xi 'svnva d o e£ v 9Cfretr x o a y 3 1 N 3 D W l I d O H D I k iIE Da iiy Texan Vol. 81, No. 124 (USPS 146-440) S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t T h e U n i v e r s i t y of Tex as a t A u s t i n F rid a y,A p ril2,1982 Twenty-Five High court rejects congresssional redistricting By TINA ROMERO Daily Texan Staff The U.S. Suprem e Court put the schedule for the May 1 state party prim ary in limbo Thursday by overturning T exas' court-ordered congression­ al red istricting plan, saying the lower federal court did not have the authority to a lter congres­ sional d istricts for D allas County. However, the Suprem e Court left it up to the lower court to decide how to proceed with the May 1 prim ary. In an unsigned opinion, the high court said the federal three-judge panel was wrong to redraw Dallas County d istricts because the U.S. D epart­ ment of Ju s tic e did not o b ject to those d istricts. The court also said the d istricts should have re ­ mained as drawn by the state Legislature. On Ja n . 29 the Ju stice D epartm ent, acting un­ der the p reclearan ce review required by the 1965 Voting R ights Act, rejected the congressional red istricting plan because the plan diluted the voting strength of m inorities in two South T exas d istricts. The federal panel — composed of U.S. D istrict Ju d ges W illiam Wayne Ju s tic e and R obert P a r­ ker and U .S Circuit Court Judge Sam Johnson — modified the L eg isla tu re ^ congressional plan by redrawing boundaries for four D allas County dis­ tricts in addition to South Texas d istricts 15 and 27. “ In absence of a finding that the D allas appor­ tionment plan offended either the Constitution or the Voting Rights Act, the d istrict court was not free, and certainly was not required, to disregard the political program of the Texas State L egisla­ tu re ,” said the court. The ju stice s noted that changing the d istricts in D allas County so close to the May 1 prim ary could cause p ractical problem s that could force the panel to enact the erroneous court-ordered plan. However, the court said, "Having indicated the legal error of the d istrict court, we leave it to that court ... to determ ine whether to modify its judgm ent and reschedule the prim ary elections for D allas and T arran t counties or, ... to allow the election to go forward in accordance with the present sch ed u le.'’ Chet Upham, state Republican P a rty ch a ir­ man, said the panel was ordered by the court to m eet either Saturday or Monday to resolve the situation. The Texas Republican P arty appealed the fed­ eral court-ordered plan in early M arch, contend­ ing that the lower court lacked the authority to change the D allas d istricts and that m inorities would be b etter represented if they could e le ct a m em ber of their own race rath er than be split into two d istricts represented by lib eral, white D em ocrats. Republican Gov Bill Clements said, “ I am de­ lighted with the decision The Suprem e Court has vindicated my position — that m inorities (in the four D allas-area d istricts) should be able to elect one of their own to Congress.'' Under the L eg islatu re’s congressional plan, Republicans stand to gain one or two congression­ al seats. To prevent a delay of the May I prim ary, Up­ ham said he expected the panel to rein state the congressional plans for D allas County as they were drawn by the Legislature Upham also said if the court took this action, it would have to re­ open the March 12 filing deadline for at least one day to allow candidates to file in their proper Reagan takes early physical to check ‘urinary discomfort’ WASHINGTON (U P I) - President Reagan underwent tests for urinary discom fort Thursday and em erged from Bethesda Naval Hospital with a clean bill of health, grinning and hungry for a tuna fish sandwich. “ Everything is perfectly normal and fin e,” Reagan told reporters as he crossed the South Lawn on his return to the White House. “ There are no prob­ lem s.” to The president said he decided move up his regular physical exam ina­ tion because of “ the slight discom fort that followed one of those fly-around- the-country trips that I was doing a few weeks ago. “ It was ju st a few days of discom ­ fort, so we took advantage of it, had the exam ination and everything is perfectly norm al,” Reagan said. He also said he is taking “ no m edicine of any kind.” W hite House spokesm an L a rry Speakes issued a statem ent saying the president underwent a “ routine urologi­ cal exam ination” lasting 90 minutes, “ the results of all tests were norm al” and “ no further medical treatm ent is required.” “ There was no evidence of a m alig­ nancy and no further evaluation is an­ ticip ated ,” Speakes said. Speakes said when the problem flared up several weeks ago, Reagan was giv­ en antibiotics to counter what the pre­ lim inary diagnosis found to be an “ in­ flam m ation of the urinary tr a c t.” “ A fter a few days, the symptoms w ere no longer evident and have not re ­ cu rred ,” Speakes said. He said the tests included a urine cul­ ture, urine cytology, intravenous pyel­ ography, and cysto-urethroscopic ex ­ am ination. In laym an’s term s, these are an exam ination for a possible infec­ tion of the urinary tra ct, a kidney x-ray, an evaluation of the cellular makeup of the urinary tra ct and an exam ination of the bladder. The president, who was given local anesthesia before the exam ination, told reporters it was “ not very painful” and, “ I feel g re a t.” Reagan devoured a tuna fish sand­ wich on the b rief helicopter ride back to the White House, Speakes said. Knowing that the president was re ­ quired to fa st before the tests and would be ravenous by the tim e he left the hos­ pital late afternoon, White House physician Daniel Ruge had the sand­ wich squirreled away in his briefcase. in Ruge participated in the exam ination along with Capt. John P . Sm ith, ch air­ man of the D epartm ent of Radiology. Reagan, who spent a total of 2 hours and 35 m inutes at the hospital in subur­ ban Maryland, also was accom panied by deputy chief of staff M ichael D eaver and Speakes. Reagan, who appeared in vigorous health at his nationally broadcast news conference Wednesday night, canceled a lunch with V ice P resid ent George Busii and his afternoon appointments to fly to the hospital. But he went directly to he Oval O ffice on his return to the White House, say­ ing: “ I ’ve got to go back to w ork.” Despite the operation, first lady Nan­ cy R eagan did not cancel a trip to At­ lanta to tour a drug treatm ent facility. Reagan, 71, underwent surgery in 1967 to remove calcium deposits from his urinary tract. He said his doctor told him it might be well to ch e ck .” then “ that periodically Dr. H.C. M iller, chairm an of the urol­ ogy departm ent at George Washington University M edical Center, said that procedure is so common that “ if you walked down the s tre et and talked to 100 men his age, you would probably find out they had the sam e thing.” The president, wearing a blue check business suit, boarded his M arine One helicopter and flew about 10 m iles to the hospital. He waved and made the thumbs up sign as he strode from the chopper to the hospital, and was grin­ ning broady when he em erged. Speakes disclosed that Reagan would go to the hospital at his regular m orn­ ing briefing Speakes said the exam ination had been delayed until now so that Dr. B u r­ ton Sm ith of Los Angeles, R eagan’s per­ sonal physician, could com e to Wash­ ington to act as a consultant. Smith was R eag an ’s attending physi­ cian 15 years ago when Reagan, then governor of C alifornia, underwent the surgery on his urinary tract. Speakes said R eagan plans to leave, as scheduled, next Wednesday on his trip to Ja m a ic a and Barbados, and to inaugurate his weekly five-minute radio broadcasts at 12:05 p.m. E S T Saturday. E a rlie r in the week, Ruge said R e a ­ gan was in “ good condition, absolute­ ly .” When Reagan was last at the hospital Oct. 29-30 for his annual physical exam ­ ination, he was said to be in “ excellent health.” Bad check writers arrested New program to discourage offenders By SCOTT WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff Travis County sh eriff’s deputies be­ gan arresting hot check w riters Thurs­ day night as part of a new program de­ signed to discourage county residents from future theft by check. County Attorney M argaret Moore said the 12 deputies dispatched through­ out the county would begin serving 300 w arrants against hot check w riters in an effort to reduce the number of out­ standing w arrants. Moore said the w arrants were chosen randomly from the m ore than 3,000 is­ sued by her office each month. The program is designed by the Na­ tional Correctional Training Institute which has had success with it in other parts of the United States Moore said because the institute had “an im pressive track record ” she de­ cided to try it. Moore said the arrests were the last step in the program and that persons named in the w arrants had been given a 30-day notice that they would be a rre s t­ ed unless they paid the outstanding checks. Those arrested were brought to the Travis County Courthouse where they appeared im m ediately before County Court Judge Jo n W isser. W isser d eter­ mined whether a defendant should be released on personal bond or jailed . All cases were then put on regular court dockets. While the average amount for each warrant served was $42. one alleged of­ in for a $15 hot fender was hauled check. Deputies began the round-up at 5:30 p.m. but by 8 p.m. only six people had been arrested . However, L arry Loyd, a representa­ tive of the institute, said that arre st w arrants w ere difficult to serve. “ You may go out on 30 w arrants and find two at hom e,” he said. “ W e’ll probably have a lot of people coming in tom or­ row on those ca rd s.” The cards were placed at the homes of those not at home when deputies a r ­ rived. The cards said: “ I have been a s ­ signed your area and have a w arrant for your a rre st. I will retain the w arrant and continue to com e to your place of residence and/or business to serve i t ... To avoid being arrested , booked and having to post bail, you should im m edi­ ately respond to the Travis County Hot Check Division and pay off your bad checks and fin e s.” Moore said she and Sheriff Doyne Bailey had discussed trying the aggres­ sive hot-check w riter round-up again. “ We have discussed doing it again on a regular basis — m aybe not with this many deputies — but we do intend to do it ag ain,” she said. Moore said the plan was designed to scare Travis County citizens with out­ standing w arrants into voluntarily pay­ ing up. “ If we get a good response then we won’t have to do this ag ain ,” she said. “ But we do intend to continue serving w arran ts.” Sigma Nu member Joe Foster dodges a left hook delivered by Craig Carlton. Joni Barnoff, Daily Texan Staff Fight Night brings blood and muscle into fraternity ring ‘This is their best night y et,' said referee Craig Gatewood. 'They look better every year. There was no broken bones, no cuts. They w ere closely watched. T here’s m aybe 1,000 rounds o f experi­ enced refereeing up there. ’ Joni Barnoff, Daily Texan Staff Carlton gets pointers from A.B. Cantu. By STEVE VINSON Daily Texan Staff seventh Wap! Pow! B am ! Zowie! Slap! annual Sigm a C h i’s “ Fight Night’’ went off like a B at­ man rerun Thursday night, except instead of colorful cartoon balloons flashing across the TV screen, there flying was real blood and sweat around the ring. Eighteen pairs of am ateur fight­ ers, m ostly fraternity m em bers, went at it before a packed house in though most City Coliseum, and bouts lacked the first sem blance of a rt and finesse, the crowd loved eve­ ry minute, as leath er slapped face and body thudded to floor. “ This is their best night y e t,” said referee Craig Gatewood. “ They look better every year. There w ere no broken bones, no cuts. They were closely watched. T h ere’s maybe a 1.000 rounds of experienced refe re e ­ ing up th ere,” he said, referring to him self and two other refs who a lte r­ nated watching the fights. The pugilists fought for charity — the Austin-area Golden Gloves, the W allace Village Home for Children and the Pan Am erican R ecreation Center. They m et in three one-min­ ute rounds, and m ost fights w ere de­ three cided a fter going full the rounds. In the course of the night’s actions there were four knockouts and two technical knockouts (when the fighter was still conscious but too weak to go on fighting). O fficials stopped one bout when a fighter re­ peatedly turned his back to his oppo­ nent. F o r sheer excitem ent, the best of the bouts probably was the fourth, as Jo e F o ster of Sigma Nu and Craig Carlton of Sigma Chi squared off. The two men — both of them bleed­ ing — provided perhaps the most evenly m atched battle of the eve­ ning, as well as the most colorful (See FIG H T, Page 5.) Three fraternities quit Fight Night because of anti-Semitic ad By JIM HANKINS Daily Texan Staff One day a fte r withdrawing from the fraternity-sponsored Fight Night, m em bers of the three UT Jew ish fratern ities woke up to find allegedly anti-Sem itic advertisem ents for the annual contest scattered around their residence halls. Sigm a Alpha Mu, Zeta B eta Tau and Alpha Epsilon Pi with­ drew their fighters from the Sigm a Chi charity fund-raiser Wednesday a fte r the advertisem ent appeared in the Fight Night program. The seventh annual Fight Night, in which the am ateur boxers battle in 12 weight classes, was held Thursday night as part of the annual Round-Up week activities. The ad includes a photo of Alpha Tau Omega m em ber Clark McNaught. with drawings of a yarm ulke on his head and a noose around his neck. Also printed in the ad is a star of David with a dollar sign in the center, and the m essage “ Rabbi David Tightwad McNaught, Tem ple of the Closed Purse — P .S. I got this ad wholesale . .. ” Chris B ell, president of the In terfraternity Council, said rep­ resentatives of Jew ish fratern ities and sororities m et with Sig­ ma Chi Wednesday to express their disapproval of the ad. As a result of that m eeting. Sigm a Chi chose to tear the page with the ad from all 3,000 copies of the program . B ell, a broad­ cast journalism senior, said an unidentified person removed the ads from trash bins at the Sigm a Chi house and scattered them in the yards of the SAM and A E P i houses. Bell said the ad was placed by a fratern ity m em ber, but he would not identify the person or the fraternity. “ He is a m em ber of a fraternity, and they are not allowing him to participate in any Round-Up a ctiv ity ,” he said. But the student whose picture appears in the ad said it was not submitted by a fraternity m em ber. McNaught, a business senior, said the ad was a practical “ At one point he tried to get into the (ATO) fra tern ity ,” McNaught said. “ M yself and some other