I 2 :2 0 -4 :4 0 - 7 :0 0 - 9 :1 5 I-3 S a *C A M E R O N M X 4 5 3 - 7 6 4 4 CAPITAL PLAZA DEADLY FRIEND _____________ 2 3 0 - 5 0 0 7 :1 5 - 9 15 RUNNING SCARED 2 : 2 0 - 4 4 0 - 7 1 0 -9 :2 0 THE FLY r 5 0 0 - 9 :3 0 ALIENS h 2 :1 5 -7 0 0 (T im e s S h o w n for T o d a y O n ly ) IT PAYS TO BE EARLY When you arrive between 5:30 PM and 7:00 PM the time of your arrival will be the price of any of these delicious dinners: • Hot Mushroom Marinate with Fettuccine • Cannelloni with Tomato Sauce • Lasagne with Mushrooms or • Shrimp Alfredo 476-7202 ^§§|p 1601 Guadalupe R e o K M n a t o Austin’s Oldest Italian Restaurant United Bank A One Capital Square CACTCCN C A V A L C A D E X A TWO-HOUR FUN FEST C l a s s i c f a v o r i t e s a n d v i n t a g e v a r i e t i e s (1 9 3 3 - 1 9 4 9 ) B U G S , D A F FY, BETTY B O O P , M IC K E Y , P O R K Y , P O PE Y E , TW EETY a n d m o r e m o st n ot a v a i la b le o n v i d e o ' \ \ \ \ \ 8 PM ONLY! Jester Aud. $2 00 U T $2 50 N on U.T Kids under 12 FREE with adult H u m p h re y B o g a r t in TECMMCOLO* C A I N E M U T I N Y ROBERT FRANCIS ■ MAY WYNN T o d a y a t 9 : 3 0 p m H o g g A u d . |n r | 2 .5 0 U.T. 3 .0 0 N o n U.T. Monty Python's Life of Brian Today at 11:50pm 2.50 UT Union Theatre k 3.00 Non UT RUTHLESS PEOPLE T o d a y a t 5 :2 0 & 1 0 :1 5 p m U n i o n T h e a tre 2 .5 0 U.T. 3 .0 0 N o n U.T. k C a u l N e w m a n i n T h e H u s tle r N.R. Not rated Further info may be ob­ tained by checkmq the Union Film Calendar. Today at 7 pm Hogg Aud. |nk| 2.50 U.T. 3.00 Non U.T. '¿•¡S 1 PRESIDIO THEATPgR ¿2 C O L O R O F M O N E Y nCl DOLBV r— < __________ ^ C H I L D R E N O F A L E S S E R GOD “ P E G G Y 1s u e “ G O T *M ,3 CRO CODILE DUNDEE GO DOLBY _______ 1S-9:30 IHX T O U G H G U Y S 't,-/ so lo oo P E G G Y S U E G O T M A R R I E D 4 cue 4 0(J DOLBY fHX 4 0 i n F i - I X g L E T ' S G E T H A R R Y ,/aXN 4 % T O U G H G U Y S S K Y B A N D I T S r / / ^ | S I N C E R E L Y C H A R L O T T E ^ — - P I G I R C IN T H E P I C T U R E ^ 15-7: 15 9 ¡0 4 V I L L A G E 2700 ANDERSON a 4614362 BLU E V E L V E T 1:45-5:10-7:45-10;15 I| T R IC K O R T R E A T p f| Advance ii kct may t>e i'.irchascd it .iny v / A ; I our and l ' zzM % Reduced prices tor features starling at . y / V 'dature oí it ,r' ft. • • • • »„. • pm w- - : i, t v. ■■ - - /f/0 before / y / V //, '/// " |jpZZZZZZS 7ZZ217ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ2ty% W '• ' ' '• ^ H o lly w o o d I. IS to Otter, A u stin ite s < h o u s e t h e f ^ ^ S M O W T I M E S A F U F O R T O D A Y O N I Y ' " " i - r o n » |, turns r V.71 "41 T -I,.- < / / / " * • * ' ” best theatres //fy77777T7P J S S A S S S / ) }>>>))>>>>>>> ■ P R E S ID IO THEATRiS minimi ■' »j t : H)- J:05 5:00 7 0(1-9:00 TO U G H G U Y S 10-5 20-7:30 9:4' C O L O R OF M O N E Y ,HX G O DOLBY fw i s 11 SO , IS-4 : TO / 00-9: JS T O P G U N 12:16-2:30-5:00 7:30-9:50 [FU| C H I L D R E N O F A L E S S E R G O D 1" 1:00-5:20-7:50-10:15 P E G G Y S U E G O T T T T T ^ ^ m a r r i e d EN JO Y THE BEST IN FOOD, MUSIC AND DRINKS JB o cz rd u K »Ilr c O IS _ .................................................... 2 DANCE FLOORS 21 & OVER — UPPER DECK UNDER 2 1 — LOWER DECK I ¡ THURS. FRI. & SAT. I THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS: THURSDAY—ALL IMPORTS $1 9-1 TRIPLES FOR SINGLES 9 12 FRIDAY & SATURDAY— TRIPLES FOR SINGLES 9 -1 2 479-8601 I ¡ 215 E. 6th í r ^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmi A n th o n y S h a f f e r ’s INSTANT CASH a n d B o n u s If y o u n e r d , a , h to h e lp y o u o u t w h ile A tte n d in g t o llr g e w h y n..t d o n a te b lo o d p la s m a ? W iih ih is ad y o u 'll „ $2 b o n u s o n y o u r f ir v l v is it S „ h e lp o th e rs w h ile h e lp in g y o u i •eH M u s i h a w v a lid II» a n d p r o o f o f A u s im re s id e n , e l ) , aw fng held onre a month for two $25 bonuses ( a lU 7 4 7941 M .m I ,1 9 5 A u s t in P l a s m a C e n t e r 2 8 0 0 ( • CA R W A SH N. 1 0 0 7 53rd R A M A L . N 1 1 | + |S^ 2 New Orleans- Live at Pearl's. / 9 J O Í RIVERSIDEm-St 1 9 SeflN PENN MflDONNH \ MUl « 4 :3 0 -7 :0 0 -9 :3 0 I G R E A T | | * i a j I 4 : 4 5 -7 :1 5 -9 4 5 2 í S T S r G U A D A L U P E * 7 7 / 3 2 * ~ 9 * S E A N PENN El 4:45 7:159:35 U 4:30-7 :00 -9 :2 0 V C H R t S T O P t C T 'W WALKEN 1 L É A I PINK FLAMINGO’S 12:00 Ü I I H G AT C LO SE RANGE 1 1 : 4 5 Where It’s Mardi Gras every night. Don’t live forget Thursdays with Dixieland Scat Cats, 8 p.m. - mid­ night. Try a taste of New Orleans Hwy 183 at Burnet Road 339-7444 FIBONACCI SEQUENCE Leonardo Fibonacci was an Italian m athem atician (1 1 8 0 -1 2 5 0 ). He invented an unending sequence w here each term equals the sum of its two predecessors (e.g., 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21. etc.). The higher one g ets in the sequence, the closer one gets to the propor­ tions of th e golden trian gle. (This is designed to appeal to the m ath em atically/scien tifically m inded.) The ad w as going to be about evolution, but I w asn’t ready to handle calls from the offended. I do believe in evolution ... I even walk like an ape somet imes. B eau ty and tru th combine in liturgy. T h a t’s when God’s presence m u tates and p erm u tates. Sigh! S iu v b u jW fid /u j> a i.lfa ,jA . ¿ C u d w u u v C a iftp u d ‘fy in it t ' u j Z JO O S a^ íA n U x io ^ 4 7 Z -5 K > ( ú u n lU í%- TAKE YOUR FAVORITE DATE TO Mxlcc ¿9*2 Q /ieoT dty Dinner served til 10 PM. ( II PM. Friday--Saturday) 1206 West 34th Phone; 4 5 1 -5 5 5 0 ai ALETAS ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Our cooks h ate Thursday nights, b e ­ c a u s e th a t’s when you ’ll get a small order oí Beef or Chicken Fajitas with all the trimmings FR E E with the p u rch ase oí a la rg e order oí iajitas. So bring the g a n g an d com e hungry!! Aleta’s Restaurant & Cantina 1907 Guadalupe 479 0940 GOOD VIBES 2 for 1 Student Rush with ID O n e Hour B eio re C urtain L io n e l Ha m p t o n VIBES-PRESIDENT of the United States and his orchestra Thurs, Nov 6, 8 p.m . Perform ing Arts Center C oncert Hall Public: $15, $10, $5 CEC, Seniors: $10, $5 Tickets a v a ila b le a t a ll HEB Superstores, the PAC, a n d Erwin C enter a n d a ll UTTM TicketCenters. C h arg e-a-T ick et; 477-6060, Inform ation: 471-1444 Performing Arts Center C o lle g e o f Fine Arts The University of T e xas pi Austin V i s a / M a s t e r c a r d A c c e p t e d m e u d i i y l e x a n / i n u r s a a y ( N o v e m D e r F O-r W O r d ° d S C o H D e p l o y o d s c o l l 4 7 1 - 1 8 6 5 / 8 o m - 4 3 0 p . m . M o n d a y - F r i d a y / T S P B u i l d i n g 3 . 2 0 0 / 2 5 0 0 W h i r l s A v e V i s a / M a s t e r c a r d A c c e p t e d M E R C H A N D I S E M E R C H A N D IS E R E N T A L R E N T A L R E N T A L 2 0 0 — F u r n i t u r e - 2 8 0 — S p o r t i n g - H o u s e h o l d C a m p i n g E q u i p . 3 6 0 — F u r n . A p t s . 3 6 0 — F u r n . A p t s . 3 6 0 — F u rn . A p t s . SANDPIPER APTS. 2 8 1 0 R I O G R A N D E Spoctous 7 bee 2-path «ostefuRy bjm*%h+c MK'owave «ttencorr an<3 reAng tar tr eoc * room Gas tookmg covered pa*iang oncl •Pen* manage* Gas and « g e pota Now onty $525 - etectrK Col 444 2750 47 ' 4622 m 474 6683 108 Place Leasing F o r Fal!/Spnr*g Furnished Efficiencies a n d O n e B e d ro o m Apartm ents • dfjh washery disposal • sw»mrning po o j • p a h o / i o u n g e " B 8 Q gr*S • individuo sto*oge • bookshe'ves • " block *0 IF shuttle • *oundry focii*t»es • resident monoger f ro rr $ 2 6 0 • E *5 2 -1 4 1 9 , if n o a n s w e r 4 5 3 - 2 7 ’ '•06 a * 5 t h Sf disposals d ish w a sh e r W ARW ICK APTS. 2907 WEST AVE. 2 b e e / boh- & 1 beo roo n - o p o '" mentj fo r reni W e h o v e Iros» free ne- fn g ceding fa n s in living r o o m o n d b e d ro o m s walk in p o o locked laund ry m at outside security lighting, c o ve re d bike rocks, c o ve re c p c-V io g o v o a D i e go ; & wate- ore smoh h o u se p e n ore O r p a id Ground-, are g a - a e r io n d sc a p e c vValk ng distance fro m UT sw *m m m g closets * " * ~ ¿ 2 b 4 4 4 2 7 5 0 12-1A Casbah Apartments 2200 San Gabriel One Month's Free Rent 2-2 for 2-3 people * $475 C o n d o living at A p t Pnces, luxu­ ry, space, convenience (walk or shuttle), ceiling fans, microwave intercom and 2 sepo’ate en- tnes 473-8553, 444-2750 U 1 0 D j e r r i c k T, 11,111 104 E. 3 2n d Street (1 block East of Speedway) 1BR — $275, 2BR $325 See Manager Apt. 103 or calf 476-5940 1M2A V.I.P. APTS O n e bdrm. ovonabie for Jar N e w furniture, carpet, top class building. C a L 4 7 6 -0 3 6 3 10’ E 33rd St ’:-e ALL BILLS PAID o ne M m - fu m « a m o c a* $ 4 4 0 Shuttle of d o o r poo- luxury liv­ ing P-esfiaicws b uild ing 50h 478-9775 Century Square 3401 Red River 11-10 LEASING FOR JANUARY Large 1BR furnished or unfur­ nished. Very low heating bills Microwave, ceilmg fons. quiet complex, 31st o n d Speedw ov 477-2004 ’2 4 ENFIELD ARMS 1409 Enfield R o o d — on shuttle Furnished 1 bedroom available N ovem ber 1st ot $ 3 6 5 plus bills Shown by appointment— coll M r . R i b a r at 4 7 8 -7 9 9 6 . n 21D n !a < C H R IS I Y SPORTS > ' Demo Ski Sale $95» pr R u s s ig a t A i I*rt\ i a I D y n a s t a r if k / I / M i j w a f He sta rt h ¡ Ofm r j N O W S K IS H exce¡ 11 t>ifwt*oq‘, H *.