T h e Da il y T e x a n :r ,n :-s « p s Copyright 1980, Texas Student P u b lica tio n s, all rights reserved » — < * - • n. a*™*, 80 t News and Editorial 47 1 -4 5 9 1 Display Advertising: 471-1865 Business O ffice and Classified: 471-5244 UT plane used to attei . ^ ootball games By DIANE BALLARD Daily Texan Staff As p a rt of “ u su al” procedure during football season. U niversity a d m in istra to rs. UT System officials and their fam ily m em bers have used an a irp la n e leased by the school for U niversity and s ta te business to fly to in­ tra s ta te Longhorn football gam es. F light logs of authorized flights la st football season show officials and their fam ilies flew to D allas, Houston and College Station to a tten d U niversity football gam es. On Nov. 10, 1979. the d a te of the L onghorn-U niversity of Houston gam e, th re e se p a ra te flights w ere m ade from Austin to Houston to take R egent T hom as Law, his wife and daughter, R egent Jon Newton, his wife and two sons, R egents C hairm an Dan W illiam s and his wife, A ssistant to the C hancellor Ja m e s Duncan and his wife and o ther officials to Houston. NEWTON SAID th at during a football w eekend, often reg en ts attended to o th er U niversity business. “ U sually it w ouldn’t ju s t be the football g a m e ,” New ­ ton said. About the Houston g am e he and his fam ily attended la st y ear, Newton said he “ couldn’t re c a ll” w hat th e fo o tb all U n iv e rsity b u sin ess o c c u rre d d u rin g weekend. Only two of la st season's out-of-town gam es — the U niversity of M issouri gam e a t C olum bia, Mo., and the U niversity of A rkansas gam e a t L ittle Rock, Ark. — w ere not atten d ed by officials and fam ily m em b ers us­ ing the UT plane. R egents and a d m in istra to rs said they c a rry out related U niversity duties such a s talking to potential U niversity b en efacto rs or m eeting w ith other officials during football w eekends. “ G enerally, th e re ’s alw ays som ething going o n ,” R egent H ow ard R ichards said. to RICHARDS FLEW th e L o n g h o rn -S o u th e rn M ethodist gam e Oct. 27, 1979, on a c o m m ercial airlin e but “ h itch ed " a ride back from D allas to Austin on the U niversity plane because he said he could not get a reservation on a com m ercial airline. “ Y ou’ll find in m ost cases, people a re g enerally fo o tb a ll (d u rin g m e e tin g o n e w a y o r a n o th e r w eekends),’’ R ichards said. R ichards said th e re w ere “ a lot of th in gs” to ju stify such flights, but “ I ’m just not going to get into it.” Law w as out of town and uavailable for com m ent. The U niversity plane, a King-Air 100, is owned by the U niversity of T exas Foundation and is leased from the foundation by the U niversity. The plane acco m m o d ates 10 persons, including a pilot and co-pilot. FOR FLIGHTS to be authorized, use of the plane by U niversity and System officials m u st fall into one or m ore of the following categories: tra v e l by m em bers of the Board of Regents, other U niversity business, of­ ficial s ta te business and a irc ra ft m aintenance. On the required form authorizing use of the plane filed a t the UT System office, the purpose for a flight can be listed as one of the above catego ries and does not re­ inform ation describing w hat “ o th er quire specific U niversity business will be conducted or why “ travel by a m em ber of the Board of R eg en ts” is necessary. UNIVERSITY SYSTEMS O perations O fficer C harles P errone said reg en ts often talk to U niversity donors- during these trips. “ Som etim es they a re talking with potential donors or they m ight be getting a scholarship funded,” P erro n e said. “ R egents a re unpaid servants of the s ta te and they donate all th e ir tim e to the s ta te ,” he said. Often, p a rt of th at tim e is used to “ talk to people.” P erro n e said it is a “ usual occu rrence for regents to use the plane to fly to football gam es and it had been happening “ as long as I ’ve been working for the U niver­ sity .” 197 9 UT fo o tb a ll g a m e s attended by officials and family members using plane leased by the University: Oct 13 — Urvv tn tn cb > to co ó > CO (0 ■ ID > (0 (0 cb > in in m CD > (0 (0 Expert repair on Puch models Free 1 hr. parking w /$ 3 .0 0 purchase yisUVERsiTv co-op prices effective 8/11 through 8 /1 6 505 W est 23rd Street W G/UdUj m K on the drag at 2406 Guadaiupa A S S ■ BASS- B A S S ■ BA SS ASS-BASS Monday, August 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEXAN World&NationaJ Muskie feels ‘left out’ by policy shift Page 3 Holy City status point of conflict WASHINGTON (UPI) — Secretary of State Ed­ mund Muskie said in an interview Sunday Israel’s annexation of East Jerusalem as part of its capital does not settle the status of the Holy City in the Palestinian autonomy talks with Egypt. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has balked at resuming the talks with Israel because its parlia­ ment passed legislation making predominantly Arab East Jerusalem part of its “ indivisible, eter­ nal' capital. Muskie, in a U.S. New s and World Report in­ terview published Sunday, said Jerusalem remains an issue in the autonomy talks despite the action by the Israeli Knesset. “The actions now taken and being considered in Israel on Jerusalem cannot finally settle the status of Jerusalem ,’ Muskie told the magazine. At some point it will be discussed as an he said. “ If agreement eventually is issue, reached concerning the status of Jerusalem, then New Iranian leader presumably both the Israeli and Egyptian governments will support it notwithstanding any prior position either government may have taken.’’ Muskie. a former senator from Maine, succeed­ ed Cyrus R. Vance as secretary of state last April. In accepting the job, Muskie told President Carter he would insist on being the primary spokesman on foreign policy. But he now indicates he feels he was bypassed in an apparent major change in U.S. policy — the use of America’s nuclear arsenal. Published reports last week said the president had adopted a new nuclear arms policy of focus­ ing on attacks on military targets in the Soviet Union — not its cities. Muskie told reporters accompanying him from a trip to California that he was unaware of the apparent policy change until he read of it in the New Yor k T imes and the Washington Post. Muskie indicated he was not necessarily in op­ position to a policy change. But he said such a change had important implications for overall foreign policy and that he should have been con­ sulted. Defense officials ‘astonish are WASHINGTON (UPI) — Defense Department officials expressed astonishment Sunday that Secretary of State Edmund Muskie could have been taken by surprise last week by the formaliza­ tion of a major change which has been evolving in U.S. nuclear strategy since 1974 The officials said Muskie was told of the change last Tuseday at a luncheon meeing between himself. Defense Secretary Harold Brown and national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski. Further, the officials said. Brown called Muskie in Los Angeles to alert him the development had leaked to the press and promise a detailed briefing in the coming week. The development was the signing by President Carter within the last two weeks of Presidential Directive 59. Under that the United States will target Soviet rocket forces and control centers — not just cities and industrial sites — in the event of a nuclear conflict. The theory is that with a wide range of opt tions running from selected military targets to massive retaliation, the United States will possess a more credible deterrent. If the United States' only option in the event of war with the Soviet Union was massive retalia1- tion. the United States might be self-deterred from using its nuclear might at all. The shift in strategy from massive retaliation to is called “ the countervailing strategy” what taken under DefensO began with decisions in 1974. Brown Secretary James Schlesinger described the countervailing strategy” in his 1979-1980 statements on defense to the Congress; As the new strategy was developed and evolved; the State Department and the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency were included in top level review meetings. Defense se c re ta ry Harold Brown plann* ed to disclose the new policy in a speech to th^ Naval War College in Newport, R.I. on Aug. 20*. His staff planned to brief Muskie in detail before that occured Brown also cabled NATO defense ministers last F riday to put the new strategy in perspective following the media leaks. Rajai passes vote TEHRAN (UPI) — Iran’s Parliament Sunday accepted the nomination of M oham m ed Ali R a ja i as p rim e minister, opening the way for certain approval of the hard-line education minister in voting Monday. Once the prime minister is chosen, Parliament can then begin its long- awaited debate on the fate of the 52 American hostages in their 281st day of captivity. Tehran Radio, monitored by the BBC in London, said Parliament received a letter from President Abolhassan Bani- Sadr introducing Rajai as his choice for the job After a long debate about the president’s authority to nominate the prime minister, the house voted to accept the letter. IT WAS LATER announced that Parliament would vote Monday on Ra- jai's nomination, but the ballot was ex­ pected to be a formality capping a decisive victory for Iran’s fundamen­ talist forces. R ajai’s nomination follows a prolong­ ed power struggle in Iran and is viewed as a clear victory for the hard-line Islam ic R epublican P a rty , which proposed the education minister over Bani-Sadr’s more moderate choices. A “party m an“ who takes orders from Islamic Republican Party leader Ayatollah Mohammed Beheshti, Rajai is likely to define Iran’s position on the fate of the hostages. Upon confirmation by Parliament, Rajai must first form a Cabinet and an­ nounce his governm ent’s program , which should include the hostage issue. In the past, his party has advocated spy trials for the hostages. RAJAI MADE A name for himself after the revolution when, as education m inister under the government of provisional Prim e M inister Mehdi Bazargan, he closed down foreign teaching of schools, prohibited English and shifted the curriculum toward religious studies. the His appointment will enhance the political difficulties faced by Bani-Sadr, whose first choice for the prim e minister spot, national police chief Mostapha Mir-Salim, was rejected as “ too moderate.” Elsewhere in Iran, there were more bloody clashes between revolutionary guards and “counterrevolutionaries” in the town of Naqadeh in the province of Azerbaijan and two army officers were wounded in the fighting, Tehran Radio said. Earlier, three people were killed, in­ cluding one Kurd, in a fierce battle at Naqadeh early S aturday betw een “ c o u n t e r r e v o l u t i o n a r i e s ” and revolutionary guards, the radio said. Klan march UPI Teleohoto A Montgomery Ala. policeman stands guard as a group of Klu Klux Klan marchers is sealed off just prior to the last leg of the KKK’s Selma to Montgomery march. The march concluded peacefully with leaders vowing more marches will be held in near future. Campaign debates set; Anderson needs 15% to join NEW YORK (UPI) — The League of Women Voters said Sunday John Anderson may join its debates if national polls give him 15 percent of the vote. President Carter dropped his opposition to in­ cluding the independent candidate. The league also announced it will hold presidential debates — probably in Baltimore, Portland, Ore., and Cleveland — this fall even if Carter, the likely Democratic nominee, refuses to appear with Ander­ son and Republican Ronald Reagan. in an But. Carter interview with CBS’ “ 60 Minutes” aired Sunday night had an apparent change of position and said he would debate if Anderson was included, although he wanted a one-on-one confronta­ tion with Reagan. “ I WOULD PARTICIPATE in a debate along with Governor Reagan and any other candidate who has qualified in enough states where he has a theoretical chance to be elected president if he carried all those states, and that would certainly include John Ander­ son,” Carter said. Carter’s criteria also appears to make him willing to debate other candidates such as Libertarian can­ didate Ed Clark who has qualified in more states than Anderson, but who has a negligible standing in national polls and therefore would not meet the league requirements. The league also will hold a vice presidential debate, probably in Louisville, Ky. Carter has said he will not participate in a three- way debate with Anderson even though the con­ gressman has surged higher than 20 percent in some polls. IN WASHINGTON, Anderson issued a statement saying, “ I feel confident that I will meet the criteria announced today by the league. “ When the debates are held next month I look forward eagerly to airing my views and debating the issues with the other presidential candidates,” he said. Ruth Hinerfeld, head of the league’s education fund, said the group will make its final decision on Anderson in late August by looking at a half-dozen national polls. She said the surveys done periodically by Louis Harris, George Gallup and Elmo Roper will be con­ sulted and possibly those made by CBS and the New York T u n e s , NBC and Ti me magazine as well. If Anderson is above 15 percent in some polls and below in others, “ We will really have to examine the numbers,' she said. “The ultimate decision would have to be made by the (league) board. We recognize there may be some marginal problems.” MS. HINERFELD said any independent candidate who makes a 15 percent or better showing in publi<* opinion polls would be invited to attend, but Andei> son is the only one who is anywhere near that figure,* Two polls released over the weekend give him 15 percent to 14 percent of the vote in a projected three*^ way race with Republican nominee Ronald Reagan and Carter. Ms. Hinderfeld said to qualify for the debates, á candidate also must be on the ballot in enough states to get the 270 electoral votes needed to be elected president. Anderson should have no problem meeting that requirement Carter defense spending tops Nixon, Ford years (UPI) WASHINGTON - Military spending has increased each year the Democrats have controlled the Pen­ tagon in sharp contrast to a decline in real defense spending during the Nixon- Ford years, a liberal defense research group said Sunday. In fiscal 1979, the military spent $117.7 billion, the report by the Center for Defense Information said In fiscal 1981, it is estimated defense spending will amount to $157.5 billion. “This amounts to an increase of $40 billion,” retired U.S. Adm. Gene La Roque, director of the research center, said “ When you adjust for inflation, that comes to an increase of almost 7 percent per year, far higher than the 3 percent or 4 percent the public has been hearing about," he said. “ IN CONTRAST,” La Roque said, “real military spending actually declin­ ed in every one of the Nixon-Ford years. ’’ La Roque’s comments were made as the center released a report entitled ' Military Overspending: A Real Pre­ sent Danger ” It criticizes both the Republican and Democratic defense postures. La Roque said the calls for massive increases in military spending expected to be a part of both major political par­ tie s’ platform s are “ wasteful, in­ flationary and will not increase the security of the United States." He said “ While it is customary for the federal government to spend more of the taxpayer's money in an election year to persuade the taxpayer to vote for an incumbent, the increased spen­ ding this year seems to be focused on the m ilitary.” HE SUGGESTED “ It stems from the lack of awareness on the part of the tax­ payers of the very formidable strength of the United States and the position of military superiority of the United States and allied military forces over those of the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact.” The report says plans for expanded Pentagon spending which are not geared to the economic problems of the privat e sector “ will disrupt the economy and ultimately weaken the m ilitary.’’ It adds "As the civilian economy con­ tinues to deteriorate with high inflation, mounting unemployment and high in­ terest rates, declines in federal revenue and the need to do something to shore up the nation’s basic industries will make fewer resources available for military purposes ” | F in a n c ia l e Tax cut fever cools off in Congress • 1980 The New York Times WASHINGTON — Chances that Congress will vote a tax bill this year have been dimming quickly and few con­ gressional experts now expect approval in 1980. In large part the cooling of tax cut fever has occurred as legislators have concluded that taxpayers are still more concerned about in­ flation than about tax reduction. The growth of that sentiment is a victory for the Carter ad­ ministration, which responded a month ago to the Republican push for tax reduction by arguing that voter interest was be­ ing overestimated. the administration If nothing else, strategy, which has enjoyed support from key House members since the start, has apparently succeeded in slow­ ing the tax cut momentum so much that passing a bill in the few remaining legislative days of 1980 would be nearly im­ possible. ON THE SENATE side, where the Republican push was directed and where consequently the interest by Democrats was greater, the ardor has dissipated as well. For one thing, voter apathy has prevented the Republicans from em­ barrassing Senate Democrats by forcing incessant votes on their tax proposal, as had been threatened. For another thing. Sen. Russell B Long of Louisiana, the powerful chairman of the Finance Committee, can win early re-election with 50 percent of the vote in a Sept. 13 primary and plans to spend little time in Washington between now and then. Some movement on the tax cut front is still possible. Long has scheduled a week of committee mark-up beginning Aug 18. and tax experts believe the committee could decide to recommpnd a bill to the full Senate But without Long to shepherd it through on the Senate floor and with the House Ways and Means Committee firmly resisting beginning work on a bill of its own, any new legisla­ tion is considered unlikely to develop any further PRESIDENT CARTER’S principal regulatory overhaul bill remains moribund but a less-noticed, less-important bill to ease the regulatory burden on small business has jumped forward With five minutes of debate, a voice vote and little attention, the bill sponsored by Sen. JohnC. Culver, D-lowa, was approved by the Senate last week. The House is expected to act similarly. Publicly, the administration hailed the action. Privately, administration officials said that its actual impact will be modest, for the officials contended tne administration done much of what the bill provides on its own. Upon passage, federal agencies will be required to analyze tbe effects of each new regulation on “small entities,” which also include small non-profit organizations and small govern­ ment jurisdictions. Administration officials expect passage this year as well of \ a bill to ease the paperwork burden on business, but they eon-; cede that their principal regulatory reform bill is virtually dead The House panel has insisted on a veto for Congress of coming regulations as part of the bill. Fiscal watchdogs have been poring over the revised 1MÉ and 1981 federal budgets and concerns have begun to appears over what the numbers show. For 1980, the news is that evea after adjusting for inflation and tbe worsened economy, federal spending is continuing to jump sharply Before3 justment, the increase from the 1979 fiscal year totals $88. billion, when Congressional Budget Office figures are used. After adjustment, that amounts to a 6.9 percent increase, far \ more than the administration’s avowed budget restn td would presumably permit. For 1981, the concern is the opposite. The budget unveiled in July would involve no spending increase, after adjustment for inflation But dissecting the numbers gives a different picture Real’ defense spending is now up 7.6 percent and; income security is up 9 percent When defense expenditures, payments to individuals and interest costs are remwpafll spending cm other items is down 19 3 percent. Budget experts fear that cutting these popular grant programs by such targe amounts will prove so difficult that more spending is likely to result. A rouncI t Iie W o R id Bv Unitwri Press Internationa! Haiti devastated PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - The death toil from Hurricane Alien's passage through Haiti has risen to 80 with a report by the mayor of a small town of 20 more casualties, of­ ficials said Sunday. The Haitian Red Cross had reported 60 dead Friday. The hurricane devastated homes and crops in Haiti, the hemisphere’s poorest country’. Foreign Minister Georges Salomon predicted famine would spread if fast relief did not reach Haiti's southwestern penin­ sula where 2.5 million people were affected. Station death toll rises BOLOGNA, Italy — Another vic­ tim of Italy’s worst terrorist attack died Sunday, bringing to 80 the death toll from the bombing of a Bologna railroad station earlier this month. Natalia Gallon, 40. whose 11-year- old daughter Emanuela died Thurs­ day of injuries suffered in the Aug. 2 blast, died at a Bologna hospital late Sunday morning. The prime suspect in the bombing, Marco Affatigato, 24, a neo-fascist, was arrested in the French Riviera city of Nice on Wednesday and Italian police were preparing to ask French authorities for his extradition. Plane hijacked to Cuba MIAMI — A commercial jetliner on a flight from Miami to Key West was hijacked to Cuba Sunday by a Spanish-speaking man who was taken into custody by Cuban police. The plane returned safely to Miami after a two-hour layover in Havana. The Federal Aviation Administra­ tion said the plane, an Air Florida Boeing 737, landed at Miami Inter­ national Airport at 1.42 p.m. EDT, a little more than four hours after the twin-engine jet began its normal Sunday morning run. Boston garbage plies up BOSTON — Garbage piled high in the Haymarket produce center and throughout Boston Sunday because 1,000 public works and parks and recreation departm ent workers remained on strike. Boston Labor Relations Supervisor Dennis Austin threatened “ severe discipline” Saturday for workers who continued to defy a back-to-work order issued by the state