people were instru­ mental in keeping him out. This is the only cheap shot he can get in against me. It was not intended as an insult to anybody in the Jew ish com m unity.” Mike Weinstein, a freshm an 146-pounder who was going to fight for SAM, said some of the ads also w ere dumped in the lobby of the Goodall-Wooten dorm itory on Guadalupe Street. Weinstein said he does not think Sigm a Chi is an anti-Sem itic group. “ I live with some of the Sigma Chis in this dorm (Goodall- Wooten). T hey're nice guys, he said. “ I t ’s ju st a m istake they made. The ad shouldn't have been run. I t’s ju st something they thought would be funny.” W’einstein said about 100 copies of the advertisem ent torn from the brochure were scattered in the Goodall-Wooten lobby Thursday. against Sigma Chi at this tim e because the fraternity has com ­ plied with the objection of the Jew ish groups. But, he said the IFC investigation of the incident will continue after Round-Up week ends. Bell said the person who submitted the ad has w ritten a letter of apology to each Jew ish fraternity and sorority and that the Jew ish groups are “ not out for revenge.” “ I t ’s very upsetting that this sort of thing has to happen,” said B ell. “ We (the Greek com m unity) don't tolerate any anti- Sem itic a ctio n .” M ichael Skolnick. president of A E P i and a liberal arts jun­ ior, refused to com m ent on the incident except to say he sup­ ports the IFC action and is “ satisfied that the fraternities, through the IFC , are taking the appropriate steps to c le a r up the m a tte r.” The presidents of ZBT and SAM could not be reached for joke by a person who holds a grudge against him. Bell said the IFC is not planning to take any punitive action com m ent. . MoPac vote Saturday. Polling locations, Page 5. THe Da il y T e x a n P E R M A N E N T S T A F F Around Campus Page 2 □ T H E D A IL Y TEXAN □ Friday, April 2, 1982 PASSOVER SEDERS Wed. night April 7 Thurs. night April 8 at 7:45 p.m . P le a s e m ak e re se rv a tio n s by April 5, M onday M eal plans a v ailab le for e n tire holiday. S e m in a rs on P a sso v er: L earn how to m ak e the Seder Wed. Mar. 31 6:30 p.m. Thu. Apr. 1 6:30 p.m. I " I ■ I Chabad House Lubavitch ■ Jewish Student I Center at U.T H 2101 Nueces ^ 472-3900 DRIVEWAY TUNE UPS Ail CARS S pecializin g in Japanese, B ritish and all A m erican m odels 4 & 6 cylinder........................ $ 1 5 p lu s parts* 8 cylinder.................................... $ 2 0 Plus parts* Valves adjustm ent..........................$10 Free E stim ates on oth er repair R o b e rt's R o llin g R e p a ir *P a rt• cost m a y vary from $10-15 477-0949 for appoint moni Once More With Feeling s ---------- PRICES A R C % CCn/NG DCUtt Going- Out- of- Business S A L E * 11-6 WED, SATf MON Huge Reductions 1 7 t h & San Antonio OPERATION IDENTIFICATION Engrave your d riv e r's license num ber on all valuables in order to fa c ilita te return to you if stolen and recovered. Engravers can be signed out fro m UT Police. “ Operation Id e n tific a tio n ". Call 471-4441. AUSTIN BURGER WORKS When was the last time you ate a Ham ­ burger, a small order of Fries, and drank a Medium Drink and then paid only E d i t o r ................................... John Schwartz M ark D o o ley M an agin g E d ito r . Jay . A s s o c ia te M an agin g E d ito r s . H a m lin , D a v id T e e c e . . . . . A s s is ta n ts to th e E d ito r W illiam . B ooth , M ic h a e l G odw in . . N e w s E d ito r J en n ifer Bird N e w s A s s ig n m e n ts E d i t o r ...................Jodi H ooker G en er a l R e p o r te r s . T in a R om ero, John E h lin g e r , D ou g M cL eod , Mark S tu ti, D avid W oodruff F e a t u r e s E d ito r S ports E d i t o r .....................R o g er C am p b ell D ian a M oore A s s o c ia te S p o r ts E d i t o r ....................D avid M cN ab b S en ior S p o r t s w r it e r s ..............................S te v e C a m p b e l l , C h a r l i e M c C o y , S u s i e Wood h a m s E n te r ta in m e n t E d i t o r .........................Cindy W ldner A s s o c ia te E n te r ta in m e n t E d i t o r ..................................... Ch ris Jord an Susan A llen-C arap . R ich ard S tein b e rg . C .R . Frin k P a m e la P h oto E d ito r Im a g e s E d ito r . A s s o c ia t e I m a g e s E d itor . A s s is ta n t I m a g e s E d ito r . . . . . . . . . M cA lpin G ra p h ic s E d i t o r ............................A lex P la za IS SU E S T A F F M ike B a rb ee A s s o c ia te N e w s E d itor S p o r ts A s s is ta n ts N e w s A s s is ta n ts N e w s w r ite r s K ath y S ch w iff, M eg B rook s B rian S ip p le, M ake-up E d ito r W ire E d i t o r . . C opy E d ito r s S co tt W illia m s . C a r m e n H ill, Jim H a n k in s, S te v e V inson E d ito r ia l A s s is ta n t E n te r ta in m e n t A s s is ta n t S p orts M ake-up E d ito r M att W eitz L eonard G o jer G eo r g e V on dracek A r tis ts . . P h o to g r a p h e r s . T im S r a lla , R an dy B ow m an A lex P la z a A ndy N e im a n C aroly n M ays, K ath y B row n M ike F r y , S am H urt J o n i B arn off, S u san AH en-C am p T E X A N A D V E R T IS IN G S T A F F S c o tt B e n e tt. C a lise B u r o h e tte Doug C a m p b ell. J o e l C a r ter . K im ie C u nn ingh am , C in dy F ile r . C a th y G id d in g s. C lau dia G r a v e s. C h eryl L u e d e ck e. M arian n e N ew ton . K en G r a y s J a v Zorn T h e D a ily T ex a n , a stu d e n t n ew sp a p e r a t T h e U n iv e r s ity o f T e x a s a t A u stin, is p u b lish ed by T e x a s S tu d e n t P u b lic a tio n s , D r a w e r D. U n iv e r s ity S tation . A ustin. TX 78712-7209 T he D a ily T ex a n is p u b lish ed M on d ay, T u e sd a y . W ed n esd a y . T h u rsd ay and F r id a y , e x c e p t h o lid a y an d e x a m p eriod s S econ d c l a s s p o s ta g e paid a t A u stin . TX 78710 N e w s c o n tr ib u tio n s w ill b e a c c e p te d by te le p h o n e (471-45911, a t the e d ito r ia l o ff ic e (T e x a s S tu dent P u b lic a tio n s B u ild in g 2 122) or a t th e n e w s la b o r a to ry (C o m m u n ic a ­ tion B uildin g A4 136> I n q u iries co n c e r n in g d e liv e r y an d c la s s ifie d a d v e r tis in g should b e m a d e in T S P B u ild in g 3 200 (471-5244 * T he n ation al a d v e r tis in g r e p r e s e n ta tiv e o f T h e D a ily T ex a n is C o m m u n ica tio n s and A d v er tisin g S e r v ic e s to S tu d e n ts. 1633 W est C e n tra l S tr e e t, E v a n sto n . Illin o is 60201. phon e (800 1 323 4044 toll fr e e T he D a ily T ex a n s u b s c r ib e s to U n ited P r e s s I n ter n a tio n a l and N e w Y ork T im e s N e w s S e r v ic e T h e T ex a n is a m e m b e r of th e A s s o c ia te d C o lle g ia te P r e s s , th e S ou th ­ th e T e x a s D a ily N e w s p a p e r A ss o c ia tio n and A m erica n w e s t J o u rn a lism C o n g re ss N e w s p a p e r P u b lis h e r s A s s o c ia tio n C op yrigh t 1982 T e x a s S tu d en t P u b lica tio n s T H E D A IL Y T E X A N S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S . O ne S e m e s te r ( F a ll o r S p r in g i . T w o S e m e s te r s ( F a ll an d S p rin g I S u m m e r S e s s io n . O ne Y e a r (F a ll. S p rin g an d S u m m e r ) ....................................................................... ..................................................... ................... . . . . . . . . . $20 00 40 00 13.00 50 00 Send o r d e r s and a d d r e s s c h a n g e s to T e x a s S tu d en t P u b lic a tio n s . P O. B ox D . Aus- P U B NO.146440 Iin TX 78712-7209. o r to T S P B u ild in g C3 200 Immigration Law Im m ig ratio n law s and regulations have becom e m ore com plex than e v e r before and the end is not in sight. The re le ase of the final R eport of the Select C om m ission on Im m igration and R efugee Policy and the p re ssu re within the C ongress for im m igration re fo rm will undoubtedly lead to fu rth e r change. At the sa m e tim e, the public is c o n stan tly confronted with so phisticated problem s involving foreign investors, m ulti-national c o rp o ratio n s tra n sfe rrin g personnel to the U nited S tates, and fam ily relationships. JONES & BENNETT P rofession al Im m igration R ep resen ta tiv es 208 W e s tg a te B ldg 1122 C o lo ra d o A u st.n , T X 78701 A tto r n e y s -a t-la w F r e e C o n su lta tio n P h 512-476-0672 CELEBRATION 82 A TIME OF CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP & SHARING Sponsored by Hyde Park Student Ministries APRIL 5-7 Professor to lecture on God Middle East seminar slated Arguments for the existence of God will be discussed in a lecture at 3 p.m. F riday in Graduate School of Business Build­ ing 1.1218. Changes in Middle E astern languages will be discussed in a brown-bag sem inar at noon Friday in the G overnor’s Room of the Texas Union Building. Malcolm Scholfield, professor of classics a t the University of Cambridge, will talk on “ Arguing About God: The Case of Zeno the Stoic.” The sem inar, sponsored by the Center for Middle E astern Studies, is the fifth sem inar in a series on Middle E astern life, a Middle E astern Studies secretary said. The lecture is sponsored by the Classics-Philosophy Program in Ancient Philosophy and the University Public Lectures Com­ mittee. Parents Day begins Monday Parents of business students will get a chance to taste col­ lege life at “ P a re n t’s Day” from 8:30 a.m . to noon Monday in Business-Economics Building 150. P arents and students will be able to m eet the deans and professors in the College of Business Administration while a t­ tending mock classes, said Mitch Kreindler, program director. Student awards and scholarships will also be announced as well as CBA aw ards for outstanding professor, teaching assist­ ant and instructor. Eight to take council offices Eight business students will take office April 21 on the Col­ lege of Business Administration Council as the result of a coun­ cil election Wednesday. Next y ear's president is Mitch Kreindler, sophomore, and vice president is Mark Koutz, junior. The six elected directors are: sophomore Rob Griffith, spe­ cial program director; junior Joe Maresh, career program di­ rector; sophomore Mary Beth Bradshaw, promotional direc­ tor; junior Debbie Wise, financial director; junior Donnie Trednick, academ ic director; and junior Elisa Kuntz. adminis­ trative director. 99* PIZZA Buy o n e pizza, get the next sm aller size for 99* Buy any giant, large or medium size Original Thin Crust or Sicilian Topper pizza and get the next sm aller sam e style pizza with equal number of toppings, for 99*. Present this coupon with guest check. Not valid with any other offer. Expiration Date: 4-12-82 Pizza inn 2.00 1.50 OFF 1 . 0 0 Buy any Original Thin Crust or Sicilian Topper pizza, and get $2.00 off a giant, $1.50 off a large or $1.00 off a medium size pizza. Present this coupon with guest check. Not valid with any other offer. Expiration Date: 4-12-82 m..... R z z a i n n i ^ H ■■■■■■■■■■■ana 3000 DUVAL 477-6751 1.99 H ow about today? M O NDAY. APRIL 5 WELCH 2.224 Special Speaker: ROBERT BREWER-QUARTERBACK UT LONGHORNS Special Speaker: JOE SHEARIN-ALL SOUTHWEST CONFERENCE GUARD, UT LONGHORNS i f e also s e r v e c h i c k e n , b u rg e r s, anil c h i c k e n f r i e d s t e a k , a m o n g o t h e r th in gs, tt e s e r v e g o o d f o o d 2 1 h o u r s a r o u n d t h e clock, a n d i f s o u u a n t . yo u ca n g e l it t o go. I f yo u sta y , yo u can plas o n o u r l i d e o G a m e s u n t i l s o u r f o o d s re a d s , o r n a t c h o u r larg e < o l o r 7.1. S t o p o n in, f o r $ 1 . 9 9 , you can I g o wrong. 300 W. MLK 478-9299 W ILD S A L E ! Special Speaker: DANA AMIS-PRESIDENT, TRI DELTA SORORITY Tu e s d a y 'A pril 6 BURDINE 106 7 :3 0 P.M. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7 WELCH 2.224 Special Speaker: DR. BILL G UY-O NE OF UTMOST'S TOP 20 PROFESSORS 7 :3 0 P.M. 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EVERYO NE WELCOME F 2406 Guadalupe • O N-THE-DRAG Friday, April 2, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN Reagan misleading Americans, O’Neill says saying, “ If the elevator's going up and you want to go down, you have to stop the elevator first." He said Reagan ignores the qualitative edge America holds in overall nuclear weaponry and fails to realize "W e have to stop the (arms) race before we de-escalate the (human) race." The question of how and when to stop the arms race dominated the reaction to Reagan’s first prime­ time news conference and fueled a rapidly escalat­ ing debate over nuclear weapons. Kennedy said on is enough where nuclear arms are concerned. And in a later news conference with Hatfield, he said: that "enough “ Today" "The president said in effect that we have to build more nuclear bombs in order to reduce the number of nuclear bombs. This is voodoo arms control, which says you must have more to have less." WASHINGTON (U P I) — House Speaker Thomas O'Neill accused President Reagan Thursday of trying to mislead the American public with inaccu­ rate statements during his nationally broadcast press conference Wednesday. “ Last night. President Reagan tried to overcome the growing public feeling that the administration is unfair," O'Neill said in an unusual speech in the House. ‘‘Unfortunately, the president's defense of his pro­ gram was not only misleading, but in several cases, completely inaccurate." And the speaker told reporters later, "H e left a totally misleading impression last night." But all his anger was not focused on Reagan. The speaker directed cutting remarks to Republi­ can congressmen who spent the morning complain­ ing that the House is ignoring its duty on appropria­ tions bills and the budget in its rush to go home for an Easter recess. Junta leader turns down military aid G U ATEM ALA C ITY (U P I) - In an unexpected turnabout, the head of Gua­ temala’s new military junta said in an interview published Thursday that he would seek better relations with Cuba and Nicaragua and did not want U.S. military aid. In telephone calls to local newspa­ pers, the Guerrilla Army of the Poor, Guatemala’s largest guerrilla group, claimed reponsbility for Wednesday’s machine gun and rocket attack on the U.S. Embassy. The attack caused no injuries and only minor damage. The group said it was in retaliation for "the recognition the United States has given to the gov­ ernment junta of Guatemala.” Gen. Jose Efrain Rios Montt, presi­ dent of the junta that came to power in a coup nine days ago, was quoted by the Mexican newspaper E x c e l s i o r as say­ ing he would seek "political and social” assistance from the United States, but not military aid. Asked about relations with leftist re­ gimes — specifically Cuba and Nicara­ gua — he replied he had "marvelous plans” to try to improve diplomatic ties, according to Excel si or . " I believe that around the American