-y c o m b alt " .no* 4 5 4 9 9 8 6 4 7 6 8 H 1 11 1 *-*. 575 4e 3 3 0 — P e t s FIVE M O N T H otd Block l a b p u p p ie s Alt shots on e de** ctaws $10 0 e a c h Pom 4 7 6 - 6 9 8 2 ext 1 2 6 or 8 5 8 7 2 2 3 after 6 0 0 p m 11-6 E X T R A O R D IN A R Y K IT T E N S* Feta aMey Ten • ft in p u r e b r e d s to o o o d weeks S w e e t h e a rts B o *-fra m e d fr e e LA CANADA FURNISHED ALL BILLS PAID LB ” 5 DEAL • * • /ft! • A '. r m p u s m Tenr A s i Ar waves CALL TODAY 4 7 7 -3 6 1 9 I Office At Che; Jacques 1302 Mr 24th VILLA SOLANO APTS. H yde P a r k A p ts. Off First Moath't Rent > E f T . F u r n $275 ( 1 BR Furn. $300 2 BR Furn. $400 City Tennis C ourts & Pool S h u ttle at Front Door M anager On Site 4413 Speedway M O V E I S T O D A Y 4 5 8 2 0 9 6 D a v - & Assoc 1 9 4 0 $ D IN E R styied c h ro m e dinette set with ro u n d table o n d four choirs Excel lent c ondition $ 6 0 4 5 4 0 6 3 8 11 6 Q U E E N SIZ E W atertoed h a r d w o o d with h e a d b o a rd , heater Uner, m attress m o h o g a n y stam ed D ra w e rs a v a ila b le $ 6 5 7 8 ? 6 9 0 ? e v e n in g * 11 -10 B L A C K v ^ T ^ T s O 2 5 w l e c h m c s receiver 7 P ioneer 3 w a y sp eakers Pi o n e e r turntable all $15 0 3 2 0 - 8 6 9 ? 11 K f f t l G f M f O i S O f A k>ve veo’ ocm c hoir twin b e d a n d d o u b le h e a d b o a rd tables chtno c ab m et desk a n d cho*r 4 514 C a sw e ll A venue 11 10 2 1 0 — S t e r e o - T V R< <• « 3 0 19* cco io r teie v'v K e n w o o d C Z p re am piiher p h o n e s re c ord e r ampJifie» $1 5 5 1 0 o n/ hm e 11-6 THE STE P E O C o n n e x io n n e w o n d usee stereo o n d vid e o equipm en* j c o r a * m ost b ra n d s a n d beat a n y p n c e C o * Pe ter after 6 pm for details 4 7 8 -3 1 2 5 11 11 3 W A Y ocoushc F tS H F R sp e a ke rs 12 b o ss soft d o m e rrwdronge c o r e fx c e M e n t $ 4 9 0 0 / pair 4 8 2 9 3 4 8 1 1 10 *w e e t# f c o n d it io n su sp e n s o r 5 P Í A k EPS* B R A N D É b o * 15 m< tch W o o f e r $200 $t*M 3 0 5 A U D K D V used Low Rete 4 5 9 equipment new n N o m e b ra n d 2 2 0 C o m p u t e r s - E q u i p m e n t i f K M 1 N 4 5 IOC 3C meste R E N T A L 1 2 0 0 -b o n d sp eed ve- 3 0 0 B a n d sp eed- $ 7 5 per le o v e m e ssa g e 4 4 7 1381 11-10 300 / 1 2 0 0 m o d e m B ra n d n e w with w ar rom y $ 1 )0 T e rm ina' wrth fufi screen ca pobvkttes $ 1 6 5 $ 1 5 0 4 4 ? 1381 11-10 C O M P U T E R t O G f C R C T T í l T o m p o t T bfei Se a g a t e 3 0 m e g H D w /com roAer A p p le c ard s dnve*. Buy veH T R A D E to n s ig n m e a h 7 4 3 1 Burnet M - f 10-8 Sa t IQ 6 4 5 8 5 8 6 ? 1 ? 2 M A C I N T O S H U P G R A D E sate M o s V c o m peottve pn c e s f ir e H quo-Hy avo é a b íe i M e g $ 2 3 9 2 M e g $ 4 9 9 fr e e m staBo h oo at yo u r ia c a h o o 4 7 8 2 6 2 9 1 1 7 > R E A ? B U Y O n ly used eoder eirter ? 5 8 after 7p 2 3 0 — P h o t o - C a m e r a s .■.*.* x e 'lla rg e f O M P l E T t v o lenses • . — u m ogm tiers ea - , *< :* ie 8 3 5 ; 5 10 11 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Consecutive Day Rotas ! 5 w o r d minimum E o ch w o rd 1 time E o c h w o r d 3 l im n E a c h w o rd 5 h u m E a c h w o rd 10 timei t o t h w o r d 15 times 1 Or I’ w o rd 7 0 tim ei 1 col 1 1 M idi 1 lim a $ 3 0 $ 8 3 $ t 26 1 7 0 5 $ 2 4 8 $ 2 6 7 pei insertion $ 7 1 0 |1 0 0 c h a rg e to c h a n g e t o p r First >wo w ord » m ay b e a * ( npital let»,,, ? S < for e a c h add itional w o rd m capital le n m i M o d e r e o rd o n d / n o accepted D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E M o n d a y t e n o n t n d o y U o m Tue sday te n o n W e d n e s d u , te n o n t S u n d a y te n o n W e d n e s d a y M om t n d o y I n . j< M o n d a y H orn Tuesday H orn Thursday llo m In die event at error» mode In on advertisement, notice must be given by 11 o.m the Mr»» doy, o* the publtshett are re sponsible lor on l, O N I mror reet Insertion All rtalms lor od (ustments should be mode not Infer than 30 d ay s otter publi­ cation. pre paid hills receive credit slip it requested at time of com ello fton, ond If amount enceed» $2 00 Slip must be presented tor a reorder within »0 d ay! to be valid Credit slips are non- transferable CLA SSIFIC A T IO N S T R A N S P O R T A T I O N IH — Misc. A u to s 20 — Sp o rts-F o re ig n A u to s 30 — T ru c k s-V a n s - Vehicles to Trade 50 — Service Repair 6 0 — Ra rts-A cce sso rle s TO — M otorcycles 80 — Bicycles V 0 — Vehicle L e a sin g ’ ®0 — V ehicles W anted R E A L E S T A T E S A L E S 1 1 0— Services 120 — H o u s e s 1 3 0 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u se s ' 80 — M o b ile H o m e s -Lots 1 SO — Ac re a g e - Lots 160 — D u p lex es A partm e n ts I 70 — W onted 180 — L o a n s M E R C H A N D I S E IV 0 — A p p lia n ce s 200 — Fu rn itu re -H o u se h o ld 210 220 — C o m pu ters* Stereo -TV iq u lp m e n t 230 — Photo C a m e ras 280 — B o o ts 2S0 — M u sica l In strum en ts 260 — H ob b ie s 270 — M a c h in e r y - I qutpm ent 2 8 0 — S p o rtin g C a m p in g Iq sd p m e n t 2V0 — Fu rn itu re-A pplia n ce Rental 200 — O o r a g e R u m m a ge Sales 310 — Trode 320 — W onted to B u y Or Rent M E R C H A N D I S E 330 — Pets 340 — M lsc R E N T A L 350 — Ren tal Services 360 — t u rn A pts 370 — U n f A pts 380 — t u rn D u p le x e s 3 9 0 — U nf (Xrpiexes 8 0 0 — C o n d o s Tow nhouse» 810 — turn. H o u s e s 4 2 0 — Unf. H o u s e s 825 — R o o m s 8 3 0 — R o o m -B o a r d 835 — C o -o p s 840 — R o o m m ate s 450 — M o b ile H o m e s-L o ts 460 — B u s in e ss Ren tals 4 7 0 — Resorts 880 — S to r a g e Space 8 V0 — W an te d to R e n t-L e a se 5 0 0 — Mlsc A N N O U N C E M E N T S 5 1 0 — f ntertainm ent Tickets 520 — P e rso n a ls 530 — Travel T ra n spo rt at Ion 540 — Lost 8 Foun d 550 — Licensed Ch ild C are 560 — Public Notice 570 — Must* -M u sician s E D U C A T I O N A L 580 — M u sica l Instruction 590 — T u to rln g bOO — Instruction W anted 610 — Misc. Instruction S E R V I C E S 620 — le g a l Services 630 — Com puter Services 640 — i x te rm in o tors 650 — M o v in g - H a u lin g 660 S to ra g e 670 — P a in tin g S E R V I C E S 6 8 0 — Office 690 — Ren tal iq u lp m e n t 7 0 0 — Furniture R e p a ir 7 1 0 — A p p lia n ce R e p a ir 7 2 0 — Ste re o -T V R e p a ir 730 — H o m e R e p a ir 740 — Bicycle R e p a ir 7 5 0 — T y p in g 760 — Misc. Services E M P L O Y M E N T 7 7 0 — E m p lo y m e n t A g e n c ie s 780 — E m p lo y m e n t Services 790 — Port time 800 — G e n e r a l H elp W an te d 8 1 0 — O ffice-C lerical 820 — A cco u n tin g- B o o k k eep tn g 830 — A d m in istra tiv e M o n g s m s r l 840 — S a le s 8 SO - Retail 860 — E n g in e e r in g - Technical 870 — M e d lc o l 880 — P ro fe ssio n a l 890 — C lu b s-R e sta u ro n ts 900 — D o m e stic -H o u se h o ld 91 0 — P o sitio n s W onted 920 - W ork W onted B U S I N E S S 9 3 0 — B u s in e ss O p p o rtu n itie s 940 O p p o rtu n itie s W onted 3 2 0 0 >P B uilding R or ? 5(X V/T.,t •day through 8t»m 4 30p< M. 471-5244 T R A N S P O R T A T IO N T R A N S P O R T A T IO N 10 — M isc . A u t o s S H O W B O O * p ix e 1 1 9 8 4 S 1 0 S l o i . i FTwot ( tjli w e e k d a y s 6 !0 p n W M *t q n d s anytim e 2 5 ! 2115 11-7 . , K)r-a ^-ili 7 9 T -B lB D P S PB A C A M f M $ ? 0 C Col! M y 3 2 8 5 8 ? 8 11 10 6 7 F O R D fa irio n e N e e d s so m e w o r k 6 0 0 p m 1! 