Labor Relations Com mission Friday night. Austin said he would take discip lin ary action “ beginning w ith susp en sio n against workers who continue to take part in the illegal walkout. Union leaders said there were no plans to return to work. fund-raising questioned CLEVELAND — Mister Coffee millionaire Vincent G. Marotta and his brother committed two apparent violations of federal elections regulations in selling tickets to a Democratic fund-raiser attended by President Carter, the Plain Dealer reported Sunday. Marotta, 58, of suburban Shaker Heights, is a self* j made millionaire who has captured | more than half of the coffee brewer | m arket. A review of campaign | finance records shows more than $34,000 raised by the dinner came i through M o ro tta's em ployees, friends and business associates, the newspaper found. Troops search camp FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa. — Airborne troops, military police and other security personnel con­ ducted an 8 Vi-hour search Sunday th a t tu rn e d up a n u m b er of homemade weapons in Camp Area 5, the center of last week’s rampage by Cuban refugees Fifty-one Cubans suspected of being prin­ cipals in the uprising were detained for further questioning, officials said. The number of weapons turned up has not been determined. About 600 military police and troopers from the 82nd Airborne Division cordoned off Camp Area 5 for Sun­ day’s unannounced search. Dallas votes for R's MESQUITE — In a unique elec­ tion w atched closely by cable television company officials, voters overwhelmingly approved R-rated movies on cable television and re­ jec ted the advice of religious leaders to ban such films Casting ballots in record numbers, residents of the Dallas suburb Saturday voted 4,095 to 2,580 to approve the screen­ ing of many award-winning movies that carry an R — restricted — designation. St. Helens simmers VANCOUVER, Wash. - Mount St. Helens simmered quietly Sun­ day. a few whisps of steam and gas drifting out of the volcano’s huge crater and its new lava dome grow­ ing Virtually no seismic activity was reported by seismologists at the U n iv e rs ity of W a s h in g to n 's g e o p h y s ic s d e p a r tm e n t. T he volcano's inner crater glowed bright red from the new lava dome bottling up explosive gases that as pressure mounts, could explode again Scientists said the size of the dome was difficult to determ ine from the air, but it appeared te nearly fill the l.UOO-foot wide inner crater. tadpole-shaped THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, August 11, 1980 El Salvador: another Vietnam? By ERNESTO C O R D O B A E d i t o r ' s n o t e t htv is the second in a tw o-part series on El Salvador. P arallel to the developm ent and grow th of g ra ssro o ts organizations of the people in El Salvador was a change inside the arm ed forces. Young m ilita ry officers began proposing their own an alysis reg ard in g the popular d is­ content in the country. They broke w ith the tradition of ignoring the people and saw the necessity of c e rta in reform s th at aim ed at w eakening these organizations, thereby avoiding a confrontation with them in the n ear future A section of the financial oligarchy w ent along the opportunity for with refo rm s as a m eans to allow a gradual absorption of the displaced and m arginal secto rs of the population back into the econom ic system . this position They saw In 1976 the m ilita ry governm ent instituted an a g ra ria n reform law th at intended to im plem ent a m inim al redistribution of uncultivated land owned by the elite. But before this law could be put into practice, the a g ric u ltu ra l-ex p o rte r oligarchy put a stop to it totally. This dem o n strated once again th at the tru e political pow’e r is in the hands of the land-owning oligarchy which is not wi 11 ing to accept even the slightest soc io-economic reform s. On the other hand, this also shows th a t the a rm ed forces a re the paid guards of this oligarchy. fro m 1976 The p o litic a l p ro c e s s to 1979 w as c h aracterized by hard work on behalf of the g ra ssro o ts popular organizations which w ere widening th e ir bases of support and which w ere the only organizations o ffer­ the people se c u rity M ilitary repression w as ing w idespread The rep ressiv e violence becam e alm o st institutionalized, this being the outstanding m ark of the r e c e n t l y r e p l a c e d R o m e r o g o v e r n m e n t. T h e w atchw ord under R om ero w as “ an nih ilatio n” of th e p o p u la r e v e r y th in g to do w ith t h a t h a d ' caused organizations. The rep ressive political policies of R om ero as m uch as the change in the Latin A m erican foreign policy of th e U n ited S ta te s , su p p o rtin g the processes of “ d em o cratic opemng-up isolation of El S alvador’s governm ent in the world arena. It is no se c re t th a t the U.S. governm ent has tried to realign the pow er stru c tu re in El Salvador by creating a young ruling elite within the m ilitary , com ­ posed of C h ristian D em o crats and Social D em o crats. A coup d e ta t w as c a rrie d out again st R om ero in O ctober 1979. paving the way for a series of proposed reform s. th e p o p u la r organizations w ere ever rep resen ted by the re fo rm ists. M oreover, R o m ero ’s fall did not m ean dism antling the governm ent’s rep ressiv e a p p a ra tu s, but ra th e r only the dissolution of R om ero and his closest ad v isers The take-over of pow er by the re fo rm ist jun ta (now sup ­ ported by the United S tates) had one outstanding point: even though they had legal pow er, the real pow er was held by the m ilita ry trad itio n alists who controlled all of the co u n try ’s so-called secu rity forces. th a t none of The key th is to is The position of the popular organizations tow ard the coup was to give the junta a period of th ree m onths to cease the repression, to put those responsible for the bloodshed on trial and to begin to im plem ent som e of the reform s During those th ree m onths (O ctober to In fact, it D ecem ber) repression w as not stopped grew Also, tria ls again st the rep ressiv e forces n ever took place, and a tte m p ts a t im plem enting refo rm s w ere m et by m ore violence T herefore, in th e begin­ ning of Ja n u a ry the m ost progressive secto rs of the th e new g o v e r n m e n t b ro k e a w a y , d e n o u n c in g traditio nalist m ilita ry and the continued rep ression they c a rrie d out. Now, the popular organizations have consolidated and unified, c reatin g a com m on front By Ja n u a ry the political p ictu re had becom e m o re defined. On the other hand, th e re was a political w eakening of the junta since all of the Social D em o crats and som e C hristian D em ocrats resigned p erm an ently. This left the junta w ithout support from im p o rtan t e n tre p re n eu ria l se c ­ tor'- The only a lte rn a tiv e to conserve the pow er they had left is m ore repression The re su lt w as a total of 3,- 300 deaths in six m onths, the victim s being te a c h e rs, w orkers p easants, citizens, w om en and children. Also, the m ilita ry has helped to c re a te and encourage the a c ­ tivities of right-v.ing p a ra -m ilita ry groups th a t have contributed to the sy ste m a tic annihilation of the peo­ ple In April the new social secto rs joined the opposition front form ing the R evolutionary D em ocratic F ro n t, which re p re se n ts the tru e in te re sts of the m asse s of Salvadoreans. it is constituted of The I S. governm ent supp orts the ju n ta with the hope it will c a rry out som e refo rm s. This is unlikely, since trad itio n al m ilita ry and m em b ers of the reactio n ary C hristian D em ocratic P arty To back its verbal support, the United S tates is sending m ilita ry aid to the ju n ta in the form of a rm s, equipm ent and technical and m ilita ry personnel th at already am ounts to ap p ro x im ately $11.5 m illion. R eports indicate th ere a re 36 U.S. m ilita ry “ a d v is e rs ” in El Salvador today. of C entral A m erica The United S tates should re-exam ine its foreign policy tow ard El Salvador and its policy of “ Viet- nam ization' in general. The R evolutionary D em ocratic F ro n t is the only a lte r ­ native for a governm ent th at is able to c a rry fo rw ard a just tru e tran sfo rm atio n of dem ocratizatio n of El Salvador. the system and the ( ordoba is a m e m b e r of the Latin Am eri c an Students Association F ír ín g U ne Reagan’s cheerleader I m ust protest R obert D o rr’s a r ti­ c le e x to llin g W.W R o s to w ’s “ positive a ttitu d e ’’ tow ard develop­ m e n t. R o s to w h a s a p p a r e n t l y b e c o m e a c h e e r le a d e r fo r th e R e a g a n sch o o l of su p p ly - sid e econom ics, which trie s to conceal its contem pt for labor and bias tow ard co rp o rate cap ital behind honeyed rh eto ric on energy production. Ju st is c u r r e n t l y m a s ­ a s R e a g a n querading as a friend of the working class, Rostow (and D orr) a re intent on p u rsu a d in g us th a t c a p ita l- intensive developm ent will “ trickle down” to the poor and ensure the pro gress of the developing world The arg u m en t has been refuted by num erous developm ent econom ists and has failed in practice. J u s t ask the in habitants of B razilian slum s if capital-intensive developm ent has m ade rich er, Mr. Rostow With the m assive foreign debts of m any developing nations, R ostow 's argum ent becom es the justification fo r e v e n g r e a t e r in je c tio n s of foreign capital (via m ulti-national c o r p o r a t i o n s ) f u r t h e r dependence on the U.S. and mul tila te ra l financial institutions. In the past, such policies have p erp etuated underdevelopm ent, not solved by it them a n d B r e n t G o ff G r a d u a t e s t u d e n t in L a tin A m e r i c a n S tu d ie s. Inferior argument the black com m unity, Kenneth Butland, in his le tte r to F i r i n g L i n e on Aug. 6, failed to recognize an im p o rta n t fact: black English is very c le a r, concise, etc. in ju st as “white” A m erican E nglish is in the white com m unity. N eith er is p a r­ ticularly c le a r to a New Z ealander Does in­ ferior? K enneth identified black E n g lis h a s a d i a l e c t , a n d a s therefore su b stan d ard Would he feel the sam e about T exas dialectal E nglish? that m ake our E nglish in K e n n e th m ig h t c o u n te r th a t its w ritten A m erican E nglish form is not su b sta n tia lly d ifferent from w ritten B ritish English, and is th erefo re not inferior. But a t this point, a m a jo r inconsistency in his original arg u m en t becom es clear: he is judging black English, a spoken d ia le c t, by w r itte n s ta n d a r d s . Anyone w ritihg a te rm p ap er or giv­ ing a le c tu re — w h a te v e r his dialec­ tal background — is expected to con­ form to c e rta in norm s. But this does not m ean th a t the sa m e rules m ust n e c e s s a r i l y a p p l y t o s p o k e n language. B r i d g e t D r in k a L i n g u i s ti c s Carter on delegates: right but weak By WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY JR. to A d v ice th e D e m o c r a tic c o n v e n tio n p ro f fe re d by R epublicans is understandably suspect. C a rte r's rating in the polls is so low the D em o crats would probably be b e tte r off nom inating Bela Lugosi But a n atu ral anxiety th at D em ocrats should put forw ard th eir w eakest candidate doesn’t bind even Republican p a rtisa n s from an effo rt a t d isin terested analysis. During the endless deb ate on w hether R ichard Nixon should tender his resignation, the loyalists stressed the point that the nation needs the stab ility of a presidency th at isn’t tossed about by fits of national cap rice. Not m any voices have been raised urging C a rte r to resign, even when he sailed in the deepest troughs of unpopularity; but the c u rre n t fev er is a step tow ard the de-institutionalization of o rder. We do not have a parliam en­ ta ry system , under which C a rte r would probably have been deposed the w eaknesses of a non- p a rlia m e n ta ry system We ought a t least to draw from the stren g th s of our federal system , and th ese issue from the dem o cratic stability of the political processes. long ago. We suffer The fact of it is. C a rte r faced down the opposition and won. It was alm o st everyw here assu m ed th a t Kennedy would quickly destroy C a rte r in the p rim a rie s, inasm uch a s the polls had for y e a rs held him out as the undisputed popular favorite. Well, to th at p ro jected th re a t P resid en t C a rte r replied casually, “ I'll whip his ass. He did exactly th a t. Those who say th at the cred it ought actually to go to the hostage c risis, or K ennedy’s m aladroit p erfo rm an ce on CBS, or w h atev er, a re arguing for a contingency-free popularity contest, and th ese sim ply do not happen. E lection s them selves express the mood of th e m om ent, and one does not plausibly a rg u e th a t C a rte r shouldn’t really have been elected m erely because Ford m ad e an unfortunate m istak e in speaking about fre e Poland in a televised debate. The facts a re th a t C a rte r w as elected, and th a t C a rte r defeated the opposition decisively. That the D em ocratic convention should coincide with the low point in C a rte r s popularity is an a ccid en t of political history. T here a re two a rg u m e n ts for C a rte r’s standing by th e rule 11-h: The first is th at he won by a rule g enerally approved; and the second is that the rule is itself a stabilizing factor in A m erican politics. for then, So m uch, the form al arg u m en ts. O ther con­ sid eratio n s inevitably figure. One m eans of reconciling the two positions would have C a rte r re lease the d elegates, and proceed to w’in the votes of the m ajo rity . W ere he to do so, he would — assu m in g he won — a p p ear before the country w ith a freshly m inted m a n d a te from his own p a rty His p osture would g re a tly benefit from the reb ap tism F actu al question: Would it w o rk 0 The poll th a t m ost nearly probes the h ypothetical question re v e a ls th a t the 59 percen t of the deleg ates who ra n as C a rte r d eleg ates have dim inished by a single point, i.e., 58 p ercen t of them a p p e a r to be saying th a t they continue to fav or C arter. It isn ’t possible, in a poll, to a sc e rta in w hether they favor him as a m a tte r of civic conscience — acknow ledging th a t they w ere deputized to vote for him . Or, w hether, surveying the a lte r ­ natives. they actually p re fe r C arter. Even so, if C a rte r w ere confident of the 58. he could proceed through this m aneuver and confound his c ritic s It would be a daring, exciting v en tu re in self-confidence, and probably w orth the risk. His c ritic s, a fte r all. will m ake m uch of any refusal to hear the voice of the con­ vention freely given. But C a rte r has a point in principle which is not m erely self- serving N am ely, th a t the m e re g e stu re is a capitulatio n to a national d istem p er, a stru c tu ra l ch allenge to the institution of the p rim ary , and for th a t reason, quite sim ply w rong. His reasoning would be c o rre c t. • 1980 U niversal P re ss Syndicate Editorials Page 4 iewpoint Agent Orange research Approximately 10 million gallons of the deadly herbicide Agent Orange were used to defoliate Vietnam's jungles during the Indochina conflict, and the government has been reluctant to accept its respon­ sibility for possible dam age to American servicem en who might have been affected. Some 2,200 Vietnam veterans are seeking compensation from the government, claim ing that Agent Orange exposure interfered with their fertility, increased the risks of birth defects in their children, caused or increased the risk of cancer and caused cases of the serious skin ailm ent chloracne. And according to a report recently released by a federal study group, it could take three years to gather the scientific evidence on Agent Orange necessary to determ ine if any of those claim s are legitim ate. The study group, whose m em bers cam e from the departments of health and human services and defense and the Veterans Administra­ tion, acknowledges many problems in determ ining whether any of these claim s are legitim ate. The government will have to identify who was exposed, how much of the chem ical they were exposed to and how long they were exposed to it. In fact, linking the herbicide to any specific ailm ent may not be possible at all, according to the report. The study group announced that a public hearing on Agent Orange will be held soon, but a public hearing is not enough. It is im perative that the government m ove expeditiously to gather all the possible facts about the effects of Agent Orange on Vietnam veterans. John Havens A new dress for Susan She was supposed to be the belle of the ball, but she wore the wrong dress and nobody recognized her. The Susan B. Anthony dollar has alm ost gone the way of the $2 bill because she looks more like a quarter — two-bits — than a dollar. But the U.S. mint is considering getting Susan a new dress with a more distinguishing appearance. Susan’s new costum e will m ost likely be changed from silver to bronze (95 percent copper, 3 percent silicon and 2 percent aluminum). It is unfortunate that the government did not exercise more foresight before issuing the first coin minted honoring a woman. She certainly deserved better. Mark McKinnon and John Havens Friends for Cambodia seeks to end starvation is By LESLIE M C C U LLO C H T here seem s to have been a g re a t deal of confusion lately about the situ a ­ tion in Cam bodia, especially c o n cer­ ning the political pow ers in control of that country and how they affect aid be­ ing d istribu ted there. The m ost fre ­ q u e n t l y th e r e p e a te d m is ta k e assum ption th a t because the F rien d s fo r C a m b o d ia a n d T he A m e ric a n F riend s Service C om m ittee call for the th e hideous Pol P o t u n se a tin g of re g im e , we a r e the in su p p o rt of regim e of Heng V ienam ese puppet Sam rin. The AFSC has in fact gone on record condem ning the V ietnam ese in­ vasion of K am puchea (the officially recognized nam e of C am bodia) and calling for V ietnam ese w ithdraw al and rep lacem en t by an international p eace­ keeping force. We do, how ever, call for a prom pt m ove by the U nited S tates to establish norm al diplom atic relatio ns with V ietnam , again not because we support that g overnm ent but because by doing so the in te re sts of the C am bo­ dian people will best be m et — our p rim ary goal in this a ffair. W hat the people in C am bodia need right now is a m ore efficient and reliable system of d i s t r i b u t i n g a i d , w h i c h i n v o l v e s relations with the Heng Sam rin govern­ m ent since they a re in control of th a t co u n try . W hat is another d ra stic change of governm ent, another disruption of th eir lives and s o c i e t y . T h e C a m b o d i a n p e o p l e them selves a re in favor of the Heng Sam rin re g im e 's rem aining until the fe a r is elim inated that Pol P ot m ay regain control. th e y need le a s t A big step in elim inating this fe a r is for the U.S. the U nited to vote a t N ations in S eptem ber not to re -se a t the Pol Pot regim e a s the lawful govern­ m ent of Cam bodia. The arg u m en t in favor of unseating Pol Pot a t the U.N. seem s so c le a r and com pelling th at it should ra ise little controversy. The a ltern ativ e — to vote again in favor of the Pol P ot regim e — would be indefen­ sible. How can the U.S. support such an inhum ane regim e th a t com m itted m ass executions, killing anyone who revealed ty p e of “ w e s te r n ” ed u catio n any (som eone w earing glasses, for ex­ am ple), and then turn around and supp­ ly generous hu m an itarian relief? th e ir Friends for C am bodia and the AFSC relief p rogram s and continue realize th a t K am puchea m ay need foreign aid now m ore than ever. When the Cam bodia c risis w as first revealed in the w estern m edia, the Cam bodians had relied to a g re a t ex ten t on their harv est until July of 1979. Now their harvest has been gone since April of this year. C am bodia is com pletely dependent on foreign aid for its ex­ istence. We hope th at enough rice seed w as planted this su m m er to produce a crop to be h arvested this D ecem ber — th at will lessen th e ir dependence on foreign aid in 1981. So, to a v e rt another m ajo r shortage of food, relief agencies have estim ated th a t it will take another $300 m illion to keep Cam bodians alive until the D ecem ber h arvest. We m ust co ncentrate on supplying this relief to help the 6 m illion people who have m anaged to survive the genocide and who a re now trying to rebuild their society They need everything — food, seed, a g ric u ltu ra l tools, w ater pum ps fishing nets, m edical for su p p lies, school su p p lies, d o c to rs, nurses, tea c h e rs, trucks — all of which w ere destroyed by the K hm er Rouge soldiers under the leadership of Pol Pot._________ irrigation, _ _ _ M c C u l l o c h is a m e m b e r o f F r i e n d s f o r C a m b o d i a . by Berke Breathed Did vou kiNOw ... that in 1954 it was reported that in the Abkhasian Republic of Georgia, U.S.S R., 2.58 percent of the population was aged over 90 — 25 tim es the proportion in the United States. ... that professional golfer Art Wall Jr. has made 41 holes-in-one, more than anyone else in the history of the gam e. Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are tnose of the editor or the writer oi the arti­ cle and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees BLOOM COUNTY m.smwvmam'¿ umm? H/DIH6. JNAPfá’3 OH W I ? Itihr, 5Wr- To M i t o * - . MD,un/trax5 m foim cteA M Pviru&coiNb TKC/W STl. c f f n n / ¿ M IN O MAM A. Monday, August 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY TEX A N □ Democratic nod rides on ‘loyalty’ rule jockeying President likely to wrap up nomination in first major vote NEW YORK (U P I) — The b a ttle for the D em ocratic presidential nom ination hinged Sun­ day on convention-eve cam paigns by P re sid e n t C a rte r and Sen. E dw ard Kennedy in advance of their showdown on the proposed “ loy alty ” rule. the proposed rule which would bind d eleg ates on the first ballot, appeared likely to win and and nail down his renom ination in the D em o cratic national convention s first m a jo r vote M onday night. C arter. staunchly supporting BOTH SIDES and independent counts gave C arter the edge a day before the vote on the proposed rules but C a rte r and K ennedy forces worked feverishly to hold their troops in line. A U PI poll W ednesday showed C a rte r in no danger of losing the rules fight and a canvas of danger of losing the rules fight and a canvas of about half the delegations Sunday showed no slippage in his position. Kennedy took personal com m and of his c a m ­ paign. wooing d elegates in the la rg e st sta te s. C am paign ch airm an R o b ert S tra u ss and Vice P resident W alter Móndale w orked the conven­ tion city for C arter. “ I think the vote itself will be decided by 50 votes one w ay or a n o th e r,” K ennedy said on CBS’s “ F a c e the N ation .” But C a rte r cam paign m a n a g e r Tim K raft told re p o rte rs “ m ost of our d ele g a te s — alm ost all of our d e le g a te s — w ant to uphold the ru le ” bin­ the first ding to vote for C a rte r on them presidential ballot presidential ballot MORE CAUTIOUSLY, R ic h a rd M oe, a stra te g ist for Móndale, conceded, “ We expect a little erosion ... on the rules question, but not very m u ch .” S trauss said he could not im agine C a rte r los­ ing m ore than 200 votes on the rules question — which would still give the presiden t m ore than 100 votes beyond the num ber he needs. The proposed rule requires deleg ates to vote for the can d id ate they w ere elected through p rim a rie s or s ta te conventions to support. If the proposed rule is adopted, C a rte r is assured renom ination. He won m ore than a m a ­ th e jo rity of th e conventio n d e le g a te s in p rim a rie s and cau cu ses p rim a rie s and cau cuses The a n ti-C a rte r forces concede even if the president loses the rules fight he will still be favored to win the nom ination IN D EPEN D EN T organizers of the effort to re je c t the rule and fre e delegates to vote as tey w ish c la im th ey w ant n e ith e r C a r te r nor Kennedy as the p a r ty ’s standard b e a re r S ecretary of S tate Edm und Muskie, M óndale. Rep M orris Udall of Arizona and Sen. Henry Jackson of W ashington a re the four m ost fre ­ quently m entioned com prom ise candidates. The so-called “ faithful deleg ate” ru^e is the culm ination of a dozen years of D erfiocratic r< reform and was the brainchild of the liberals who support Kennedy and now m ostly oppose their own creation P a rty conservatives who once opposed the reform , now support Carter and favor it. BACKERS OF THE rule a rg u e it is needed ¿o g u a r a n te e th e s e n tim e n ts of 19 milliojn D em ocrats who voted in the p rim a rie s a re ade­ quately reflected. Opponents say the c lim a te has changed and C arter — who tra ils badly in the polls — needs to be replaced if the p arty is to avoid a landslide defeat in N ovem ber, They say the proposed rute would turn deleg ates into robots. Texas farmers go to New York By ROBERT DORR Daily T exan Staff S everal C entral T exas fa rm e rs a re going to the D em ocratic national con­ vention in New Y ork City M o n d a y , n o t a s p a r t y delegates, but as d isg ru n tl­ ed D em ocrats seeking an o pen c o n v e n tio n . F r e d I I I , a p a r ­ L u n d g r e n tic ip a tin g fro m f a rm e r E lgin, said Sunday. A m e ric a n A g ric u ltu re M ovem ent m em b ers from a cro ss the country will be a r r iv in g n e a r M a d iso n the con­ Square G arden, v en tio n s ite , w ith th e ir tra c to rs to push e ffo rts to “ dum p C a rte r,” Lundgren said. “ A c o u p l e d o z e n loaded v o lu n te e rs” have th eir tra c to rs onto larg e trucks and have left Cen­ tra l T exas for New York since Thursday. Lundgren said. The fa rm e rs plan to in unload th e ir the parking spaces n e a r convention hall and “ be v isib le” to the p re ss and m eet with delegates. tra c to rs TH E FA RM ERS will be l a b o r , w o r k i n g w i t h te a c h e rs , H isp a n ic s and other groups d issatisfied t h e C a r t e r a d ­ w i t h the m in istratio n convention. to open L undgren said he hopes the fa rm e rs will be able to “ d isru p t the convention” so C a rte r d eleg ates will lose faith th e re is enough support for C a rte r to win the nom ination. “ Inside the convention th in g s m u s t b e co m e so chaotic as to disru p t the concentration of the C a rte r d e le g a te s,” Lundgren said. “ W e’re going to try to destroy the h ierarch y of concentration and break the convention open. All factions will be working together to open the con­ vention. Once the conven­ tion is open, the groups will work for th e ir own c a n ­ d id a te s,” Lundgren said. T h e A m e r i c a n A griculture M ovem ent has not endorsed a candidate, but Lundgren said m any m em b ers p re fe r Lyndon LaRouche or, “ in a distan t s e c o n d , ’ ’ S e n . H e n r y Jackson of W ashington. IF TH E FA R M ER S lose the fight to open the con­ vention and dum p C arter, “ we w ill h av e f a ile d ,” L undgren sa id . A p a rty platform aim ed a t helping fa rm e rs would probably be d is r e g a r d e d by C a r te r , who Lundgren said broke prom ises to fa rm e rs m ade in the 1976 convention p la t­ form and in the 1978 mini- convention platform . F a rm e rs a re being forc­ ed o u t of b u s in e s s by C a rte r p o lic ie s, C ounty C o m m i s s i o n e r D a v i d Sam uelson said, speaking a s a p e rs o n a l frie n d of s e v e r a l C e n tr a l T e x a s fa rm e rs. T H E C A R T E R f a r m policy in 1977 has allowed f o r a g r ic u ltu r a l p r ic e s products to drop a t a tim e when the price of inputs the fa rm e r m ust buy for p r o d u c t i o n h a v e r is e n sharply, Sam uelson said. The falling p ric e of farm products m ay be attrib u te d to a tte m p ts by p a rtia lly c o n ­ a g r i - b u s i n e s s g l o m e r a t e s t o “ m a n ip u la te ” p rices below the level needed by sm all f a r m e r s t o i n business, he said. s t a y Carter aide sees no platform crisis resolution N E W Y O R K ( U P I ) — C a m p a i g n stra te g ists for P re sid e n t C a rte r and Sen. E dw ard Kennedy negotiated Sunday over the D em ocratic p latform , but a C a rte r aide predicted th e re would be no resolution of the cru cial econom ic issues dividing the can ­ didates. White House Chief of Staff Ja c k Watson told re p o rte rs the C a rte r forces had m ade “ a considerable n um ber of com prom ises. We re trying to conciliate and close ran ks w ithin the p a rty .” But he said, “ I don’t think th e re will be any reconciliation on the econom ic issues a t a ll.” MEANWHILE, anti-nuclear groups who succeeded in getting a strong sta te m e n t in the D em ocratic P a rty p latform in June predicted they would win an o th er big p la t­ form victory this week on so lar energy. The C am paign for Safe E nergy and the Solar Lobby said preconvention lobbying had produced enough support to win the solar energy issue when the convention votes on m inority platform planks. The big econom ic deb ate is scheduled Tues­ day night, the second day of the D em ocratic national convention. Kennedy said Sunday he expects to prevail on two econom ic p latfo rm points — a co m ­ m itm en t not to fight inflation with high un­ em ploym ent and a $12 billion jobs program . WITHOUT VICTORIES on the two planks, the sen ato r suggested on CBS-TV’s “ F a c e the N ation” he m ight withhold his support from the D em o cratic nominee. Kennedy said he would work hard for any D em ocratic nom inee if he is convinced th e re is a to his econom ic positions. firm com m itm ent in to in d ic a tin g “ But if I'm convinced th at those a re just cosm etic co m m itm ents, then I have real dif­ ficulty th e m illio n s of A m ericans who supported m y candidacy other than th a t those m a tte rs a re cosm etic. * Health and H um an Services S ecretary P atricia H a rris told re p o rte rs the problem with a Kennedy proposal m aking jobs the ad ­ m in istra tio n ’s top priority is th at it suggests that has been a low priority in the past. “ To suggest th a t this has not been a high priority runs co unter to the re a lity of our ad­ m inistration, ’’ she said VICE PRESIDENT W alter M óndale said a t a n e w s c o n f e r e n c e t h e p l a t f o r m negotiations continued “ even to day” but the clash over th e econom y was “ ju s t som ething that has to h ap p en ." C arter and Kennedy s tra te g ists reached a la st week on five of the 18 com prom ise m inority planks planned to fight. for which Kennedy had The m a jo r platform fight now will focus on four econom ic planks: the jobs p rogram , the pledge not to use unem ploym ent to fight In­ flation. the sta te m e n t m aking jobs the top priority and a com prehensive program to reindu strialize A m erica. KENN EDY A G R EED to drop his fight over oil decontrol and the two sides reached com prom ises over d ra ft reg istratio n , cost-of- l i v i n g f or S o c i a l S e c u r ity recipients, federalization of s ta te welfare costs and s ta te veto pow er over the location of n uclear w aste sites within th e ir boun­ daries. i n c r e a s e s A m a jo r platform fight also is expected over deploym ent of the MX m issile system , which Kennedy opposes. T-shirts, Strauss slip, Yankee tickets, other topics catch observer’s notice NEW Y O R K - F r o m a re p o rte r’s notebook a t the D em ocratic national convention: ( U P I ) • In P e n n sy lv a n ia S tatio n u n d e r Madison Square G arden, d elegates can purchase T -shirts saying “ Nuke the R epublicans.” • A slip of the tongue by C a rte r- M ondale c h a irm a n R obert S trauss Sun­ day p rov ided a highly p e s s im is tic D em ocratic prediction of the election returns. Asked how he exp ects to ov ercom e the p re sid e n t’s the polls, S trauss said C a rte r alread y has sta rte d a com eback and “ will pull even w ith R eagan by m id-N ovem ber.” low standing in Election Day is Nov. 4. Interv iew ers la te r noted the prediction and S tra u ss said he had to say “ m id- intended O ctober, of c o u rse .” • Security w as so tight re p o rte rs en tering M adison Square G arden had to go through an a irp o rt-ty p e se c u rity a r ra n g e m e n t inclu d ed h av in g packages X -rayed. One re p o rte r w ith a c ig a r in his sh irt pocket was stopped and could not p ass until the c ig a r w as th a t cleared through the X-ray m achine. • The D em ocratic N ational Com­ m itte e provides tape-recorded free “ a c tu a litie s ” and voice re p o rts from the convention to sm all radio stations that don t m ind m a te ria l com ing from a som ew hat biased source. A m anual in stru cts re p o rte rs to be scrupulously fair in th e ir new sgathering regarding C a rte r and M assachusetts Sen, E dw ard Kennedy. But they m ust avoid controversy. The m anual says, “ Since we a re p a rt of the DNC, (it is) wise to be as uncon- tro v ersial as possible. We will not cover c e rta in ‘stick y ’ new s item s. If your sense of fair play is o utraged, be issu es w ill be fully a s su re d t h e o t h e r m e d i a h i g h l i g h t e d by p re s e n t.” th o se r e p o r tin g It la te r advises re p o rte rs to stick to issues when covering the p latfo rm fights expected Tuesday night, ra th e r t ha n th e m a s C a r te r - Kennedy b attles. “ By concentratin g on issues we can be m ore a c c u ra te and de- em phasize the division w ithin the p a r­ ty .” • In a town full of to u rist a ttra c tio n s and hit shows, one of the toughest tickets the w eekend Yankee- B altim ore Orioles se rie s — the two team s locked in a tight pennant fight in the A m erican League E ast. to is Edw ard Bennett W illiam s, head of the C om m ittee to Continue the Open Convention, also owns the Orioles. Ask­ ed by a re p o rte r a fte r a news con­ ference on the “ open” convention rule if he could spare any tick ets, W illiam s replied, “ I have to ask (Y ankee ow ner G eorge) Steinbrenner for my ow n.” • At the sam e session, delegation p a rlia m e n ta rian Jo e W yatt dem anded m em b ers occupy th e ir s e a ts on the con­ vention floor, filling th em w ith a lte r ­ nates a t all tim es th a t n a tu re calls. “ The only thing w orse than looking like a ja c k a ss on national television is not to be th e re ,” he said. • The Irish N ational Caucus threw a reception Sunday a t R yan M cF adden’s re s ta u ra n t for Rep. M ario Biaggi, D- N.Y., who a t last check w as of Italian is c h a irm a n of the descent. Biaggi Congressional Irish Caucus. UNBELIEVABLE T H E B O N A N Z A L U N C H . . . 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I h i I a .« .-2 je p j*. _ 5 1 0 W e s t 2 9 t h V fre t' I h r. p e rk in g * ** S t nnn»hu^» * $ 3 p u r c h u M - ----------- No. 5 Jefferson Square Coll 452-8846 SALE! 20% off All Earrings! 35% Off All Pins! Step right up, ladies! This is your chance to get a bargain on any of our popular Laurel, Morningstar, Shashi or Thousand Flowers brand earrings. Not to mention our hand- painted ceramic and enamel pins. Hurry, sale ends Saturday. Unicorn V 3 7 Gallery and Gift Shop in Dobte Mall Mon-Sat 10-9 477-0719 Page 6 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Monday. August 11. 1980 Boycott ignored by Soviet troops W ASHINGTON ¡ I P I » - As a huge balloon of Misha the Olympic bear, floated into the Moscow night last Sunday, the in 85,tOO S o vie t troops A f g a n i s t á n showed no similar sign of disappearing into the sunset Obviously, the American-led boycott of the Moscow Olympics and other sanctions have not, in the short-term had their intended effect But for the moment, both the Krem lin and the Carter administration seem determined to continue the test of wills “ We have to hold steady cm those policies. ’ Secretary of State Edmund Muskie said on a flight to California last week * We have to be as patient and as determined and as hard-nosed as they are.” its of Afghanistan, experts agree Moscow has been discomfited by the general condemnation of i n t e r v e n t i o n Afghanistan has dominated in­ ternational politics for months and American economic sanc­ tions have had an annoying, if limited, effect on Soviet plan- a d m i n i s t r a t i o n n ing . specialists say. More impor­ tantly, officials say. Soviet leaders will have to find a way out of Afghanistan if they want to head off a Chinese- American alliance, give new life to arms control and revive Soviet-American trade T H E SECO ND Strategic Arms Lim itation Treaty remains a high Soviet priority The Carter administration a iso maintains the treaty is A naTvsís Administration intelligence reports say the Russians are in Afghanistan, digging in building permanent structures and fortifications that would allow them to remain for many winters. Moscow, some American officials suggest, may be assuming the West will eventually become resign­ ed to the Soviet occupation as it accepted the Soviet suppres­ sion of revolts in Hungary and Czechoslovakia. B IT TH E White House, in this election season, is trying hard to negate any such im­ pression. Muskie said the United States would exert pressure on the Russians at every opportunity. He singled out the forthcoming Madrid conference, to review com­ pliance with the Helsinki acords, as a forum for the West to hammer away at Soviet “ aggressior Behind these t< • h words som e and p o s it io n Washington off lals and others outside the government nevertheless believe there is a chance for seriou talk on a diplomatic soluti n to the Afghan crisis now that the Olympics are past. W H IL E T H E Russians have refused to pull their troops out vital for American security and Muskie said in San Fran­ cisco on Friday he was eager to make SALT a campaign issue against Ronald Reagan, who favors renegotiating the treaty Muskie has said on previous occasions, however. Senate ratification is “ im­ possible while the Russians are in Afghanistan. The effect on the Russian economy of cutbacks in American grain deliveries has been neglible, administration officials concede, because much of the embargoed grain was made up from other sources P E R H A P S M O R E upset­ ting to the Russians has been the surge of anti-Soviet senti­ ment in certain Moslem coun­ tries and in the United Nations, where for the first time since the Hungarian in­ vasion of 1956, the Soviet Union has been clearly on the defensive. And w hile the A m e ric a n - le d O ly m p ic boycott was less successful than Washington had hoped, it did keep the Kremlin from us­ ing the occasion to mark its full acceptance as a world leader equal to the United States. RCA RECORDS AND TAPES A fireworks display concludes the Lighted Water Parade. The Friday night event, along with German Night at Town Lake, was part of Austin AquaFest ac­ tivities that began Aug. 1 and concluded Sunday. Electric night Brad Doherty, Daify Texan Staff ranians raise speech questions *1980 The New York Times WASHINGTON — An international political controversy spilled into the last streets of the nation’s capital week, raising fresh questions about the rights of aliens to express unpopular views. Just as supporters and opponents of the shah clashed here three years ago, when the Iranian monarch visited the White House, friends and foes of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini have recently been confronting each other in demonstrations in Washington. Nearly 200 Iranian students were arrested late last month at a demonstration in sup­ port of the ayatollah and spent 10 days in prison. AS SOON AS they were released, they returned to Washington to par­ ticipate in another demonstration. Angry onlookers jeered and heckled the Iranian demonstrators. Tehran saw a victory for Islam in the release of the protesters from American prisons “ After 10 days. Tehran Radio said, “ the savage police of Washington and the ruthless and cruel police of the U.S. Im m igration Department at last retreated in the face of the brave struggles of our beloved sisters and brothers." The Iranian demonstrations and the treatment of the protesters by federal authorities raised several questions. To what extent are aliens protected by the Constitution? To what extent do they enjoy First Amendment rights of free speech and assembly? Can immigra­ tion laws be used as an instrument of foreign policy"7 Does the Immigration and Naturalization Servic consult with the State Department in deciding how to enforce the law? JU S T IC E D EP A R T M EN T officials insisted the treatment of the Iranian protesters was in accordance with im ­ migration laws and that the political beliefs of the protestors were not a con­ sideration. The State Department in­ sisted it had not sought lenient treat­ ment for the Iranians to avoid harm to the American hostages. Consultations between the two agencies were infor­ mal and details were kept secret. The District of Columbia police said the 192 Khomeini supporters were arrested after they pushed through a police line Ju ly 27 and tried to disrupt an anti-Khomeini rally. The Iranians, initially held in the city jail on dis­ orderly conduct charges, were transferred to federal custody and taken to New York for possible depor­ tation proceedings because they refus­ ed to disclose their names is sued U N D E R R U L E S la s t November by the Justice Department, Iranian students must make “ full and truthful disclosure of all information requested Officials said the Iranians were violating this requirement until they identified themselves. It was announced, after rather hurried checks of the files, that all the Iranian prisoners were “ in status” — in compliance with the law and with the terms of their visas. That finding surprised Justice Department officials (who maintain that a fair percentage of any foreign student group usually has visa problems) and suggested the demonstrators had been carefully selected. Finance director tired of pressure, quits after 6 years B y A L IS A H AG AN Daiiy Texan Staff Five years of 50-hour work weeks and critical independent auditors" reports have taken their toll on the city’s director of finance Monty Nitcholas, a staff member for almost six years, last week resigned as director effective Sept. 5. “ To be honest. I ’m just a little tired of the pressure,’’ Nitcholas, 47. said Friday His resignation, received Thursday by City Manager Dan Davidson, comes after a highly critical audit report released to the city by Peat. Marwick, Mitchell & Co. which claimed Austin could have earned more than $1,1 million more in interest than it did durjng the 1978-79 fiscal year TH E AU D IT A T T R IBU T ED the “ loss’" of interest largely to poor management and slow collection of payment by the Finance Department Nitcholas has worked 18 years in the finance business and said Friday the audit report did not influence his decision to resign as director. “ I ’ve been thinking about resigning on and off for four months." he said. “ These jobs like mine, especially in govern­ ment. are really tough jobs. You don’t find too many people who stay in the jobs for more than five years. ’’ Nitcholas. however, said the Peat audit report is more critical than audits the department has received in the past. The department had a “ pretty hard year’’ because of un­ derstaffing and important positions being unfilled for periods, he said. IN AN SW ER TO T H E audit’s recommendation the depart­ ment hire additional staff, Davidson last Thursday requested the City Council to authorize hiring 15 additional employees — 13 of whom would be added during the current fiscal year. The council, however, denied authorization by saying the matter could not be decided until the 1980-81 budget is finalized. "I'm not sure the decision to hire a lot more people is necessary.” Mayor Carole McClellan said. “ It has to be very carefully scrutinized.” Nitcholas estimated the council’s postponement of the authorization to hire additional finance staff will set the department’s improvement plan back three months. NITCHOLAS JO IN ED the city staff in September 1974. He was named director of finance in 1975 and has received praise from Davidson and McClellan for his work. The resignation of Monty Nitcholas is going to be a great loss to the city,” McClellan said. “ He is a highly qualified individual who has addressed some real problems in the Finance Depart­ ment. “ It s going to be a lot tougher going through the budget without him,” she added TH E CITY MUST adopt a final 1980-81 annual budget by Sept. 27. McClellan did not dismiss the possibility the Peat report carried weight with Nitcholas’ decision to resign. “ It (the report) might be of some importance only because he has done