Mediterranean (the Caribbean) we can show geopolitical unity,” he said. From Texan news services Brezhnev health mystery MOSCOW — The mystery over President Leonid Brezhnev’s health deepened Thursday with a Commu­ nist Party spokesman refusing to confirm or deny reports from Soviet sources that the 75-year-old Krem­ lin leader was hospitalized. Soviet sources said Brezhnev had been hos­ pitalized, but they added they did not know if he was simply resting after a recent round of speeches and travel, or suffering some more se­ rious ailment. Brezhnev has not been seen in public since March 25, when he returned from a trip to Tashkent that left him obviously fa­ tigued. Paper prints criticism WARSAW, Poland — In a series of letters that took observers by surprise, a government newspaper Thursday printed the first criticism of the regime since since martial law was imposed Dec. 13. The let­ ters, which also defended the now- labor union banned Solidarity against charges it was responsible j for Poland's economic plight, appeared to have been sanctioned by the government. Soviet spy sub spotted LONDON — The Defense Minis­ try said Thursday a Soviet nuclear submarine is lurking in internation­ al waters on the strategic approach­ es to Britain’s northwestern sea de­ fenses. It was the first foreign submarine detected near British shores in recent years. The vessel first was spotted Sunday off Scot­ land's northwestern coast but was not identified as a Soviet ship until Thursday. Panamanians in control < PANAMA CITY, Panama - As thousands of Panamanians sang and J danced in the streets for joy. Pana- j ma Thursday formally assumed re- I sponsibility for policing the Canal I Zone, moving a step closer toward j full ownership of the Panama j Canal. "They're really going!" read I one banner unfurled at the transfer I ceremony attended by President I I Aristides Royo, members of his J I cabinet, and thousands of Panama- I nians. among them the 4,000 who re- I jj side in the Canal Zone. j Avalanches kill 3 SQUAW V A L L E Y , Calif. - I Crews using dynam ite and j snowplows Thursday cleared tons of I unstable snow at a ski resort, and I rescuers with dogs searched J snowdrifts for five people missing I in high Sierra avalanches that killed j three men. Four avalanches, I triggered by nearly 13 feet of new j snow dropped since Sunday by the I most powerful spring blizzard in a J generation, rolled Wednesday into I the popular resorts of Alpine j Meadows and Squaw Valley, site of j I the 1960 Winter Olympics. j Test-tube baby born NORFOLK, Va. — America’s sec- I ond test-tube baby was born recent- j ly, healthy, happy and "bigger than J the first," it was announced Thurs- j day. The parents have insisted on j strict privacy. Spokesman Vernon I Jones with the Eastern Virginia j Medical School said the child, J conceived by the in vitro fertiliza- j tion method, was born within the I last week. "Bu t the parents have re- j quested total anonymity, so we are j going to honor that wish.” Jones J said. He would not say where or ex- I actly when the baby was born or I j what the child’s sex was. ! Prison wants library ^ than LEAVEN W O RTH , Kan. - A city that counts a federal penitentiary I among its top tourist draws is con- I sidering adding the Richard M. Nix- I on Presidential Library. "Because J of his infamous character, I felt it J (the library) would bring more peo- I library j pie the Truman would," Leavenworth Chamber of j Commerce Director William Zand- I ers said Thursday. " It would be a I tremendous tourist attraction for j the Leavenworth community and I would provide more jobs and dol- j lars.” "Nixon would feel right at I home surrounded by prisons," City j Commissioner Lee Farnsworth I joked after the five-member city I commission agreed Tuesday to fol- j through with Coihmissioner j low Clyde Graeber's suggestion to go af- I ter the homeless Nixon archives. " I I think it's an outstanding idea for the | j tourists." j Stocks rally N EW YO RK — Stocks rallied I Thursday on trader belief that the I market’s 10-month decline of share I prices is ready to bottom out. Trad- I ing was active. The Dow Jones in- | d u strial average, advancing I throughout the session, surged 10 47 I points to 833.24. The Dow, a 1.72- I point loser Wednesday, gained more I than 6 points in the previous two sessions, including a 5.90-point gain I the market I Monday, although I closed mixed all three days. Iraqi prisoners of war pray while squatting in the parade ground of the Dezful army camp in Iran. About 2,000 POWs were held in the camp, Praying prisoners UPI TelePhoto Iran claims to have as many as 15,000 prisoners, most of whom have been taken to cities away from the camp. SAN SALVADOR. E l Salvador (U P I) — Junta President Jose Napoleon Duarte vowed Thursday to hold onto the pres­ idency "if the people want m e" and warned rightist foes that U.S. support could end if his reforms are dismantled. "Do you think the U.S. Congress would approve aid for a kind of government that goes back on all the reforms made in the past two years?" Duarte said at a news conference at the National Palace. In the war between troops and leftist rebels, 70 guerrillas, 16 soldiers and nine civilians were killed in battles and rebel-launched attacks around E l Salvador Wednesday and Thursday, military officials said. In one attack, rebels exploded a bomb beneath a bus near Cinquera, 44 miles northeast of San Salvador, killing a child, eight other civilians and a paramilitary civil guardsman, a local military spokesman said. A fierce battle also raged overnight in the poor San Salva­ dor suburb of Soyopango, where guerrillas ambushed gov­ ernment patrols. A civil guardsman said 15 soldiers were killed and six injured. ment as they undertake their new re­ sponsibility," Chairman Charles Percy, R-Ill., said. But both Percy and ranking Demo­ crat Claiborne Pell of Rhode Island, stressed that continued U.S. aid is linked to compliance with political and human rights conditions imposed by Congress. Briggs rejected the guerrillas' con­ tention — which he said “ is being paral­ leled by their friends in this country" — that the elections weakened the U.S.- backed junta, were a defeat for U.S. policy and will not end the civil war. "As to a defeat for U.S. policy, that is terribly patronizing. It was not a defeat for anyone rather than the guerrillas. It was a victory for the people of E l Salva­ dor," Briggs said. "The lesson of March 28 was that we and other friends of E l Salvador must give the parties which represent those people a chance to work out among themselves how they are going to form their new coalition government. As for ending the war, Briggs said, "the people voted to reject the war and, obviously, if 4,000 or 5,000 guerrillas wish to keep shooting and continue to be supplied, they have it within their pow­ er to continue to terrorize that country. Briggs and three members of Con­ gress who went to E l Salvador as ob­ servers testified at a hearing called to consider a House-Senate resolution urg- WASHINGTON (U P I) — The Social Security system, battered by the recession, will run out of money to pay old-age benefits by July 1983 unless Congress acts, trus­ tees of the program warned Thursday. In their annual report to Congress, the trustees — the secretaries of labor, treasury and health and human services — also said all three Social Security trust funds, even if combined, would run in the red a year earlier than was predicted last year. The trustees forecast "severe financial problems for the Social Security program in both the short range and the long range.” "The short-range financial status is significantly worse than was estimated last year, because of continu­ ing unfavorable economic conditions,” the trustees said, citing unemployment and the recession. "The long-range deficit ... remains about the same as last year.” Democrats, who forced the administration to scuttle proposed benefit cuts last year, were quick to react. " I would not want this report to cause fear in the hearts of those on Social Security," House Speaker Thomas O’Neill said. " I have absolute faith and trust that never in any way will this program be abated. The government is committed to it." Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee and a member of the special com­ mission now studying Social Security changes, said of the report, " I think it’s right." " I think we’re going to have to move on Social Securi­ ty very quickly," he said, but he declined to say what specific actions he would recommend. The trustees’ report covered Social Security’s retire­ ment and disability funds, which pay benefits to 36 mil­ lion Americans, and its Medicare fund, which serves 28 million people. "Without corrective action in the very near future, the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund will be unable to make benefit payments on time beginning no later than July of 1983." they warned, referring to the retirement fund. The trustees warned in their 1981 report that the re­ tirement fund would run in the red by the end of 1982 unless something was done. As a result. Congress passed stopgap legislation allowing the system’s three trust funds to borrow from each other until the end of this year. "The trend is the same as it was last year and we haven’t done anything to solve it," Social Security Com­ missioner John Svahn said. "Nobody has changed the facts or rewritten anything to heighten or sensational­ ize the report.” Svahn said interfund borrowing may be needed by October, a month earlier than predicted last year, to bail out the old-age trust fund IRA kills 2 soldiers as home rule plan approved LO ND O ND ERRY, Northern Ireland (U P I) — IRA gunmen ambushed and killed two more British soldiers outside Londonderry cathedral Thursday as Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s cabinet approved a home rule plan for Northern Ireland. The IRA ambush brought the death toll among security forces in Northern Ireland to six in the past week. The IRA claimed responsibility for the killings, the latest in a series of at­ tacks that was mounted to prove that the arrest of a number of its members recently has not affected its ability to wage war against British rule in Ulster. In London, the cabinet approval of plans to restore limited home rule to Ulster would end English control ex­ ercised since 1974. A 78-seat assembly with strictly lim­ ited powers will be elected sometime in the fall in an experiment to see whether Protestant and Catholic politicians can work together again. Officials said details of the plan, to be implemented in stages, would be an­ nounced in Parliament on Monday. Police said the two British soldiers were cut down by "a number of gun­ men" who took over a house near St. Eugene’s Roman Catholic cathedral and held the student occupants hostage for the night. The gunmen sprayed Creggan street with automatic weapons fire when the two soldiers left a nearby army post in a gray van. Londonderry’s Roman Catholic bish­ op, Rev. Edward Daly, was at the ca­ thedral when the shots rang out at lunchtime. "There was a very loud and sustained burst of automatic gunfire just right by us. A priest from the cathedral re­ moved two men from the van which had crashed into a shop doorway "The van was riddled with bullet holes ... it was a pretty awful, terrible sight," he said. Three British soldiers were killed in a similar ambush in Belfast last Thurs­ day. A police inspector was murdered outside a Londonderry church on Sun­ day. election ing President Reagan to seek "uncondi­ tional negotiations" between the San Salvador government and its leftist op­ ponents, mainly the guerrillas. "This is a very important first step that was taken with the election of March 28," said committee member Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan., who led the U.S. observers. "The people of E l Salvador really gave a heartfelt message and perhaps one that made us more mindful of the privilege of vot­ ing.” Rep. Robert Livingston. R-La., warned against abandoning E l Salvador at this stage but said he would favor the new government calling for a one- month general and unconditional am­ nesty to the guerrillas. “ If we in the United States listen to those who would have us pull out of that country and leave those people to suffer the hands of the terrorists and the com­ munist guerrillas, then we would be committing a great sin against the peo­ ple of E l Salvador and we would be doing ourselves a great disservice," Livingston said. 12 workers get exposure to rubidium SODDY-DAISY, Tenn. (U P I) - Less than a week after the Sequoyah Nuclear Plant's new Unit 2 reactor leached full power a dozen workers were exposed to radioactive gas when a valve was left open by mis­ take, TV A officials said Thursday The workers' hair and clothing was slightly contaminated with ra­ dioactive rubidium, but they were al­ lowed to return to work a half hour later, TVA spokesman Bill Steverson said He said the contamination was not enough to cause health problems "They were all checked by radia­ tion monitors and all the radioactive gas decayed within 30 minutes after they were exposed." Steverson said. “ Health physicists have looked them over and determined there was no danger to the safety of the workers. " TVA officials said the incident oc­ curred Wednesday morning but not reported to the public until later be­ cause they did not believe the con­ tamination serious enough. Steverson said a valve in a system that chemically cleans coolant w'ater in the new Unit 2 reactor for some reason was not closed when it should have been. Editorials THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, April 2, 1982 * Viewpoint How to handle D’aubisson People who normally have a lot to say about El Salvador have been pretty quiet lately. The big liberal complaint about the elec­ tions was that, since extrem ists on both sides were terrorizing the electorate, voter turnout would be low, so that the election results, whatever they were, would be unrepresentative. But the election day last Sunday saw an 80-percent turnout, allowing President R ea­ gan to claim that the election marked a victory for dem ocracy and that the voters had rejected the leftist alternative. But Reagan has been silent about the im plications of the right- wing coalition that is likely to form, a coalition which will leave the “ m oderate” Christian Dem ocrats out in the cold. Although P resi­ dent Jose Napoleon Duarte’s party did not gain a m ajority, it none­ theless received the largest single percentage of the vote (40.7 per­ cent). Yet right-wing party leader Roberto D ’aubisson has declared his intention to purge Duarte and other “ com m unists” from any coalition that may form and to overturn U.S.