6 J f f P S o n V i v 0 8 1 8 11 7 J S 3 0 4 V 8 t«(i*ilei!i - í.ifKÍ, 8 35- ,-j must sell Best 198 ! C H E V R O ET c,tat,or, » 11 c H 3 4 0 0 0 mile» O 1 mo»n o n hit s e te o n d sun- P o ik e r 3 2 0 - 8 8 8 8 11 7 [US ■ $ 3 4 9 5 C a * Patnrk ' * M A R Q U ‘S 7 ‘ X X m 4es m m aru 1 9 7 7 V W Ro bbd su n -io o< SOW 4’’ lote, o n ly $ 5 9 9 . 7 0 0 0C m iles 4 3 6 4 1 7 2 0 — S p o r t s - F o r e ig n A u t o s - A M A R O 1 9 8 5 7 . H ■ tops so u n d > „ 'e n new h-es $K 4(X 1 45 7 ? ! 3 o h 6 3 4 5 1 9 9 7 , 9 6 11 6 1 9 7 5 T O Y O T A C ofo üa. ru m go o d . b o d y w o rt $ 5 0 0 1#q v» m m tocm Pan, 4 7 4 7 2 1 0 11 6 fo* 1 9 7 7 C A M A S O RoH> S p o n A m o A C A M / f M , S o n y casMtft* A s k in g $ 1 0 5 0 4 4 ? 0 1 2 6 a^ta* 6 OOpm 11*14 P O ^ S C H t 9 ? 4 Sp o tiot M o rim # / W h ita m o o n -^ery 7 2 1 7 11-7 n»ce ftr$! $ 5 4 0 0 M o r io n 3 3 5 fd ik o n K o t * roof 9 7 3 C X L A N G L Con¥«rt*b*« V W thing 8#i*abk» fro m P©H#ct party m o c h ín * poHattcm a n d in excottant c ondition 3 3 9 6 7 0 6 11 11 8 7 N I S S A N 2 0 0 S X b ra n d new 2 5 0 AH opk ont. su n ro o f t*ta nd *N j 198! C o m o r o B e d ,1 etfo 3 5 0 V 8 e*cet 2 3 5 6 11-13 9 5 5 3 ,en,:tief ‘jpm 11-7 P a r i T;m< lo w n to w n lo w firm 11 3 0 - 5 3 0 Rteose fa ll Janice 4 ’6 4 3 4 6 11 7 runner recephonist 9 8 3 A C C O R D I X Tw o d o o r h o v h b o c k 3 6 , 0 0 0 mttas Su p e r sh a p e $ 6 5 0 0 *0 i 467 ? 9 0 6 U 10 19 79 C O K O i l A S R 5 Tw o do o * Ithtoocfc TxceHent condition $ 2 2 5 0 4 6 7 2 9 0 6 1 9 7 7 C H E V R O t E T V r^ ij G o o d b o d y run, mell ne w '-res a n d battery $ 8 0 0 E ve n in g s 4 7 8 - 0 7 9 4 11-13 60 — P a r t s - 1 97 7 C H E V R O t E T M , me, (Jrio N r » br l ie s lues, m aroo n, kxided * $ '-.'VS. C ol: M e la n ie 4 9 5 , ¡-,48 a,'yhm e 11 1? n e w A c c e s s o r ie s M A Z D A Rx Foctary oHoy » ’ ee -. lou* -•he- p " e * , 8 A V e » $ ; 5 0 1 - tv*!’ 343 0 2 3 1 11-7 T R A N S P O R T A T IO N 50 — S e r v ic e -R e p a ir BMW VOLVO SAAB PORSCHE • Expert Service • Parts • Reasonable Prices • An Independent Alternative • Courtesy Car Rides A vailable PHOENIX MOTOR WORKS 1508 Fortview Rd. 4 4 2 -1 3 6 1 R E N T A L 3 6 0 — F u r n . A p t s . Tanglewood Westside Apartments N o w Leasing! 1 BR f urn. From $325 2 BR Furn. From $450 G A S & W ATER P A ID SHUTTLE AT FRO NT D O O R 1403 Norw alk Ln. 472-9614 Davis & Assoc. T R A N S P O R T A T I O N R E A L E S T A T E S A L E S •FRF! 7 0 — M o t o r c y c l e s 1 3 0 C o n d o s - T o w n h o u s e s Y A M A H A V I S I O N 1 9 8 ?, bloc*. 3 3 0 0 mtles D o u g 4 n 7 0 7 1 81 h * »ht( a a „. concfckon $ 4 5 0 Ttays 2 6 6 ? 4 * j 8 v A n ■ * ¡ o o n is ; 2 6 5 0 m o p e d i * eReo* ®v H O N ! 6 I «press M (».* ei.obie ► o n s p o r t a k o n eHenl .... • ' « $ 7 3 0 Co; 4 4 8 7 1 8 5 its*. 4 per V ery I MO N DA GYRC 5 fhiee wtteeier moped I * •**•*>■ o n d A o r 5 4 7 5 4 7 8 4 0 4 ) . ... •! x x ter w orronty *1 8 0 — B i c y c l e s 75 BIKES — $ 2 5 U pT !Sodf. — 54#i& Arpe* Soutv - 6>*Vjr. Springs SouRl . o-rw- EVERY SATURDAY 9 0 0 5 0 0 i v Austin Bicycle Solvage 9 2 8 *4 9 0 0 *' 1 H-*-*'■ *he,. S T{ * StncsF 8 3 4 9 Fa i i * bloc k c o m m - '* -F ’ • .twwr! G o o d ;c rw* >c egotiubie Coli w Mobeiy 9 9 6 8 4 .'6 B i l l 11 1 ► Mf A 1C S P f f l w • y bscycie J ‘ j,'6 673; V V A N T lL M I N ' S P e u g e ' p»esi 32 >0 N i *m a : m o t »8f A N f kghl biu. h.<**h! ». estros Si-5 **e- lie,).* ■se* bioct $ 6 C 4 5 0 * 6 9 ? 11 1? ,f> ,¿- K Hieec •, ,MI* btocl escekem 818- jtte» I 3 0 11 12 kkMkv $199 4 - - ' G A N N f C b x q so r ,* terodleurs Sokdt! r* 3d tus1 seu*», !■ > 4 ■ever sr.- s . 10 ^ **■ ... I « a v ib 4 8 0 9 4 ’> '2 . R A N G E f t f f 7 i I E A S E ! 000 fO tX n\)C W eil ?4 fh A popgior ta# of o w nemhqp « ewd ent m the ki • ond 2 '2 f H.A approved TON AVENUE— 2513 Setor* Wimi ceSeN plan a borgom at $ 6 2 .5 0 0 i Bekow ow» vat# gorag* u* $ 29 500 be droom pkam fro* « — I " t f A 5 f $64 f $55( tvetap Mvdwiu i ^ ST N U T SQ U A R E duct W O R D PRC typewrtte-f S3! ^es O P E N H O U S E Soturciay, Nov. 8, 10 30-12 30 The Gabies Condominiums, 1808 Rio Grande, given fc y Caldwell Banker Residential Sales. mortgage* «.*1 appt*on S 5C 334 ) '66 2 4 0 — B o a t s B O $ 9 0 - *>'■• $ 3 6 5 •- OOrd S '5 v /Ifh lN lA l ►#m all MVh#0 $12 O N D O Security uT«owsiy 11-20 7 6 1 9 2 5 0 — M u s i c a l I n s t r u m e n t s Y A M A H A C S 6 0 iy n l t a v z t r w»th orr $ 4 9 9 or best offer C oH Steve 4 ? 5 6 4 3 4 7 ? 0 3 2 9 11 6 O N E x A M A H A stage se ne* h ve p*e drum set with H a rd w a re B ra n d n e $ 7 0 0 leave m* ixoge Evem -ng* 4 7 7 • 5 0 1 6 11-7 8 5 p m 8 6 0 2 3 9 0 Y A M A H A M l 4 4 4 track cassette r#cc der c o m o Borefy uted $ 4 7 5 3 8 5 5 2 9 2 11-1.1 p a tc h -b a y a n d fm *er K X T w Y a m a h a qu#or o m p 150w ^ Sui sp e aA m 3 4 6 3 9 5 5 11-11 9 0 — V e h i c l e s L e a s i n g M o b i l e H o m e s - iffgJífUífaiífgJlai L o t s HONEST ED;S REKT-A-SLD. IMC. • Au»c k e n tot! 8 y The D o y A*eeit O - M o nth • V iso M o»» #' C o r d O r C o sh A< ;epteo • • *#»! ■'! Ar- .<** * Spr- IQ* V'i.l*r.(j f Y o f e s s o r R o te s 3100 Guodalupe St Austin, Texas 78705 512 *51-3473 D f N ’ 4 . 4 4 '980 CHompon _A*'< ►* ok a p p k o n c e s m dssded ■ on ■.!' iot 4 6 646 9 m*.! Set _ ¡ saije 1 6 0 D u p l e x e s A p a r t m e n t s . jn h o r e 2 - 2 w t u r r e r " «eeses 3 r d unit m 3 1 e x t ro to rp e C A C H « fe o ■or O rvn e * x < u p o n * D e s ir a b le *OCO n o r m F .e ,., r H o c e H o t n e tg h b . ■ h o o d s c h o o ls c lo s e to U T >nd to s» sc h o o l $ ? X X F io n k W e s s e h R e a lt o * 8 3 5 - 2 3 8 6 TRI-PLEX $10,000 down 2 7 0 — M a c h i n e r y - E q u i p m e n t ONE BEDROOMS Big Enough for Two S N P R E S S for vale G re a t f o ( st e ^ m o gn e h cs a n d d e c o h printing In the ram p u s o re o sm a f au*e' a p o n m e n " h as on set up ’or C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 TO PL ACE A C L A S S I F I E D A O . _ a nim ates O n site m o n o ge m e m walk to campus located -ecr 1*’- o n c S a r G a b n e Cotí todo» i ' t ¡ 7399 Pnce negohabie Í1 -2 4 A 1 urnish e d Apartm ent» “LET’S DEAL” * l i f e » iu- and T w o B e d r o o m s From $350 • W alk in ( am pus • Nice Pool A Patio • Vk \houi ( citing I an- 2 2 0 7 L e o n 4 7 H - I 7 X 1 C all Afternoons s D o s R W alk to Cam pus i o • Fully Fumi-hed • Microwave • O ilin g Fans • Built in Desk • Individual Washer D n er • Privan- Balcony • Covered Parking • Decorative Wallpaper 4 7 8 -4 2 7 1 2818 G u a d a lu p e 1 GARDEN GATE APARTMENTS COCD NOW LEASING FOR FALL ’86! A . v , s V * Small 1 BR. Large 1 BR, 2 BR Central Air Conditioning Heat Near 2 shuttle stops Laundry Room Security Completely Furnished Pool MOVE IN T O D A Y L uxury 1HH F u rn ished 2222 Rio Grande 476-4992 4 7 4 - 0 9 7 1 4 7 4 - 1 0 0 4 6 0 0 W. 26th Street At Nueces n o w LEASING! J One Bedroom J * Apartments £ 1 Bdrm $300 * 2 Bdrm $400 * j Off First Month’s Rent! ». » 3815 Guadalupe » I 459-1664 Davis & Assoc. a * a a * a a * a a « « NEWLY REMODELED ALL BILLS PAID Elf-$330 1 BR-$440 f o r 2 people, $395 for one. 2 B R - $ 4 6 0 C A / C H WALK TO CAMPUS 2212 San Gabriel Off. Hrs. 10-5:30 Daily 474-7732 A 2 Hdrm. / ur- n i ' h e d . P r i v a t e Parking, h¡replaces. S u n d e c k s » a n d I a u n d r 1 R t t o m Prices Start At $350 Month ( till ( ,irn,H \1arcus at 4> I-S412 R E N T A L 3 6 0 — F u r n . A p t s . • Furnished • G reat Location • W a lk to Campus • All K itch en Appl i anees • M icro w a v e • B uilt-in desks • W a s h e r & D ry e r • C overed Pa rk in g Cornerstone P lace 24th & Rio Grande Call 480-0065 Ld Padgett, Co. 454-4621 CONDOS NEAR UT Nice 1 bedroom, 1 bath with mi crowaves, ceiling fans, drapes, located next to pool at Shadow 2404 O aks Condominiums Longview. $350 per month. Call Equity 452-9357 or 251-4653 1-13A Two Months Free M ove in befara N o v lit and lake advantage of the best deal three blocks from campus luxury 1 and 2 Bedrooms wtth designer mten ors, Washer/Dryer secunty system iocuzzi, and more Nice residents and professional management Cod now for details The H e r ita g e C o nd om in iu m s 4 7 9 8 1 7 4 o r 4 5 1 -8 9 6 4 12 150 NO DEPOSIT! Silverado Condos— unique floor plans! M icrow ave1 Washers/ dryers m every unit! Pool, |OCuz- zi, party room1 Secunty, on shut­ tle $345-$425. 