so much in such a short time and received little praise for his work,” she said. Nitcholas said he hopes to remain in Austin and continue working in finance. RCA RECORDS AND TAPES OPENING STOREWIDE Monchaca at Ben White 443-7997 Ronnie Milsap Milsap Magic DARYL MALL JOHN OATES PRO G RESSIO NS OF POWER TRIUMPH STEPHANIE MILLS Sweet Sensation $4.88 $4.88 $5.55 J )Y N A S 7 Y Adventures in the Land of Music f t C / I 8 RECORD SET $4.88 D A V E D A V I E S A F L U ' 3 6 0 3 $4.88 CACTUS AND A ROSE Gary Stewart $4.88 *59.99 EVERY ALBUM, CASSETTE, 8-TRACK ON SALE NOW * 4.88 *4.88 *4.88 ANN" *S «TSAftY UMITtD S O T O , Open Every Night Until Midnight, Friday Until 1 a.m. Sports Page 7 Monday, August 11, 1980 □ THE DAILY T EXAN Nicklaus ties record with fifth PGA title RO C H ESTER. N Y (U P I) - Jack Nicklaus, once more the fearsome scourge of the fairways, fired a 1-under- par 69 Sunday to equal Walter Hagen's 53-year-old record with his fifth PGA Championship His winning margin of seven shots over Andy Bean was the largest in PGA history, surpassing the mark of four strokes he shared with A1 Geiberger, and he came within three shots of equal­ ing the record PGA score of 271 held by Bobby Nichols. ALMOST AS if the final round was a stage set up in his honor, Nicklaus was the rivet of attention and the recipient of repeated ovations as it became more and more obvious that no one would even make a run at him After taking a three-shot lead into the final 18 holes, Nicklaus saw his advan­ tage lifted to five strokes when playing partner Lon Hinkle bogeyed the second and third holes. From there, it was simply a matter of the Grand Master completing the course and taking his bows Nicklaus. who earned $60,000, wound up with a 6-under total of 274 over the 6,964-yard Oak H ill Country Club course, breaking par the final three days after matching par of 70 on Thurs­ day. No one else in the original field of 150 was under par for 72 holes Ironically, in matching the record he so dearly sought. Nicklaus did it in Hagen's hometown, and at the same time he increased his record total of major championships to 19. HAGEN WON his five PG A crowns in a 7-year stretch between 1921 and 1927, when the competition was at match play. Nicklaus captured his first one in 1963 at Dallas, winning again in 1971, 1973 and 1975. Only two months ago, at a time when many people were talking about the 40- year-old Nicklaus in the past tense, he also equaled the record for U.S. Open championships by winning it for the fourth time. Realizing that he probably needed only a par round of 70 for his final tour of Oak Hill. Nicklaus parred the first 10 holes before achieving his first birdie on the 11th with an eight-foot putt. He also birdied the 13th hole with a 10-foot putt, then parred his way home except for a bogey on No. 17. Nicklaus didn't get into any kind of trouble until the seventh when his drive went into the left rough and his second shot went into a bunker. But he recovered to within a foot of the pin. On the eighth hole Nicklaus drove into the left sand trap and he left his second shot short of the green, eventually leav­ ing him with a 12-foot putt to save par. BEA N , WHO had started the day tied for third with Gil Morgan, settled for a 70 that gave him second place at 281 and a check for $40,000 He birdied the se­ cond hole with a 25-foot putt from the border of the right fringe, but gave it back with a bogey on the sixth. Another birdie on the ninth brought him back to even par at the turn. He had three bogeys coming home against two bir­ dies. Hinkle, Nicklaus’ closest pursuer at the start of the day, was three shots off the pace. However, Hinkle gave his rival all the lift he needed with bogeys on the second and third holes, missing putts of 15 and 2 ^ feet. He lost the fight for second place with bogeys on the 14th. 15th and 16th holes for a 75. Hinkle was tied for third at 3-over 283 with Morgan, who had a 72 Morgan, the second-round leader, quickly lost whatever chance he had with a double­ bogey on the sixth hole and a bogey on the seventh. Howard Twitty, with a 71, and Curtis Strange, with a 72, tied for fifth at 284, followed another stroke back by Lee Trevino, who had a 69. Tied for eighth at 286 were Bobby Walzel (71) and B ill Rogers (72). TOO LA T E to matter, Tom Watson turned in his first sub-par round with a 67 that gave him 288. Watson had five birdies, two more than he had managed in the first three rounds. Defending champion David Graham wound up with a 75 for 292. Arnold Palm er suffered a hackish 8 on Oak Hill s shortest hole, the par-3, 175- vard sixth, where he hit into the water three times. He shot a 76 for 302. UPI Telephoto Arnold Palmer Allen sends Horns inside “ We’re not as tough as the tornados (that touched down in Austin Sunday),” Fred Akers conceded. “ But that’s because we re not in pads yet,” the head coach added after the UT freshmen Sunday completed their third day of workouts at Memorial Stadium. Hurricane Allen’s approach on the Capital City forced the Longhorns to move inside for practice Sunday but, otherwise, has not affected football practice, Akers said. The Horns worked out in Bellmont Hall. Two-a-days continue this week at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. each day and the practices are open to the public. The veterans, who checked into Jester Center Sunday, report for practice Tuesday. The team starts contact drills on Aug. 15. So far, Coach Akers has been pleased with the new recruits in practice. “ This is a good group,” he said. ‘“ They definitely have the physical talent.” The adjustment from high school to college football takes time and the freshmens’ “ heads are spinning,” Akers acknowledges. “ But that’s only natural.” The 27 recruits and several walk-ons have been in camp since Aug. 8. Except for the unknown status of running back Terry Orr. in­ juries have not plagued the Longhorns’ freshman class. Another running back, John Walker, sprained an ankle during workout Saturday, but he returned to practice Sunday. “ We are encouraged about O rr,” the fourth-year head UT coach said. Orr dislocated his shoulder during practice for the Texas High School Coaches All-Star game last month The Abilene Cooper recruit is scheduled to be re-examined this week and doctors do not think he will need surgery. “ It could be 2-3 weeks before he starts (working out),” Akers added. The freshmen also completed strength tests Sunday and Tom­ my Woods, a 6-1, 202-pound running back from Houston North Shore, rated among the strongest players of the newcomers. Astros tumble out of first Orioles close gap on New York with three-game sweep By United Press International HOUSTON — Tim Flannery singled home Dave Winfield with two out in the ninth inning Sunday to give the San Diego Padres a 3-2 victory over Houston that tumbled the Astros out of first place in the National League West. Winfield singled to open the ninth off Joe Sambito, 7-3, and W illie Montanez followed with a single. Frank LaCorte relieved and two outs later Flannery poked a single to right to give Rick Wise, 4-5, the victory. The loss, coupled with Los Angeles' victory over Cincinnati, moved the Dodgers into first place by one-half game. The Padres tied the score at 2-2 in the fifth off Joaquin Andujar on walks to B ill Fahey and Barry Evans and a single by Gene Richards Andujar hit his first home run of the season and third of his career to give the Astros a 2- 1 lead in the third. Each team scored a run in the first. San Diego went ahead 1-0 on a double by R ich ard s and a single by Je r r y Mumphrey, but Houston countered with a single by Terry Puhl and an R B I dou­ ble by Jose Cruz • N EW YO RK — Eddie M urray’s two- out run-scoring double capped a two-run ninth inning th at enabled the Baltiomore Orioles to defeat the New York Yankees 6-5 and complete a sweep of their three-game series. The victory reduced the first place Yankees’ lead to 2 vz games over the Orioles. Trailing 5-4, the Orioles got a break to start the ninth when left fielder Bobby Brown misjudged Lenn Sakata’s fly bail into a leadoff triple and Rick Dempsey delivered a two-out single to center to tie the score. Ken Singleton then walked and Murray lined a hard smash to right field which bounced off Reggie Jackson’s shoulder for a double. Tim Stoddard, who relieved in the eighth, picked up his second victory in five decisions. The Yankees took a 5-4 lead in the seventh on singles by Rick Cerone and Ruppert Jones and Bucky Dent’s groun- dout. Trailing 4-0 in the sixth, the Yankees rallied for four runs off Mike Flanagan to tie the score. Cerone singled and Aurelio Rodriguez doubled to start the inning and Jones followed with a sacrifice fly and Dent delivered an R B I single. W illie Randolph then doubled and Lou Piniella reached on an error to load the bases. Bob Watson brought in the third run with a sacrifice fly and Jackson tied it with a run-scoring single. Jack Nicklaus in the final round of the PGA U.S. clay court Curren, Denton win doubles IN D IA N A PO LIS (U P I) — Jose-Luis Clerc of Argentina con­ tinued his hot summer streak Sunday by winning his second consecutive tournament with a 7-5, 6-3 victory over Mel Purcell at the U.S. Open Clay Court Tennis Championships. Chris Evert Lloyd won her sixth women's singles title Satur­ day with a 6-4, 6-3 triumph over Andrea Jaeger. Two former Longhorns also got into the act as South African Kevin Curren teamed with Steve Denton of Kingsville, to beat Wojtek Fibak of Miami and Czech Ivan Lendle 3-6, 7-6, 6-4. Purcell, a wild card qualifying entry in the tournament, took an early lead in the first set and had two set points with a score of 5-3 in games But Clerc, the No. 8 seed, scored the next 14 points and 15 of the next 16 points to win the set 7-5. Purcell won the first game of the second set, but Clerc charg­ ed through the next four games for a 4-1 lead, then held serve twice more to win the title. Clerc, 21, has had a very successful four-week period. After finishing in the semifinals of a tournament three weeks ago, Clerc lost to Brian Gottfried in the finals of the Washington tournament, then defeated John McEnroe in the finals at South Orange, N .J. Purcell, 21, a pro only 23 days, upset three seeded players — Hank Pfister, Harold Solomon and Wojtek Fibak — during his run to the title match. Clerc said the victory capped his great summer. “ I think this is my best week of the summer,” he said. “ It ’s very important for my life.” He said he definitely w ill play at the U.S. Open tournament later this month at Flushing Meadows, N .Y., but would fly home Sunday night to Argentina because he had to see a doctor about a foot problem. Clerc said the absence of the big name tennis players this week did not take anything away from his victory. Jim m y Con­ nors. Guillermo Vilas and John McEnroe, all good clay court players, did not attend the tournament because they played in an exhibition tournament in France. 1 think this is a great tournament,” Clerc said. “ There were four players here in the top 10.” “ He (Clerc) has beaten Connors and McEnroe, anyway,” Purcell said after the match. “ They probably didn’t want to come here.” Clerc said the turning point of the match came when he saved two set points in the first set. Maybe when I won my service at 5-4, after winning set points 1 think he (Pu rcell) lost his confidence,” he said. Purcell said the match was different than any of the other matches in the tournament. 1 was scared of Jose, he said. “ I knew I could win against Solomon and Fibak. but today I went into the match not too con­ fident he said He just outplayed me. I don’t have any ex­ cuses.” For one of the few times this season, the women’s singles champion earned more money than the men’s winner. Evert won $30 IKK) tor her t i t l e Saturday and Clerc earned $28,000 Sun­ day. The men’s runner-up won $14,000. While the total purse was $350,000. the men’s doubles champs won $10,600 with $5.200 going to the second place. NFL management losing yardage over megabuck contracts An open prayer for the future of professional football as we know it: Dear Lord, Please forgive the Baltimore Colts, for they knew not what they were doing when they signed Curtis Dickey Friday afternoon. In fact, Lord, please forgive Curtis Dickey's agent for using Curtis like a piece of meat to pad his own pocketbook at 10 percent (or more) of the total contract price. More than anything, Lord, please allow the NFL owners a way to bypass money-hungry agents during future contract negotiations and renegotiations before these guys ruin the game for all of us. Thank you, Lord, John Q Public. What Curtis Dickey did Friday when he signed with the Colts for $1.2 million ($250,000 annual base salary plus bonus clauses 1 was nothing more than the average American does — he looked out for No. 1 and took all the money he could get. There’s nothing at all wrong with that. W HAT’S WRONG is that Dickey was prepared to let a dentist from Houston who moonlights as a sports agent talk him out of playing pro football because Dickey’s contract wasn t as large as the one B illy Sims signed with the Detroit Lions There’s two things drasticially wrong here. No.l, how can a guy who pulls teeth for a living be a qualified sports agent? No. 2, why does Curtis Dickey deserve a contract even close to Sims’ in terms of dollars and cents? Let’s handle one question at a time. First of all, it seems ridiculous that a dentist would be allow­ ed to be an athlete’s agent in the first place. An accountant, maybe An investment consultant, maybe. A lawyer, maybe. Even an agent from another field — a show business or literary agent, perhaps. But a dentist? No way. As far as contract terms go, Dickey’s agent, Jerry Argovitz, said, “ Detroit paid B illy Sims more to sign his name than Dickey’s entire con­ tract.” And they should have. Sims can do it on the field, and has proved that. Dickey never has. Sims won the Heisman Trophy his junior year and set an NCAA record for most yards per carry in a career with a 7 17 average. He scored 20 touchdowns in 1978 and 22 more last year. He gained 3,268 yards in those two seasons in spite of playing hurt a lot of the time. D IC K EY , ON the other hand, is one of those guys with “ unlimited potential ” He was a good running back for the Aggies, but never the great back they expected him to be. He gained 728 yards as a freshman and 853 as a senior. Of course, he missed several games because of injuries and played only parts of several others for the same reason. At 6-0, 220 pounds, Dickey is solid muscle To spend as much time as he did on the A&M bench, he must either be injury-prone or he must baby himself when he’s hurt — or both. Jiiviiviy r* Bunch Either way, it doesn’t matter. The pros don t look for potential, they look for production — which is why Sims deserves a much higher con­ tract than Dickey. When it comes down to nuts and bolts, all other criticisms of Dickey pale in the wake of his willingness to sit out a year of football at the ad­ vice of his agent. That would have been professional suicide. His market value would have dropped substantially because of inactivity. Signing with the Canadian league wouldn’t work either, because the league is already four games deep into its regular season. Of course, he could have gone and made a few bucks on the fledgling pro track circuit, but that doesn t pay well at all. In other words. Dickey had no feasible alter­ native than to sign with the Colts, no matter what his agent said. Plus, he couldn’t bargain with another N FL team because the Colts own the draft rights to him Only through a trade could Dickey play anywhere in the league other than Baltimore IT ’S JU S T a shame the Colts broke from their hard-line stand and signed him. That would have been the best thing that could have happened for the good of the league, considering the million- dollar contracts rookies like I T’s Lam' Jones and Johnnie Johnson and Nebraska's Junior Miller have signed without plaving a down in the N FL. After all, when a medical school graduate joins a medical clinic, he doesn t make the money that established professionals do The same is true for graduates joining legal firms, business cor­ porations —- most any line of work imaginable. So why should rookies expect to make more money than veterans? They shouldn't. It's regrettable that the N FL has allowed this salary war to happen Agents boost the asking price for rookies and it causes friction between the rookie and other team members. A good ex­ ample is the Los Angeles Rams, where four es­ tablished starters have boycotted camp in protest of Johnson’s pact TH IS CAN only be bad for team morale, and it will eventually be bad for management. When it’s time to renegotiate the veterans contracts they’ll want more than the rookies — and they deserve more Signing rookies to these huge contracts will almost inevitably start an upward players’ salary spiral reminiscent of the one that’s led to million- doliar-a-year contracts in baseball. The owners can price themselves out of existence. However, it's not too late to save the manage­ ment of the N F L from the salary' problems faced by major league baseball front offices. It only took a few teams to offer large contracts to their rookies to get the ball rolling, and it would only take a few teams to say “ no” to stop it. For awhile, it looked like the Colts would be one of those teams. For the N F L ’s sake, it’s a shame they were not. Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, August 11, 1980 Dolphins drown Sims sees little Lions; action MIAMI (U P I) — Rookie q u a rte rb a c k David Woodley of Louisiana S ta te ran for one touchdown and directed another scoring drive Sunday to give the M iam i Dolphins a 17-7 victory over the D etroit Lions in the exhibition opener for both team s, Woodley, who la s t y e a r a lte rn a te d with Steve E nsm inger a t LSU, clinched the victory in his firs t pro appearan ce by guiding the Dolphins on an eight-play, 51-yard drive. He finished it by circling left end for a touchdown from six yards out w ith 3:46 left in the gam e Woodley gave M iam i a 7-0 lead it never lost by d irecting a 70- yard scoring m a rc h , capped by a 1-yard burst by fellow rookie Steve G iaquinto. Uwe von Scham ann added a 23-yard field goal ¡n the third q u a rte r to m ake it 10-0 before D e tro it’s Rick Kane scored from a y ard out. The gam e m ark ed the N FL debut of 1980’s top d ra ft choice Billy Sims of O klahom a, The running back m anaged 11 yard s on th re e c a rrie s in a p erfo rm an ce lim ited to the first half. The D olphins’ two top q u a rte rb a ck s, Bob G riese and Don Strock. a re engaged in a b a ttle for the s ta rtin g role this fall, but G riese saw no action Sunday and Strock played only in the first q u a rte r, com pleting 5-of-10 passes for 49 yards. Woodley opened the second q u a rte r w ith his 70-yard, 13-play drive. His first big g ain er w as a 16-yard com pletion off a s c ra m ­ ble to fellow rookie E lm e r Bailey of M innesota. A fter moving into D etroit te rrito ry , he hit an oth er rookie, Eugene Byrd, for 30 yard s down the left sidelines. The pass followed by ju st one play an o th er com pletion to Byrd, called back on a holding violation. A 3-yard punch up the m iddle by second-year fullback Bob T orrey and an 8-yard pass to G iaquinto down the left side m ov­ ed the ball to the one, setting up the fre e a g e n t’s touchdown. D etroit q u a rte rb a c k G ary D anielson, who sa t out la st season w ith a knee injury, showed he m ay be ready to re tu rn to his late season 1978 form w ith a prom ising d riv e late in the first half. He moved the Lions to the M iam i 28 with passes of 13 and 11 yard s to Je sse Thom pson and 17 y a rd s to F red Scott before flip­ ping an interception to M iami lin eb ack er Ralph O rtega with 30 seconds left in the second q u a rte r. O rte g a ’s interception capped an outstanding p erfo rm an ce by the Dolphins’ defense. M iami held D etroit w ithout a first down until th ere w as less Strikes out seven than four m inutes left in the firs t half. The Lions only score c a m e when rookie q u arterb ack E ric Hippie of Utah S tate took over and led D etroit on a sy stem atic 13-play. 68-vard scoring driv e finished by K ane’s 1-yard dive. Chicago ruins Lam’s debut EAST RU TH ER FO R D , N .J (U P I) - Bob Avellini threw a 23-yard touchdown pass to Willie McClendon in the third period Sunday night and se t up another score w ith an 80-yard toss to G reg L atta to rally the Chicago B ears to a 21-9 victory over the New York J e ts in the exhibition opener for both clubs. A veil ini’s pass to a wide-open McClendon on a third and in­ ches situation, spoiled an im p ressiv e N FL debut for the J e ts ’ Johnny “ L a m ” Jones. The fo rm e r U niversity of Texas sta r w as the second play er selected overall in the N FL draft. Jones, who entered the gam e in the second period, set up all nine New York points w ith a leaping 17-yard pass recep­ tion a t the B e a rs’ 2 and a tw isting 32-yard run to the Chicago 6 on an end around. Chicago took a 7-0 lead in the first period a fte r stopping the J e ts a t their nine and m arch in g 81 y ards in 13 plays. B ears’ s ta rte r Mike Phipps hit fo rm e r J e t J a m e s Scott for gains of 16 and 42 y ard s before lofting a 3-yard TD pass to Scott But R ichard Todd, who hit 8-for-ll for 121 yard s in his half of work, brought the J e ts back on an 83-yard m arch. He hit Wesley W alker for 34 y a rd s and Jones for 17 to se t up Woody B en nett’s 1-yard TD plunge. The kick failed and Chicago led 7-6. The J e ts took a 9-7 lead on th e ir next possession as Todd hit H arp er for 13 y ard s and Jo nes left a half dozen B ears strew n on the field with his d a rtin g 32-yard run to the 14 Dave Jaco bs kicked a 28-yard field goal with 1:54 left in the first half. Billy Sims in his first pro game UPI Telephoto Stabler faces first start HOUSTON (U P I) — Kenny S tabler official­ ly takes com m and of the Houston O ile rs’ offense Monday night, and a group of T am pa Bay wide re c e iv e rs com pete for the atten tio n of th e ir coaches in each te a m ’s first exhibi­ tion gam e. S ta b le r, th e fo rm e r O akland R a id e rs ' q u a rte rb a ck acquired in the off-season, will play only the first q u a rte r, said Coach Bum Phillips. B ecause he has a lock on his job, how ever. StaDler w on’t get a s c ritic a l an eye a s will a handful of the B u ccan eers’ pass catch ers. Issac H agins and I^arry M ucker, two of the th re e leading re c e iv e rs on the team la st y ear, will s ta rt. But they a re being pushed by G erald C a rte r and Kevin House to becom e the secondary ta rg e ts of q u a rte rb a ck Doug W illiam s this season. The O ilers planned look a t backup q u a rte rb a c k G iffo rd N ielsen and C raig B radshaw , T e rry ’s b ro th er and a candidate to m ake the team as a th ird qu arterb ack . to The O ilers’ coaches p rim a ry concern is defense, w here th e re a re a nu m ber of young players trying to tak e the jobs of defensive end Elvin B ethea, 34, and m iddle guard C urley Culp. 33. The g am e will m ark the re tu rn of wide receiv er Billy “ W hite Shoes” Johnson from serious knee su rg ery which followed an in­ ju ry ea rly last season. D esserts and c o ffe e til 1 a.m. "the best cheesecake in tow n " 1200 West Lynn 4 7 2-379 0 Perry tames Tigers for 285th career victory By United Press International A R L IN G T O N , T e x a s - G aylord P e rry , a m onth shy of his 42nd birthday, won the 285th gam e of his c a re e r and struck out seven Sunday night in leading the T exas R angers to a 4-2 v ic to ry o v e r th e D etro it Tigers. P e rry , 6-9 and plagued by lack of offensive support for m o st of the season, gave up an unearned run in the eighth and allow ed a solo h o m er to Lance P a rrish , his 19th, to open the ninth before D anny D arw in c a m e on to g et the final three outs. P e r r y ’s c a re e r strikeout to ta l, s e c o n d b e s t th e h istory of baseball, rose to 3,- 248 — 260 short of W alter Johnson’s all-tim e record in R usty Staub w alked to s ta rt T ex as’ three-run second and R ichie Zisk followed with a s in g le . P a t P u tn a m th e n doubled hom e one run and Jim Sundberg singled up the m id­ dle to score two m ore A single by A1 O liver and a trip le by Buddy Bell gave Tex­ a s an o th er run in the fourth off s ta r te r M ilt W ilcox. 