-supported econom ic and political reforms. It is this sam e D ’aubisson who hopes to “ na­ palm the com m unists11 into submission and whom former U.S. Am­ bassador Robert White has called a “ pathological k iller.” What should be our policy toward a dem ocratically elected far- right regim e headed by D ’aubisson? Any aid to such a governm ent should be contingent upon two things: 1) a continued com m itm ent to the reform s we have urged and 2) a clear effort to maintain the pluralistic institutions that brought D'aubisson to power. Our own com m itm ent to liberty requires that we not tolerate any “ purges,” any continuation of the political oppression that has plagued El Salvador for decades, or any system atic violation of human rights. Mi chael Go dw in T h e D a i l y T e x a n is calling upon all student candidates for posi­ tions on the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees and the Texas Union Board of Directors to submit their campaign statem ents to the T e x a n editorial office by 8 p.m. Sunday. Stress: today's disease By JAN NAUGHTON E d i t o r ’s not e: s u b m i t t e d by Cent er. the f o l l o w i n g is the S t u d e n t He al t h No one knows better than a college student what is m eant by the “ ups and downs" of life. Just what is happening during bouts of anxiety, and what can be done about them? Feelings of anxiety usually result when someone expects that something unpleasant is going to happen. Every­ one has experienced the worried, up- tight feeling characterized by sweating, trem bling, a pounding heart, an inabili­ ty :c relax, and abnormal eating habits. M idterm s and finals often evoke such fee'.ngs in even the m ost easygoing stu­ tter's. A certain amount of anxiety can actually aid productivity but if tensions are not kept within reasonable lim its, they can become overpowering and de­ structive. What is the best way to cope with anxiety The best treatm ent, of course, is prevention, and the following sugges­ tions may help keep anxiety within rea­ sonable limits: 1 * Set realistic goals for yourself. You know your own strengths and weaknesses, and if it takes you an hour to get dressed in the morning, give yourself sufficient tim e to save wear and tear on your nerves. 2) Take tim e to plan your work - avoid having to “ cram" work, which builds up stress 31 Take tim e to enjoy yourself En­ gage regularly in recreation and activi­ ties which you find relaxing. Creative outlets also help defuse anxiety caused by studies. Som etim es writing 4) Share your fears with a friend or a counselor out thoughts and feelings is helpful if it’s difficult to confide in som eone These can help relieve tension and put worries in perspective. 5) Avoid making too many changes in your life at once. Even positive changes d ike m arriage or a new job) can cause stress. Another m anifestation of stress can be depression Depression is a feeling of sadness or disappointment that leads to apathy and withdrawal for no apparent reason. Depression m ay result from loss, frustration, the inability to live up to expectations or from a disappoint­ ment or com prom ise. Signs of depres­ sion are fatigue, sleeplessness or exces­ sive sleeping, inability to concentrate, restlessness or a lack of interest in food or life in general. Some depression is normal — a reaction to the reality that what IS often falls short of w hat’s hoped for. But prolonged depression can be a serious problem and can lead to suicide. A person with an increased tendency to withdraw from routine activity m ay be seriously depressed and need profes­ sional help. But w’hat are som e steps that can help cope with occasional bouts of depression common to college life? 1) Confide feelings of disappointment or letdow’n with a sym pathetic friend. Seek professional help if feelings of de­ pression linger for prolonged period of tim e. 2) Push yourslef to engage in physi­ cal activity - exercise can help restore the em otions as well as the body. 3) Becom e more involved in helping others To be needed by others helps get our mind off our own situation. Plenty of volunteer opportunities are available on campus. 4' Be good to yourself. Plan that much-desired vacation - build incen­ tives into your w?ork and study accom ­ plishments. 5) Learn to say “ no" without feeling of guilt Avoid feeling responsible for fulfulling the expectations of others. 6' Don't make the m istake of using alcohol as a mood-elevator. In reality, alcohol is a depressant and although the initial effects might be euphoric, the aftermath is often worse than the initial depression that triggered it. In ordering your daily activities, re­ m em ber that positive changes (gradua­ tion. a new job. marriage, etc .) cause stress, too. Finally, don't be afraid to change your mind Most decisions are not so permanent that they can’t be altered by another decision Allow yourself to be flexible until you feel a sense of peace. Allow yourself and others to fail. Life is a series of imperfections, and the more that is realized, the less the inevitable ups and downs will disturb you. The more you expect and accept the ups and downs w’hen they com e, the less control your circum stances will have on your sense of well-being. X a u g h t o n c o o r d i n a t o r . is health e d u c a t i o n 7 m ENVIRONMENTALLY SENSITIVE BRIDGE MEANS NEVER Hi, ID SAY YOU RE SORRY. Page 4 MoPac Boulevard who will benefit? Citizens, swimmers, have the most to lose _B yJO N A. HASLETT_______ Econom ical Transportation for Austin Neighbor­ hoods is a broad-based coalition of Austin citizens op­ posed to the extension of MoPac Boulevard. We are young, old, black, white and brown; we are enviorn- m entalsits, neighborhood association m em bers, sm all business-people, students, parents, D em ocrats and Republicans. We are against the extension of M oPac for many reasons. We believe that the extension of MoPac w ould: 1 D ivert state and federal funds drastically needed for road im provem ents. 1 Lead to the expenditure of upward of $60 to $80 million of city tax m oney for the necessary upgrading of east-w est MoPac feeder streets. Destroy our neighborhoods with noise, pollution Reduce the usability of MoPac for Austin resi­ and congestion. dents. While each of these concerns is real and significant, we also understand that an important issue concern­ ing the extension of MoPac is growth and develop­ ment and their effects on the environment. Some of our citizens advocate no growth, others want uncontrolled growth. N either position seem s reasonable. There must be som e growth to maintain our healthy econom y with relatively low rates of infla­ tion and unemployment. But if we grow, we should grow w isely and with careful planning. We should not facilitate growth out­ side the city ’s Preferred Growth Corridor, which was conceived after years of citizen input and intelligent planning. The southern extension of MoPac clearly services developm ent outside the Preferred Groth Corridor. The extension itself, as well as the entire area to be serviced by the extension, is outside the Preferred Growth Corridor and is directly atop the Edwards Aquifer, the source of Barton Springs. D evelopers have admitted that plans are already on the drawing board for over 200,000 new houses in that part of Travis County. Extensive com m ercial develop­ ment is also planned. Assuming that each household would have two m em bers, this developm ent would increase Austin’s population by 400,000 people, a figure greater than the current total population of Austin. An extension of three randomly selected tracts of land along the current M oPac corridor provides an explanation of the motivation the developm ent inter­ ests have in seeing that MoPac is extended south. For exam ple, the one and one-half acre Whatley E state was appraised in 1960, before current MoPac was built, at $1,000 an acre. The m arket value of the property in 1981 is $109,000 an acre. Another exam ple: the two-acre Thompson Proper­ ties tract, valued at $2,000 an acre in 1967. The market value in 1981 is $65,000 an acre. A final exam ple. The one and one-half acre Crutch­ er tract: $1,000 an acre assessed m arket value in 1960, $31,000 an acre in 1981. Some people have argued that the developm ent in the southwestern region of the county will occur with or without the southern extension of MoPac. Editor’s note We think the voters should hear both sides of an issue. With that in mind, the editorial staff of the T e x an attem pted to solicit a column by the pro- MoPac group called Neighbors for MoPac. After two conversations with the group, and an extend­ ed deadline, they chose not to submit a column. I must wonder why the developm ent interests are bankrolling the pro-extension “ Neighbors for M oPac’’ if they would build without an extended MoPac. The fact of the m atter is that while the citizens of Austin are faced with the prospect of losing Barton Creek and Barton Springs as treasured resources if MoPac is extended south, a sm all, select group of people stand to gain m illions of dollars. Some have argued that we can control the environ­ m ental dam age caused by the developm ent of this re­ gion through the enforcem ent of the Barton Creek Watershed Ordinance. What they fail to realize is that land use is often determined through the planning of streets and highways. The m ost severe damage to Barton Creek, Barton Springs and the Barton Creek Watershed from the proposed southern extension of M oPac would not be from the highway and the bridge, but from the inten­ sive developm ent which invariably accom panies such a freew ay — large, high-density, m all-type develop­ ment. Landowners are reported to be already d iscuss­ ing another major mall where MoPac will intersect 290. The mall would be within a quarter of m ile of Barton Creek. There are other costs of unmanaged growth, among them: • Increases in per capita crim e rates. • Erosion of our tax base which pays for our parks and schools as whites m ove to gentrified suburban tax havens. • Devaluation of property values in Central Austin while widespread speculation takes place in the sub­ urbs around Austin. The bankers, real estate developers and builders say, “ Trust us. We won’t hurt your springs. We’re never lied to you, have w e?” The snake oil salesm en from the boardroomns of the Big Bank Towers had us firm ly convinced that the construction of Loop 360 in the w est would not lead to accelerated rates of developm ent. What has actually happened? The high-density developm ent along 360 is now referred to by the banners, real estate specula­ tors and builders as the “ Golden Corridor.’’The voters of Austin must enter the voting booths on Saturday with the full understanding that there is no such thing as a free lunch in transportation planning. We can vote for the southern extension of MoPac. This will permanently dam age Barton Springs and Barton Creek and lead to unmanaged growth which will cost us m illions of dollars in increased taxes. Or we can use that sam e so-called “ free” state and federal money to m ake repairs and upgrade streets all of us know are problems now — 183, 290 and the South Lam ar/Ben White interchange. These im provem ents would channel growth within the Preferred Growth Corridor and not cost us the 60 to 80 million city tax dollars we would need to upgrade city streets to ser­ vice an extended MoPac. The voters of Austin spoke in one loud voice last August when they overw helm ingly rejected numerous bond proposals which many argued would lead to un­ managed levels of new developm ent. It seem s reasonable to suggest that the quality of life in Austin is a direct reflection of the w ater quality in Barton Springs. We are being asked to give that up, but for what? To get to Oak Hill five m inutes faster? It hardly seem s worth the price. H a s l e t t is the c a m p a i g n d i r e c t o r o f E c o n o m i ­ c a l T r a n s p o r t a t i o n f o r A u s t i n N e i g h b o r h o o d s . The bombast bursting in air Dear John: Your last little tirade on the Texas Student Publications Board ( “Change the Q ualifications,” March 30) was certainly enlightening. Only days before we w ere treated to a sim ilar bombast by your cohort in overstatem ent, Bill Booth. Because no one had applied for TSP board positions by the day before the deadline. Bill con­ cluded that the board really doesn’t have any power and that the positions just “ aren’t worth the effort.” (What he failed to say is that there w ere no appli­ cants for UTmos t editor either. But I guess as a former UT mos t editor Bill could hardly be expected to apply the sam e logic to U T m o s t . ) And what about when only one fully qualified applicant applies for T e x an editor9 Do the sam e conclusions apply? Evidently not. Even though TSP has never had a problem fielding at least two candidates for T e x a n editor in the past a n d even though there are many staffers who are fully qualified to run for editor this year, it is somehow the board’s fault that they chose not to run. It is they, not the board, that failed to give students a “ch oice” this year. You are absolutely right, John. There are many things in this world worth liv­ ing and dying for (the Salvadoran guer­ rilla was a ludicrous, but predictable, touch) and evidently being T e x a n edi­ tor just isn’t one of those things. Are we left to assum e that it just isn ’t “ worth the effort?” Betsy McCole President, TSP Board H eeeeeeeere’s Henry!! A m ericans: RONALD REAGAN I. 1) Pied piper pipes dumb sheep 2) Into side of mountain 3) Which closes in upon them II. 1) D u m b (? ) 2) Beguiles dumb o le a cto r little ole people lit t le o le little tyranny 3) Into w orst 4) World’s ever known 5) And FBI/CIA lets no one escape III. Ron’s m ilitary registration? Code words for conscription — war — death IV. Compassionate? His deeds indicate a very cruel man V. 1) As cheery lad from Dixon, 111. 