443-3666 11 29A 3 MONTHS FREE RENT Luxurious one and two bedroom condo's with everything Across from UT. Starting at $600. Call Dan Joseph at 479-8727. 12-1A TREEHOUSE C O N D O S 202 E 45th Large 1-1 in small complex, close to shuttle Across from park and pool $395/monfh G reat land­ lord. 480-8273. Ask for N at 12 8 ó BLOCKS FROM UT 2 5 c o n d o s 9 0 0 1300 s q u a re feet 2- 2's w ith w a sh er/d rye rs, m icro w av es, re fn g e ra to r w ith icem a k er, secunty system, fire p la c e , c o v e r e d p ark in g L o c a te d R o b b in 's P la c e C o n d o s , 1910 R o b b m s P la c e Street For in form atio n ca ll 4 8 0 - 0 7 8 4 , 4 7 7 - 4 0 7 2 o r 476- 9101 exten sion 3 0 0 11-7 E x c lu s iv e sm all complex. Located pn bus ro u te s. Walking distance to main campus. i l l 2-2 ,, • Covered Parking ; ; • SpapndPdol • Security . ■ ■ • Individual | Washer/Dryer • Fireplace • Microwave 2804 Rio Grande C a l l 3 3 5 4 ) 3 3 0 W H Y PAY M O R E ? VERY LARGE M O D E R N T O W N H O M E S Pool, sauna, fireplace, w/d, pets. O K 3/2 — $495 2/1 Vi — $445 E A N E S S C H O O L S Attroct^e 2-1’ ?, 2- stoiy b ak o n y y a id utility room W D connection $515 G a ry Rodan owner agent 378 0 8 0 /. 11-12 A V A ILA B LE JA N U A R Y 1 M o d e m energy efficient 3-7 C A /C H , garage, attic and ceiling fans, washer/dryer shuttle $795. 345-9442.11 14 fenced IF < Twelve Oaks Condominiums • Three b locks from cam pus • Furnished 2 2 s W /D , dishwasher. iacuzzi/pool, cov ered parking, secunty entrance 21st & Rio Grande 479-0142 Ogle and Associates 452-6888 __________________________ 11-14 W E S T C A M P U S Condos-pnces cut d ra ­ matically some a t much os 5 0 % Call University Properties 454-7065 11-14D V A N D ER BILT D E S IG N E R C O N D O S ~ LIVE IN LU X U R Y! Apphancm ♦ mi c row ave - w ash er and dryer Swim mmg pool * Jocuzz and Y O U C A N A F F O R D IT! 4 9 9 8863 12 2D ATTRACTIVE, C L O S E in, near shuttte one bedroom condo Two ceiling fans n ew ­ ly pointed, fenced patio A vaila b le now 4411 G u a dalu pe Unit 9 Patty Haikes 452-5781 or evenings 454-1874 11-7 O R A N G E TREE famished efficiency S e ­ curity building/parking Fireplace, vault ed ceiling, skylight, W /D , m icrow ave 327 4521,327 45 6 2 11-7_______________ O N SHUTTLE O n e bedroom, one bath, just painted, gas ond water paid. Pools, laundry facilities O nly $275 Call Mrs B rey 258-0533 o r 451-8412 11-I8A RENTAL 400 — Condos-Tow nhouses * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * + + + + + + + + + + J _ S p e c i a l R a t e s C h o o s e t h is Fine C o n d o m in iu m | + + l S a la d o I C o n d o m in iu m s * • Microivave • fully furnished ^ • individual washer dryer • private parking ^ * ceiling fans ♦ • private balcony • near shuttle • $395 mo. for summer ; * * 4 5 4 - 4 6 2 1 E d P a d g e t t R e a l t o r s J Page 14/The Daiiy Texan/Thursday, November 6, 1986 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 360 — Furn. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 390 — Unf. Duplexes 400 — Condos- 400 — Condos- Tow nhouses Townhouses HYDE PARK AREA 1 BR — Furnished or Urtfur- nished-$275. CACH, Laundry, Pool. O n Shuttle/City Bus. Du­ val/ 45th S P A N IS H Street O A K S A PA RTM EN TS, G a s/ W a ­ ter Paid. 458-5743, 447-9845. 11-12A Student Rates L a r g e 1 & 2 b e d ro o m opts w ith fire o ff 2 9 0 & C a m e r o n Rd. on C R shuttle £ o m e visit 1604 W h e le s s Ln. o r coll 4 5 2 - 4 9 0 7 o r 8 3 5 - 0 3 0 3 . Texas Property 12 3 A LUXURY & LOCATION H-U -G-E 2 -b ed ro o m 2-bath Fully furnished. C A / C H , w ith cellin g fans a n d in tercom in e a c h room C o m p le te kitchen w ith m ic ro w a v e G a s c o o k in g 1 U N IT W IT H F IR E P L A C E . C o v e r e d p ark in g . W a lk in g d ista n ce to UT. N o w on ly $ 5 2 5 + E. G o t to see it to b e ­ lie v e it. 2 7 0 4 S a la d o # 2 0 3 O ffic e S P R IN G P R ELEA SE a vailable now. W est Campus, unfumished/fur- mshed $300-$315 plus bills 2 5 0 8 San G a b rie l Call Sid 478-3518 11-10 I bedroom E X Q U IS IT ELY F U R N IS H E D 1 BR in studio, 1'2 baths, all amenities and pool. $60 0 Preservation Sq uare 901 W 22nd 477- 1477,441 3995 11-10___________ 2 P E R S O N g a ra g e apartment Part of C o o p $299 per person ABP, includes meals Arrakis C o o p 472-2292. 2212 Peori 4 blocks from UT. 11-12 A V A IL A B L E N O W ! Efficiencies, parking, lorge walk in closet, bosic cable paid, coin washer/dryer on premises Close to It shuttle $275 + E. H ow ell Properties 477 9 9 2 5 12 5D 477-4622 444-2750 2 2 N D ^9 A N D Sa n G a b riel efficiency with separate sleeping area, la rge walk in closet, all electric built-ins, perfect for one person. H ow ell Properties 477- 9 9 2 5 .12-5D 12-3A p la ce s, b alco n ies, p o o l qnd la u n d ry facilities. P ro fes s io n a lly m a n ag e d . Just hou rs b e fo r e 1:00 p.m. a n d a fte r 5 0 0 p.m. * $501ST MONTH * N o deposit until 2nd month 1-1, 304 E 33rd, 5 blocks to UT. $265 & $295/month. 479-6331 UNIQUE STUDIO Tn level oportment for one person in beauti ful tree shoded residential neighborhood, loft bedroom, platform kitchen with hardwood floors. Three sets of double French doors, lots of storage. CACH, five minutes to UT, three 12-15D blocks to shuttle bus Available 11/1/86 $475/month, ABP 454 3139 evenings ond weekends 11-10 HYDE PARK 4306 A V E N U E A. 2 la rge bedrooms (15 x 10 ea.) with bookcase and desks bulH in N e w carpet, ceiling fans, mimblinds, and more. Fur­ nished and unfurnished. Small community with covered p a riin g and laundry room. 1 block off 45th a n d G u adalu pe, 2 blocks ♦o shuttle M o v e in n ow or pre-lease for Spring. Call for Liz at 4 58-9809 or 451 2 2 4 2 o r leave messaqe 11-21A tivities. N E A R IE shuttle, nice one bedroom, one bath apartments and two bedroom lW bath townhom e $275 $3 7 5 * E Small complex with pool, gas and water paid $100 off 1st month's rent 453 7514 442-4076 11-21D N O R T H W E S T HILLS, 1-7 Bedrooms,shut He, ceiling fans, completely equipped kitchen, tennis courts, tennis pro with free ts Large lessons, fireplaces in some urn pool a nd deck a re a 345 4444 H U FREE C A BLE and reduced rent! 6 9 12 month leases, immediate occupancy on N orth Loop near Burnet Road Effu rency, one and two bedrooms from $ 2 7 0 * E 451 9007. 4 4 2 4 0 7 6 .11 U D EA SY A C C E S S to M O P A C and Seton M ed ica l Center O n e bedroom apart­ ment, ask about our summer special, from $280 + E. Small complex, nice pool. 454-1376, 442-4076 11-110 N O R T H W E S T HILLS,1 7 ? B e d :oTrnsTfott" He. ceiling fans, completely equipped kitchen, tennis courts, tennis p ro with free lessons, fireplaces in some units. Large pool and deck a re a 345-4444 10-17 R E D U C E D H YD E P a r i close to UT and shuttle 407 B W 45th. 11 a p t, new paint and carpet $2 6 0 + G & E. 459- 0017 11-13D C O M F O R T A B L E , Q U IE T 1-bedroom renovated 50-year-oid in apartment building. Attractive courtyard, swimming pool, laundry. $ 2 9 5 plus electricity Rio House Apartments, 17th/Rio G ra n d e 469-9268 11-6 6 M O N 1H S AT $288 7 5 /M O N T H ! R ¡* modeled, large 1-1 near RR shuttle. Small, quiet complex 467-6508.11-7 W E STILL hove the best bargains on UT Apartments a vailable Call FSA Harnson Pearson 472-6201 11-7D D O B IE M ALL o rea Really nice 11 condo, furnished, covered parking, all appli anees, m icrowave, ceiling fan, $45 0 Apartment Finders. 458-1213 11-10D W O W 1 H U G E 1-1 only $325. Furnished Free rent speciall Apartment Finders 458-1213.11-10D W e Don't Have A Laundry Room W e hove something better, individual washers & dryers in every apartment Also microwaves, frost free refrigerators, butchei block counters, lots of closet space and FREE RENT plus pool, hot tub, ond recreotionol ac­ North Cape Apartments, 834-0780 You're gonna love it 11-12D QUIET HYDE PARK GREAT FOR GRAD STUDENTS Close to shuttle and UT. Pool. G as and water paid. G ood study environment. 4310 Ave. B, Call Robbie 458-8893 11-6A One Month Free Rent On Town Lake Nice $malf qutet community, convenient to UT shuttle and the ACC campu$ 1-1, $295, 2-2, $386 2-2 4 Fireplace, $394 Brookhollow Apartments 1414 A r e n a • 4 4 5 - 5 6 5 5 11-14D H E Y L O O K us over! Fireplace, ceiling Ian, built in bookcases, mini-blinds, effi ciency for only $310. Apartment Finders 458-1213. U-10D ★NICE VIEW* Small 1 Bdrm— CACH, Quiet neighborhood. Perfect for single occupancy. All appliances. Ex­ cellent location, on shuttle. ALL BILLS PA ID — $365. 