11-8. A single by Rick P e te rs, com bined with an e rro r by B um p Wills and a sa c rific e fly by R ichie H ebner gave the T igers th eir firs t run in the eighth. Tw ins 5, Angels 2 ANAHEIM , Calif. - Roy Sm alley and G lenn A dam s c lo u te d b ac k -to -b a ck hom e runs in a three-run firs t in­ ning, enabling the M innesota Twins to snap a nine-gam e losing streak with a trium ph over the C alifornia Angels. T h e v i c t o r y b r o k e th e A n g e ls ’ s ix -g a m e w in n in g streak M innesota J e r r y Koosman evened his record a t 10-10 but needed relief help s t a r t e r th e in fro m Doug C o rb e tt e ig h th . C o r b e tt h e ld th e Angels the re s t of the w ay to pick up his 12th save. A’s 6-1, M ariners 1-2 - O A K L A N D R i c k Langford sc a tte re d eigh t hits to win his eighth g am e in a row and Tony A rm as hit his 24th hom e run, helping the Oakland A’s to a trium p h over the S eattle M arin ers and a split of their double-header. Dan M eyer’s leadoff hom er broke a 1-1 tie in the 14th in­ ning to give S eattle a trium ph in the opener. Langford, 12-9, gave up six hits and struck out two to record his 16th consecutive com plete gam e and in crease the A’s total for the season to 63, which is 10 short of the A m erican League reco rd set by C alifornia in 1973. O akland took a 1-0 lead in the third on an RBI single by M itchell Page and added four runs in the fourth. Jim E ssian knocked in one w ith a double and Je ff Cox executed th e A’s 1 3th s u i c i d e squeeze bunt before R ickey H e n d e r s o n a n d D w a y n e Murphy drove in the final two s u c c e s s f u l B rew ers 4-5, Indians 9-1 MILW AUKEE - Alan Ban­ n iste r drove in four runs and Dan Spillner sc a tte re d five hits to lead the C leveland In­ dians to a victory o ver the M ilw aukee B re w e rs and a split of th eir double-header. Cecil Cooper drove in th ree r uns w ith a double and a sin g le and M ike C aldw ell pitched a five-hitter to lead the B rew ers to a triu m p h in the opener B annister hit a sa c rific e fly in a four-run first inning off loser R eggie C leveland, 8-6, then singled in two m ore runs th e s e c o n d o f f F r e d in H o l d s w o r t h . H e a d d e d another RBI in th e eighth w ith a groundout. In the nightcap, back-to- back doubles by Sal Bando and Cooper in the first inning off loser Ross G rim sley, 3-1 gave lead The M ilwaukee a 1-0 th re e m ore B rew ers added runs in the third when Paul M olitor led off with a single and advanced to third on Ban- do’s double. Cooper followed to with his c e n te r and G orm an T hom as then scored Cooper w ith a double. two-run single Red Sox 4, W hite Sox 3 BOSTON - Tony P e re z clouted a p a ir of hom e runs to drive in four runs and lead the Boston Red Sox to a victory over the Chicago W hite Sox. The victory w as the 500th of m a n a g e r D o n Z i m m e r ' s c a re e r, 386 of them with the Red Sox. P erez broke a sco reless tie in the fourth w ith a solo driv e off L a m a rr Hoyt, 4-2, and clouted a th ree-run blast, his 18th of the season, in the sixth to put the Red Sox ahead. Royals 8, Blue Ja y s 5 TORONTO - Amos O tis’ run-scoring double and Willie Aikens’ RBI single capped a six-run fifth inning th a t lifted the K ansas City Royals to an victory over the Toronto Blue Jays. K ansas C ity’s G eorge B re tt went 3-for-5 and drove in one ru n to e x t e n d his h i t t i n g streak to 23 gam es. The Royals sent 12 m en to the p late in the fifth inning when they rallied from a 1-0 deficit. With one out, D ave Chalk singled off s ta r te r Je sse J e ffe rs o n , 4-9, and R a n e e J o h n M u l l i n i k s w a l k e d . Don Robinson allow ed four hits in seven innings, helping the P ittsb u rg h P ira te s co m ­ plete a double-header sw eep of the Philadelphia P hillies and m ove into a tie w ith Mon­ tre a l for first place the N ational L eague E a st. in In the opener, Tim Foli and to Phi l G a r n e r c o m b in e d driv e in five runs and Jim Bib- by pitched an eig h t-h itte r for his 14th victory to lead the P ira te s to a 7-1 decision. The P ira te s, who sw ept the four-gam e se rie s and have now w on s e v e n s t r a i g h t gam es, took a 1-0 lead in the nightcap on E a s le r ’s third- inning sa c rific e fly off Dan Larson, 0-5. E a s le r's seventh- innmg RBI double m ad e it 3-1. D ale B e rra had an RBI single in the fourth and Lee Lacy added a solo hom er, his fifth, in the eighth W athan, B re tt and D arrell P o r t e r th e n s tr o k e d c o n ­ secutive RBI singles to chase Jefferson. D odgers 7, R eds 1 C I N C I N N A T I - D a v e y Lopes collected four hits, in- luding a lead off hom e run, k n o c k e d tw o r u n s a nd scored th re e tim e s to lift the Los Angeles D odgers to a vic­ tory over th e C incinnati Reds in Dave Goltz, 5-7, who went seven the R eds the four hits and their only run. inning s, lim ite d The D odgers took a 1-0 lead in the first on L opes’ eighth hom e run but the R eds tied it in the third when Ron O ester scored from second on left fielder G a rry T hom asson’s erro r. P ira te s 4-7, Phillies 1-1 P I T T S B U R G H - Mi k e E a sie r drove in two runs and SíANdÍNGS AMERICAN LEAGUE By United Press International Eaat NATIONAL LEAGUE By United Preea international New York Baltimore Detroit M :waukee Boston Cleveland Toronto Kansas City Oakland Texas Minnesota Chicago California Seattle I 42 44 49 52 52 52 63 W 67 64 57 59 57 55 46 W N l w 70 58 53 48 47 44 41 pci. 615 593 538 532 523 514 422 pet. 631 513 486 432 431 404 369 QB 2 % 8'y 9 10 11 21 QB 13 16 22 22 25 29 Montreal Pittsburgh Philadelphia New York St l G U IS Chicago Los Angeles Houston Cmcmnat' San Francisco Atlanta San Diego Eaat W 63 63 55 54 48 45 Wm I W 61 60 59 53 50 50 I 48 48 52 56 60 64 50 53 58 60 62 pet. 568 568 .514 491 444 413 pet. 550 545 527 477 455 446 QB 6 8 * 13 2 17 QB 2 v? 8 10 ; 1 1 ’2 Sunday's Results Kansas City 8. Toronto 5 Baltimore 6. New York 5 Boston 4. Chicago 3 Milwaukee 5 Cleveland 1 Cleveland 9. Milwaukee 4 Seattle 2. Oakland 1 Oakland 6. Seattle 1 M nnesota 5. California 2 Texas 4 Detroit 2 Sunday's Rssuttss Pittsburgh 7. Philadelphia 1 Pittsburgh 4 Philadelphia 1 Montreal 7. Chicago 3 Los Angeles 7, Cincinnati 1 Alianta 3, San Francisco 1 New York 4, St Louis 1 San Diego 3 Houston 2 SpORTS SltORTS By United Press International Fidrych returns to mound NEW YORK - P itc h e r M ark "T h e B ird " F idrych, who e n rap tu red the baseball world in 1976 w ith his colorful an tic s on the mound for D etro it before tendinitis h am p ered his c a re e r, has rejoined the T igers and will m ak e his first m a jo r league s ta rt in over a y e a r T uesday against the Boston Red Sox. talking F id ry ch , known for to the baseball betw een pitches, ca m e down w ith tendinitis in his rig h t shoulder in 1978 and had been pitching for E vansville of the A m erican A ssociation before be­ ing officially recalled on F rid ay . Cowboys return to camp DALLAS ■— The D allas Cowboys retu rn ed to th e ir Thousand O aks, Calif., training cam p Sun­ day, gen erally satisfied th a t th eir first step in a rebuilding y e a r had been a successful one. D allas whipped th e G reen Bay P a c k e rs 17-14 on S atu rd ay night in T exas Stadium , m arking the firs t a p p e a ra n ce by Danny W hite as the te a m ’s No. 1 q u a rte rb a ck and also m arking the retu rn of E d “ Too T a ll’’ Jo n e s to the Cowboys’ defensive line W hite com pleted 7-of-13 passes for 99 y ard s in tw o q u a rte rs and did not throw an intercept on. “ He handled h im self well and will get bi tte r e v e ry tim e he p la y s ,” said Coach Tom L andiy. The Co. boys, who had trailed badly in the tu r­ nover c a te g o i/ la st season, ca m e up with four of th re e f umbl e th e P a c k e r s — th e m a g a in s t reco veries and a pass interception. The defensive effo rt w as sparked by occasional show s of old form from the defensive line. “ E d (Jones) is fa ste r and quicker th an he was before he le ft,” said Landry. “ I ’m not a t all su r­ prised to see him doing the things h e ’s doing. H e’s been having an outstanding c a m p .” The Cowboys rallied from a 7-3 h a lftim e deficit to go in front 17-7 early in the fourth q u a rte r, Tony D orsett scored the go-ahead touchdow n on a 1- yard run in the third q u a rte r and backup q u a rte r­ back Glenn C arano threw a 3-yard TD p ass to tight end Doug Cosbie in the final period. SMU athlete dies DALLAS — P e te Collins, 21, expected to s ta r t a t linebacker for the SMU M ustangs football team t hi s y e a r , w a s ki l l ed e a r ly S u n d a y in a n autom obile accid en t in suburban G rand P ra irie . Police officers said Collins ap p aren tly lost con­ trol of his c a r and crash ed over an em b ank m ent killing him self and injuring his b ro th er, Johnny Lee Collins, 23. " P e te w as an outstanding young m an and a vital p a rt of our te a m .” said SMU coach Ron M eyer “ He w as entering an exciting phase of his life. Our sym p athies go out to Mr. and M rs. Collins and th e ir fam ily We a re deeply saddened by this un­ fo rtu n a te a c c id e n t.” Hogs prepare for opener F A Y E T T E V IL L E , Ark - All m e m b e rs of the 19») R azorback football squad m et weigh-in lim its set by Coach Lou Holtz and all but one finished the m ile run in the p rescrib ed tim e. With those dread ed o bstacles behind them , the Hogs will take the field M onday for the firs t tim e as a team to p re p a re for the Sept. 1 opener with T exas. “ This is the b est conditioned group I ’ve seen since I'v e been h e re ,” said 10-year A rkansas a ssis­ ta n t coach Ken T u rn er a fte r the preseason te sts Saturday. A ssistant coach H arold H orton agreed. “ You can tell th ey ’ve done som e work this s u m m e r,” Horton said. “ They have done som e p rep aratio n , a lot of p re p a ra tio n .’’ Holtz adm itted the e a rly gam e with T exas could have m otivated su m m e r conditioning. “ But all our players a re ju st en th u siastic about playing,” Holtz said. The player who did not com plete the run in the tim e w as so p h o m o re c e n te r K evin a llo tte d Eu b a n k s of B enton. He la te r re m o v e d his belongings from the a th le tic do rm itory and ap­ p aren tly won’t play football this fall. Austin advances in NBC the biggest win WICHITA, Kan. — U nseeded A nchorage, Alaska posted in N ational B aseball C ongress T ournam ent play Sunday, stunning No. 5 seded Santa M aria, C alif., 8-1 in a second-round gam e. A ustin beat Savannah G a., on a three-run hom er by Beno Spangler in the U th inning. In late gam es Sunday, F airb an k s A laska m et Lubbock; L iberal, K an., faced F o rt Sm ith A rk., and Boulder Colo., b attled B eatrice, Neb FAT ALBERT i s c o m i n g ! CALL T H E HOT LINE 471-524 4 Tonight LEWIS & THE LEGENDS Tuesday S tep h en Doster B a n d Longest Happy Hour in Town Double Shots — 2 for 1 11 a .m .-8 p.m. NEVER A COVER CHARGE .ositions available: The Daily Texan is acc ep tin g applications from students interested in working on the fall staff. A ny U niversity student may apply. No jo urnalism classes are required. The Texan will begin in terv iew s for perm anent staff positions August 6. S tu d e n ts s h ould hav *■ at least o n e semester of ex p erience at the Texan to apply for a perm anent position. S tudents should pick up applications and sign up for interview s at th e Texan o ffice, TSP C 2 .1 1 2 . Call 471-4591 for more inform ation. T h e Da il y T e x a n ’NEW^ ) 'SICILIAN 183)PI ElR PIZZA E ach Sicilian T opper is m ade esp ecially for you. C h o o se your favorite toppings, and then w e add lots of sp ecial sa u ce on a thicker, m ore flavorful crust and cover it all with lots m ore c h e e se . INTRODUCTORY OFFER! N E X T S M A L L E R PIZZA FR E E 53 Buy one giant, large or medium size Sicilian Topper or Original Thin Crust pizza, get next smaller Original Thin Crust, with equal number of ingredients, Present this coupon with guest check. Not valid with any other offer. Expiration date August 18. 1980 Pizza inn1 o f th fF H ^ n g syO tfliw e. cYbu ■ I ■ a a a ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a 8 3 1 9 Research ..................... 8 3 7 -0 7 7 1 8 4 0 1 B u r n e t Road .............. 4 5 1 - 7 5 7 1 1710 W Ben W h ile B lv d .. 4 4 4 - 6 6 5 5 3 0 0 0 D u v a l ............................ 4 7 7 -6 7 5 1 ................ 4 4 7 - 6 6 1 1 2 2 0 * E. Riverside ....... 9 2 8 - 1 5 0 4 7 2 3 7 H w y . 2 9 0 East 3 7 6 la n d a N e w B rau n fe ls 6 2 5 -7 3 1 4 FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE H o m e s -F o r S a le M is c e lla n e o u s - F o r S a le C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G C o n s e c u t iv e D a y R a t e s 15 w o r d m i n im u m 1 t im e E a c h w o r d 3 t im e s E a c h w o r d E a c h w o r d 5 t im e s E a c h w o r d 10 t im e s * 1 in c h 1 tim e 1 co l x 1 in c h 2-9 t im e s 1 co l 1 col x 1 inch 10 or m o re tim e s S4 01 S I 00 c h a r g e to C h a n g e c o p y F i r s t t w o w o r d s m a y be a ll c a p it a l le tte rs 25‘ to r e a c h a d d itio n a l w o r d in c a p it a l le tte rs '5 i 34 * $ 32 S 68 $4.70 S3 24 ______ - - - S T U D E N T / F A C U L T Y S T A F F C o n s e c u t iv e D a y R a te s 13 w o r d m i n im u m E a c h d a y S 91 E a c h a d d it io n a l w o r d e a c h d a y S 07 l co l x 1 In c h e a c h d a y S2 40 P a y m e n t in a d v a n c e a n d c u r r e n t I D m u s t be p r e s e n te d in T S P B u ild in g 3.200 (25th 8. W h i t i s ) f r o m 8 a m. to 4 30 p m . M o n d a y t h ro u g h F r id a y . T h e r e is a 50" c h a r g e to c h a n g e c o p y F i r s t tw o w o r d s m a y be a ll c a p it a l le tte rs 25‘ fo r e a c h a d d itio n a l w o r d in c a p it a l le tte rs D C A D U N E S C H E D U L E M o n d a y T o x o n F rid a y 2 : 0 0 p m. T u o t d a y T o x o n W o d n o t d a y T o x a n . . M o n d a y 1 1 : 0 0 a .m . T u o t d a y 1 1 :0 0 a .m . T h u r s d a y T o x a n W o d n o t d a y 1 1 : 0 0 a m. F r id a y T o x a n T h u r t d a y 1 1 : 0 0 a .m . In tho ovonl of orrort m ado in an odvar- Ittomonl. im modiato notko mutt bo givon a t tho publithort aro rotpcntiM o for onty O N E incorroxt intorfion AM claim* for od- juttmontt thould bo m ado not la tor than 30 d a y* aftor publication." M o t o r c y c le -F o r S a le 79 B A T A V U S M O P E D , S t a r t Iíte7 $450 478-6171 e v e n in g s B A T A V U S M O P E D. g r e a t s h a p e ! B la c K , m o t o r c y c le style , 140 m p g A s k in g S400 452-8678 after 5 p.m. 1979 P U C H S P O R T M K s ig n a ls , 4 76^585 II w ith t u rn le s s t h a n 700 m ile s $600 B ill, 1979 S U Z U K I G S 750 E x c e p t i o n a l l y m a in ta in e d , n e v e r a b u s e d , p e rfe c t c o n ­ d itio n N e w K -8 1 s S2000 f ir m . 478-2756 a n y t im e 1978 B A T A V U S M O P E D m a d e in H o lla n d . 90 m p g . M u s t se ll, S400 D o u g , 454 8165 a fte r 5 p.m . 1979 B A T A V U S R E G E N C Y B la c k , 100 m p g , 500 m ile s lik e n e w $400 C a ll 472- 5765 e v e n in g s . f u n , h o Ñ O A E X P R E S S . F a s t , e c o n o m i c a l , B e t t e r t h a n r e l i a b l e m o p e d s A s k in g $300 458-8969, k e e p t r y ­ ing. 1973 H O N D A C B -3 5 0 E x c e l le n t stre e t bike , 9800 m ile s $535 in c lu d e s b o o k r a c k a n d g o o d h e lm e t 477-9011 B ic y d e -F o r S a le 22 I N C H V O L K c y c le , 10-speed, $80 472- 4743 o r 477-5850 Y E L L O W 2 0 " S c h w in n V a r s it y , n e e d s t u n in g u p ( c o s t in g a b o u t $25). C a ll C la ire , 478-5697 P r ic e $50 1 0 - S P E E D T A K A R A , b a s k e t s, c h a in , lo c k. G o o d sh a p e , w ill se ll ch e a p . C a ll T o m , 476-4929 o r 471-4591. B I C Y C L E S R E P A I R E D , in e x p e n s iv e q u a lit y w o rk , h it the r o a d in r e c o r d t im e C a ll 451-0571 A U TO S FOR SALE S te re o -F o r S a le V W E N G I N E S re b u ilt. J459 in sta lle d , e x ­ c h a n g e G e n e r a l V W r e p a ir R e a s o n a b le r a t e s 452-3821 W e b u y b r o k e n V W s . '78 V W R A B B I T M o v in g , m u s t se ll 4- d oor, A M / F M 8 -tra c k , A C , A T , r e g u la r g a s , g r e a t c o n d it io n S4550. 477-5173, 476- 2622, R ic k e y 1970 C H E V R O L E T I M P A L A , A T , A C , n e w t u n e -u p P e r f e c t c o n d itio n . $850 477- 6534 1969 V W B E E T L E . G o o d e n gin e , r u n s r a d io $800, n e g o tia b le . A la in , 477- w e ll 5935, e v e n in g s 6 30-8 30. 1973 P L Y M O U T H D U S T E R P e r f e c t c o n d it io n . M u s t S e ll Im m e d ia t e ly . E m ­ m a n u e l 928-0053 B M W 530i, '77 s ilv e r 35,000 m ile s, A C , c a s se t t e . $12,000 o r b e st o ffe r 474-6660 o r 926-3105 1968 P L Y M O U T H F U R Y D e p e n ­ d a b l e , c l e a n , a ll p o w e r , A C , n e w t r a n s m is s io n , g o o d m ile a g e $650. 459- 6446 I I I 1966 I M P A L A A T , P S , A C , ju st p a s s e d in s p e c tio n , g o o d s tu d e n t ca r, $600. C a ll 458-8615 o r 926 7301. '72 C H E V R O L E T I M P A L A G o o d c o n d i- tion, n e w t ir e s $750, n e g o t ia b le M i k e K ik u c h i, 478-3975 a fte r 5. 1970 M A V E R I C K A T A M - F M 8 t ra c k , 2 0 -p lu s m p g $500 443-3400 a fte r 6 '73 V W S U P E R B E E ~TLE7~re b u ilt e n g in e , n e w b r a k e s , m u ffle r , A M - F M ste re o E x ­ c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $1850 345-6560 ext. 780, 346-5372 '75 S T A R F I R E 231 V-6, 4-speed, A C , P B . P S , A M - F M ste re o, 48,000 m ile s $2495 453 3440 '72 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A 1600, 2-door, A T , A C R u n s goo d , b o d y goo d . N e g o t ia b le . 258-0138 a fte r 6 00 ____ 1973 C U T L A S S S U P R E M E G o o d c o n d i­ tion, n e w b r a k e s , t r a n s m is s io n , A M - F M 8 -t ra ck, A C . $1100. 442-3936. _ _ _ _ _ 1974 F I A T 125 S p o r t C o u p e E x c e lle n t c o n d it io n , g o o d m i le a g e $2000. C a ll S e r g io , 474-1030 1974 V O L V O 164 G o ld w ith b la c k le a th e r in t e rio r, A T , P S , P B , A C , A M / F M . $3000 454-1937 a fte r 5 00 '73 M O B C O N V E R T I B L E O v e r d r iv e ! c a s s e t t e ste re o , b lu e a n d ta n N ic e $2695 o r o f f e r ^928-3108 1969 B u T c k T e S A B R E F a ir - g o o d c o n ­ d itio n Id e a l w o r k c a r. O r ig in a l o w n e r. $500, n e g o t ia b le . 459 4669, 459-1671. 1976 B U I C K R E G A L 2-door n a v y b lu e w it h w h it e v in y l top, 61,000 m ile s F a m i ­ ly c a r, re c e n t tu n e up. L o a n v a lu e at P E C U is $2050, w ill sell fo r $2050. C a ll R o u n d R o c k , 255-0442 FOR SA IE M o to rc y c le -F o r S a le ____ 1«80 H O N D A 400 3700 m ile s . $1100 or B e s t O ffe r C a ll 472-5599 o r 471-4591. L e a v e m e s s a g e fo r R o b b ie K i n g 1978 G O L D W I N G P e r f e c t co n d itio n , fu ll d r e s s, a ll e x t r a s . S h o u ld se e to a p ­ p r e c ia t e $3500 346-1386, T o n y . C I R C L E S T E R E O ; p r o m p t, r e a s o n a b le a u d io v id e o s e r v ic e U s e d e q u ip m e n t b o u g h t a n d sold. P a r t s a n d a c c e s s o r ie s 1211 R e d R iv e r 476-0947 T W O A D V E N T s p e a k e r s , e x c e lle n t so u n d . $140 p a ir n e w ; u s e d 6 m o n th s , $90 B ill, 459-8350 S A N Y O J X T 6440 s te r e o s y s t e m . D o lb y ca sse tte , A M - F M , b u ilt -in t u r n t a b le a n d s p e a k e r s . $245 452-9717 m o r n i n g s N A K A M I C H I 600-11 c a s s e t t e d e c k. 30- 20.000 H z f r e q u e n c y r e sp o n se . M in t c o n ­ d it io n $425. 838-7422 w o r k , 837-0013 h o m e C O M P A C T S T E R E O , 8 t r a c k p la y e r re c o r d e r , G a r r a r d t u rn ta b le , s p e a k e r s 20 w a tt s G o o d sh a p e , $125 474-5055 M u s ic a l- F o r S a le A U S T I N 'S B E S T s e le c t io n of s o n g b o o k s a n d sh e e t m u s ic A lp h a M u s i c C e n te r, 611 W 29th. 477 5009 C L A S S Í C A L ~ G u T f A R - V e n T u r a B e a u t if u l. W o o d fin is h . $65 ($115 n e w ) T o ri, 444-2621 e xt 293 D R U M S E T , f iv e piece, e x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tion. $295. L u c y , 926-6353. P I A N O . C O L B Y u p r ig h t . G o o d c o n d i­ tion, g o o d a c t io n $450 d e liv e r e d 472- 0530 P h o t o g r a p h y - F o r S a le M A M I Y A M -6 4 5 , 8 0 m m F 2 8, P D P r i s m F in d e r , E x c e l le n t C o n d itio n , $700 474- 7879, 453-1101 C A N O N A E - 1 a n d S o lig o r 8 5 -2 1 0 m m f3.5. C lo s e f o c u s in g z o o m le n s. T o g e t h e r o r se p e r a t e ly . 