2) R ivets our attention upon M oscow/ Warsaw 3) MIC (M ilitary Industrial Complex) picks our pockets, drafts our sons and steals our liberties VI. Ron doesn’t make Lyndon’s m is­ takes: he seals Canadian border tight VII. l) Hitler leads Germ ans to de­ struction via blood and thunder 2) Ron takes Americans with deceptive sm ile VIII. The people had enough of presi- dentialism ? Intelligent — nonviolent — sober — enduring — cohesive — purpo­ sive: into their own hands? to take power IX. Ron dumps financial responsibility for people on states where it whithers away. His staggering federal taxes un­ derwrite history’s m ost dangerous and Henry Ratlifj wasteful m ilitarism . New York City Barbarism It has com e to worldwide attention that the lives of 27 Iranian students are in great jeopardy. According to news reports from Iran (A P ), an arrange­ ment has been reached between Turk­ ish and Iranian authorities that Turkey will hand over 27 Iranians who have been jailed since Oct. 26,1981. The regim e of Khomeini has gone too far with its exterm ination of 8,000 citi­ zens of which pregnant women and chil­ dren were not spared. The prisons of Iran are full of 35,000 patriots. We m ust not sit by and be idle. We insist that these young Iranians be kept from the hands of this barbarian. Rev. John S. Korcsmar, CSC President, Committee of Ministers to Stop Torture and Executions in Iran DOONESBURY . AND IN MY OPINION, THERE'S ONLY ONE THING THAT CAN PRE­ VENT 1HE SOVIETS FROM OVERRUNNING ALL OF you CANT NEVERMORE, be serious, senator. r r GENERAL WORKED BE - rrs A SJMPIB SCENARIO. WE THROW A NAVAL BLOCKADE AROUND NICA­ RAGUA AND GIVE THE SOVIETS 24 HOURS TO PACK UP AND GET OUT. WHEN OUR PE5TROYER57URN UP, THE RUSSIANS SEE WE MEAN BUSINESS, BACKDOWN, AND LEAVE OUR COMMANDER- IN-CHIEF RETURNS FROM BARBADOS IN TRIUMPH. by Garry Trudeau Austinites to settle future of MoPac Austin v o ters will show their preference Saturday in a non- 247 binding referendum on whether MoPac Boulevard should be 248 E ? S ? to f f i S S U S' 183 t0 H° ad ¡ a highw ay p ro jects involving federal funds. Though the referendum is nonbinding, results are expected 255 to influence the decision of the Austin Transportation Study 256 om m ittee, an 11-m em ber body which must approve all local 257 Pct Those who favor the extensions say com pleting MoPac will 320 relieve the traffic congestion th at cu rren tly plagues far north 321 southw est Austin while extension opponents argue th a t ??? an com pleting the expressw ay will dam ag e the environmentally 324 sensitive B arton Creek W atershed and th a t MoPac is not the 325 326 best solution to the traffic problem s. The city clerk s office has predicted a fairly high turnout — 000 betw een 70,000 and 75,000 voters - based on absentee ballot 329 331 totals. Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m . Doss Elementary School Burnet Junior High School Brown Elementary School First Presbyterian Church Fire Station No. 25 Cook Elementary School Casis Elementary School Barrington Elementary School P o lling Place Mathews Elementary School O. Henry Junior High School Ullrich Water Treatment Plant Bethany Lutheran Church Porter Junior High School St. M ark’s Episcopal Church Church of the G ood Shepherd Joslin Elementary School Dill Elementary School Brykerw oods Elementary School Austin Recreation Center ! ravis County Precinct 1 W arehouse Pct. P o lling Place 121 Lyndon B. Johnson High School 124 Kealing Learning Center 125 Doris M iller Auditorium 126 St. James Episcopal Church 128 David Chapel Baptist Church 129 130 Memorial United Methodist Church 131 M aplewood Elementary School 132 Pecan Springs Elementary School 133 Blanton Elementary School 135 Messiah Lutheran Church 136 Ridgetop Elementary School 137 Carruth Am inistration Building 138 St. John's Coll. Hts. Baptist Church 139 Dobie Junior High School 141 Reagan High School 143 Trinity United Church 144 W ebb Junior High School 145 Robert E. Lee Elementary School 146 LBJ — Sid Richardson Hall 3 .107 147 Jester Hall West, Room A215A 148 Jester Hall East, 1st Floor Lounge 233 Wooten Elementary School 234 Lanier High School 235 M cCallum High School 236 Rosedale Elementary School 237 Highland Park Baptist Church 238 M urchison Junior High School 239 Gullett Elementary School 240 Highland Park Elementary School 241 Brentwood Elementary School 242 W ooldridge Elementary School 243 Read Elementary School 244 Northwest Baptist Church 245 Crestview Baptist Church 246 Hill Elementary School A d d re ss 7903 Lazy Creek 1607 Pennsylvania 2300 Rosewood 3701 E. MLK Jr. Blvd. 2211 E. MLK Jr. Blvd. 4601 E. MLK Jr. Blvd. 6100 Berkman 3808 Maplewood 3100 Rogge Lane 5408 W estminster Dr. 5701 Cam eron Road 5005 Caswell Road 6100 G uadalupe 7207 Carver 1200 E. Rundberg Ln 7104 Berkman 5800 Cam eron Road 601 E. St. Johns Ave. 3308 Ham pton Road 26th and Red River 101 E. 21st St. 101 E. 21st St. 1406 Dale 1201 Peyton Gin Dr. 5600 Sunshine Dr. 2117 W. 49th St. 5206 Balcones Dr. 3700 North Hills Dr. 6310 Treadwell Dr. 4900 Fairview Dr. 6700 Arroyo Seca 1412 Norseman Terr. 2608 Richcreek 6301 W oodrow Ave. 7600 W oodrow Ave. 8600 Tallwood 332 Zilker Elementary School 333 Trinity Lutheran Church 334 Texas Federation of W om en’s Clubs 335 City of Austin Fire Station 336 University M ethodist Church 337 Old Austin High School Annex 341 Cunningham Elementary School 342 Barton Hills Elementary School 343 All Saints Episcopal Church 344 First English Lutheran Church 345 Baker Elementary School 346 Northside Church of Christ 420 University Savings 421 Grace M ethodist Church 422 Travis Heights Elementary School 423 Allison Elementary School 424 San Jose Elementary School 426 Govalle Elementary School 427 Allan Junior High School 433 Travis High School 434 W ard Memorial M ethodist Church 437 Becker Elementary School 438 439 440 442 Dawson Elementary School 443 Houston Elementary School 444 Holy Trinity Episcopal Church 445 Travis County Courhouse 446 St. Elmo Elementary School 447 O dom Elementary School 44 8 / 450 Beautiful Savior Lutheran Church Sanchez Elementary School Pan Am erican Recreation Center Linder Elementary School 449 S hadow Bend Child Inc. 451 Bedichek Junior High School 7005 Northledge Dr. 8401 Hathaway Dr. 505 W. Anderson Ln 8001 Mesa Dr. 5228 Duval 1511 Cripple Creek 2710 Exposition Blvd 400 C ooper Dr. A d d re s s 901 West Lynn 2600 W. 10th St. 1000 Forestview Dr. 6215 M anchaca Road 2206 Prather Lane 2128 Barton Hills Dr. 2206 Exposition Blvd. 4500 M anchaca Road 2007 McCall Road 3309 Kerbey Lane 1213 Shoal Creek Blvd. 1900 Bluebonnet Ln 1207 W. 45th St. 2312 San Gabriel 506 W. M LK Jr. Blvd. 2409 G uadalupe St. 1200 West Ave. 2200 Berkeley 2108 Barton Hills Dr. 209 W. 27th St. 3001 Whitis 3908 Avenue B 4305 Avenue B 1916 E. Riverside Dr. 205 E. M onroe 2010 Alam eda 515 Vargas Road 2435 O ak Crest 3601 Govalle Ave. 4900 Gonzales 1211 E. Oltorf 2105 Parker Lane 906 W. Milton 73 San Marcos 2100 E. 3rd St. 2800 Metcalfe Road 3001 S. 1st St. 5409 Pinciana 1700 W oodland 1000 G uadalupe 600 W. St. Elmo 1010 Turtle Creek 6830 S. Pleasant Valley Road 6328 Shadow Bend 6800 Bill Hughes Rd Panama celebrates new Canal Zone powers PANAMA CITY. Panama (U PI) — As thousands of Pan­ amanians sang and danced in the streets for joy, Panama Thursday formally assumed responsibility for policing the Canal Zone, moving a step closer toward full ownership of the Panama Canal. “They’re really going!' read one banner unfurled at the transfer ceremony attend­ ed by President Aristides Royo, m em bers of his cabinet and thousands of Panam ani­ ans, among them the 4,000 who reside in the Canal Zone. They danced, cheered and waved banners in front of the police station and court build­ ings in the Canal Zone town of Balboa on the Pacific coast. The formal transfer of judi­ law enforcem ent cial and powers to Panama erases a source of contention between the two governments and m oves one step closer to end­ ing U.S. control over the stra­ tegic waterway. An honored guest at the c e r e m o n y L e s te r w a s G reaves, a black Caribbean worker sentenced in 1946 to 50 years in jail by one of the Canal Zone's American judg­ es for allegedly attempting to rape a white woman. Greaves served nearly 16 years in a Panamanian prison before the conviction was overturned because the Canal Zone judge — a relative of the supp osed v ic tim — had refused to allow the woman to testify. Under the August 1977 Pan­ ama Canal Treaties signed by form er President Jim m y Carter and the late Panam a­ nian strongman Omar Torri- jos, Panama will assum e tull control of the waterway on Dec. 31, 1999. The transfer of powers m eans the U.S. special police force in the Canal Zone will be disbanded and Panamani­ an police and courts will now arrest and try all U.S. and Panamanian residents of the zone with the exception of certain civil cases still cov­ ered by U.S. law under the term s of a 1977 treaty. There are an estim ated 30,750 Americans in the Canal Zone, including 9,566 m ilitary personnel Judicial and law enforce­ ment duties— exercised by it the United States since C Y C L E S 'mmm p e u c e o t Fight... (Continued from Page 1.) spectacle. Even the ref was not to walk away unbloodied. The m ost artistic of the fights was No. 7, when Delta Sigma Phi member Ronnie Crossland defeated Phi Gam­ ma D elta’s Ned Barnett, in a duet that featured dancing and jabbing, rather than the more typical clenching and flailing. to All the gladiators walked away from the ring except freshman Matt Carley, who was carried from the ring and taken the Brackenridge Hospital em ergency room af­ ter being knocked out in the final round of the seventh fight. There was no word on Carley’s condition late Thurs­ day night. The final fight of the night was a heavyweight contest between Marine ROTC cadet Rock Pollard and Glen Dia­ mond, who was identified only as an "unattached power lifter.' Despite Diamond’s advantage in height, weight and reach. Marine Pollard put him away in the final round by a TKO. from one But the final word had to fan who com e hugged ringside throughout the 11th fight: “ Kill his ass! Kill him! Kill him, baby! Kill him, kill him, kill him !” the inter-ocearuc com pleted canal in 1914 — were officially handed over to Panama at the Foreign Relations Ministry Wednesday. The Greaves conviction was the most disputed legal case in the stormy history of U.S. control of Canal Zone, w here the court system was a constant sore point with Pan­ ama. Friday, April 2, 1982 □ T H E D A I L Y TEXAN □ -'age 5 STUDY PROBLEMS? I • is R A S S L t e c h n i c a l l y a # " r e a d in g a n d s tu d y s k ills * la b " , b u t lo ts o f j if o ffe rs h e lp w it h w r it in g , m a t h # and g ra d u a te e x a m p r e p , * f o r m a n y * t u t o r s and has co u rse s, fin d o u t * too. T o m o re , d ro p b y A332 J e s t e r , * 10 to 5 M o n . th ro u g h F r i. o r * phone 471-3614. • IM M IG R A T IO N LAW Permanent Residency Citizenship Student Matters School Approvals Labor Certification Refugee Matters Orphan Petitions Asylum J i m B. Cloudt Atty. at law Free Consultation Free Parking 3810 Medical Parkwav No. 231, Austin, TX 512-454-1438 P I SIGMA PI PROFESSION AS DAY DATE: Saturday, April 3, 1982 TIME: 11:00-1:00 PLACE: Texas Governors Room Student Union 2nd floor Topic o f Discussion: # I The transition from College to Industry. A . H o w to sell yourself: Impressing the c o m p a n ie s you w a n t to impress. B. W h a t companies do w ith y o u r resume. C. The bottom line: The value of h irin g minority engineers — m a n d a t e or tru e professional need? D. The recession a n d its effect on the engineering ¡ob forecast. E. Continuing education: M B A , E n g in e e rin g M a n a g e m e n t , or M a stors in E n g in e e r in g n The f o r m a t will be s o m e t h i n g similar to " FACE THE N A ­ 'MEET THE PRESS", w h e r e a p a ne l of Pi m em bers TI O N " or will in terview three representatives from industry a long with t w o former Pi members w h o are practicing engineers. The session will be informal, as to al lo w a m p le audience participation. There will be a q u e st io n a n d a n s w e r period, in which students are free to ask questions pertaining to the a b o v e f o r m a t or o t h e r subjects p e r t a i n i n g to engineering. Pi Sigma Pi a n n u a l Spring picnic w i l l i m m e d i a t e l y f o l l o w . UO-10 Reg. $315 on sale $ 2 5 9 0 0 A u stin ’s Only Authorized Peugeot Dealer CD Lainbew Jersey 705-C W. 24th at Rio Grande 477-2142 Midnight Happy Hour Friday & Saturday 12-lam : MUNCH & GUZZLE i FOR ONLY $1.50 j t I'llJIls C llu .lg o -M \Ic d c c p d isb ¡ pizza by the slu e. l t \ the ulti- ¡ m ate lunch (or hig h -sp eed pizza I lovers, because it’s ready w hen ! s o u are. G et the s lu e at the I i milt p i K i . along u tth a drink. I lust S I.50 with this coupon, j So tom e bin todas | The Slice. Available From II I to 2, weekdays only It's the ¡ Ivst munch and guzzle in town I And at the best price. O ffer cx- I pires May 14, 1782 Good with coupon only at 2til Hi Guadalupe and 1713 Riverside. HOW VI I MAkl IT MAK1 S IT OKI AT. 2WI6 G uadalupe and 1913 Riverside 1 1 th A n n u a l S p rin g S id ew a lk S ale! H a lf Price O ff A n d M e re ! Friday & Saturday, 10-7 O n ly at the Dobie Store Dobie M a i 4 7 4 - 4 3 1 7 2941 W. Anderson Ln 4 5 8 - 3 1 14 477-8999 311 W. 6th o n -th e-d ra g a t 2 4 0 6 G uadalu p e fo r a best-seller Feather-light wedgie all-leather uppers in natural 30.25 I D S C O U n T c e n t e r t gagg_6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday. April 2 , 1982 CUJTOm hi-fi WE ISSUE 2 D A Y S Friday 1 1AM-8PM O N L Y ! S aturday 10 AM 6PM Friday and Saturday Custom Hi-Fi and BASF issues you the Chrome Challenge. Bring in your (or a friend’s) favorite cassette tape— Maxell, TDK, Fuji, Scotch, Memorex, Realistic, or any high bias cassette tape— and try to challenge BASF Pro II Chrome for the lowest hiss. If your cassette tape has less hiss, than the outstanding BASF Pro II cassette, Custom Hi-Fi and BASF will give you a BASF “ Kiss the Hiss Goodbye” T-Shirt, and one BASF Pro II free. Be early so you can challenge BASF’s Pro II Chrome and be amazed at the tape with the lowest hiss! The w orld’s quietest tape L m i SIM i t sr?* # > ). v i r 7 f Today, only one high bias tape is able to combine outstanding sensitivity in the critical high frequency range with the lowest background noise of any oxide tape in the world. That tape is BASF’s Professional II. It’s like no other tape because it’s made like no other tape. While ordinary high bias tapes are made from modified particles of ferric oxide, Professional II is made of pure chromium dioxide. These perfectly shaped and uniformly sized particles provide a magnetic medium that not only delivers an absolute minimum of background noise, but outstanding high frequencies as well. Like all BASF tapes, Professional II comes encased in the new ultra­ precision cassette shell for perfect alignment, smooth, even movement and consistent high fidelity reproduction. With Professional II, you’ll hear all of the music and none of the tape. And isn’t that what you want in a tape? GUARANTEE OF A LIFETIME: All BASF tape cassettes come with a lifetime guarantee. Should any BASF cassette ever fail— except for abuse or mishandling — simply return it to BASF for a free replacement. M o bile F id e lity Sound Lab: BASF P rofessional II is so superior it was chosen by M obile F id e lity Sound Lab for th e ir O rigina; M aster Recording (TM) High F ide lity Cassettes. These state- of the art pre recorded cassettes are duplicated in real tim e (1:1) from the o rigin al recording stu d io m aster tapes of some of the m ost prom inent recording artists of our tim e BASF BASF Take the Chrome Challenge! The diffe re nce in noise level between PRO II and ordinary high bias tape is greatest where the hum an ear is most sensitive (2-6 kHz). IjY pu-alC lM O lT»e S ub!