928-9868 447-9845. W E S T A U S T IN 615 Upson N e a r shuttte Dishwasher, refn g , disposal, CA/CH, nice carpet and paint Quiet creekside ef- ficiency. $2 8 0 371-3099 11-25 N E W L Y D E C O R A T E D Kitchen app li­ ances. Draperies, carpeting 2-1, CA/ CH, carport, near shopping center, uni­ versity, shuttle. N o pets 472-9502.11-28 11-19A S P E C IA L $99 m ove in. Large 1-1, V2 mile from UT. 3 Elms Apartment 4 0 0 W est 35th. 453-1804 11-10 WOODCREEKAPTS 8 6 0 0 N . L a m a r 8 3 7 - 5 5 5 6 $99 Move-in Special 11-11D Luxury aportments, conveniently located in the heart of North Austin, |ust minutes awoy from all mo|or freeways. STUDIO FLATS-$199-$295 1 B ED R O O M S - $275-$335 2 B ED R O O M S - S350-S405, S365-J415 11-11 Excellent Enfield Area $100 M O V E IN 1115 W est 10th. N e w paint, corpet, ceiling fans, gas/woter paid Dishwasher, CA/CH. N o pets $295 month. 4 7 6 -7145.480-9546 115 P R ELE A S E FO R Ja n u a ry - walk to UT/ north campus Efficiencies $225-$325 Extensively rem odeled an d charming. Ceiling fans, stained w oodwork. 459- 9095.11-1 8 __ FR EE RENT Large efficiencies, oil a p p li­ ances. pool, laundry, gas-water paid N e a r shuttle Also pre-leasing The Estab- lishment, 4 4 0 0 A v e B. 452-3590 12 6 R E N T R E D U C E D $70. Almost n ew 1-Bed­ room. Perfect condition. All appliances, ceiling fans, small complex East UT $ 2 9 5.320-0206 levest_____________ F O U R B L O C K S campus Small 1-1, hard ­ w o o d floors, older style kitchen, CA/CH $ 3 5 0 + bills. H ow ell Properties 477- 9 9 2 5 .12-5D 380 — Furn. Duplexes LOVELY VIEW Three bedroom townhouse, 2Vi baths, 2 living areas, dmmg room, 2 fireplaces. Deck over­ looking city. W asher and Dryer. O n shuttle W a te r paid — $800. Call 447-9845 or 928-9868. 11-14A ONE BLOCK UT 705-707 Graham Place Large 2-1 $495 Available immediately Call Linda, agent at 476-5394 or 328-7115 11-11A THREE BED RO O M O ne block from shuttle Fenced yard, corner lot, fire­ place, all kitchen appliances. N o common walls. $495/ month. Call Steve at 837- 2514 or 288-0432. __________________ 11-25A Close to UT T ree s h a d e d 2 b e d ro o m is in g re a t co n d itio n ' O v e rto o k s W o lle r Creek $ 4 7 5 V e r y la rg e 2 b e d ro o m — h a s oak floo rs a n d lots o f room $ 5 5 0 Coll Tom B arr, 458 -4 0 2 1. 11-26 Something Different 2400-A T H O R T O N Three bedroom, tw o bath, very modem, close-in, south location, trees, fenced, pels okay $550, woter paid 1413-B K IR K W O O D Two bedroom, o n e bath, fenced, pets okay, trees, convenient D e lw ood lo ca ­ tion. $395, w oter paid. 4 4 7 - 8 8 8 4 (d a ys) 4 7 7 -7 9 1 8 (nights) ________________________ 17-lriA NEWON MARKET L a rg e , a p p ro x im a te ly 12 5 0 sq. ft, r e ­ m o d e le d 2-1. C A / C H , 9 fo o t ceilings, w o o d floors, fire p la c e , b ook casses, Fre n ch doors, la u n d ry h ook ups, th ree ceilin g fans, m o d e rn kitchen, mini blinds, lots o f closets, earth tone d e ­ c o r Fa ll sp ecial, $ 5 9 5 . 4 5 9 - 9 0 9 5 ___________________________ _ _ it i» Something Different 2400-A T H O R T O N Three bedroom, two both, very modem, close-in, south location, trees, fenced, pets okay. $550, w ater paid 1413-B K IR K W O O D : Two bedroom, on e bath, fenced, pets okay, trees, convenient D e lw ood loca­ tion. $395. w oter poid. 4 4 7 - 8 8 8 4 (d a ys ) 4 7 7 -7 9 1 8 (nights) 1 i n * F O U R B L O C K S from UT (4-ptax) 2-1, up ­ stairs, hardw ood floors 1907 Pearl $ 4 5 0 S R E M C O 441-5135, 445 6872 N E W 6-PLEX month free1 Washers/dryers included 5 6 0 6 Jim Hogg 452-1188, 3 2 7 3400 I bedroom $ 3 5 0 First SHUTTLE, 2 1 SR carport C A C H fenced, fireplace, washer/dryer con n ec­ tion, new corpet, $410 440 0 9 4 4 281) 4102 home U-24D. C A S A G R A N D E Apartments 1400 Rio G rand e. 1BR IB A + E Pool, laundry, parking 474-7081. 11-6 ♦ Clubhouse and Laundry Room ♦ Secunty and Professional On 370 — Unf. Apts. WILDWOOD APARTMENTS "Be as special to yourself as you are to us.” ♦ Come enjoy the luxury of 1 & 2 bedroom apartments AMENITIES INCLUDE: ♦ Fireplaces ♦ Washer/Dryer Connections ♦ Balconies & Private Patios ♦ Walk & Jogging Trail Site Management We Have Vanous Floor Plans, W it h O n e E s p e c ia lly F o r Y o u . 7610Cameron Rd R E Johnson 459-6557 D evelopm ent Vi M O N TH FREE RENT 1 1 Studios and Fiats Flats 2/1 Townhomes 2/175 gas Or shuttle bus route . ^ . . . . . . SJóOmo ♦ The Irongate ♦ 1225 W e s ♦ 454 2636 ♦ ♦ I t I J ▼ ♦ flRCHUJRV RPTS. Nice Efficiencies Close To Compos seso.mo * C 2 Blocks from UT Shuttle C o ll:4 7 0 3622 2506 Mcmor R d . ★ $501st MONTH * N o deposit until 2nd month. 1-1, 304 E. 33rd, 5 blocks to UT. $265 & $295/month. 479-6331 12-9D ONE MONTH'ONE CENT CourHand I & II Apartments 1200 Broadm oor — |ust off Cam eron Rd. ond 51st 1BR $286*, 2BR $ 3 4 6 \ 2BR $385* ALL BILLS P A ID A V A IL A B L E " O T H E R S P E C IA L S A V A IL A B L E ’ Large spacious units on UT shuttle. W alk to shopping center. 454-2537, 454- 2 5 3 8 O p e n weekends 11-26 Parker Square Has lowered the boom on the high cost of living. O n e bed­ room, $315 + E; with loft, $425 + E. Microwave, ceiling fan, pri­ vate balcony, jacuzzi. 448- 3214. _ _ _ _ _ ___________________________12-3D $150 Moves You In First month's rent free. Large re­ modeled 1 and 2 bedroom. G reat location near M O P A C and 45th St. N ice pool, gas and water paid. 454-7500, 442- 4076. ★BRAND N EW * W e've got what you're looking for in a brand new apartment home Ceiling fans, tcemoker, microwave, $e!f-cleaning oven, SPORT COURT & JACUZZI. North central location Call us about our specials today! 835-9892 A CO UNTRY PLACE 9971 Q u ail Blvd The Best P lace To Live 3408 SPEEDWAY LARGE EFFICIENCIES O N UT SHUTTLE $245 per month Call Equity 443-0247 or 452-9357 1-13A 415 PLACE APTS S P A C IO U S 1 & 2 bedroom opts, available Access to UT shuttle & metro bus line. 415 West 39th 458-2990 A A A APT. LIVING (o 41st & Avenue C 1BR 1BA furnished units a v a ila b le im ­ m e d ia te ly Q u ie t co m p le x n e a r shut­ tle A s lo w as $ 3 4 0 /m o . Call Carl, 459-9592 11-10 ALL BILLS paid N e a r compos, on shuttle, furnished efficiencies and one bedroom in small complex $ 2 9 5 - $415 special $100 off 1st month's rent, reody tor im­ mediate occupancy 451-8532 442- 407 6 11-21D 2304 L E O N #2 0 4 , 1-1, view, private, $225 + E 1106 W 22nd #7, 1-1, balcony, vaulted ceiling, nice, $ 3 5 0 + E TIP M anogem ent 445-5909 11-12 M A T U R E P E R S O N - Lorge, clean, quiet, efficiencies on shuttle Popolo V illage Apartments 111 W est 38th Street 452- 8 0 0 7 11-12A Raised Ceilings Walk-in Closet complete this 1 bedroom upstairs apartment with CA/CH G as & water paid. W alk to UT & G ro ­ cery. 21st/San Gabriel, $325. 288-5451 after 1:00 p.m. 12-10D $100 off first month's rent. N e a r UT. 3104 D uva l. 3812-16 Speedway. 403 W . 38th. 3707 Cedar. 4712 Depew. 5012 Du­ val. Efficiencies. $230-$275. IB R ’s $280-$295 2BR's $350- $450. See list at office. 