472-7828 P c ts-F o r S a le P U R E B R E D I R I S H S e tte r p u p p ie s . 5 1 z w e e k s old, w o r m e d . B o t h p a r e n t s. C a ll 476-5015 ________ H o m e s -F o r S a le O L D U N I V E R S I T Y n e i g h b o r h o o d , b e a u t if u ll y r e m o d e l e d 2 s t o r y b r ic k c o lo n ia l. 3 B R , 2 ’ z bath, h u g e r e d w o o d d e c k o v e r lo o k in g la r g e t re e c o v e r e d lot. 3104 G r a n d v i e w $159,000 453-1121. W A L K T O U T R e n o v a t e d 1911 ho m e . H ig h c e ilin g s , H u n t e r fa n s, h a r d w o o d flo o rs, la n d s c a p e d y a r d . C a ll A le x , 477- 5117 o r 327-4524 R e a lt y W o r ld T o w n a n d C o u n t ry . 10 x 57 M O B I L E h o m e in g o o d co n d itio n . T w o b e d ro o m , o n e bath, $4800. C a ll 385- 1992 E N F I E L D C O N D O M I N I U M E f f ic ie n c y $25,000, 1 B R $38,000 F in a n c in g . W e n d a ll C o r r i g a n . 4 7 8 -7 0 0 5 A m e l i a B u l l o c k R e a lt o r s , 346-1073 S T Y L E G A L O R E ^ T a r r y t o w n c o n ­ d o m i n i u m O N T H E S H U T T L E B U S L I N E w ith tw o s t o r y a t r iu m , f o r m a l d in ­ in g ro o m , fir e p la c e , w e tb a r, tw o m a s t e r b e d ro o m s, p a tio a n d g r e a t s t o r a g e $82,- 500. C a ll to d a y a n d m o v e in b e fo re sc h o o l s ta r ts . M a x w e ll - J e n k in s , 474-9923. H Y D E P A R K r e m o d e le d tw o s t o r y 4-2, C A / C H , n e w k itc h e n , h a r d w o o d s , th re e s it t in g a r e a s , la r g e w o o d e d lo ts 459-9468 $129,500 A U T O M O T IV E REPAIR ! A U T O M O T IV E REPAIR Service as efficient and reliable as the car itself. ^ E ngine tuning, problem d iagn osis, full parts inventory. Personal service. Fine used BMWs. PHOENIX AUTO PRODUCTIONS 442-1361 1606 Fortview Road O n e block north of Ben W hite at Clawson FOR SALE FOR SALE LAST CALL FOR THE T h e D a i l y T e x a n ALL SIZZLER A D S M U S T R U N BY A U G U S T 29, 1980 $3 1 | C W O R D S 1 C W O R D S FOR mm FOR O N LY FOR « W A dditional W ords - 2 0 ‘ each • L im ite d to n o n - c o m m e r c ia l a d v e r t is in g o n ly . f l P D A Y S • A d s m a y b e ca n c e lle d , b u t n o r e f u n d s c a n b e m a d e • A d s m a y be o r d e re d for a n y m u lt ip le o f fiv e d a y i (to r u n t h r o u g h A u g u s t 2 9 ) . • L im ite d to f o llo w in g c a t e g o r ie s o n ly; • For S a le • Lost & F o u n d • M e r c h a n d is e W a n t e d • T ra v e l • R o o m m a t e s CALL THE T E X A N CLASSIFIED "H O T L IN E " 471 -5244 BE SURE TO A SK FOR THE $3. SIZZLER! (24th S t re e t ) W I N D S O R R O A D 2 B R to w n h o u se , I 1* m ile s to U T . F ir e p la c e , p a r q u e t flo o rs, pool, p r iv a t e p a tio a n d y a r d L o w 70s, lo a n a r r a n g e d w ith low d o w n p a y m e n t 2401 W in s t e d 441-1980. S T U D E N T S ! 12 x 60 m o b ile h o m e on U n i v e r s i t y p r o p e r t y , A C , l a r g e r e f r ig e r a t o r , d is h w a s h e r , a n d m o r e 1 476- 7464 I N V E S T D O R M fe o s in b e a u t ifu l ne w c o n d o 2 B R . 2 ’ j B A , g a r a g e , f ire p la c e , pool. 454-5305 S a t N E A R S H U T T L E S p a c io u s t o w n h o m e fo r s a le 3 B R 2 B A , fir e p la c e , pool, te n ­ nis, g a r a g e P r ic e d u n d e r m a r k e t , low 6 0 's 474-2522 P a t r i c i a A L in n , R e a lt o r W a lk to U T f r o m t h is la r g e e le g a n t b r ic k h o u s e o n the n ic e s t c o r n e r in A ld r i d g e P la c e S it on y o u r c i r c u l a r f ro n t p o r c h in the e v e n in g a n d w a t c h the s q u ir r e ls p la y in th e o ld o a k a n d p e c a n tre e s T h e h o u se h a s a l m o s t 2 5 0 0 f e e t w i t h t h r e e b e d ro o m s, tw o b a th s, a n d a tw o -sto ry r e sto re d r e n ta b le a d d itio n T a s t e f u lly a n d c o m p e t it iv e ly p r ic e d $149,950 474- 7776 fo r W h y pa y $9600 rent over 4 y e a rs co lle ge ? B u y a mobile le s s t h a n $200/ h o m e month; sell at end of 4 years and m a k e money. To find out more, call G r e g a n y t im e at 385-1992 or 892-0592 after 7 p.m. Get a ro o m m a te to split p a y m e n ts and m a k e a large profit. M is c e lla n e o u s - F o r S a le I N D I A N S A L E ! is 2 5 % off! N e l s o n 's G ifts, 4502 S. C o n g r e s s . 444- 3814, 10-6, c lo se d M o n d a y s j e w e lry T W I N B E D S , c o m p le t e m a t tr e s s, b o x s p r in g , m a p le , m a h o g a n y , $79 95 M a t ­ t re ss, b o x s p r in g s o ld s e p a ra t e . 454-5896 M U S T S E L L s t u r d y w o o d e n d in in g t a b le w ith f o u r c h a i r s $90 C a ll M ik e a ft e r 6 443-7048 G R E A T H U N T I N G $6000 e q u it y T a k e u p p a y m e n t s 10 a c r e s of b e a u t ifu l tre e s w it h 1 a c r e t a n k ; L la n o , T e x a s . 1-824- 1814, 1-656-9554 a fte r 6 N E W T W I N bed w it h f r a m e $125, lik e n e w M i r a n d a a u t o m a t ic c a m e r a $150. J o y , 476-6381 ext. 42, 477-3882 R E F R I G E R A T O R , O L D E R m o d e l g r e a t s h a p e $35 A f t e r 5 p m 478-5228 in F O R S A L E tw in s iz e b o x s p r in g s $10. G o o d c o n d itio n . 266-2775. T R A V E L A G E N C Y , U T a re a , $50,000 o r b e s t o f f e r P .O . B o x 12504, A u s t in T e x a s, o r c a ll (5 1 2 ) 474-6660 12 C U B I C F O O T n o -tro st r e fr ig e ra t o r , $125 5000 B T U S e a r s E n e r g y s a v e r a ir c o n d it io n e r , $100. C a ll 476-1621. O ' B R I E N C O M P E T I T O R 67 5, p la te b i n ­ d in g , b r a n d n e w w a t e r s k i 451-8737. F U L L S I Z E bed in v e r y g o o d c o n d it io n ; p u r c h a s e d n e w 3 y e a r s a g o ; d e lu x e q u a lit y ; 443-0852. A C , Í5.000 B T U s , $190 R e f r ig e r a t o r , $75. C h e a p T V , stove, fan, r e c e iv e r , so fa s, tab le . 477-1887 a ft e r 5. C O N N A L T O sa x , C o n n e lly H o o k s la lo m ski, H e x a ll s n o w s k is w ith L o o k b in d in g s , N ó r d ic a boots, 8 ! z B ill, 476-2585 L A R G E B R O W N c a rp e t , $100. D r e s s e r a n d d e sk , $50 e a c h . D o u b le bed, new , $150 S o f a a n d c h a ir, $50 F il e ca b in e t, $45 E v e n in g s , 477-9647, 477-7566 T Y P E W R I T E R E L E C T R I C p o rta b le , c a r t r i d g e lo a d N e a r ly new . O r ig i n a l l y $240, a s k i n g $170. 458-8899 a fte r 5 30 L O T F O R sale , p in e -w o o d e d 1 j a cre , v ie w p o s s ib le . T a h it ia n V illa g e , B a s t r o p , 9 30 p m . -11 p.m., 836-1718 O L D B O O K p r iv a t e c o lle c tio n n o w b e in g s o ld S u n d a y 1 0 t h -T h u r s d a y 14th C a ll 476-8866 fo r a p p o in tm e n t. W A N T T O b u y a p a r t m e n t - s iz e g a s stove . N e e d b y 9/1. C a ll 474-7776 f r o m 4-9 p.m . 16' D E L C R A F T A L U M I N U M c a n o e w ith o a r s $175 453-6470 S T E R E O , S t O v e , P I O N E E R r e f r ig e r a t o r , R e a s o n a b le tw in b e d s C a ll M ic h e ll e fo r d e ta ils. 453-2658, 474- 4652 e v e n in g s N I C E F U R N I T U R E , c h e a p : tw o la r g e so fa s, d in in g t a b le / fo u r c h a ir s . G r e a t sh a p e , g o o d v a lu e s 443 4888 H P 6 7 C A L C U L A T O R M i s s i n g p r o g r a m s O t h e r w is e c o m p le te N e w $375, y o u r s $195. A f t e r 5 w e e k d a y s, 477- 6410 P I A N O U P R I G H T , m a h o g a n y G o o d c o n d it io n N e e d s s o m e t u n in g . P r ic e n e g o t ia b le D a y , 474-1263. v -O U C H W I T H h id e -a -b e d a n d m a t c h in g lo v e se a t M in t c o n d itio n . L a m p s , n ig h t s ta n d s , r e c lin e r , d e s k A ll e x c e lle n t c o n ­ d itio n . M u s t se ll C a ll 474-2466 a n y t im e , k e e p t r y in g . FURNISHED APARTM EN TS F U R N I T U R E S I N G L E m a t f r e s s a nd b ox s p r in g s , $10 2 d r e s s e r s , e a c h $5. U p h o ls t e r e d ro c k e r, $10. E le c t r ic h e a ter, $20 C u s h io n c h a ir, $5. 5815 D u v a l 478- 2942 or 459-6431 G E R O N I M O 160 a ir p la n e - $45/hour, 1 10 s h a r e - $1200, I F R J o h n D o u g la s , 452-2239. ________________ S T U D Y D E S K M e t a l, f iv e d r a w e r w ith m a h o g a n y top G o o d c o n d itio n , $125 o r b e st o ffe r 447-7860 2 B L A C K A N D w hite. 2 c o lo r T V s . F>or- t a b le s e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , g u a r a n t e e d K e n , 345-0826 e v e n in g s, w e e k e n d s. W I S H T O b u y 12-14 foot r e f r ig e r a t o r G r e e n , y e llo w o r b ro w n . G o o d c o n d it io n J o h n D o u g la s 452-2239. F U L L S I Z E m a t tr e s s , b ox s p r in g s w ith f ra m e , $75. C o u c h , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , $150 454 8921 C H I N A S E T S im p le d e lic a t e d e sig n , g u a r a n te e d , n e v e r u se d F o u r p la ce . 20 p ie c e s $220 new , just $120. 474-8905. We buy jewelry, estate jewelry, dia m o n d s and old gold. H ighest cash prices paid. C APITO L D IAM O N D SHOP 4018 N. L a m a r r i i i i i i i i i i i i G O I N G b a n a n a s ? We rent apartments, duplexes, houses all over Austin. F R E E Real World Properties 443-2212 S o u th 458-6111 N o r t h 345-6350 N o r t h w e s t UNIQUE CONTEM PORARY 1-bedroom efficiency apartments Fall $209-$219-I- E furnished with all the goodies! 4105 Speedw ay M an age r No. 103 Call 451-4919 If no answer, call 459-3226 HYDE PARK APTS. • Large Fum. Efficiency S200-S210 • Large Furn 1 BR $235 • Shuttle Bus Front Door • Park & Tennis Courts Adjoin Complex 4 413 S p e e d w a y 4 5 8 -2 0 9 6 P A T 1 0 C O V E R $350, U H a u l K e v in , 474-9923, 474-2385. C a l l Fall I .easing N ow sk THE VINEYARD ISN'T KID'S STUFF For young adults looking for reasonably priced apartments, the Vineyard offers efficiencies and one or two bedroom apartments. Furnished or to $290. Seniors unfurnished graduating Dec. 31, 1980, welcome. V IN E Y A R D A P A R T M E N T S 6 3 0 9 B U R N S M O ST POPULAR N U M B ER IN TOWN 451-4561 from $185 FALL SPECIAL! 1 b e d ro o m a p ts. - $ 1 0 0 o ff first m o n t h 's rent ( one bedrooms only) Also available for lease two and four bedrooms Located on 1 st tw o RC shuttle bus stops Monday, August 11, 1980 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 9 LA PAZ APTS. S ig n in g Fall Leases 1 BR FURN. $250 • W ater & G a s Paid • Shuttle Bus • Quiet Complex 401 W. 39 451-4255 Continental Apartments 2 BR Furn.-$315 • Water, gas, TV cable PAID • Shuttle Bus Comer • Nice Pool • Golf Course Across Street 9 1 0 E. 40 4 5 1 -7 7 1 8 r1 I I I I I I I I I I I I — Tanglewood North Apartments F all L e a sin g — Better Hurry! Tom orrow W ill Be Too Late — 1 Bedroom Furnished $ 26 0 -$2 9 0 2 Bedroom Furnished $ 37 0 -$3 9 0 - We Pay Your A ir Conditioning - T. V. Cable, Too! Shuttle Bus at your Front Doot 1020 E. 45th 4 52 -0 06 0 I Tanglewood Westside Apartments Fall Leasing Run, don't w alk — tomorrow will be too late for these choice residerwes. 1 Bedroom Furnished $220-$270 G a s & water is paid by owner. T V. C able, Too! Shuttle buses at your front door 1403 N o rw a lk Ln. 472-9614 a / a -' " ” ” a c a ñ a d a APTS. Fall Leasing — ALL BILLS P A ID ~ • 1 BR Furn. $ 3 1 0 • Walk To C am p us • Nice Pool — Patio • Tennis Courts Across Street 1300 W. 24 4 7 7 -3 0 6 6 I I I l I l I I I I I I 1 i l l I l I l I I l I I j EL DORADO APTS. Fall Leasing • 1 BR Furn. $ 2 3 5 -$ 2 4 5 • Shuttle Front Door • Nice Pool — Patio • Close Enough to W a lk to C a m p u s 3501 S p e e d w a y 4 7 2 -4 8 9 3 E N G L IS H A IR E Apartm ents Efficiency, 1 Bedroom & 2 Bedroom Startin g at *185. S o m e Utilities Paid On shuttle route F R E E Racquetball & Tennis C ourts Free C able TV See one of A u stin 's F IN E S T A P A R T M E N T C O M M U N I T I E S 1919 B urto n Dr. E n g lish A ire 4 4 4 1846 9-6 M o n .-S a t 12 6 S u n d a y G iv e your lifestyle a lift. Longview Plaza 25 is central to all U.T. happenings, at the corner of 25th Streets. C h o o se Plaza 25. It's som ething special - not just another pretty place and Pressed for a place to live? Try Plaza 25. A coed dorm, where we offer a non-regi- mented lifestyle. Contract parking available to m ake your life infinitely more simple. Laundry rooms on every floor. And, we're located on the U.T. shuttle. There are T.V. and music rooms, a courtyard, and a pool for relaxing moments; special rooms available for sequestered studying fur­ nished suites that you'll call home. Now leasing for fall, 2505 Longview 472-0100 Professonaly m an ag e d by Barry G^mgwater M an age m e n t C o m pans Page 10 □ THE D A I L Y T E X A N □ Monday, August 11, 1980 SERVICES TYRING HELP WANTED FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED A P A R T M E N T S ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS * * * * * * * H ardebeck Free Locators 444-9490 We Drive * * * * * * * 4- ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ + ACT V I I A P A R T M E N T S 4303 D U V A L Furnished IB*? near ¡JT shopping and shuttle, private panos August $155 Pall S225 plus E .145 8550 451 0798 Tired of living with stranger*? Try us ■ New M anor Apartm ehts. a new age com m unity of friends Austin's only clothing- "r'tionat apartm ents have a few more openings Close to shuttle wine 'tu b v o lle y b a ll, hu ge po o l, c h ild r e n 's playground, laundrom at, tenant secun ty A ! bills paid except t $180 *215.2401 E Manor ! 7 10 m ile E Of IH35) 476 5875 474 4319, 458 9042 F A L L P R E L E A S I N G Central fu rn ish ed Efficiency with gas neat and cook.ng paid Laundry and pool Convenient to UT shuttle and city bus S205 plus E 4SI 45*4 or 476 2633 B arry GiUm awater M anagem ent Company R I O G R A N D E S Q U A R E A P A R T M E N T S ONE B E D R O O M S210 E F F I C I E N C I E S S195 2800 Rio G ra n d e 472 9569 A L L B I L L S P A I D South, I and 2 bedroom apartm ent* on Town Lake pool W D room, convenient to downtown and city bus Starting S245 444 3337 or 476 7633, G illm g w a t e r M anagem ent Co E F F I C I E N C Y $199 A B P Close to campus beautifully paneled, tufty carpeted, a ll b u ilt-in kitchen, CA CH 4000 Avenue A 45* 4511, 45) 6533 C entral P ro pe rties Inc. B E E H I V E A P A R T M E N T S 4209 A V E N U E B Furnished efficiency near UT and shut­ large walk m closets, dishwasher tle, and patio August $147 50. F a ll $200 plus E 459 6180 453 0798 FURNISHE • F - U T W A U i y j 1BR - S195 Secluded s m a ll quiet complex. B u ilt- in kitc h e n applia nces, AC, trees W a te r, gas, cable paid. 609 E 45th St 454-8995, 451-6533. C e n tra l P ro p e rtie s Inc. A lt OVER AUSTIN A partm ent Locators 459-3226 4314 Medical Parkway No. 1 H ttt PROFESSIONAL SERVICE LICENSED BY THE TEXAS REAL ESTATE COMMISSION EL CID APTS. ^ a ll le a s in g ¡S o u ! I BR Furn. $240 • Shuttle Front Door • Water, Gas & TV Cable Paid • Small Friendly Complex 3704 Speedway 477-1607 MARK XX APTS. Fall Leasing • I BR furn. $ 2 5 0 • 2 BR furn $ 3 1 0 • Shuttle 2 Blk*. • W ater, Gas Paid 3 8 1 5 G uadalupe 45 1-2 62 1 T R A V I S HOUSE A P A R T M E N T S P rele a sin g Now Super F a ll Savings S ta rtin g at $215 Huge 1 and 2 bedroom* F irs t shuttle stop Large pool CA CH 2 laundry rooms 1600 Royal Crest 442-9720 P r e le a s in g F o r F a l l 4700 Ave A E ft S205 plus E IB » $245 plus E 4700 Ave A 4706 Ave A Eft , S745 ABP 451 6966 IB P $710 $720 plus E 454 8995 609 E 45th 4000 Ave A E ft $245 ABP 458 4511 4307 Ave A IB P $240 plus E 459-1571 4209 Speedway IB P $74$ plus E 458-6917 202 E 32nd E ft $215 plus E 458-4511 Central Properties Inc 451 6513 A L L B I L L S P A I D S m a ll 2 B R 's $330 2215 Leon Walk or shuttle to campus, central air, and new carpeting 474 7732 A L L B I L L S P A I D Lar ge 1BR $320 2212 S a n G a b r ie l Walk or sh uttle to ca mpus, C A / C H , n e w c a r p e t , DW, cable, disposal. 474-7732 E¡ Campo Apts. Si gning Fall Leases M ID S U M M E R SPEC IA L A T T E N T IO N S IN G LES A N D S T U D E N T S to q u a lifie d Tw o w eeks fr e e re n t applicants, efficiency apartm ents, fu r­ nished or unfurnished, from S175-S200, Security guards on duty, Olympic sue pool, low income welcome Casa Blanca Apartm ents 2506 Manor Road 474-5550 • 1 BR Farn. $250 • 2 BR Furn. $310 • Wafer & gas pd. • Shuffle 1 Blk. • Ouief Complex 30 5 W. 39 4 5 2 -8 5 3 7 MARK VII APTS. - F a ll L e a sin g - • 1 BR Furn. $ 2 5 0 • S h u ffle Fronf Door • W a fe r , g a *, TV c a b le Paid 3 1 0 0 Speedw ay 4 7 7 -1 6 0 7 i . UNFURN. APARTMENTS CIRCLE VILLA APTS. FAII Leasing 1 BR $220 • Water A Gas TV Cable Paid By Owner • Shuffle I js NOW L E A S IN G FOR F A L L B R O W N L E E F A L L R E N T S175 2 BLOCKS TO C A M P U S 2502 Nueces 477-2897 P a v i l l i o n : furnished or unfurnished one Large large win bedroom apartm ents with dows and walk-in closets Within w a lk ­ ing distance ot U T shuttle and city bus C onv e n ie n t to shopping and m a jo r highways starting at $180 unfurnished, $200 furnished 926-3534 or 476-263.) B arry G lllingw ater M anagem ent company L A W S T U D E N T S G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S U P P E R C L A S S M E N Unique 1BR and efficiency suites, t a s te fu l I y d e s ig n e d w ith b u ilt-in bookcases and am p le storage Tree covered grounds W ithin walking dis­ ta n c e of c a m p u s C o n ta c t D a v id Stapleton, 472-0100 or 345-0326 B arry G illm gw ater M anagem ent Company D O WN TO W N W I L D E R N E S S A wilderness with new I and 2 bedroom apartm ents Only 5 minutes from down town Oak Run 1700 Southridge 44) 824! or 476 2633 B arry G lllingw ater M anagem ent Company G R E E N W O O D TOW ERS, 1800 Lavaca One and tw o bedroo m a p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le C o m p le te re d o n e , new appliances, poo! with redwood decks Jacuyri spa, parking garage, closed c ir ­ c u it TV S e c u rity system L im ite d numbers available August 1st through September 1st S4I0 and up ABP Cres Realtors 474-6407 M ARK V APTS. S ig n in g F a l l Leases 1 BR Furn. $250 • Water, Gas, TV Cable Paid by Ownar • Shuttle Bus • Small Friendly Complex Pa rk side Apts. 4209 B u r n e t Rd. L a rg e 1 bedroom a p a rtm e n ts , fu lly carpeted Central heat and a ir Ideal for faculty or serious student. Tennis court, pool and jogging trad across the street Ramsey Park No pets, no children 9 months or 12 months lease $235 plus electricity Deposit $75. Now leasing for September 1st M rs Thomson 454-3251 M anager 4591594 M ID S U M M E R S P E C IA L TA N G LE W O O D FAST A P A R T M E N T S W E L C O M E S YOU S T U D E N T S A N D F A M IL IE S fre e re n t to q u a lifie d Tw o w eeks t and 2 BR apartm ents, applicants, Olympic sue pool, security guards on du­ ty, low income welcome 2604 M anor Road 474-5550 $135 E F F I C I E N C Y d u p le x E a s t Spacious, appliances 5707 Ledesma B Ralph Louis Property M anagem ent. 458 6757 IBR condo tor lease B R A N D N E W fr o m c a m p u s , a ll T h r e e b lo c k s appliances including dishwasher ceding fans Energy efficient $275 474 2052 W IL L PA Y $50 if you lease 2BR, 1BA into house). $255 apartm ent idus E with gas heat and gas range Quiet Northwest Austin complex 345 4417 after 6 (moving IBR unfurnished nice apart L A R G E m ent on U T shuttle and city bus route A ll a p p l ia n c e s , C A / C H , c a b le , r e s i d e n t b o o k s h e lv e s , m anager $185 plus E 1801 M anor Road, 478 8845 la u n d r y , D O W N T O W N L U X U R Y condo 2BR, 2 -BA, pool, all appliances S650 per month Call Kevin or Kay, 474 9923 474 2385 ROOMS UT COEDS F A L L Several nice private rooms available for women and men Close to campus F u r ­ nished and carpeted Bdl$ paid Com ­ m unity kitchen Laundry. C entral heat and a ir. Call Dave at 477-1205. NOW L E A S IN G for summer and fall. Co ed dorm next to campus Remodeled, re c re a tio n a re a , new sundeck Wide screen TV, refrigerators, no m eals Taos, 2612 Guadalupe, 474 6905 fu rn is h in g s , N IC E ROOM, C A /C H , walking distance UT Call 477 9388 T W O BLOCKS U T , nicely furnished rooms, efficiencies and apartm e n ts from $105 up Lyle House, 2800 Whltis 477 755* ;; W A N T E D . F E M A L E g ra d student Kitchen privileges $100 a month. Quad Creek, city bus line 837-7526 In co ed house F U R N IS H E D SIN G L E *120 plus 1/5 bills EC Housemates are liberal, quiet students, co-op style liv ­ ing 472 2627 FURNISHED HOUSES S T U D ! N T S ' L O O K IN G for a home aw ay from homp’ Share expenses and furnished 4BR 2-story student-owned home on beautiful wooded ravine lot In f ne residential neighborhood M u tt be neat and responsible 928-3108 N E E D P A R E N T (S ) ot 4 8 year old to share house with father of 5 year old girl 2 blocks shuttle No drugs, late noise $95 month ABP 457 6393 ROOM AND BOARD S T O N E H E N G E C O O P Fem ale vacan cy We are 5 women and 5 men living in po$t-Victorian home 3 blocks from cam pus 611 W 22nd 474-9029 477 7181 NE W G U IL D Co op has fem ale and m ale vacancies 510 W 23rd 472-0352 VA C A N C Y AT V C oed, economical, vegetarian co-op 6 blocks campus Pets ok 1919 Robbins. 474 7767 EA STW O O D PA RK Area Coop looking tor quiet, non-smoking person to help l m ake a house a home Vacancy Sep* Long-term com m itm ent preferred 474- 2487 or 472-6554 H E A L T H A N D nutrition oriented co-op seeks responsible individuals We offer quiet res id e n tia l neighborhood near campus, vegetarian smoke free environ­ ment sundeck, open field and garden Royal Co op >805 P earl 4/8 0880 /W A IT A B L E at French V A C A N C IE S , blocks from speaking cooperative. 3 campus French House, 710 W 21st, 478- 6586 P R A N A HOUSL seeking vegetarians, nonsmokers Co-op lifestyle, nice house, good food 2510 Rio Grande 476-7905 WANTED currency CLASS R IN GS, gold jew elry, old pocket stam ps wanted watches High prices paid Pioneer Com Com pany, 5555 North Lam ar Bldg C-113 in C om m erce Park, 451-3607 jewelry, B U Y IN G W O R LD gold, gold scrap gold, old coins, antiques, pocket w atches P aying fa ir m a rk e t price Capitol Com C o , 3004 Guada'upe, 472- 1676 P hilip Nohra, owner W A N T TO buy used sci-fic books Good condition M in im um 100 paperbacks A fter 8 p m 346-1570 IB M OR oth er c o rre c tin g e le c tric ty p e w rite r, cassette player recorder, A M F M plug radio M e rry , 477-1421, evenings C AN YOU sell me two Fleetwood M a r tickets? M e n a n in e or floor Janine, 476- 7817, keep try in g 1 ROOMMATES SOUTH F E M A L E share 2 I furnished duplex CA-CH, city bus $150, bills paid A lter 5 00, 442 7381 A B P E F F . , I B R s F r o m $195 Leasing for ta ll 5 blocks to campus Shuttle, pool C H A P A R R A L A P T S . 