¡titu le BAS! P ro le s s k >na¡ II „ fik 4 it -k ! During this sale, BASF has allowed Custom Hi-Fi to sell the following tape at Half Price history-making low prices! With every 10 cassettes, reel to reel, and video tape, you get a free T-Shirt, plus a “ Kiss the Hiss G oodbye” poster. There is no limit, so stock up at these never-again prices! 3204 GUADALUPE 454.2622 290E. & IH35N 454-5295 m . z THE TAPE REGULAR PRICE C U S T O M /B A S F CASE O F 10 1/2 PRICE SALE B A S F S tu d io I B A S F P ro fessio na l I B A S F P ro fes sio n a l II C h ro m e B A S F P ro fes sio n a l III F e rric h ro m e BASF LP35 Reel-to-Reel, 1800’ B A S F L500 Video B A S F T 120 Video $2.89 each $3.89 each $5.38 each $1.49 each $1.99 each $2.79 each $5.98 each $18.95 each Not Available Not A vailable $2.99 each $8.95 each $9.95 each $13.99 each ♦ $13.90 $18.90 $20.90 $28.90 $79.50 $95.00 $129.90 CUiTOm hi-fi DI5COUCT center* Austin to approve lakeside park By BRIAN SIPPLE Daily Texan Staff Austinites will have a chance to okay the pur­ chase of a tract of land for a new park on Lake Austin now that the City Council has accepted an offer by local developers to sell 215 acres along the lake’s south shore. The 6-1 vote Thursday gave a go-ahead for the city to finalize a contract with developers Gary Bradley and John C. Wooley. The contract allows the city up to two years to purchase the property, with a $100 down-payment. The property, valued at $3.09 million, is part of a 315-acre ranch eight miles west of Austin, and ac­ cording to several council members, could be one of the city’s prettiest parks. Bradley and Wooley, trustees for the purchase of the waterfront land, bought the 315-acre Resaca Ranch from Houston oilman Robert Baldwin after city officials expressed interest in buying parkland on the lake. Eventually, though, the purchase could cost the city as much as $4.5 million after interest and spe­ cial contractual stipulations are met. Some of those contractual covenants include m leasing 23 acres of the purchased land for five years to the present owner, Baldwin, for private use. On those 23 acres, the city has agreed to con­ struct two lighted tennis courts, a covered marina and a greenhouse supplied with water and electrici­ ty. The city also must remodel a barn and provide electrical and cable television hook-ups for a log cabin to be used by Baldwin. All properties and improvements would be relin­ quished at the end of the five-year term. Bradley and Wooley will pay any covenant obli­ gations in excess of $175,000. The purchase agreement also calls for the city to pay all utilities, taxes, insurance and repairs on the leased land, including upkeep of a private swim­ ming pool. In addition, the city will be responsible for maintaining those grounds, including paying a housekeeper and yardman’s salary, transportation costs, taxes, housing costs, utilities and medical bills. Baldwin also reserves the rights to a five-acre drilling site on the property. While these costs may sound excessive, Bradley and Wooley representatives say, the city is getting a great deal on choice lakefront property for $14,900 per acre. Mayor Carole McClellan, who said the city should act now before the opportunity to buy a lakeside park in the area either becomes more ex­ pensive or disappears altogether, agreed. Council member Larry Deuser disagreed. The city will be inheriting a lot of expensive liabilities without voter approval,” Deuser said. ‘‘I don’t think we can do that.” Council member Richard Goodman, however, who introduced the motion to approve the purchase and who became annoyed with Deuser’s reluc­ tance, called the purchase “ a variation of an option on this land that could save us money,” if voters approve financing. “ Should the voters not approve financing.” Goodman said, “ the purchase could actually make us money, because we will be able to sell the land to developers.” Before the vote, council member Roger Duncan introduced a friendly amendment granting re­ quests from the Panorama Ranch Association, which includes residents in the park vicinity, that the association have the chance to participate in the developmental process of the park. Friday, April 2, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 THE GULF FESTIVAL . J j i ' i *— >1! má I ¿ I L o t j 4 j - J ’ j l —J 4 » ; ill» lh It tmmmSmt md 1 jU 1 V j 1 U S» HJ I OAT « r i l l 3 , 7 0 0 , . U N I V . I T I I ( Arll*|l«a 1 , L' HIV « * 1 1 * 0 0 * ICS C~ •— A V. ** X , ' — .....rar—ai.; -.7;. ..-ct.t- . - . . . ^ Introducing Joske's Athletic Club. .'. where the name of the game is clothes and equipment with the competitive edge! W e re as serious about your sport as you are. Whatever your fitness game, we've the activewear and sporting goods you need to play it in style. For her, from HEAD: cotton rib knit shirt in white with blue/navy or yellow/ navy, S,M,L, 28.00 ; polyester woven twill court short in blue or yellow with navy/white, 6-14, 39.50. Nike “All Court" shoe in white with a blue Sw o o sh "’ 5-10, 25.00. For him, from NIKE: polyester tricot singlet top in white with red/navy, bur­ gundy/silver, black/kelly or black with red/silver, S,M,L,XL, 11.00; polyester tricot split-leg short in navy/red, bur­ gundy/silver, kelly/white or royal/ white, S,M,L,XL, 13.50; “Yankee" run­ ning shoe in grey/black, 6-13, 36.0 0 . For both, from HEAD: “Master Plus" racquet, 68.00. And this is just a warm-up. . . choose from our wide selection of tops and bottoms, shoes, bags, racquets, balls and lots more in joske's Athletic Club, Highland Mall. To celebrate the opening of joske's Athletic Club and in conjunction with the Austin Sportsfest that's continuing this weekend, we've planned a full schedule of sports- minded activities for Saturday, April 3: GIVFAWAY! Be one of the first 250 visitors to Joske's Athletic Club and receive a Nike T-shirt at no charge. Be one of the first 200 shoppers, to receive an Adidas poster at no charge! REGISTER for a chance to win one of three Adidas vinyl "SIR' bags, (a 25.00 value) or a Nike warm-up, (a 48.00-50.00 value). No pur­ chase necessary, you need not be present to win; winners will be notified by mail. PARTICIPATE in the Blood Pressure Test con­ ducted courtesy of the YMCA, 10 am to 2 pm. MEET a representative of the Austin Runners Club for tips and membership information, 11 am to 2 pm. LEARN about tennis and recreation facilities from a representative of the Austin Depart­ ment of Parks and Recreation, 11 am to 2 pm. SFIOP for all your active needs for the Austin Sportsfest in Joske's Athletic Club. J O S K E ’SA UNIT OF ALLIED STORES Order 24 hours a day from anywhere in Texas: dial toll-free 1-800-292-5600. W e welcome your Joske's charge card, Diners Club' and The American Express® Card. Shop Joske's Highland Mall daily 10 'til 9! DAILY T EX A N □ Friday, April 2, 1982 THE ULTIMATE AM /FM c a s s e t t e w / 3 W A Y C fc SPEAKERS ^ § 2 Y EA R w a r r a n t y 3 W AY CAR SPEAKERS Soviets study Reagan’s stance Russians say President’s policy ‘on defensive’ consistently that the two superpowers are equal in strength. * 1982 The New York Times MOSCOW — The Soviet press Thurs­ day depicted President Reagan at his newsconference Wednesday as a man forced to speak out on arms controls by mounting criticism of his policies and swelling support for a nuclear freeze. The initial reaction to Reagan’s com­ ments on Tass, published Thursday night, provided an occasionally sarcas­ tic account of Reagan's statements on arms controls, with some rebuttals but little substantive analysis. Analysts said the approach suggested that the president’s comments probably were still being studied. Implying that Reagan was on the de­ fensive against growing popular discon­ tent with his policies, Tass said: “The president is being personally accused more and more often that his govern­ ment has plans of preparations for war, but has not as yet formulated a policy of preserving peace. Statements in favor of reviewing the course toward an unrestricted arms race, in favor of freezing nuclear arse­ nals and holding business-like talks with the Soviet Union to achieve mutually acceptable accords are being made in various quarters, including the U.S. Congress.” The Soviet agency approvingly quot­ ed an American television commenta­ tor as saying that the news conference gave the president “ a chance to sail the wave of the freeze movement before be­ ing swamped by it.' The reference was to the growing movement for a nuclear freeze now, one that Reagan said would not only be disadvantageous but dangerous to us. Tass made no reference to Reagan’s claim that the Soviet Union had a ‘ defi­ nite margin of superiority” in nuclear arms, although the Soviet line has been Reporting on Reagan's endorsement of the proposal by Sens Henry M. Jack­ son and John Warner to work toward a nuclear freeze once the United States and the Soviet Union were at equal lev­ els. Tass said the president had done so to counterbalance other considera­ tions which are discussed among Amer­ ican parliamentarians.” The reference was evidently to the Senate resolution sponsored by Sens. Mark Hatfield and Edward M. Kennedy for an immediate freeze, one Reagan rejected. The president is being per­ sonally accu sed m ore and m ore often that his govern­ m ent has plans of prepara­ tions for w ar, but has not as yet form ulated a policy of preserving p e a c e .’ — Tass Tass said the proposal backed bv Reagan was based on the premise that the administration’s military buildup should first be completed. ‘Quite a mu­ tual admiration society indeed,” the agency commented. In an earlier commentary, Radio Moscow similarly accused Reagan of planning to complete building u p Amer­ ican weapons before entering into disar­ mament talks with the Russians. “This proves President Reagan’s intention to break strategic parity and to achieve military superiority over the Soviet Un­ ion,” the radio said. Commenting on Reagan’s invitation to Moscow to join in talks on substan­ tially reducing nuclear weapons, Tass declared: " It must be said that the So­ viet Union is not the side that has to be convinced of the benefits of negotiation. The U.S.S.R. consistently displays goodwill and desire for constructive co­ operation and solution of outstanding problems precisely at the negotiating table on the basis of the principle of equality and equal security.” Tass said the president’s pledge to reduce nuclear weapons dramatical­ ly was made in response to the criti­ cism of his policies, and the agency made little of Reagan's specific points. His proposal to eliminate all medi- um-range missiles from Europe had al­ ready been rejected by Moscow as an attempt by Washington to gain ‘‘unilat­ eral advantages.” Tass said. In talking about the negotiations on reducing armed forces in Central Europe, Tass continued, "He failed to mention that the Vienna talks have been marking time for years because of obstruction from the NATO countries.” Tass also took Reagan to task for making no mention of the SALT-II trea­ ty. which was shelved by President Carter in the wake of the Soviet inter­ vention in Afghanistan and set aside by Reagan. "The president did not say anything about the Soviet proposals which call on the United States to sit down immediately at the negotiating table on the limitation and reduction of strategic armaments, and to prevent the disruption of the existing parity in this area,” Tass wrote. The tone of the Tass commentary of­ fered little prospect of a more favor­ able reaction to Reagan's comments in the future, and analysts predicted the Soviet media was certain to continue trying to exploit what the Russians see as mounting anti-nuclear sentiments within the United States. Up with A¿-ni»ñ Down with South Ahita Victory To Afiii-anLiberatrn Worldwide OPEN PARTY free admission At the Sigma Nu House, Sunday 1-4 p.m. to round off Round-Up Everyone invited to enjoy music (provided by A M /F M ) and Bu d w eiser beer 50c 1002 W. 26th 1 f Free the Anti-Spring bak 5 Monday, a p r ii . s 7:30pm B E til55 UT Campus A M E V E N ! . M < ; i n MOI I D A K I T Y W I T H T H E L I H E R A T IO N O f A / A M I A (*> *#»*•) Film Crossroads S lid e S h o w Speakers from Anti-Springbok- 5, J.B.A.K.C., S.A.L.A.C. SOLD G O L D SERIES FEATURING — 100 WATT AMPLIFIER WITH BUILT IN EQUALIZER — DIGITAL DISPLAY QUARTZ LOCKING TUNER — SEMI-AUTOMATIC TURNTABLE WITH STRAIGHT LOW M A SS TONE ARM - 4 - W A Y PROFESSIONAL STUDIO MONITORS AUDIO TECHNICA Tickefs Benefiting Z N House Advance Tickets 300 at N au’s, R a y m o n d ’s D r u g s H uSColüt Dyatrophy Association I n n e r S a n c t u m R e c o r d s ♦ 4 i 4 4 * 4 4 4 4 I 4 4 4 4 4 i 4 4 ►4 Campus News in Brief THE D E A D L IN E FOR ITEMS TO SUBMITTING CAMPUS NEWS IN BRIEF IS 1 P.M. THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION. NO EXCEP­ TIONS WILL BE MADE. EACH ITEM MAY APPEAR ONLY ONCE. ANNOUNCEMENTS N A TU R A L S C IE N C E S COUNCIL is sponsoring a free movie "Close En­ counters of the Third Kind” at noon Friday in Texas Tavern. A tokamak tour will be at 10 a.m. Friday at Robert Lee Moore Hall sec­ ond floor. A mixer will be at ' 3 p.m. Friday in Texas Un­ ion Building 3.116. STU D EN T VO LU N TEER SERVICES Persons inter­ ested in working at anurs- ing home may contact S V S in Texas Union Building 4.310,471-3065. UT DART ASSOCIATION is sponsoring a benefit dart tournament for Meals on Wheels at 8 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m., 2, 6 and 9 p.m. Satur­ day, and 1 and 4 p.m. Sun­ day in Texas Union Build­ ing 3.304. CHABAD JEW ISH STU ­ DENT CENTER is spon­ soring Shabbat candlelight- ing at 6:32 p.m. Friday at 2101 Nueces St. A live broadcast of Lubavitcher Rebbe’s public address will be at 8 p.m. Sunday at Howard Johnson’s. MUSIC DEPARTMENT is sponsoring the UT Horn Ensemble at 4 p.m. Sunday in Bates Recital Hall. d r a m a d e p a r t m e n t Shoestring Theater is spon­ soring the play "Changes” at 8 p.m. Friday and Satur­ day in Lab Theater, 23rd Jacinto Street and San Boulevard. Children’s The­ ater Pre-Thesis Plays will present "All About Jack ," "The “ La Triviata" and Toad and the Frog” at 3 and 6 p.m. Friday and 2 p.m. Saturday in Winship Drama Building 1.134. UNIVERSITY CHORUS is sponsoring a contest from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday at the West Mall, Music Build­ ing and Gregory Gym to guess the number of jelly­ beans. STUDENTS OLDER THAN AVERAGE is sponsoring an idea-sharing session for older and returning stu­ dents at 5 p.m. Friday in Texas Union Building 3.128. RASSL/LEARNING SERVI­ CES Registration for short classes will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday in Jester Center A332. CBA STUDENT COUNCIL is sponsoring CBA Parents’ Day from 8:30 a.m. to noon Saturday in Business-Eco- nomics Building 150. CAREER CENTER is spon­ soring a resume critique lab at 2 p.m. Friday in Jest­ er Center 223. THURGOOD MARSHALL LEGAL SOCIETY is spon­ soring its awards banquet at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Marriott Hotel, Highway 290 and IH 35. HONORS ENGLISH PRO­ GRAM is sponsoring a so­ cial at 4:30 