404 E. 31st. 477-2214, 453-8812, 452-4516 Silver O aks Apartments FREE R E N T 4 0 0 7 A v e C. 451-5096, 453 8538 Conquistador Apartments, 4412 A v e A 451-3180 W ater, gas, cable. Furnished. Call for rent details 11-130 SO U T H C A M P U S 2 0 5 W est 20th Small two bedroom, $ 3 5 0 an d large private rooms (share both) CA/CH, cable ABP, no off street parking no pets M-F 397 2576.11 2D available $ 2 5 5 E N F IE L D A R E A 1515 Palma Plaza eff. ciency CA/CH, laundry facility, coble r, cable TV, UT shuttle no pets $285 electnci- ty M -F 397-2576 11-70 AC, R IO G R A N D E one bedroom Small com ­ plex facilities. W o te r and gas paid $26 5 451-8122 W est W o r ld Real Estate 11-18 laundry corpet, W A L K T O campus, fall leasing, large effi­ ciency, furnished or unfurnished, large 1BR, M a u n o Kai 4 0 5 East 31st 472- 2 1 4 7 .1 1 - 1 9 _________________ 12-1 N E A R UT low school on RR shuttle. Fur­ nished rooms $175 $ 2 2 5 A B P Sh are baths. CA/CH. 3310 Red River 476- 363 4 11-20______________ Student Rates Eff., 1 and 2 bedroom apts. Lo­ cated between 183 & 290 on CR shuttle. Come by 7418 Cam ­ eron Rd or call 450-1551 or 835-0303. Texas Properties 12-3A WE HAVE THE KEYS to y o u r n e w ly r e m o d e le d efficiency, 1 o r 2 b e d r o o m a p a rtm e n t h o m e C O M E A N D G E T 'E M I I ! C lo se to UT s h o p p in g & on site la u nd ry. * * A S H F O R D A P A R T M E N T S * * * 2 4 0 8 L e o n 5623 W O O D R O W N ic e quiet complex five m inutes fully from furnished, pool, busline, one bedroom, |ust reduced $2 5 0 Coll 472-6201 Tom or D ian a 11-6D cam pus, GR EA T O A K O n e block law school, large clean 2-2 Ceiling fans. C A/CH pool la u nd ry, 2 9 0 0 Swisher 477 33 8 8 472-2097 11-6A FO U R B L O C K S west campus. Large clean 1 bedroom efficiency, well-moin- tained b y reduced rotes for immediate occupancy N o nets 476 7916 117 ow ner Laundry, SU P ER S A V IN G S ! Efficiency^ kitchen ond bath, $175 blocks M anagem ent. 4 45-5909 11-25 * to campus, 2802 Whitis. TIP shared E Three LA R G E E F F IC IE N C IE S Clean, q u .e T T ^ T plex O n e month free $310 34th 469-0071 11 14 3 0 2 E 4 7 6 8 9 1 5 11 10A F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T for rent Ali bills paid, $225 per month 260 4 G u a d a lu p e 4 76-5437 11-14 RENTAL 37 0— Unf. Apts. Worried? About how to pay your holiday bills? W e will give you o January Bonus! $150 off your January rent if you sign a 6 or 9 month lease in October. Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedrooms from $270 + E. Call for details. 451-9007, 442- 4076. N E A R UT Law Scho ol on shuttle. Large one bedroom in small quiet complex E. $100 off 1st with ^ on th 's rent. 474-1240, 442-4076 11- pool $310 * LO C A TIO N LO C A TIO N 11-18A O n shuttle route, sm all q u iet co m p lex set b ock from b u sy ro a d . T w o B e d ­ ro o m T o w n h o m e a p a rtm en ts h a v e b a lco n ie s fa c in g th e sw im m ing pool, a n d a ll bills p a id . D o w n to w n , n e a r UT $ 4 0 0 O n e B e d ro o m A p t $ 3 2 5 . o n d C a p ito l. O ld e r building, re n o v a t ­ L a u n d ry R o o m , G a s 8. W a t e r p aid, e d w ith la rg e ro o m s a n d p le n ty o f 2 8 8 -5 4 5 1, a fte r 1:00 p.m. a m b ia n c e O n e m o r e r e a s o n to live th e re ? W e h a v e th e best residents a n y w h e r e ! C a ll o w n e r at 4 7 4 - 4 8 4 8 fo r a c h a n c e to e x p e r ie n c e c o n v e n ­ 11-13D ient living at a n a ffo r d a b le p ric e . C a ll us o n w e e k e n d s to o . W e w ill b e g la d to h e lp you. _______________ 12-15A R E D U C E D RATES and free rent specials, n ew ly remodeled efficiencies, on e and tw o bedroom apartments some with fire­ places and skylight. Convenient North Central $240-$395 + E. 451-4561, 442-4076 11-2TD___________ location n ea r IF shuttle, pool 23 R D STREET. AH electnc efficiency, parking, $325 -t- bills. How ell Prop er­ ties. 4 7 7 - 9 9 2 5 .12-5D N IC E O N E bedroom O n e month free rent Small pets accepted Best d eal in University area. 467-6052.11-10 12-10D N E A R UT, like-house, pnvqte backyard. 2-1, CA/CH, kitchen utensils, bedding, washer, $450. 345-9442.11-19 390 — Unf. Duplexes 1940s 2-l’/2 oak floors, ceiling fans, up­ stairs bedrooms, trees, near UT. 703 W 35th, $625. 472-2123 11 11______________ 1940s 2-1 on cul-de-sac. O a k floors, Hie bath, CA/CH, W / D connections, ceiling fans, patio, laroe yard, lots o f windows 1302 Kirkwood $4 2 5 472-2123 11 11 T W O B E C R O O M , washer/dryer connec tions W alkin g distance to UT $425/ month 482-8666,288-1543 11-6 346-4392 N e a r IH-35 and W illiam Cannon. 1? 8A J U S T C O M P U T E D ! ! C l O S f TO C A M P U S / S H U T T ll B U S e 1 0 % P r e - L e a s e e L a u n d r y R o o m e 5 * 2 t o 9 0 * S q . F e e t • l o r o e W a H t- ln C lo s e t SANDSTONE APTS. I ft II . 24 0 0 ft 2501 M a n o r R d . fly “ 478-0955 A ll New Interiors and Appliances & ta ffo rb ijo t is c Close to C ( Shuttle On-Site Laundry Security Patrolled Start at $310 478-»955 S 1 9 9 M O V E - I N • 1 2,3 ,5 Bedrooms • 2 Lighted Tennis Courts • Shuttle Bus Stop-SR • Secunty Service e City Ironsportotion • Pulling Green • O utd o or Jacuzzi's • Bor-B-Ques& Picnc Facilities • « Ceiling Fans In Living Rooms and Bedrooms 6 Car Washing Areo • Exercise Rooms • Cor Washing Areo • Cable TV Hook Up • Two Swimming Pools • Basketball & Volleyball Courts • Italian Ceramic Tile in Kitchen and Bath • 2 Bedroom Guest House • GE M icrowave Ovens SPECIAL RATES Professionally Managed By Regency Properties V illa g e Come live with me# 447-4130 M-F 8-6, SAT 9-5 2101 BURTON OR. SU N 12-5 Duval Villa In Hyde Park • S p a cio u s Floorplans • Large Pool • H o t Tubs and Redwood D e cks • C o n tro lle d A c c e s s G ate s • Convenient to S h u ttle • Covered Parking • 1 and 2 bedroom s Call Today For An Appointment Open M-F 9-6pm Sat 10-4 4305 Duval 451-2343 Racquet Club/Creekhaus Apartments on Town Lake Two Pools • Two Hot Tubs Water Volleyball 2317 Pleasant Valley Rd. (512) 440-0118 G R E A T F A L L R A T E S MOVE IN TODAY Pre-Leasing For Fall El Campo 305 W 39th Street La Paz 401 W . 39th St. El Dorado 3501 S p e e d w a y INCREDIBLE FALL RATES COME ON DOWN! LE T ’S MAKE A DEAL THE PRICE IS RIGHT 1, 2 & 3 B edroom s 472-4893 & 452-8537 Professionally Managed by Equities of Texas Management SA V E M O N EY Our Large One Bedroom is ideal for room m ates! Com e by & see our m odel today! • Lakefront Apartments • 2 Pools • Su n d eck • Tennis Court • Volleyball Court • B oat Dock • C lub ro om with fireplace an d bar • Shuttle Route 1720 S. Lakeshore Blvd. Austin, Texas 78741 (512) 444-2882 FREE RENT SPECIALS OPEN SAT and SUN l QUIET L I V I NG Attention graduate students and law students. 1 Bd., lb $36 5 $100 deposit 3 B d , 2b $575, $300 deposit • Pool • Across from tennis courts • Hike and bike frail • One mile from UT campus 3203 Shoal Creek 454-4224 La Casita Apartments 2 bd. 1 ba. $375 Fu m or Unf 3 block* to campa* • water and gas paid • new carpet • new GE appliances • covered parking • large closets • laundry room • 40 ft poo! • quiet complex • resident manager 8 :0 0 til dark 2900 Cole • 482-9154 e V I L L A S OF OIUTT rPifKv Sp aciou s one and two bedroom apartm ents • microwave ovens • vaulted ceilings • ceiling fans • fireplaces • heated spa • swimming pool Sp ecial Student Kates 9 0 3 6 North L a m a r B o u le v a r d 8 3 7 - 3 9 7 7 RENTAL 435 — Co-ops iiiinnnnnnninnninnnninninnniinninnnnnininniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin O O B I E C E N T E R D O R M I T O R Y C ornerstone of the University of Texas Campus We have room for you. Come Coin For A d d itio n a l In fo rm a tio n DOBIE CENTER 2021 Guadalupe P.O. Box “ R ” Austin. TX 78713 (512)472-8411 illinium REN TA L E D U C A T IO N A L S E R V IC E S 440 — R o o m m a te s 590 — T u to rin g 750 — T y p in g Z I V L E Y ’S THE COMPLETE P R O F E S SIO N A L FULLTIME T Y P IN G SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING F R f N C H T U T O R IN G b y noftve sp eaker $ IQ /ho ur C a ll Phtitppe 4 8 2 8 5 / 8 11-10 S E R V IC E S 630 — C o m p u te r Services S l A T I S i l C A l ( O N 5 U L 1 A N Í Y . I I p ro vid e help with S P S S EDIT, guantrtative mett* research o d i m e th o d o lo g y 451 8 1 5 2 11 2 5 statistical a n a ly sis a n d I o b e y K o o p P h D 650 — M o v in g - H a u lin g A B i f B O D I E D M o v e r s A u stin s m ovtng service W h o le sa le b o x e s estimates M C T V .sa 4 41 2 6 2 2 11-6 finest Free 750 — T y p in g N E E D N O N S M O K I N G fem ale to shore luxury 2 2 apartm ent $ 2 2 5 • bills M ust fat, neol, 4 4 5 4 9 1 9 11 11 V IC T O R IA N A R T S H O U S I ye a i aid h o m e with artists $ 1 7 5 ♦ B bifc. D e p o sit 4 7 9 8 4 1 7 II 7 __ Sh a re 1 0 0 $ 2 4 5 V E G E T A R IA N , N O N S M O k í R financial ly resp onsible earth p e rso n to share 2 1 apartm ent in clothing optiona l com m unt 4 7 8 4 0 4 3 ty $ 1 * 2 5 0 r II !! ? elertm ity L A R G E $ 3 0 0 F U R N IS H E D 2 2 F W shuffle ? bills 145 3 9 5 5 I I ¡1 N O N S M O K I N G F E M A IF sp ring Y m e s ter $ 2 5 5 ■ ': / it / :i* Tr■ /v iijy November 6 1986/Page 15 The University Ski Club Thurs. November 6 N 7:00 p.m. Meeting at Seholtz's Garten 1607 San Jacinto B R E C K E N R Í D G E T R I P J a n . 