2408 Leon 476 3467 32ND A T I H35 A VA L O N APTS. Efficiency • $180 I Bedroom $215 2BR-2BA $308 Up On Prem ises Laundry W alk UT 472-7604 to c a m p u s E F F I C I E N C Y C LO SE C a rp e te d d rapes a p p lia n c e s C all Chris, 478 8958, 2302 Leon E F F Í C IE N C I É S , 6607 a n d 7102 Guadalupe Gas paid, furnished, dis­ hw asher, accessible shuttle, p a rtia l leases available 454 3414 H U N T IN G T O N V IL L A A pa rtm e n ts Large efficiency, furnished, pool, laun- d r y , shuttle $175 plus E 454 8903 O L D M A IN Apartm ents, 25th and Pearl IB P efficiencies Four blocks UT, shut­ tle, cable, pool 476 5109 P R E L E A S E FO P FA LL Tree shaded quiet furnished IB P garden apartm ents Twelve Oaks A partm ent*, 301 W 39th M anager 451-2586 after 3 p m E F F IC IE N C Y F0 R ”$175 Quiet surroun dmgs walking access to m a io r shopping IF field for shuttle access area Near Call 454-0086, The Saltillo IB P S T U D IO a vailable tor August Ceil two mg fans m shw ashef disposal, blocks from shuttle s 165 t o r August, Fall $260, plus E 404 35th 451 0791 451 7986 345 0772 in q u ie t L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y neighborhood near golf course $160 for August, SI85 for F a ll. 516 E 40th, a fter 6 412-3271 -■ YES, W E have the perfect student com­ )8th Le M arquee plex for you 302 W IB R s, efficiencies A partm ents Pool left Gas paid 453-4002 E F F I C I E N C I E S . T 2 B R , g a r a g e apartm ents G raduate students, faculty only 12 month lease No pets, children 474 1212, 452-7680 SU B L É ASE F U R N I S H E D 1-t near shut­ tle. shopping $235, a ll am enities August 75 Call 288-7861 IM M E D IA T E M O V E IN I I, $195 Shut­ tle U T West No pets, children 700 H earn, 476 0953 lease Tw o bedroom two T A K E U P blocks to campus A vailable August 29 474-4542._______________ P R E L E A S E FOR fall Furnished e f­ ficiency $190 plus E W alk or shuttle 621 W 31st 345-6300 F A L L E F F IC IE N C IE S Quiet, shuttle cabin double bed gas heat Only $199 plus E 1805 Avenue B 453 2676. 444 1269 IR R IC IE N C V * S M A LL, quiet complex. $200 plus electricity 302 East 34th 471 7443 474 8701, Kathy find H A N D IE S T L O C A T IO N you'M Bloc k campus, quiet, cool, A BP No pets Efficiency $200 205 W 20th (opposite Dobie G arage) 453 4082 for appoint ment i A bills. Julie, 443-1511. E A S Y C O IN G room - R ESPO N S IB I I mate wanted to share large home off Shoal Creek Road 3BR, 3BA Prefer non TV. creative person Bob, 453-3049 S130 month plus utilities F E M A L E R O O M M A TE wanted Own room, older house near 37th Red River .< bills, Quiet, 2 blocks shuttle. $107, Julie, Bill, 472-3565 HOUSL M A T E (S) TO share clean fu r­ (D o v e n ish ed 3-2-2, South A u s tin s h a re S p r in g s ) $I7 5 -$1 4 5 m o n th utilities 442 6751 F E M A L E R O O M M A TE to share 2BR m obile home, $100 month N ear UT, downtown, stables 447 5663 F E M A L E V E G E T A R IA N nonsmoker ' j preferred Near Zilker Park $125, bids A vailable 9-1 80 Dana. 444 8417 after s F E M A L E G R A D to share nice home in q u ie t n o rth e a s t neighbo rh ood AC, w ashateria N ear CR shuttle P rivate garage $150 month plus ‘a utilities By appointm ent only Call Roberto. 465 5003. evenings call Carol, 928-2475 ORAL SURGERY PATIENTS S tu d e n ts in n e e d o f h a v in g th ird m o la rs (W is d o m te e th ) r e m o v ­ e d a n d w h o w o u ld b e w illin g to p a r tic ip a te in a n a n a lg a s ic d ru g S tudy a t r e d u c a d fees, p le a s e c a ll Donald R. Mehlisch, M.D., D.D.S. 451-0254 S u rg e ry c an be a rr a n g e d to be d o n e a t th e U n iv e rs ity o f Tex a s i f S t u d a n t H e a l t h S e r v i c e d e s 'r e d PHOTOS l . r PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 minuta «arvica MON.-SAT. 10-6 477-5555 THE THIRD EYE 2530 GUADALUPE Theaha, Dlaaertatlona é Profeaalonal Reporta inn/ COPYING SERVICE # 44 Dobie M all 476-9171 P R O B L E M P R EG N AN C Y COUNSELIN G. REFF RRALS & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y TES TIN G T o a s Problem Pregnancy 600 W 28th, Suite 101 M -F / 30-5 » ___________ 474-9930 ________ F R E E P R E G N A N C Y TESTS Counsebny on all pregnancy a lte r ­ b ir th c o n tr o l m e th o d s and n a tiv e s w om e n 's h e a lth concerns W a lk-m basis, M o n -F r i 9-5 Women s R eferral Center, 1800B I avaca. 476 6878 A ll re f e rra ls m ade locally. A R T 'S M O V IN G and Hauling: any area 24 hours, 7 days 447-9384 477 3249 J E N N IN G S ' M O V IN G a nd H a u lin g . large or Dependable personal service, sm all lobs 7 days week 442-7233 fo r m e n t a l ly or D A N C E C L A S S em otionally disturbed Call Donna C lift at 445-1652 E X P E R IE N C E D , C E R T IF IE D elemen ta ry for teachers seeking students p riv a te school A fte r 5, B a rb a ra 476 7991, Betsy 258 9575 TRAVEL R ID E W A N T E D to A n n A rb o r, M ic h ig a n a re a a n y tim e A fte r A ugust t5th. c a ll 475-0516 or 472-3120 (A fte r 5 p.m .) R ID E W A N T E D to New York around August 19th Call 474-9776. R ID E TO Tennessee or V irginia 9 30/80 Some gas and own food Music lover preferred 385 5501 R I D E R W A N T E D to Oregon Leaving August 20 Share usual* Roger, 472-1595 a fte r noon. SOUTH A M E R IC A N trip by van Need couple or single male free for 6 months ( N ovem ber-A p rll). Evenings, 454 0159 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION PI ANO LESSONS. All levels E xperienc­ ed, qualified teacher For information, phone 451-3549 E X P E R I E N C E D P IA N O G U IT A R te a c h e r B e g in n e rs a d v a n c e d U T degree A fter 1 p m . 459-4082 476-4407 G U IT A R LESSO NS trained experienced 451 0040 3-7 p .m .________________ _ for serious. By instructor Phil, P R IV A T E V O IC E , piano, and music instruction, study classical or theory popular m u sic, 327-6471 TUTORING F R E N C H P R O F E S S O R w i ll g iv e lessons, all levels, Parisian culture in­ cluded 478 5369 all m ath , T U T O R IN G A V A IL A B L E some physics and chem istry Get help before exam s Call Jeff 451-0571 LOST A FOUND F O U N D OR LOST a pet? Special Pals H otline c a ll 258 0408 inscribed LOST S M A LL silver band “ C a rm e n ." G reat sentim ental value R ew ard offered Call 472-2392 after 8 p m . PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e pregnancy testing and referrals 474- 9930 TYPING T Y P IN G TH ESES, dissertations, term IB M papers, reports, etc Experienced Selectric N ear Northcross M a ll 458 6465 C ALL DeAnne at 474 1563 8 5 M -F or 345- 1244. 453 0234 weekends and evenings N orm ally 1 day service P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T , economical experienced All types ot work accepted. 251 44 54 after 6 p m T A Y L O R T Y P E S ; p r o f e s s i o n a l, I day service UT delivery technical, IB M S eie c trk , carbon ribbon. 458 2649 after 5 p.m A C C U R A TE T Y P IS T experienced, fast service, IB M Selectric. 443-5060, Kim T Y P IN G , R IV E R S ID E area One day se rv ic e Ire n e 's Business Service 443- 4684 Q U A L IT Y T Y P IN G at low rates Ex c e lle n t sp e lle r g ra m m a ria n N ea r 45th and Burnet 451-7086 P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G s c r ip t s , Guaranteed Yvonne, 474-4863. m anu r e p o r ts , s t a t i s t i c a l lo ng FA ST, FA ST Professional, expenenc ed $l page, double spaced C all Bonnie. 441 6657 2323 Town Lake Circle 4 4 4 -5 0 0 3 3 9 1 4 Ave. D 4 5 3 -5 9 8 3 FOR RENT SPACIOUS M O B IL E home lots tor rent Call 385 5883 Oft 6900 block of Riverside D rive J UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS ON UT SHUTTLE • Central location off Cameron Rd. just east of IH35 • Beautiful landscaping • Pools, wet bars, cable TV and more • Huge floor plans with private patios • ABP, one and two bedrooms B R O A D M O O R A P A R T M E N T S I & II 1200 Broadmoor 4 5 4 -3 8 8 5 4 5 4 -2 5 3 7 ROOMS ROOMS LEASING FOR FALL Park Place 4306 Ave. A Furnished 454-1789 2/1...$300 plus E. Redwood North 5101 Evans Unfurnished 459-0956 Eff $169 plus E. 1/1...$195 plus E. Blackstone 2910 Red River All Bills Paid 476-5631 Furnished & Unfurnished 2/2 $410 N O W H I R I N G SCHOOL BUS M O N IT O R S Reliable women and men needed, must be a vailable 6 30 a m and or 2 00 p.m. S ta rt $3 50 hour Apply North, 5901 Guadalupe 452-5007 Central, 1315 W 5th St 474 5773 South 3300 Jones Rd., 892 2620 Nelson Field Highway 290 ( ast and Berk man, 452 00M, LBJ, 7309 La*y Creek D rive, 452-0259 E O E R esponsible and energetic person to> handle sales, consignment and some paper work in clothing store Duties In­ clude answ ering phone, hanging up clothes from dressing room and greeting customers Tuesday. Thursday, F rid ay and Saturday, 10 a m 5 p.m $3 25 hour Call 45! 6845 during the above hours. SECOND T I M E A R O U N D 3704 Craw tord p a r t - t i m e P H O T O G R A P H E R S Phototech is now accepting applications p a r t y f o r p h o to g ra p h e rs. A p p lic a n ts m u st be neat and p erso n a ble and own a 35m m SLR w ith a n o rm a l lens For in fo rm a tio n call 474 4879 11 a m 5 p m c a n d i d D ire c to r of Citizen A d vo c a cy P r o g r a m m a tc h in g volun te ers w ith m e n t a lly re ta rd e d p e r ­ include e v a lu a ­ sons. Duties tion, tr a in in g , case w o rk and g e n e ra l a d m i n i s t r a t i o n and sup e rvisio n of staff. Proposal of w r i t i n g a n d b u d g e t i n g . MSW or M a s te rs in rela ted field, 2 years experience. BA and four years experience. Salary $14,500 per ye a r Send resum e or com e by A ustin ARC, 2818 San G a b rie l. Clos­ ing date is A ugust 15. E.O .E . G R O U P H O M E C O U NSELO R The B ro w n Schools is now interview ing fo r a m ature individual to work in a com ­ munity based program which provides guid a nce and counseling to em otionally d is tu rb e d a nd m e n ta lly r e t a r d e d resid e n ts H ou rs a re fr o m 3 p .m .-11 p m Monday through F rid ay Call 478 6662 E .O .E . N E E D E X T R A CASH? W ork fu ll o r p a rt tim e - no e xp e rie n ce re q u ire d No d ress code. W a lk in g dls tance fro m ca m p u s C ontact: R iv e r C ity F ilm Service 476-9312 M O T E L N I G H T C L E R K Two personable, able bodied individuals to work from 9 p m to 7 a.m . Each w ill work three to four nights per week. E x ­ perience preferred, but we also train . Excellent for university students w o rk­ ing theu way through college Apply at Interstate 10 a m. West Winds M otel, Highway 35 at the A irport Blvd intersec­ tion, 452-2511. TYPIST 50 w p m $ 3 .5 0 /h o u r 9-5 o r 1-9 M - F 815 Brazos D ow ntow n C a ll 474-8467 P L E A S A N T S P E A K I N G V OI CE $ 4 .0 0 /h o u r 5 :3 0 -9 :3 0 M - F W il l t r a i n 815 B r a z o s D O WN TO W N c a ll 474 8467 S end q u a l if ic a t io n s S C IE N T IF IC TR A N S L A T O R S part- or full-tim e Hours flexible Good pay. All languages except F rench, G e rm a n , to S p a n is h Translators, P.O. Box 7552. Austin, T e x ­ as 78712._______________________________ , job. Flexib le 15-20 hours PART 3 I M E p er week $5.25 per hour Call between 10 a m. and 2 p.m only. 459 3440 SM A LL UT area apartm ent complex needs a m anager Respond by m ail only to A ll O ver Austin P roperties, 4314 M edical P arkw ay, No C R EA TIV E H EBR EW school teachers in H e b re w and w ¡th b a c k g ro u n d Judaica Music teacher opening, also Send resume to Agudas Achim , 4300 Bull Creek, Austin 78731. I, 78756 1 AM A haridic apped graduate interested in finding someone 1o provide part-tim e assistance with m y care and completion if you are interested, please of degree call 444 6227 or 4 7 4 - 1 3 3 3 . ________ YO U N G F A M IL Y wants responsible, to exchange room and pleasant g irl board for general household help 441- 7393 In structor PA R T TIMfc experienced dance and/or for c h ild ren 's gym nastic classes M ust have reliable transporta­ tion Good pay. Call 478-0047. 2 M E D IC A L R E A D E R S , notetaker Tor the blind $2.50 hour. C linical experience required M rs D ahl, 24 hours, 474 8541. fall H A N D Y M A N N E E D E D now for semester W illing worker on call for protects No tools, own transportation. 454 5834 477 6770 P H Y S IC A L L Y H A N D IC Á P P E D student needs part tim e assistance with daily care and housework in m orning a nd/or evening Call 474 9783 M O T E L F R O N T desk, night audit and PB X needed full- and pari tim e All shifts For appointm ent, 836 8520 C O L L E G E S T U D E N T needed for minor paint touch-up on house and yard w o rk.' Tem porary 478 5172 $5/hour for C h ris tia n W O R K E R S N E E D E D Child C are Center In Manchac a Hours 2- 6 p.m M in im u m wage C all 282-1202. W A N T E D SCHOOL bus drivers Must be dependable, have a good driving record and be c ertifia b le Short hours, good job Contact Paul pay, great student • W akefield, 327-2230. B U D G E T R E N T A CAR is now accep­ ting applications for a part tim e rental agent Weekend work Apply in person al 3330 M anor Road or phone 478-6438 AN E N E R G E T IC , responsible person is needed by a background music company to tro u b le sh o o t and m aintain c o m m e rc ia l p r iv a te ra d io system s. Must have some knowtedye of radio elec­ tronics, w iring, am p lifiers etc and have c a r F l e x i b l e s c h e d u le of 20 30 hours week Good pay and working con­ ditions Catl Don JeMison a f 472-8659 to set up a p p o in tm e n t in s ta ll, P A R T T IM E C O U N T E R a tte n d a n t carhop Hours 2 p m 6 p m M F . i a m - 12 noon Saturday No phone calls; apply in person o n ly H om e Steam Laundry and C leaners 2301 M a no r Road E X C H A N G E E F F IC IE N C Y apartm ent for housew ork and b abysittin g F a r S o u th A u s t i n T r a n s p o r t a t i o n , re fe ren ce s re q u ire d 441-3995 P A R T -T IM E . LAW student to evaluate and post c rim in a l b o il bonds No ex­ perience necessary Call 472 0125 n u r s e r y A I D E S F O R kindergarten sc ho©! near W estlake H ill*. Can 327 1530 afte* 5 p m p r i v a t e A F T E R N O O N P A R T T IM E tile c le rk / se c re ta ry 15-20 hou rs a week. Needs b a s ic o f t ic e s k ills f i l i n g , bookkeeping knowledge helpful C all L a u r ie a t 476 9569 S a la r y $3 50- $4 0 0 /hour t y p m g MISCELLANEOUS M O U N T A I N R E T R E A T & HOT S PR IN G S m p riv a te valley. Enjoy room, m eals, sw im m ing, sunbathing and exercise classes from $22 00 dally met (Massage e x t r a ) B r o c h u r e R i Q C A L IE N T E B m 1-1187 a tmnelit lance for Mu'.tular Dystrophy from 8 p.rn to 1 am Aug 24 at Silver Dollar North nati on AC WCATHER Sl»7ice *0»tCA$T to 7 P m 1ST 8 - 1 - 80 (Interesting P » 90'<í “9C * UPl WEATHER FOTOCAST ® Austin will havs periods of showors and thundsrshowsra M on­ day. A 70 percent chanca of rain will dacreasa to 30 parcant by Monday night. Tha high will ba in ths mid 80a; tha low, In tha mid 70a. Winds will ba aastarly at 10 to 15 mph. Tha sun will sat at 8:16 p.m. Monday and riaa at 8:56 a.m. Tuaaday. Nationally, thundsrshowsra ara axpactad for tha Gulf Coast and tha north and south Atlantic atataa. Elsawhara, waathar will ba gsnarally fair. B . C . on 8 - // I h a t e it when b u g s CRAWL OVER YOUR T0E5 s * 0^ —^ by Johnny hart A C RO SS 1 Veal source 5 Shouts 10 Elan 14 Adam's son 15 Harmonize 16 Inner Comb form 17 Ploy 18 Defamatory 20 Certified 22 Rio — 23 Digits 24 Fairy 25 Minister 28 Settled 32 Arab gar­ ment 33 Wyoming's Grand — 35 Stewaro 36 Divorce city 38 Obligations 40 Let fall 41 Saves 43 Some horses 45 Recent Pre fix 46 Sheerest 48 Most frigid 50 Fury 51 Man's name 52 Warning word 55 Mixing 59 Mollusk shell 2 words 61 Idea: Comb form 62 Roast 63 Cake 64 Tribe 65 Some drinks 66 Racehorse 67 Phoenician city DOWN UNITED Feature Syndicate Friday's Puzzla Solved □BCJU □□□□ □□□□□ □□□□ □□□□ u u u u u □□□□ □O UU u u u u u □□□□□□□□ u u u o u u □□□□ a u u u □□□□□a a a a u u u u u □ 3 3 3 U a a a u a h u d □□□□ □□□□□ U U D U □□□ □□□□□ a o u u u □ □ □ u u u u u a a a o u u 25 Banff and Estes 26 Red as — 1 Dear It. 2 Touch 3 That not 4 Navy units 5 Hurried 6 Leers 7 Mouthward 8 Decimal base 27 Indian 9 Marsh plants 10 Off the tracks 28 Automaton 11 Erelong 12 Button 13 Footwear 19 Mistake 21 Carbon 24 Number pre­ 30 Revelers' shouts 31 Station 34 Concise 37 Manages princess fix 29 Author Jules QQQQ QUU □□□□ □□□ 39 Whined 42 Save 44 Look at 47 Throws Out 49 Arraign 51 T ype size 52 Alt — 53 Mild oath 54 Vigil 55 Uncovered 56 Lazily 57 Close 58 Departed 60 Negative Your imtellectoal UiCXJc & ‘S cfto O O y U7W AMD YOUR FMYaCAL A M P EM O TIO N AL C r fc L E S ARE AT£*£AJNP ZBPP. VfcUR B E S T e e r yJo\KP &C.T0&O © L X T & S E P . Oddly enough, the smallest U.S. state has the longest official name: The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations. fNB 0 tMM fMerprteee TANK MFNAMARA by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinda I'M GOING TO S+lOW TMC»£ SPOI?T&WI?rrER& MOW tm eiR j o b ie>.. " rl WEU PEEP r roue fii& r columm f it &T 3 PM , STEVE FAT ALBERT is c o m in g 1 For information about advertising in Images, call 471-1865. U Fell-color copie* from 9 dr»«rio*» ot iiuuw ** w 9 t-shirt tnuwfer*! Ü §j B Complete copyiag service*: off*et prtettag, pfeotoropyiag. pester making, typesetting ¡■AM* : ‘ u fenMMM ‘ ' j I m ¡B H I lotas Union) i Copy Goiter I | Ü gill tmmrt Pito* a a fc M Opee M H y gnu* ^ Facts “ Bro u g h t To You E ve ry W e e k B y T h e U n iv e rs ity Co-Op The capital of the U.S. cam e close to being T ren­ ton, N .J. When debate started in the late 1700s on where to locate the U.S. capital permanently, most delegates originally favored Trenton. The last U.S. President to wear a mustache was W illiam Howard Taft, who was President from 1909 to 1913. The average human has about 12 pints of blood in his body. ♦ * A A A A A A A A A A Amazingly, there was once an iceberg found in the South Pa cific Ocean that was bigger than the whole country of Belgium. A A A And, here's another interesting fact.... You can get more than 100 mpg and save more than $100 on some models of top-of-the-line P U C H mopeds. They are on sale all this week at your Co-Op Bike Shop. H u rry for the best selection! V IS A M asterCharge - A , J Free \ Hr. Parking w $3 00 Purchase Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, August 11. 1980 Hurricane Allen hits South Texas Corpus Christi imposes curfew By DAVID PYNDUS Daily Texan Staff CORPUS CHRISTI — Sustained winds nearing 70 mph and torrential rain from Hurricane Alien dam aged residential areas as well as the downtown area, but there was no way to estim ate the amount of destruction in Corpus Christi Sunday night, Je n ­ nie Duran, a city information officer, said. A dam age report issued at an em ergency m eeting of the Cor­ pus Christi city council Sunday night stated the city spent $100,- 000 paying city workers overtim e, operating equipment and us­ ing fuel during the storm “ This (money) is in addition to the physical dam age the hurricane caused,” Duran said. “ Monday w e’ll be able to get a handle on a lot of it.” THE EXTENT of the physical destruction — much of which was downtown — was broken glass, dangling traffic signals, mangled lamp posts, downed power lines and structural dam age. “ We won’t be able to make any estim ates for the next couple of days,” Guy Clumpner, another information officer, said. “ We’ll have to wait until the w ater subsides.” M embers of the council also placed a one night, city-wide curfew 9 p.m. Sunday to 6 a.m . Monday to protect unsecured property. Many homes were left vacant as people evacuated the city, a Civil Defense spokesman said “ Sixty percent of the m etropolitan area left the city,” Leroy Crozier of the Coast Guard said “ It was bum per to bum per on the freeway Friday — a typical Houston environm ent.” A sim ilar curfew for Corpus Christi Beach will last through the week, unless it is lifted by the police chief earlier, Duran said Although Hurricane Allen struck the Texas coast north of Brownsville, the “ m assive size of the sto rm ” resulted in verv serious w eather conditions for the city, Clumpner said. No deaths or serious injuries, however, were reported along the coastline. THE HURRICANE raised the tide level in Corpus Christi to approxim ately nine feet — the city ’s second-highest recorded tide. The high level of w ater forced a “ serious interruption in our w ater supply," Mayor Luther Jones said early Sunday. The high tide pushed salt w ater across a b arrier into the city’s w ater system, Jones said, prompting officials to stop treating w ater already in the system so it would not become polluted “ The w ater supply has in no way been contam inated,” Jones stressed in a radio announcem ent “ This (not treating the w ater) is simply a precautionary m easure.” The m ayor also said there were no mechanical problem s with the system and it went back in full operation Sunday night after the tide retreated two feet City officials earlier had asked residents in Corpus Christi and seven surrounding areas to conserve w ater until w ater plants resumed full operation “ THE CONSERVATION m easure has been dropped,” Duran said. “ The w ater problem has been alleviated.” She said the w ater will taste salty for a few days, but it is well within the state health d ep artm ent’s requirem ents for con­ sumption The council also decided to join with Nueces County in asking Gov. Bill Clements to declare Corpus Christi a disaster area. “ We should be eligible for state and federal assistance,” Duran said, “ but I don t want to paint the picture of a disaster area — that would be a false im pression.” Four sailboats lie heeled over from hurricane winds. DPI Telephoto Storm causes less damage than expected No deaths or serious injuries reported despite high winds, rain HARLINGEN (UPI) - The lush Rio Grande Valley and neighboring M atam oros, Mexico, looked Sunday like victim s of an extrem ely bad thunderstorm , rather than a night of pounding by stalled Hurricane Allen More than 200,000 coastal cities’ residents spent Saturday night in com m unity shelters, and the rest had boarded them selves in their homes or fled inland. H urricane force winds late Saturday, which tailed off to 60 mph by daybreak Sunday, kept the populace indoors and unaw are of the lightness of the damage. “ It s a m iracle. Ju st a goddamned m iracle,” an em ergency worker blurted a t 3 a.m ., waking sleeping refugees who had sought safety at the Brownsville city hall. “ The eye of the thing has passed us and has gone in below Corpus,” the volunteer worker said. ON SUNDAY residents awoke to a chaos of downed power lines, snapped