p.m. Friday in Texas Union Building Cactus Cafe. MEETINGS INTER-VARSITY C H R IS ­ TIAN FELLOWSHIP will not meet Friday. UNIVERSITY CHESS CLUB will meet at 7 p.m. Friday in Burdine Hall 228. LECTURES POPULATION RESEARCH CENTER is sponsoring a lecture "Approaches to the Estimation of the Number of Illegal Migrants in the State of Texas" by Frank Bean at noon Friday in Bur­ dine Hall 436A. VOICE is sponsoring a lecture "Reaganomics & the New Federalism" by Al Watkins at 3:10 p.m. Friday at Uni­ versity Catholic Center. PI SIGMA PI is sponsoring several lectures in conjunc­ tion with Professional Day from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sat­ urday in Texas Union Building Governors Room. PHYSICAL & HEALTH EDU­ CATION DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a lecture "Running Machines: Mus­ cles in Living Animals" by C.R. Taylor of Harvard Uni­ versity at 3 p.m. Friday in Pharmacy Building 3.106. C EN TER FOR M ID D L E EASTERN STUDIES is sponsoring a panel discus­ sion "New Words — New Worlds” at noon Friday if) Texas Union Bulldinq 3.118. Harding pleads innocent to charges By DAVID LINDSEY Daily Texan Staff State Treasurer Warren G. Harding Thursday pleaded innocent to two third- degree felony indictments charging him with misusing state employees by hav­ ing them work on his re-election cam­ paign. With the state treasurer at his side, attorney Robert O. Smith entered the plea before 167th District Court Judge Tom Blackwell and asked for sufficient time to prepare a defense to the charges. Blackwell scheduled a pre-tri­ al hearing for April 14. The indictments allege Harding used his secretary, Emma Franzetti, and an employee of the treasury s accounting division, Charlotte Fulton, to work on his re-election campaign while Franzet­ ti and Fulton were being paid by the state. Personal use of state employees is classified as official misconduct, a third-degree felony that carries a penal­ ty of two to 10 years in prison and not more than a $5,000 fine. Following his appearance in court, Harding said he still believes the Travis County district attorney's investigation into his office is politically motivated. “ I have always had an open record, my life is open to the public and cer­ tainly my office is,” Harding said. “ This (the charges) is an obvious mis­ carriage of justice.” Smith, who has suggested District At­ torney Ronald Earle initiated the grand jury investigation to further the politi­ cal career of former Travis County Commissioner Ann Richards, said the charges were ‘‘ridiculous. You can’t separate politics from the treasurer’s office.” Richards resigned as a county com­ missioner and entered the race for the Democratic nomination for state treas­ urer shortly after news of the grand jury investigation of Harding was re­ leased. Harding said he would win the nomi­ nation for state treasurer on May 1 and be re-elected to the office in November despite the charges. T H E CHI PH I F R A T E R N IT Y __________ The Chi Phi Fraternity Is R e tu r n i n g to th e University of Texas Established at UT first in 1898, Chi P h i stands for t r u t h , friendship and personal integrity. \^e consider ourselves f o r t u n a t e to be th e only fr a t e rn i t y invited by the I.F.C. to colonize on campus this year. We’re Glad To Be Back For more information, contact Rick Stanley at 480-0564 or Mike Trostel 451-2074. Calvin Klein Men 5 Jeans 14 oz. denim straight leg Sizes 29 to 38 IF PERFECT $42 (While they last!) TICKETED . $29.99. . ONE DAY ONLY...SAT. APR. 3 5505 Airport Blvd. 6505 AIRPORT BLVD. ACROSS FROM HIGHLAND MALL - » * MO US BRANDS FOR LESS Friday, April 2, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 LET’S GET PHYSICAL... ISRAELI STYLE!” Introducing ULPAN MARVA Two unique programs of three or six months duration combining physical fitness training, Hebrew, touring, university lec­ tures seminars and more Open to young North American men and women (18-28) who have a knowledge of basic Hebrew and are in good physical condition, live in a camp in the Galilee. Cost: Airfare Departure: June, 1982 For further information contact: >RAE . _ m in ^CENTER 6 4 2 0 Hillcroft Suite 4 0 3 Houston, Tex. 7 7 0 81 ( 71 3 ) 7 7 8 - 0 6 4 3 or. outside New York, call 1-800-221 1251 IMMIGRATION U.S. citizen spouses, parents or children (over 21 years old) of an alien may petition for the alien’s permanent residency. For more information call: Paul Parsons Attorney at Law 2200 Guadalupe, Suite 216 477-7887 F re e initial consu ltatio n for UT stu d en ts and faculty HERPES Research on College Students HERPES & SEXUALITY Undergraduates w ith Genital Herpes for approx. 1 yr. or less invited to participate Pays $5 for 30-60 min. Anonymous Questionnaires For more information call Lee Nicoloff a t 4 5 8 - 8 6 3 1 LOCAL i importer's WAREHOUSE OEARAUXf- SALE A m it e m s p r ic e d a t 1 0 - 8 O ff WHOt-CSACX 0 % i ^ A Y S 0 » * ¡ 5 sot^£¡ÜH * r e retail 110.00 valu es to 65.00 retail 6.95 2 FT. PARK BENCH ES PAPIER MACHE BIR D S OCTAGONAL G LASS BO XES 10,000 STEM S PAPER FLOWERS v alu es to 2.95 ea. PALM BASKETS WILLOW BASKETS BLOWN GLASSW ARE WIRE RABBIT BA SK ETS EASTER BA SK ETS BR A SS ANGELS retail 6-10.00 all sizes & s h a p e s valu es to 7.95 retail 6.50 all sizes retail 5-20.00 3995 ea. 995 ea. I 95 ea. 5 / 1°° 3 /5 00 .99-15°° ea. .99 ea. I95 ea. 350-15°° ea. l 95 - 595 ea. Pl u s tho usands op o th er ITEMS AT GNZMOPH PRICES Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, April 2, 1982 Senate committee cuts billions from defense ® 1982 T he New York Times W ASHINGTON — The S enate A rm ed S er­ vices C o m m ittee announced T h u rsd ay pro­ posed cu ts in P re sid e n t R e a g a n 's m ilita ry budget rea ch in g $3.2 billion. Sen. John G. Tow er. R-Texas, c h a irm a n of the panel, m ad e it plain th at the c o m m itte e had ad h ered to m ost of the a d m in is tra tio n 's w eapons p ro g ra m s but had decided to cut the bulk of funds out of two pro g ram s. T hese a re the in terim deploym ent of the firs t 40 MX m issiles and delayed production of the A rm y 's new a tta c k helicopters. At a new s co nference on Capitol Hill, Tow­ e r said the c o m m itte e had deleted m o re than $2.1 billion from the a d m in istra tio n 's req u e st for the in te rim deploym ent of MX m issile s in existing silos. R eagan had sought to base about 40 of the m issiles in M inutem an silos, while try in g to find a p erm a n en t w ay to d e ­ ploy the new and pow erful w eapons. But c ritic s , including Tow er, usually a strong su p p o rte r of m ilita ry p ro g ra m s, said that the te m p o ra ry deploym ent of m issile s in bases th a t could be vulnerable to Soviet a t­ tack would only m ake an inviting ta rg e t for Soviet w arh ead s. Tow er predicted th a t the MX would u ltim ately be deployed in a “ s e r­ viceable basing m ode' th at could survive a Soviet firs t strik e. Tow er also said the co m m ittee had voted to cut about $700 m illion from an A rm y a n ti­ tank h elico p ter — called the AH64 A pache — because the weapon w as “ too c o s tly .'’ The overall vote to approve spending $180.2 billion for m ilita ry w eapons w as 16 to one, with Sen. C arl Levin, a liberal D em o crat from M ichigan, dissenting The figure is $3.2 billion less than R eagan requested. S everal con tro v ersial item s approved by the co m m ittee — including $4.5 billion for the production of seven B-1B bom bers as well as research and developm ent for the planes — are expected to s tir considerable d eb a te on the Senate floor when the w eapons bill com es up for a vote in m id-April, shortly a fte r the E a s te r recess. M eanwhile, the House A rm ed S ervices C om m ittee is also set in the next few d ays to take its own vote on the various defense pro­ posals offered by the adm inistration. Once the full Senate and House vote on the a d m in istra tio n ’s m ilita ry requests, the dif­ ferences in funds and program s will be ironed out in a conference com m ittee. Tow er said th a t although ce rtain m ilita ry w eapons “ m ay be underfunded,’ he had “ r e ­ sisted the tem p tatio n to add savings back into these p ro g ra m s." The cuts included about $700 m illion from the Apache. The A rm y had w anted 48 of the m issile-firing helico p ters next y ea r, saying they would prove highly effective ag ain st So­ viet tanks in E urope. But c ritic s said the Apache — whose cost had spiraled from $10 m illion each la st y e a r to $16 m illion now — was defective, w ith its laser-guided m issiles not functioning in rain or heavy hum idity. O ther cu ts approved a t a closed session of the co m m ittee, and disclosed Thursday, w ere m ade in A-6 and A-10 a irc ra ft p u rch a s­ es. The co m m ittee approved in c re ase s in pur­ chases of F-15 and F-16 fighters, m o re funds for Titan-2 m issiles, $1.4 billion for two m ore Los A ngeles-class attac k su b m arin es and $3.1 billion for th ree guided m issile cru isers. Tow er denied th at th ere had been shouting and furious d isag reem en t am ong the sena­ tors on the co m m ittee over the issue of the two nuclear a irc ra ft c a rrie rs th at the adm in­ istration sought — and won. Initially, Sen G ary H art, D-Colo., had tried to a lte r R ea­ g an 's request for $6.87 billion in fiscal 1983 to build the two c a rrie rs . H a r t’s m ove to get the panel to shift the funds to sm a lle r — and nu­ m erous — c a rrie rs w as rejected. T hat was followed by a m ove by Sen. W illiam S. Cohen, R-M aine. to allot funds for one c a r ­ rie r and delay sub stan tial spending on the second c a rrie r. Cohen's proposal w as also turned down am id som e debate. “ It was a sp irited discussion,” said Tow er with a sm ile. “ Men d on't shout when they talk through clenched te e th .” A nswering questions, Tow er m ade it c lea r that he disapproved of the c u rre n t m ovem ent for a nuclear freeze. Past offers few models for female law students By K A T H Y S H W I F F Daily Texan Staff When F ra n ce s “ S issy” F arenthold attended the UT School of Law in the mid-1940s, she used to go down into the basem ent of the old law school building and search for the faces of women in old class pictures. “ We had no role m o d els,” F a re n t­ hold, 55. told m em b ers of the T ravis County Women L aw yers A ssociation Tuesday. “ What it would have m ean t to the handful of w om en law students to know of the th ree wom en who w ere appointed to the Texas S uprem e Court to h ear one case in the early 1900s! ” Today, F arenthold said, her daugh­ te r tells h er th at th e re a re enough women in law school classes to hiss when they h ear a sexist rem a rk . “ Yes, th e re have been changes, but they have been in c re m e n ta l,” F a re n t­ hold said, rem em b erin g the cerem ony she attended in Ja n u ary 1981 for the UT centennial and the opening of the new law school library. As I sa t through (hat cerem ony, I was stunned. T here w as not a m inority or a w om an in sight p articip a tin g in the cerem ony. And th ere w as no con­ cern about this. T here w as an oblivi­ ousness to th at fact. As far as the out­ w ard s tru c tu re w as concerned, the cerem ony could have been the sa m e one th a t served a t the cerem ony of the opening of the U niversity of T e x a s.” F arenthold, who has served as a sta te legislator from South T exas and was a candidate for governor in 1972 and 1974, told the group how “ netw ork­ ing” had w orked for her even before the te rm w as coined to describ e w om ­ en helping other women find jobs, sup­ port or recognition. F arenthold, who returned to p ra c tic ­ ing law in Houston last y ea r a fte r se rv ­ ing as president of Wells College in New York, said her own consciousness w as raised through a series of negative experiences. law students had “ R acism w as ram p an t, and along with rac ism , th e re w as se x ism ,” she to said. “ Women sh a re the women em plo yees’ lounge, and the first question they w ere asked was w ere they th ere to find a husband. The second question: Do you think you'll m ake it past the six-week q u iz?” Susan Allen-Cam p, Dally Texan Staff Frances ‘Sissy’ Farenthold Two AISD positions draw seven candidates By M E G B R O O K S Daily Texan Staff In a city-w ide election S aturday, A ustin citizens will choose from seven can d id ates vying for two places on the Austin Independent School D istric t Board of T rustees. P lac es 4 and 5 on the school board w ere v acated this spring by J e rr y Nugent and Will D avis, resp e c­ tively. N ugent resigned to take a post on the Austin C om m unity College Board, and D avis is running for the s ta te Board of Education in the M ay 1 p ri­ m ary. C andidates tor P lace 4 are: R ichard B uerger, an oil and gas consultant. Hal W illiam son, an IBM com puter sy stem s an a ly st and head of an anti-bus­ ing group; M ae H arris M arion, a re a l-e sta te bro­ ker; and L arry W aterhouse, executive d ire c to r of Middle E a rth , a fam ily service agency. A fifth candidate. John M cGee, w ithdrew from the ra c e la te W ednesday. He has throw n his sup­ port to W aterhouse for P lace 4 and Abel Ruiz for P lac e 5. Running for P la c e 5 a re : Ruiz, sup erv iso r in the c ity ’s H um an S ervices D ep artm en t and fo rm e r di­ rec to r of the South Austin Neighborhood C enter; G ayla King, fo rm e r sponsor of a local high school drill team and ow ner of a dance and fitness studio; and G ary Johnson; a p riv ate investor and fo rm e r L ibertarian m ayoral candidate in 1981. L ast fall, the school board te rm s w ere changed from six- to four-year term s. To m ain tain the staggering system , one of the two cand id ates ele c t­ ed S aturday will serv e a tw o-year te rm and the other a four-year term . The elected school board m em bers will draw for the te rm a fte r the election. Two local te ac h er organizations — Austin F e d e r­ ation of T eachers and the Austin A ssociation of T e a c h e rs’ political action co m m ittee — have pub­ licly endorsed candidates W aterhouse and Ruiz. Polling places for the AISD school board election will be the sa m e as for the M oPac extension re ­ ferendum . 20% OFF every regular priced item in stock; albums, tapes, accessories and more! TODAY ONLY, 6 pm to 2 am as SCOTCH Record Cleaning System adnes More Than 20% Off These Items ALLEGRO Series SALE 2.99 each, 7.99 The best way to protect your record investm ent! • Cleans, reduces stylu s drag, and removes record static for the life of the record... all in one easy step! SALE 19.99 Reg. 27.99 Save on all Allegro cassettes in stock, including these selections: Vivaldi: The Four Seasons; Vivaldi: Flute. Oboe & Bassoon Concerti; Bach: Brandenburg Concerti; George Ger­ shwin: An American in Paris'Rhap- sody in Blue. Sale price good through April 10, 1982. Sale price good through April 10, 1982. SALE 3.99LP or C assette Sale price good t hrough April 10. 