3 ^ 1 0 $275 not transp ort $110 b us trip IN ( L I J)LS: acTornmodation.s lift tickets, races. H aw aiian Party. Pajama Party, etc PARK CITY, UTAH Nov. 25-30 F l y i n g $399 includes flight Places fillin g up fast! Your C a ctu s is w a itin g P ic k u p 8 6 y e a r ­ b o o k s a t TSP 3 2 0 0 E M P L O Y M E N T EM PLO YM EN T B U Y , SELL, RENT, TRADE...W ANT ADS...471 -5 2 4 4 790 — Part Time STAR TREK IV USHERS NEEDED The A rbo r Cinem a IV is accepting o p pucotions for ushers ‘or our holiday season which includes Star Trek IV Day or m gh' sh/ts avoiiat/'t- Apply -c person or coll 346 7919 for morf n formation 8 0 0 — G e n e r a l H e lp Wanted 'GET INTO SHOWBIZ! S o u th Pork c n e m o III n o w tak n g a p p lic a tio n s for floor sta P M u s t b e a b l e to w o r k o n d h o i i d c y% M i r w a g e A p p l y in p e rs o n o nly M W F v 6 TTh 6 10 E O f Bivd fie x ip le hr% — * r e e 19/1 E Ber vs/h;te jv ie s U K \ I K F ’S P C S T A T I O N T e le p h o n e Survey W o r k Nc selling nc O D P O in tm e n f sefl POSITION OPEN If you are qualified, and experienced in dealing wifh models and fight schedules: Texas Student Publications is seeking a FASHION COORDINATOR for the Special Fashion Supplement to The Daily Texan to be published in February. C O M E TO TSP 3.210 TO APPLY 4 1 0 — Furn. H o u se s T ra n sp o rta tio n S A V E $ $ $ o n H*j heke* fo o d todg :•* • . 81J Bfdzoy 4» Floor 4 7 7 3 3 5 S m 8 a R E S U M E S 2707 Hemphill Park 472-3210 472-7677 P tO E fS S lO N A l TYPING word P'oceiv *^9 **'1# c k d to n c ry cNeck k«o%o»xít>H» ♦m ’ tvrmorrxHxJ L oca ted N o f ^ Aiusfln 3 3 9 - 2 3 9 3 12-15 F S O F E S 9 0 N A L T Y P IN G serv*ce t o n occu p»ci u p de*»»#rv k ’■ate Cof; onytene/teeve 4 4 2 7 7 2 9 IT 14______________________________ C A A ^ U S Most UF* O v e m tg h * $s p o g e ¡BM T w#?ve » e o n e xp erienc e jom e 2 4 4 0 2 ) 3 I M S _________________________ ir v x e f t e O F E S S f O N A i T Y P IN G w o rd p r o c t is tng Term p o p e n m eves d tsse n o e o m re w m e i -ego p rie h R e o so n o b te roiei O o n # 3 4 3 8 7 3 8 11-11 e S T A S l i S H f O W O f f S S l N A l Quatey w o rd proc.esur»g. iflM -P C ¡ener quotf^y p n n *e ' '■esczmes mese*, tenr» p o p e n re ­ p orts 4 7 8 5 4 8 5 12 2 F t e O F B S f O N A i TVP'ST Theses dtsserto **am schoot' r e p o t s etc G ro d u o te c*uairh gu o ro n fe e d f-rotr $1 25 b o rtw ro T u io s 4 5 3 5 1 2 4 12 3 C O N V E N I E N T i O C A S I O N S o u lt' 2 0 4 St o u g N e r com ? 2 8 2 3 0 6 5 T y p in g terrr» p a p e rs r e p o m esum es op.es p e rso n arfized an sw e rin g service M o n c h o c c C o p y S h o p A n s w e n n g Servic e 1 ? 4 Su re, w e ty p e FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grodes? 472-3210 472-7677 760 — Misc. Services P H O T O S t o r PASSPORTS M O N - F R I 9 - 6 S A T 1 0 - 2 4 7 7 -5 5 5 5 ALTERATIONS CUSTOM TAILORING For perfect fitting, please com e to visit, wtfh our seamstress Dee, from Thailand, 10 am -6 pm M o n -S a t at Kikuya 1126 W 6fh St.. Austin, TX 78703 474-9215 ________________ T7_8 P H O T O E N L A B G I N G bv b o n d W alk U7 C o lo r 6 4 W Slid es N e g a t iv e s E c o n o m ­ ical 4 7 8 P rofessio nal 4 3 Z 8 Terry 11-25 C ustom ized EM PLO YM EN T 790 — P art Time RECEPTIO NIST/CLERICAL POSITIO N R eception tst/derical p e rso n to w o r i M -F a fte rn oo n W o r d pro cessir.g a plus S e n d resum e or letter to Factorial System s, 3 3 0 5 N o r t t s i a n d D r S u i 'e 3 0 5 A u s t i n 7 fc 731 Attention Parm ita Tx M o s o r MARKETING & ADVERTISING POSITIONS AVAILABLE M oneftn q jn c odvens.-.. m oKin neeo e: for a - vounc o o v e n ^ n q p a r time sow, « t o g m c y 7hmJ-/eqr to post g rad preferrec - leads provndec - ■:* - - o ng m o icv e -'sin q con.ea’ okready prove. - m a t e O ' , shorp. neat neec apex. Co» 4 7 4 4 4 6 9 fq. app onfm en' BUSINESS SURVEYS M u s t h a v e p le a s a n ’ p r o fe s s io n a i t e le p h o n e m a n n e r C a ii Jim A i i 'e c o r R j b e ^ Foster. 440-8558 100% Guaranteed Never to Run! Sheer Tyfon pantyhose 28 fosh*i coion - oft sizes $3 99 To «eon- h< you con become a poh-ttme dtstnfc tor ond eorr foil of money m vc spore time coll Kothenne Tpyior a tect 2U /9 8 0 -6 8 3 6 APARTm EN’ MANAGER neeoed u* □ re o port nm e D o vis o n d A ssoc ia te s 5 9 2 9 b a lc o n e s D a v e C o m e b y office for a p p ifc a h o r 9 o m 4 p n 11 6 0 W A N T E D 1 0 0 overw e*ghY p eo pte to Try c n e w hertKiJ pr oduct a n d m o *e $ $ $ C o f D r M o m n e z M D 4 4 7 0 9 3 4 i 2 1 A T T | N T O N ¡’ HIGHLY m ohvo ted repre sematrves n e e d e d to seR faong distance serv»ce w a mufl* »#ve m orketing 4 ? 2 7 8 4 0 11-11 ______________ PARKING G A R A G E gate xeepe^ M u s f b e oepervOocwe o n e tx>ndabte H o u n t>prr M -F $ 4 hou r starting O n shv/tTi# route 4 7 8 6 4 3 3 11 7 s o p r A C C O U N T I N G S T U D E N T tun 10- 20 Hours N e o r CGMTIpus O e rtc o w ork m C R A ofbee Fo m iflonzation wrth Lotus W o r d P o r M otfm erge o plus Tvptog 3 0 w p rr prefer «frong e le n co ot sec re t o n o ib a c k g r o u n d 4 7 7 - 5 8 5 4 NEED EXTRA CASH? W o r k a ro u n d your sc hedule 3 p m sh o rp 320C^ R ed Rrver S u t o 4 0 1 C Ask tor G p r y 11-5 STORE ClERN SECRETAR-" n e e o e o ttecem ber tor science m useu m store R o y $ 4 50/hr H o u rs ore flexible T y p in g m inim um 5 0 w p rr *ntervtew$ M o r Tues W e d 4 7 4 7 6 1 6 11-10 11-5 *n P AR T T IM E d n v e rs n e e d e d eve n *n gs M u st hove O w n cor M a r k o r Rictam d CT 4 4 5 - 5 7 7 4 11-7 PART-TIME POSITION n e e d e d for u p s cole m en s sh o e deportm ent N c expe^ ence >eeaea A p p ly at Frost B r o t h e r M e n $ S h o e D eportm ent N o rth C ro ss M a ll or cok 4 5 1 - 6 2 6 2 ext 2 7 6 U -7 T W E L V E H O U R S w eek twin infants H o u rs flexible For N o rth 2 5 1 - 6 3 9 8 11-11 flobysitter fo r 800 G e n e ra l Help W anted JAPANESE & CHINESE Japanese and Chinese translators technical Chemistry electronics ana mechanical en gi­ neering a must Part time or tu» time Your home or our office Must hcrve excellent com m an d ot English la n gu o ge Sana mtofmoi i**ume to Tran slators B o . 4 S 2 8 A u s t in TX 7 8 7 6 6 H e lp wanted for w o m e n s c o n sign ­ ment shop. Responsible a n d energetic person to assist witti customers and paper w o r i N e e d e d 10 a m -5 pm Tuesdays. Thursdays. Fndoys and som e Saturdays $4 hr Coi: 451 6 8 4 5 on those days SECOND TIME AROUND n - i i 8 1 0 - O H . e e - C le ric a i DESK CLERK 11 P m - 7 c r r 5 D a y s Tues-Satj. A pp i son Rio Motel, IH-35. / i n o e r - ~i 8 0 0 N Ru nner (yo u r cor) 8 c ?kJte>p#r expert- 8 4 0 - - S a le s sM m E D í a ? e C C - ’ C " T * 8 5 0 - -R e ta il 6 S P e r H o u r + ar*c m Colt For interview 4 6 C to- e ve t o - c e n d s O oft 8 8 0 — P ro fe ssio n a l N f F l A yrd o y e : 0-^5 O O pn1 $ 3 0 0 wwek Coi= ART T M R A P IS ? neede d*^o *eoch cios* ~ I w e e k d a y d te m o o n s 11-7 ^ D A Y C O U N S E l G R p osition avaTkab*e at HtH C all w e e k d a y s 2 8 8 - 2 6 8 7 b etw een ? - 5 p r r 8 9 0 - C lu b s- R e sta u ra n ts f a j i t a f l time, esoe C O O K S P■ O S IT IO N 8 o narros Hecessory A p p ly m p e n o n 4 . 3 0 - 5 - 3 0 at 1601 G y o d o iu p e 11 -6 Se-stourant N * n c e 9 0 0 - D om estic- H o u s e h o ld B A B • SIT Tf k W A N T E D W e e k e n d * a n d e ve n in gs R e g u iO ' w o rt C a re tor ! i C re e k 3 2 7 - 1 4 8 6 T t m sp ortotjon prefer/ a c C oll B U S IN E S S 930 — B u sin e ss O p p o rtu n itie s F O R $ '0 0 yo u c an n o v e unlimited long distance service a n y w h e re *n tto ü S 5 1 ? 4 4 4 ft • TEXAN WANT ADS! Word Processing B i n d i n g i a m i r r a ? i n g Laser Printing K odak C opies 2518 G u a d a upe 476-4498 4 " h- c l o e s - L a r g e r PROFESSIONAL RESUME SERVICE JOB WINNING! RESUMES $9 UP í Aperr jmmgr • hf&rrQ rthe# hx> i*W * x * t SeiMmiwAeiNNwAppbccAon» ixn < ,onverwon> IkerwM« i*«oDr,)»o« • Repom ' f ’«hr v^erview UNNWne i*poair»g C e n t r a l * 9 9 1 4 * 1 1 1 0 0 O M O O o t u p e * 1 0 3 t o u l h H o r lh 2 2 1 9 M t o r W h ite # f 4 4 1 * 1 4 4 4 1 4 - 9 4 7 ? 9 5 1 3 t o m e x « 2 0 1 1 _ • P R P E R 5 -T D -G D tft su n u s _ J 't ja / Aut*s_ ~ 7 ñ i S í S - J e7 e u r : J f a f e t S - J - J t J U A - S v Q i S S e i L l L i & r u - y W e d o It a ll fo r L E S S ! 