telephone poles and trees and debris of all sorts choking the streets, but surprisingly little substantial damage. Harlingen m ayor Bob Youker, who had slept only five hours in the preceding 60 hours, took a predawn tour with city m anager H arry Savio. They found a steak house with its roof lifted, a few homes battered but still habitable, tree limbs and trash intersections. E lectricity was blocking downtown restored early Sunday to m ost areas; contam inated fresh w ater supplies in Brownsville were restored after a six-hour interruption. No injuries were reported. Valley Memorial Hospital, which operated most of the night on em ergency power, reported treating a heart attack patient and the victim of a stabbing. shreds and left m ere stubs in the ground. Flooding was seen in all low-lying areas, but again the dam age to the all-im portant South Texas agriculture crop appeared minimal. UPI REPO RTER Raymundo Perez Sunday inspected South Padre, a fishing-tourist village on the southern tip of Texas which lay within 30 miles of the eye of Allen for hours Saturday, and found only light damage. South P adre Mayor Glenn McGehee urged residents not to return until at least Monday. “ We still have some flooding in the streets and we don’t want anyone to return until it is completely safe,” he said. M atam oros assistant civil defense coordinator E nri­ que Lopez G arcia said dam age was minimal. “ F or­ tunately the hurricane did not hit us, but we still had prepared well enough had it come our way,” he said. DAMAGE INVOLVED two streets, but children were playing in the w ater Sunday. Scattered stree t signs and telephone polls had been knocked down. two-foot flooding on Mexican National Guard troops w ere activiated, and were used prim arily to help m erchants clean up. Toll booths on the International Bridge were once again open, and some Mexicans who had sought shelter in the United States, bundles slung over their shoulders, returned to Matamoros. On U.S. 83 between Harlingen and McAllen, where citrus orchards lie between cotton fields and the roadway is lined by palms, winds tore palm fronds to The hurricane force winds ripped oranges and grapefruits from the citrus trees between Harlingen and McAllen. Hidalgo County Agent Doyle W arren said, “ Citrus- wise, what I ’ve seen in this area, about 20 to 30 percent of it is on the ground,” said Hidalgo County agent Doyle Warren. “ We’ll probably have wind scars on a lot of the rest of it.” Warren also said other crops in the Valley suffered damage. “ Late corn crops will be salvagable — th a t’s about all. About 30 to 50 percent of what it would have been,” he said. “ Vegetable planting has not yet begun and this weather will delay the planting some. But we should be able to get back in there if this thing blows out pretty quick within the next 10 days or two weeks.” ALONG U.S. 83 the wind tore palm fronds to shreds and left m ere stubs in the ground. Flooding was seen in all low-lying areas. At La F eria, hundreds of bales of cotton stored in trailers and on the ground where soaked by the down­ pour, ruining the fiber. In M ercedes, a few miles to the west, power lines were down and awnings were torn from downtown buildings. Worker cleans glass off Corpus Christi street. Tim Wentworth, Daily Texan Staff Waiting out the storm ... ... in Austin By MELISSA WARD Daily Texan Staff Armed with bedding, guitars, portable TVs and tales of past hurricane experiences, nearly 2,700 refugees from the Gulf Coast packed into five Austin Red Cross high school shelters over the weekend. Seventy-eight-year-old L.A. Ridgeway said he was one of the first to leave A ransas P ass Thursday night. “ I’ve been through several hurricanes and run from all of them except Celia. Never again. It tore the town to pieces,” Ridgeway said. HE AND HIS family nailed up their house and headed for LaGrange, but no m otel they passed had vacancies. They finally arrived at Reagan High School a t 2 a.m . Friday. At LBJ High School, refugees held church services Sunday. Vietnamese fam ilies from Palacios sat in a circle playing guitars and singing while Alvin teen-agers on the other side of the gymnasium shot baskets with a hom em ade ball of newspaper and tape M arie Medellin, 8. and Iris Avina, 11, both of Galveston, did cartw heels to entertain themselves. Leonard Jerue of Galveston was lying on his cot watching television. Jerue, a carpenter, said he was “ resting up,” because he expects a heavy workload when he returns to Galveston Tuesday. Most everyone agreed the shelters were unexpectedly organized When Red Cross volunteers announced that a tornado had touched down one- half m ile from LBJ at Manor Road and asked people to file out into the halls, the confusion was only tem porary. WITHIN 30 m inutes the gymnasium was evacuated and the hallways were lined with people facing the wall. Red Cross volunteers covered people’s shoulders with blankets and pillows while Civil Air Patrol workers watched the tornado outside and kept everyone posted of its loca­ tion until it passed over. Nola Cottom, a University graduate who is now a registered nurse, said there were few medical problems at the LBJ shelter where she was volunteering “ Except for the two women who had to be taken to Brackenridge to have their babies, the only problems we’ve had were caused by nerves. We had one woman break out in hives,” Cottom said. By Sunday night, many people had left the shelters. Red Cross workers said only 1,650 refugees rem ained in Austin. “ I ’m anxious to get back and see w hat’s happened,” said Ray Mendez of Gregory, a town near Corpus Christi. MENDEZ SAID he was worried even though he had boarded up his house and rearranged the furniture His house had flooded once before during H urricane Celia “ When Celia hit, we drove as far as Taft (approxim ately 30 miles north of Corpus Christi) and stayed in a little old Catholic church We watched the winds tear the roof right off of that building After that we all cram m ­ ed into one little room that was still covered Now we have three little girls — th ere’s no way we would stay through another one,” Mendez said. ... in Corpus Christi By DAVID PYNDUS Daily Texan Staff CORPUS CHRISTI — Though Hurricane Allen’s diminished force did not strike the Texas coast until shortly before dawn Sunday, fam ilies fled their homes as early as Friday afternoon to seek refuge in one of 23 em ergency shelters set up in the city. The largest of the shelters, at W.B. Ray Senior High School, housed ap­ proxim ately 1,100 people at its peak late Friday. “ Most of them cam e in Friday night around 10 p .m .,” Cande Aranda, one of the Red Cross volunteers, said Sunday. He said they had to sta rt turning away people early Saturday morning because the high school was already overcrowded. THE RED CROSS supplied sim ple nourishment through bologna sandwiches, oranges, milk and coffee. The food was handed out periodically to the refugees, who lined them selves against the long hallways on all three of the high school’s floors. Despite the crowded situation, there were only minor problem s, said Polly Lopez, shelter m anager. “ Some people brought alcoholic beverages, and they got aggravated when we told them it was not allowed,” she said. “ And no pets were allowed, so we had to tell some people to go home, leave their pets and come back.” One elderly woman was found with her dog in a stairw ay and was told to get rid of the anim al. "We called the Humane Society (to pick up the dog), but they were closed,” Lopez said. Most of the 30 volunteers, she said, were those who cam e to the school for shelter and ended up helping out. Only nine were actual Red Cross volunteers. THE HIGH SCHOOL’S clinic was used by the volunteers, two of whom were registered nurses, to treat “ mostly headaches, nosebleeds and nausea.” Lopez said Two dozen people waited in line outside the clinic Sunday morning not for aspirin, but for a cup of coffee. “ There haven’t been any accidents,” Joe Martinez, a Red Cross the “ Most people get headaches worrying about volunteer, said hurricane and not getting any sleep “ I am going home this evening come hell or high w ater,” Helen Brum ­ baugh, a refugee, said. The middle-aged woman brought only three item s to the shelter, a blanket, a pillow and her insurance papers. Brumbaugh said she was in her apartm ent when Hurricane Celia hit in August 1970 and “ the whole thing blew aw ay.” “ I THOUGHT about leaving town before Hurricane Allen h it,” she said "I have relatives in Laredo.” Ironically, the hurricane headed for that South Texas town F arther down the hall, Eugene Nagowski sat in his lounge chair smok­ ing a cigar and reading the paper. “ It doesn't m atter one way or another what happens,” the retired businessman said. “ I ’ve got insurance.” “ We re as com fortable as we can be and we’re safe,” said Nagowski’s wife Lottie Tim W entworth, Daily Texan Staff A look at Austin’s 10 best potties Kicking a Dead Horse: The Plight of the Real Urban Cowboy, by Steve Davis Out and About: Madge Malone Meets the Best Little Bachelors in Texas The Daily Texan Weekly Arts & Entertainment Magazine August 11, 1980 f T$&1§ Some recom m endations on what to do. see and buy this month You Are What You Eat Love those Famous Aimless chocolate chip cookies, the ones with the smilin' black man on the plain brown bag? But alas, the high cost of pretentiousness. Nothing is very cheap anymore. Even chocolate chip cookies are selling at outrageous prices nowadays. They go for five bucks a shot, and after one bad case of the munchies all you’re left with are crumbs and chips. Like so many products that are bought for the name on the tag, no one can tell the difference between the expen­ sive and the cheap brand once they’re out of the package — they all have that same “ brown kid with acne” look. So why not buy your very own Pillsbury chocolate chip cookie dough (about $1.50) for your next posh dinner par­ ty and have a servant (of an appropriate shade) cut up the dough for that special Famous Aimless authenticity? Just have your maid or male servant roll out the cookie dough, a knife and a tray on a sterling silver cart, and he/she can make a full-scale production out of the process. Your posh guests will be so excited to be in con­ tact with a true chef, and it will give your servants a chance to come out of the kitchen (they just love to mingle with the sophisticates). Soon cookie lovers everywhere will be groovin’ to the Famous Aim less tune. Remember, you don’t have to be Famous Aimless him self to make cookies that taste (or look) as good as his. COOKIE DOUGH BY P I L L S B U R Y / A u s t i n : Safeway, Seven-Eleven, and most frozen food sections of larger grocery stores. D al la s : Safeway, Seven-Eleven, and m ost frozen food sections of larger grocery stores. H o u s t o n : Safeway, etc. S a n A n t o n i o : m ism o tiendas. SERVANTS/Check the Yellow Pages. Greg Vimont Ralph B a w a 1 Speaker of the House Amaze and stim ulate your guests while you entertain them '!! By taking flashlights and turning them on and off you can create an exciting black light '60s effect on this sophisticatedly priced stereo turntable and speaker Squint your eyes hard enough and the speaker looks like one of those dated lava lamps Look again and the RCA mutt appears before your very’ eyes. And what psychedelic song wouldn’t sound better when emitted from this speaker0 Even if the sound quality is worse than your very first Mickey Mouse record player, the aesthetic values of this unit overwhelm your senses to the point where they can't tell the difference So crank up "Inna- Gadda-Da-Vidda,'' “Surrealistic Pillow ” or “ Satanic Ma­ jesties and enjoy. In addition, the large funnel which holds the speaker can be used as a bong. That's right — just load your favorite herbal mixture into the bowl at the end of the funnel and set the speed at 33 or 45, 33 for beginners and 45 for burn-outs, depen­ ding on what you can handle. Ligh the bowl and put your mouth at the hole where the record usually goes, and voila! —■ a killer hit which will top the chiirts for weeks to come NIRVANA VICTROLA A u s tin , D a l l a s , H o u s t o n Available at finer head shops, used record stores and flea markets. You must have proof that you are 18 or older to purchase the Nirvana Victrola — or bribe the salesman with an illicit substance. Priced inexpensive to moderate to expensive, depending on who you buy it from. Armadillo Hell! Rarely in all the years since the armadillo has served as the landmark of Austin has such im­ agination been used in creating replicas of this decidedly unattractive animal. The wooden puzzle is easy and safe for both toodlers and the overly laid-back. Hard plastic coasters are durable enough to handle beer after beer without getting soggy and crumbling before your very eyes. The candle may function as an underplayed accessory, or as an eye-catching centerpiece on any vacated table. But best of all, all three replicas can stand alone as decorative relief from an otherwise tasteful environment. AUSTINTATIOUS ARMADILLOS/ A u s t i n : At any cute gift shop around town, with un­ necessarily high mark-up. Ralph Barrera That Texas Girl It’s an attitude, it’s a lifestyle, it’s an armadillo. The perfect ensemble for that special Del Rio dog fight. Black pleated baggies that don't show dirt. You’ll wow them in W aco or Wichita. Sizes 3 to 7 only. $34. Gray catch-me-if- you-can pumps. $20 in our shoe salon. Exclusively at Flosy’s. The perfect gift for a sorority sister, or an out-of-town beau. Stuffed armadillo, $10, in our gift shop. t n o m i V g e r G COOL OFF SUMMER with a TERRIFIC HAIRCUT at P. t TPl/M h.R S K UR S I ) l./XG •S H A M P O O •CONDITION H A IR C • REDKLN .BLOW D R Y 2 /$ 1 6 ! apOZd $9 for one! offer expires 8 25 M a s te rC h a rg e & V IS A W elco m e d ftr/ lOU^EAhr. THE ORIGIN A Biographical N o ve l o f Charles Darwin by Irving Stone introduction by Allan Net ins to N atu re, lo God but draw n rra in e d twenty-two-year-old Gharles D a rw in left England in 1831 aboard H .M .S . B E A G L E and sailed lo So u th A m erica, b egin nin g a career w h ic h was to shake the ve ry fo u n d a ­ tion of m an s relationship to his world. Ir- Mng S to n e 's sweeping now novel is s«*t against a backdrop of g ru elin g sea passages, re s e a rc h , and a d em an d in g s c ie n tific to life lo n g s tru g g le ag ain st op p o sitio n D arw in s iconoclastic theor\ o f evo lu tion . the Origin is laced wi t h high adventure and in te lle c tu a l endeavor, dom estic bliss high and acad em ic c o n tro v e rs y * as Da r wi n battles the elements and the Establishm ent to w in himself a place alongside G a lile o and N ew ton \ biographical novel to rank wi t h The Agony And The Ecstasy. the scien tific pantheon. in 4% $ -4 5 4 - 3 6 7 6 V I S A & M asterC h arg e W r lr o in e free I hr. parkin g * ^ w — pu rchase pub lished by, I)o u b le d a \ $1 1.95 books S eco n d L e v e l CHARLOTTE EVANS formerly of Jerem iahs N ow Cutting Hair at: 4106 M A R A T H O N CALL 452-7566 for appt. " M r M O N D A Y N I G H T S P E C I A L ALL The Sirloin Steak & Crab Legs You Can Eat From o-10 p.m. Only*9.95 S e r v e d w ith S a l a d Bar, French Fries, Hush P uppies For THE BRANDING IRON 6 ' i m ile s post O a k Hill on H w y . 71 W est 2 6 3 -2 8 2 7 "^ T U D t K T 1>SCO O HT U J e t f e ) i O * / o 0 * F 6 * £>0 MÍ*T H ifc S IT « FAu. £vo£*ct€Rs( ^ U i ü t e - S L vu rrH y o ü * c t u o e k t \ D s * i t r r s , a n h k i i i M b c l t s , o t n r i^ c iA C ^ O o H h feMic-H SuiJerrreHS, N oSSM A M S H i RT61í €CS€S A*£> ask ABotn OOR 6^00? KiSHT ^ . Iw t e b>) D e s ic M 2100 VjJ BS*t 1KTHC JiLLAGt so4 .<-,0 4 5 1 - 0 S 1 3 Soap Creek Saloon * ★ TO NIGH T ★ ★ The Rise and Fall of the Austintatious B a r & Grill a R o c k 'n * Roll F a n ta s y 11306 N. LAMAR 835-0509 ------------*__________ SA____ d- IN C O N C E R T JACKSON $9.50, $8.50, $7.50 F rid a y , S e p t. 19 8 P M TICKETS O N SALE N O W CHARGE-A-TICKET A u stin 477-6060 San M arcos 392-2731 Tem pla 774-9176 K illeen 326-2881 p r o d u c e d b y C o n c e r t s W e s t THEkXWYnsur or 4T 4u s t OTf B S H L - SPECI4L EKENTS CENTER C.E.C. M e m b e r s : T o p - p r ic e t ic k e t s a t S 1 . 0 0 o f f a v a i l a b l e b e g i n n i n g T u e s., A u g . 2 6 , a t H o g g B o x O f f ic e . C a ll 4 7 1 - 1 4 4 4 . Cultural K B SL i E n t e r t u i n m e n t l l l l H Commit tee • M il» Today at 7:30 & 9:30 p.m. Union Theater $1.50 UT $2.00 non-UT Matinees Daily No One Under 1H Admitted late Shows Friday A Saturday Sundays Open N«»un Please Brmq I D s Reqaidless Of Aqe M A S T E R T Y P IS T , I N C . The Professional's Professional P R. s. THESES & DISSERTATIONS H A V E Y our Rough D ra ft typed for 35e a pg. w i t h d e p o sit fo r L e t t e r - p e r f e c t f i n a l $1.35 a pg ( p i c a ) B in d in g & c o p y i n g als o a v a i l a b l e D e p o s it fo r f i n a l & b i n d in g is r e q u i r e d DOBIE MALL(WhitisSt ) 4 7 2-0 2 93 (reservations) quality that stands above the rest F ilm C olleg e of Fine Arts The University of Texas / \ / * That’s Entertainment! Wrap up the sum m er’s fabulous film festival w ith this special treat for all ages—-over 75 stars in unforgettable musical vignettes Monday, August 11 at 6:30 & 9:00 pm Batts Auditorium Adm ission $1 Free to season ticke t holders 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 MANN THEATRES TH E VARSITY' 2402 G U A D A LU P E 474-4351 upstairs DOUBLE Ft A r u m N IG H T LAURIL AND HARDY IN MARCH OF TH I WOODIN «ittinc duck» 8:30 fOLDIKRS sysioto plus: f 5 Soap Creek Saloon Coming Thii Week A WED ALVIN CROW FBI ESTHERS FOLLIES 11306 N. L A M A R LEWIS * 1 THE L1CIMPS SAT ALVIN CROW 835-0509 _ p f-X p R E S I D I O T H E A T P E S ’ FUmGOCU * 1 1 M aDLC to JHaKC TM lAttMAtC CXKNCMCC ◦TOCMGMOC z a in id m 12 45 3 05 5 2S 7 55 10 15 n nrmm C u t mrrniMtifi h L A i r r n . i i i H T ow 1V1IAM M AMM DOLBY STEREO l? 0 o 2 JO 5 00 7 35 10 iQ DOUBLE FEATURE 1.00 3:15 5:30 7:45 10:00 VILLAGE A 2700 A N D E R S O N • 431 -§352 K t& U & E r C U T Bl HI REYNOLDS 1 00 3:15 5 30 7 45 10 00 ro e TMC HK5T T M ÍH.MGCXXS * 1 1 0C AMI TO M A M r m ímtimat* cxk n c m c c Of « *<> MVOC ne w k n toma» r i O S E E N C O U N T G P S 1 Y 1 [ D O L B Y ST E R E O | 12 00 2 30 5 00 7 35 10 10 HERBIE S BACK! MMTJl.or. . I . A W T F I .1 I 1 H 1 c n r r u o / i H « V K H <> . A»* - 2 35 6 10-9 «5 101 - ! 00 4 35 * 10 ■■ i g e a i M* f i f i *'*' B A S A S iS . L A K E H I L L S 242S BIN WHITE «444-0552 l U y U f f l BRIAN DePALMA S to do to System whaf me System s frwn "f* «»N to JANE CURTIN HOW TO M AT ’ THi HKHOOcr Of LMMC — 1 r 1 00-3:15 5:30 7 45 9 55 RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5409 2 044 00 6 oo a ooio oo REDUCED PRICES UNTIL 6 00 MON THRU FRI “A movie that can proudly take its place in the great tradition of American war dramas.” R £ B £ L D r iv e - In 6902 Burleson Road New Cine-fi Sound System XXX Original Uncut 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto Note Theatre sound operates through your car radio If your car has no radio, bring a portable One Last Score D i r t y W\arq OPENS 8 STARTS DUSK kAÍS IN TNI | CALL THE HOT UNE 471-5244 IIO B IE | SCREENS $1.50 FIRST M A T * » SHOWING ONLY CAPITAL PLAZA 453-7546 I H 35 NORTH II1 1 / ■ I j U I i H i— WILLIE NELSON OYAN CANNON N \ I 00 3 15 5 30-7 45-10 00 HIGHLAND MALL IH 35 AT KOEMG IN. 451-7326 J o h n B f l u t h i D a n A y k r o y d THE BLUES BROTHERS (R) II 00-2 30-4 55 7 35-9 50 Chech a n d Chong's NEXT M O VIE" («! 12 00-2 00 4 00 6 00-8 00 10 00 G E N E R A L C I N E M A t h e a t r e s REDUCED ADULT ADMISSION— First Show Each d ay LIMITED TO SEATING CAPACITY— Daily Times May Vary presents ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 V 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ -£ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER Truffaut's classic gangster homage. Tues. — 7 & 9 p.m. BURDINE AUD. COCKFIGHTER W a rren Oates, N ew World Pictures, Fighting Cocks Wed. — 7 & 9 p.m. BURDINE AUD. JEREMIAH JOHNSON ROBERT REDFORD, Will Geer Thors. — 7 & 9 p.m. BURDINE AUD. /AMUfl FV/tURX " the BIG NED ONI PC , LEE M A R V IN MARK H A M Ill 5:30-7:40 9:50 T " FE A T U R E S : S1.50 til 6:00. $2.00 after M ID N IG H T E R S : $1.50 BO DEREK DUDLEY MOORE JULIE ANDREWS 5:40 7:45-9:55 _L TH E B IG RED O N E m uggy, m eandering m ovies." "A blast of clean air in a t u m m ^ o f DAV ID ANS EN NEWSWEEK I ................. ................ ---------------------------- -------- DIVINE $ £ « « -ss® I B from the novel by K U R T V O N N E G U T , JR . 1 S L A U G H T E R H O U S E 1 F'vc I MICHAEL SACKS ,md p j t i 1 VALER IE PERRINE [ - k A i My P%nm IhM from ten* to tona to tone 1 \ IVmsMiKslly editor clare hagerty guest associate editor victoria barnaart assistant editors lody denberg alex plaza top top production consultant photo contributors ralph barrera brad doherty production executives nik-nik barbaro sarah whistler authenticity consultant steve davis managing makeup artists nik-nik barbaro kelly cash artistic consultant gilíes chabannes King and Scoflie Bowles Cove» photo by Greg Virnont f dlowmg store contributors The Saddle Shop, University Co-Op, dean, an j By Seorge in Dobie Man to > KJed fhi h Wea PROTECT Y O U R S E L F WITH THE " P A R A L Y Z E R " Easy to carry Use pocket clip or with handy key ring Fast, simple, easy to use. Causes no permanent injury to assailant Non Flammable and Non-Lethal 5 (Five) Vear Guarantee. C A L L T O D A Y ! A S K F O R P A R A L Y Z E R 4 5 4 2 2 7 5 J a i m e ’s Spanish Village B e s t M e x ic a n Food in A u s t i n BREAKFAST FROM 7 AM LUNCH AND DINNER 10% OFF TOTAL MEAL WITH COUPON AND UT ID J a i m e ' s S p a n is h Village 802 Red River Reservations: 4 7 6 - 5 1 4 9 U nder N e w M a n a g e m e n t Parking tn rear of restaurant Get *1.00 Off reg price plus tax o n M o n d a y W edn es d a y , Thursday a n d S a t u r d a y ( wi t h coupon) E x p i r e s A u g u s t 1 6 11 a.m.-10 p.m. r«f fKKt Deluxe D in n e r ...................... *4 .4 0 CM » c**t Otseee T o n Tamal* CM», fm tM arfa I h i m w V * « • »»>**i our Quot o m o it Satod Too or CoHoo t D h w I 9 N um ber 1 Dinner ............... *3.95 G u o to m o b Sotad t o n fn c M M o i M w i i W l i n , t o m o b o r C hib coo Ouooo Too or C t b o t and O ottott Regular Dinner .................... *3 .6 0 toro fn th d o d o Sito. C h ib too Q uota or to m o b Soar,, C hib Too or Co H ot a n d Ootooti C om bination D in n e r t m hilada Chito S o o n t a n d t