2 S C ' S a - J a a n t c 4 7 6 - 9 P 9 C f f y t m c P a s s e italics 4 0 4 W 4 0 t h M F 9 - 7 S a t 1 0 -3 S , i f- b y A p p t • W ord P ro ce ssin g * IB M Com patible P r in t in g 9 Proofreading 4 t t A bo ut Our T h n e t P t c k tg e s 1 0 % Diicount With This Ac 459-1120 MILUE'S TYPING SERVICES Word Processing— J1 65 iQM PRINTING— S 25 page • Dissertations Tneses W s Term f^esL„;mes C ove*? i.ef - T«chncol io d g n m g , itft tickets m o u n t a in p*cnt< p a rt ie s ski r a c e a n d m o r e fr o n ^ $ U 2 * H U R R Y coll S u n c h a s e T o w n I d fre e fo r futi d e ta ils 1 8 0 0 3 2 1 5 9 ' T O D A Y ) E D U C A T IO N A L 580 — M u sic a l Instruction P I A N O L E S S O N S E x p e rie n c e d teocto r pe rfo rm e r o c ce p tm g student* Al« a g e s o n e levels Ckisstcof im p ro vised styies 4 5 3 9 6 9 6 11-19 590 — T u to rin g • MOST SUBJECTS • ALL LEVELS • LARGE SELECTION 0E EXPERIENCED AND QUALIFIED TUTORS • ALSO EXAM PREP GRE. LSAT, MCAT, GMAT • SATISFACTION • GUARANTEED • COMPETITIVE RATES F r e e ha*-hour fofotng • to O p l O l hr m m o n eflRwi 30 d a p OPEN 7 DAYS M - T h 8 a m - M I D N I G H T F r i S o » S u n 8 a m - 5 p m I 0 a m - 3 p m S p m - M D N I G H T 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 H H Ü — H i — 1 1 ) W . 2 4 » S I . I H - t a m f mm w v I M A T H T U T O R *4*4 \k 2 4 t h s t < f f f n i 1 7 7 - 7 < f l i. t ■ i n >_-j< \ l n 4 M a t h M< M i O M P SCIENCE w TT R M S ENGi v P H Y S IC S < HE M IS TRY 11 7 ‘ N * FRENCH (A HMAN SPA N ISH Don 1 pert t tm oP unn ftw rwgt*t tie tore m e u m ii * tot tete * 1 • to i f f •F ee ‘‘* 6* r>v •V»ry m » * W e '•r»o Atm' *i ot» ot pettaKM* »tn « -m- VOit cmr uncAeni utne ernoo» courum* *n me etf*.*ve •ubpecf» mna SAT A iAH £**»-«#«• N e * ?( X e a RE N T A L 400 — C o n d o s - T o w n h o u se s TIM BER R ID G T . o n d om im um *. i n d u c e d renl storting ot $ 4 5 0 fo r 2 /2 a n d 2 / 2 1' w/d, o n * a n d tw o car g a ra g e s, p o o l a n d tennis courts sp ring m o v e in specials for students sign lease eorty 4 4 / 0 5 8 0 6 _____ _ I I I I $ 3 5 0 2 I V Í $ 4 5 0 N t c e d e a n units w olf to c a m p u s Ebert le asin g 0 4 4 4 11 19 331 N O R T H F O R K C O N D O S 4 4 0 1 5 p e e d w ay 1 bdrm $ 3 7 5 1 b d rm with loft g a s p a id $ 5 2 5 W / D quiet Q uality conveniently located 4 7 9 - 0 1 4 2 O g l e & A ssoc ia te s 4 5 2 6 8 8 8 I I 6 d ish w a sh e r c o m p le x N E A R UT shuttle N W efficient, m, re frig e ra to r W / D , p o o l t r o w o v e c o ve m d p o rt in g excellent c ondition $ 3 2 5 C oll Judy, 3 2 8 0 8 2 8 I I 10 2 2 C O N D O W a lk in g d istance to UT S o r P e d ro O a l s 8 0 3 W e st 28th # 1 0 / $60(7 4 7 / 6 55 1 M ott 11 2 5 0 im m ediately A v a ila b le S H A R I P R O F IT S *' Resident t o investor pay s $ 5 2 9 for luxury IB R in crease over to d a y s a p p ro ise d ..slue otter gra dua tion (7» n«r a g e n t n i i _____ ______ J2H 0 8 0 / __________ re a p halt S P A C IO U S 2 2 7 condr. M ic ro w a v e h rep lac e p a tio c or c am p u s o re a A n g e lo H 32 b o k o n y , 8 9 2 8 $ 1 2 0 0 12 4 g a r a g e tw o S A V A N N A H . 2 2 n d a n d So n G a b rie l . 2 w asher/dryer quiet to m p le » no pets H ow ell Prop erties 4 7 7 9 9 / 5 12 5 D 2 - 2 fo m ish e d O n e tw o intercom ceding ton s tv e p lo te C l O S E UT Storey all am enities c o m e b y 2 8 1 3 Rio G r a n d e tci see H o w e ll Properties 4 7 ' 9 9 2 5 12 5 0 F O R R E N T 1 b e d ro o m a n d 2 b e d ro o m c ondom inium s 1 7 0 5 C ro s sin g P lo t# |ust t>H R.verstde o n UT shuttle Storting ot $ 3 5 0 C oll Tina. 4 5 1 9 9 9 5 4 L U X U R Y 2 2 c o n d o Wolfc to c om pus W o s t ie i d r y e r S t u d e n t H o t atm osp here R o y 331 5 3 6 4 11-70 tu b H Y D E P A R K b a rg a in s M o tiv a te d o w n e rs f n need p ro p e rly leased Torrytown held. W est C a m p u s a v a ila b le a s wei University Properties 4 5 4 7 0 6 5 TI '4 0 420 — Unf. H o u se s 16)56 t N f If i O s p o c i o m i'Sd r h w ftoon loads ot charm on shuttle $ 6 5 0 CA/CM month 4 5 0 ? P L A C ID Pi — 4oft of Toomj yard 3 1 with H W floors $ 5 5 0 month ed 3 50 8 H O L L Y W O O D -chormmg Vid o n on flooded w i*ghf 3 1 m with toll ceilings French Place $ 6 9 5 month : oil ftett ienkir 4 7 7 2 3 6 6 m o o NEW ON MARKET L a r g e , a p p r o x i m a t e l y 1 2 5 0 sq 8 re m o d e le d 2 -1 C A / C H , 9 f o o t cettm gs w o o d floors fireploce bookc asses french d o o rs foundry hook ups three c e ilin g fa n s, m o d e m k itch e n m m. W in ds, lots o f closets, e a r t h t o n e d e cor Fall sp e c ia l, $ 5 9 5 4 5 9 - 9 0 9 5 C L A R K S V IL L E 1930s 2 1 o n qv.*.~TIre*I O a k Floors fen ced yord. pets O K 8 0 7 P-nssie. $ 5 9 0 4 72 2 '2 3 11-11 4 01 A V f N U f A 2 1 h a r d w o o d B o o rs ap p lianc es 4 5 9 3 5 3 2 11 ’3 la rg e fen ced yo re $ 5 5 0 H Y D E P A R S o re o 1-1, A C carpet appi. o 'w r s w -rid 4 5 1 -8 1 2 .' Real Estate 1118 $.175 N W H IL L S 4 2 ? tw o Irving areas, fire­ ploce C A / C M , double g a r a g e decks fenced view shuttle $ 9 9 5 3 4 5 - 9 4 4 2 ! ! 13 S P A í IO U S , ’ C L Í A N ~ 2 1 Duw>g~ roo m Pontry H a r d w o o d B o o rs W o ls to UT 1 4 0 5 W alle r 4 7 8 - 5 7 3 9 « 7 2 2 0 9 7 U 2 0 _ ______________________ Q U A IN T O L D E R , d e a n , c o nvenient UT, 2 -2 h a r d w o o d B o o rs Y a rd 3 1 0 6 K in g Street $ 5 0 0 4 7 8 - 5 7 3 9 4 7 2 2 0 9 7 fj- 2 0 ______________________ 3 * 2 1 4 miles west o f University m Tarry- tow n O w e . Fe n ce d y o rd $ 8 1 5 3 5 '6 II 6 4 7 2 R E D U C E D H Y D E Park d o s e to UT o n d shuttle 7 0 7 East 4 9 th 2-1 house, w o o d B o o rs C A / C H , mmi-bfcnds $ 4 6 0 - WBs 4 5 V 0017 11 2 5 0 3 B R O N shuttle W o sh e r d ry e r C entral A C M ic ro w a v e Free ca b le C in e m a *. H B O A v a ila b le immedt- ateiy O n ly $ 5 9 0 3 3 8 - 0 3 2 2 11 2 6 Fen ced yo rd L A R G E. O l D 4 B R 2 B A W a lk UT fro m E. 12th near IH 3 5 Fenced, pets $ 4 7 5 month 4 5 9 - 5 8 2 9 , 3 2 7 0 4 2 5 ' 1-7 C E N T R A L L O C A T I O N bedro om , fireploce. a p p lia n c e s pretty ne ig h b o rh o o d , h o r d w o o d floors, ya rd $ 7 2 5 4 7 9 - 6 1 5 3 12 3__________________ three o r four Z ILK E R P A R K G * e " 2 1 2 2 0 2 P oro m ount $ 4 2 5 C o » Terry 4 4 1 - 7 8 3 9 or B o n n ie 4 8 2 -9 » ! 12-2 H Y D E P A R K C o tta g e 2-1 A v e n u e A fans W asher/ dryer, d ish w a sh e r ceiling h o rd w o o d B o o rs IS shuttle $ 5 9 5 + bills 4 7 9 615 3 8018 11-7_____________ fen ced y a rd A C 4 5 4 R E N O V A T E D 2/1 n e a r UT H ig h ceilings St-e e ' h a rd w o o d $ 6 2 5 4 7 7 - 1 4 7 7 4 4 1 - 3 9 9 5 11-10 3 K )4 K in g floors L A R G E 2 - B E D R O O M 2 bath R e o d y to m o v e m 3 2 7 - 4 8 4 5 11-12 7 3 1 3 C a rv e r $ 3 6 0 425 — R o o m s P R IV A T E S IN G L E R O O M S F O R U N V E R S lT Y W O M E N M E N F U R N I S H E D A B P C A C H C L O S E C A M P U S $ 2 4 0 $ 2 6 0 / M O N T H 4 7 2 4 9 2 4 11-14 P R IV A T E R O O M S with sh a re d bath for m en N o kitchen $ 2 4 0 A B P 2 3 rd a n d R io G r a n d e H ow e ll Prop erties 4 7 7 9 9 2 5 1 2 -5 D 430 — R oo m - B o a rd R O O M A N D b o a r d a v a ila b le S p rin g se m ester D o b ie from $ 1 .6 0 5 C ontac t C Richard- D orm , so n 4 7 2 8411 11-17_____________________ o c c u p a n c y D o u b le 435 — C o -o p s P n v a te M A T U R E N O N S M O K E R (pefless) H o B W o c k UT (includes $ 2 9 0 suppers! Eight hou sem ates M a k e a h o u se a h o m e 4 7 4 - 2 0 0 2 , 4 7 2 - 5 6 4 6 11-19 440 — R o o m m a te s HEY! N E E D E D 2 female suifemates W H E N Spring '87 W HERE: Somerset Con dos H O W : C a l l J e n n i f e r f o r i n f o 4 7 3 8 2 66 H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D Three b e d ro o m ho u se O w n ro o m $ 210. m onth + bills N o v e m b e r free 3 7 0 6 L afay e tte 4 7 3 - 8 2 8 0 11-6_______________________________ N E E D A ro o m m a te * C oll R o o m m a te B ro ­ kers, Inc 4 7 8 - 5 0 9 6 1 3 0 7 W e st A v e n u e R o o m 13 12-15 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D fo r la rge 3 -2 h o u se near S R shuttle M ic ro w a v e , W /D , M e y - T l b M o t O m e , B o t T L o o . V l 1 2 ^ M < . 2 / A T g y i b i ? B y c o s j b M £ THt© IS OoBTHM G, a UTTiLt- l o o ( U 6 i g T > F=b tz - M e , . . ' BY VAN GARRETT (A lA T 2 VoO CboKlkiA. I B M B Mook M O W ? 1 , T o n / / I I T^oM'-r F e & u L i k e T h e o j l T m o m a t t h c , C o m V 5 N T io M a u V M o k l ! BY MILES MATHIS