1982. Save o n every Capital Series 598 LP and cassette in stock, including these selections. BOB SEGER SYSTEM •W ribtin G a n b tm M an SALE3.99LP or C assette Sale price good through April 10. 1982. L_Z 20'< discount does not apply to sale priced items RCA Warner Brothers Save on every MCA Series 598 LP and cassette in stock, including these selections. UPPCR 1£U£L TEXASUNION GENERAL STORE ' t < 4 & ' f > i. * », > ’ -'I**'* ■ * i ,A *■ *■ >. ■; • U ' * I 24k Gold Plated All pieces $5 Chains from $4 I I r Huge Selection! Starts this weekend! Saturday, April 3- Friday, April 9 9:30-5 Information Lobby, Texas Union MOUNT AIN MUSIC Includes: Take M e Down* Mountain Music ... Close Enough To Perfect • ir> . c VANGELIS Chariots of Fire im includes tltie t 8W0Í6 | “0« Hbc _ Beitew In love ’ F P o lv d o r Chrysalis TOTO m including Rosann.i Africa Make Believe I Won t Hold You Back Afraid Of L THE CHARLIE DANIELS BAND W IN D O W S including Still In Saigon Am t No Ramblers Anymore T he I ady In Red Ragin Cajun We Had It All One T im e S ; ' ' ■ *5 . l.v ' I K mm -• \ ; % ■ i"^ \ I ■ \ j 6? / 2310 G u ad alu p e S treet “ On th e D rag' Phone: 178-107 1 «asmm m m T rjI 390086-032 Texas U non “When it comes to music, come to us.” Indians struggling for heritage Spokesman touts rights of native Americans By CARMEN HILL Daily Texan Staff Bureaucracy, the court system and people’s own fears are threatening Indi­ an survival. Steve Robineau. national coordinator of the Leonard Peltier De fense Committee, said Thursday night at a public forum to increase awareness of native American issues. The oppression people are facing to­ day is never going to stop,” Robineau told an audience of about 200. •‘That’s a reality.” The reality Robineau spoke of is struggle. After a slide show. ‘ Free the People,” the brightly clothed, braided Indian described the “ birth of the American Indian Movement,” which in­ volves a struggle against the courts, a struggle for constitutional rights — a struggle for survival. “ When the time comes to fight, the natural Spirit will show the way,” Robi­ neau said. “ We must fight and stand for last remaining lands, for our brothers in prison.” Leonard Peltier, who Robineau de­ scribed as a “ political prisoner,” is serving two life sentences for aiding and abetting in the death of two F B I agents who died in a 1975 Indian reser­ vation shootout. Peltier's defense com­ mittee is filing a habeas corpus brief in an effort to free the 37-year-old Indian. We believe Leonard to be innocent and hope to prove that soon,” Robineau said. “ Leonard is a warrior who was daring enough to stand in self-defense.” He said the two agents were on the North Dakota reservation illegally and that the ensuing investigation involved F B I misconduct, torture and harass­ ment. “ We get captured into fears and lock ourselves away in our own prisons in our own minds We re all political pris­ oners. Robineau said, referring to na­ tive Americans' fears of court control. “ What more evidence do we need that genocide has been to the maxi­ mum?” Robineau asked. “ If they (gov­ ernment officials) take the language and the land base, they conquer a peo­ ple There are no resources, no spirit ” The F B I and other law enforcement agencies have “ dealt a blow, taken many lives of brothers and sisters,” Ro­ bineau said. Interrogators threatened other Indians — mostly the young - that they or family members would be killed if they did not testify against Pel­ tier, he said In addition to fighting the bureacra- cy, Robineau said Indians must struggle to regain their natural lifestyle. “ We don't believe in t(ie Bureau of Indian Affairs, it takes away our way of life,” Robineau said. Indians have a natural-born right to use the sacred elements of land for sur­ vival. “ We re earth people and we be­ long here,” Robineau said Decrying the looting and polluting of the Earth by exploitation of coal, gold and oil. Robineau said Indians value life — including “ night and day, the plants and animals, the sun and moon.” Friday, April 2. 1982 □ T H E D A ILY T E X A N □ Page 1 ■ Council defers utility vote By DOUGLAS McLEOD Daily Texan Staff The City Council Thursday postponed for one week a vote to establish a Municipal Utility District northeast of Austin. The council could vote next week to allow a private com­ pany to sell $61 million worth of bonds to expand the city’s water and sewer system in the Preferred Growth Corri­ dor. Nash Phillips-Copus Inc. seeks to establish the 700-acre MUD, so it can develop the water and wastewater facili­ ties necessary to develop the company’s 700-acre tract along Walnut Creek The facilities would provide service for thousands of acres beyond the company’s proposed de­ velopment. By selling $61 million in tax-exempt bonds, the firm can finance such an endeavor, but such bonding authority is usually put before the city’s electorate for approval. That’s why opponents of the MUD claim the city will never have another bond election if the district is ap­ proved, because the City Council will have found a way to issue bonds without voter approval. A consistent lack of voter approval has kept such utility bonds from being is­ sued since 1976. While the City Charter requires voter approval of bond sales, some city officials say a state law allows bonds to be issued without voter approval and that the law supersedes the charter Proponents of the MUD say it will promote planned de­ velopment in the city’s PGC. In other action, the council heard a $5.7 million rate hike request from Southern Union Gas Co. followed by a brief public hearing during which two citizens denounced a rate increase. As the hearing closed, the council decided to retain at­ torney Don Butler as outside counsel for the city. Butler believes the gas company has not presented suffi cient information to support its rate hike request, and he has stated the firm is not actually seeking a 10 percent rate hike as it has said, but rather a 37 percent increase in base revenue. Robert Laczko. district vice president of Southern Un­ ion, told the council the rate increase was needed because the company’s stockholders were not getting a reasonable return on their investment He said the company’s future service may be impaired if a revenue increase is not granted because its 1981 revenue was not even high enough to cover its capital obligations. Laczko showed the council a map indicating areas of the city that have had low pressure problems in recent months because of an inadequeate gas main The company wants $1.53 million to install a new high-pressure feeder main to alleviate the problem The average customer s monthly gas bill would increase by about $2.50 if the rate hike is granted, he said. 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E A C H S 1 .49 EPI-LS70 6x9's are some of the finest sounding ca r speakers on the m a rk e t today. A 6 inch long throw woofer insures deep bass and a one inch a ir spring tweeter provides smooth high f r e ­ quencies H ear them today. 149, P o r ta b l e S te r e o C a s s e t t e W ith this JV C A M F M p ortable stereo cassette you can take m u sic w h en e ve r you go. S m a ll and nghtw eight with e x c e - e n t sound Model RC-363 _ _ _ is now sale priced. C «1 JVC 139 2815 G u a d a lu p e Across from McDonald's A u s tin ’s Friendly Stereo Stores VTSA- 101 West Denson Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, April 2, 1982 Valiev Texas farmworkers recently made a six-day, 80- mde march through the Rio Grande Valley to protest low wages paid by South Texas farmers. The protest march marked renewed efforts by the United Farm Workers Union to organize Rio Grande Valley farm­ workers in a state that traditionally is anti-union. Among the marchers, there existed an atmosphere of hope and fear. For many, it was the first time they had taken any active role in the farmworkers’ move­ ment. and there was a fear of being blacklisted by growers for participating in union activity. The marchers derived their courage from the one man responsible for the existence of the farmworkers union Cesar Chavez, short, stocky and unimposing, led a band of men and women, children and the elder­ ly. Carrying the black-and-red union flag through the small towns along the Texas-Mexico border, the pro­ testers marched through the area where many of the farmworkers have chosen to make their permanent homes. They are among the poorest people in this country. Some travel hundreds of miles with their families from farm to farm in search of work, while others make temporary homes near the farms where they work. According to Rebecca Flores Harrington, director of Texas United Farm Workers, Texas supplies most of the United States' farmworkers, while Hidalgo County, ;n the fertile Rio Grande Valley, is the state’s leading consumer of their labor. Approximately 150,000 Mexican-Americans — men, women and chil­ dren — leave Hidalgo County each spring to search for work elsewhere. These farmworkers generally follow a migrant trail that takes them to the Midwest and then the East during the scmmer months. They go to northern Mich­ igan to harvest the cherry crop, then to Ohio and Indi­ ana for tomatoes before arriving in Florida in the fall for the vegetable-harvesting season. Some live in camps, but many reside in substandard housing pro­ vided by farmers for whom they are working. According to Harrington, the median income of a family of six farmworkers is $3,990; the federal pover­ ty level for a six-member family is $8,891. Eighty per­ cent of farmworker families have an income below the poverty level. “ Most farmworkers live in homes valued at less than $3,000, and 41 percent of those homes have no indoor toilet facilities; 20 percent have no access to safe drinking water,” said Harrington. “ I grew up in the South Texas town of Poteet, just outside of San Antonio. My family followed the same migrant trail that other farmworkers follow now. Con­ ditions aren't any better than they were when I was a farmworker,” Harrington said. Many years ago, the way to raise Mexican-Ameri- can farmworkers out of poverty was to unionize sea­ sonal farmworkers, Chavez said. Starting in Califor­ nia in 1952, Chavez worked quietly creating the United Farm Workers of America. The union was founded 10 years later in 1962. The national union actively works to get farmworkers fair wages and tolerable working conditions. It lobbies in state legislatures for laws to protect farmworkers. In California, the union has made advarjes; the state has had a law providing farmworkers the right to collective bargaining since 1975. That struggle is only beginning in Texas. Several bills were introduced to the 67th legislative session relating to Texas farmworkers. House Bill 45 would have given the workers the right to collective bargaining; H B 698. workers’ compensation; and H B 266, unemployment compensation. None of the bills ever made it to the governor’s desk. However, one farmworker bill — sponsored by Rep. Tony Garcia, D-Pharr — did make it through the Leg­ islature last session. The new law prohibits the use of the short-handled hoe used in harvesting and levies a fine up to $200 on the employer for each employee found using the instrument. The union also plays another important role for Texas farmworkers: it reinforces cultural and relig­ ious values and enhances the sense of national pride. Thoughout the six-day march there were frequent expressions of devotion to the Virgen de Guadelupe (carried by two women leading the march), to the Catholic Church and to Chavez as a hero and a source of hope that Mexican-Americans will someday be a political force with influence to change the plight of the farmworkers, the stock from which many Mexi­ can-Americans derive. Story by Tina Romero Photos by Steve Goodson KWAHoyimfr í u S f ro mic 13 ¡ f t * ¡v .... i-?a : [ N I R O If/f 'UfNOCAh<‘ ■ Top: Farmworkers In the lower Rio Grande Valley are determined to improve their bargaining status with Texas agricultural producers. Above: This woman car­ ries a banner containing an image of the Virgen de Guadalupe commemorat­ ing previous farmworker marches in the Valley pro­ testing violence. Far ieft: People who work in the fields gather­ ing produce all their lives often carry reminders of their long, difficult labors. Left: UFW marchers stop for lunch and rest at a park along the highway through San Juan. Friday, April 2, 1982 O T H E D A IL Y T E X A N Horn’s Levine king of courts ROGERXAMPBELL With the enactm ent of the DeLoss Dodds Secrecy Act, the Abe Lemons on-off em ployment status, Gus Ball and goodness knows what else, it com pletely slipped by this w riter’s notice that Jonny Levine, the new kid in town, has becom e a Longhorn personality in the wrong sport. Tennis is his gam e, so even an NCAA title will never bring him quite the fam e. After all, in B evo’s backyard, football or basketball or baseball is where U T’s heroes are made. Still, no m atter how m eager the attention and recognition, it hasn’t slowed the fresh­ m an’s schem e of ascending to the top. And this, believe me, is not exactly what his coach or team m ates or opponents had in mind before the start of the season. Sidelined now for three weeks because of a thumb injury he received playing b a sk e tb a ll? Heretofore, he was the subject of many tennis conversations. To understand how remarkable it is that Levine has becom e the core of the Texas Longhorn tennis team , listen to Dave Synder, the head coach: “ When we w ere recruiting him, he was just another good junior player (while in high school), top 10 or 20. I thought he was a good player, but a player in the middle (of the lineup). Then he blossom ed last summer. Off the top, he had a real good start. His won-loss record (12-6) isn ’t great, but h e’s playing well. We take a team vote, and at the end of the fall, the general consensus was that he should play No. 1. I don’t like to make an overstatem ent, but I think h e’s been the best recruit w e’ve had.” Further, listen to junior Paul Crozier, who Levine dethroned from the team 's No. 1 position: “You can’t ask for much more. The pressure is a little differ­ ent in college tennis, and h e’s handled it very well. H e’s very consistent and m entally tough. He’s not a big hitter, but is very quick and tough. Basically, just a tough com petitor.” The baseline bouncer Quickly, som e technical information. Levine, righthanded, 5-9 and 145 pounds, does his thing from the baseline. Makes few errors. Coach Snyder calls him “ a retriever and exceptional return m an.” This is not to say he does not approach the net, but his consistent return shots allow him to force his opponent to make the m istakes. It works. Besides his 12-6 singles record, he has played in the No. 2 doubles spot m ost of the season. L evine’s favorite partner, he says, is Tom Fontana, another freshman. The tandem has com ­ piled an 8-5 record. “ It’s been a pretty good season ,” Levine says. “ I t’s been pretty tough, though. I ’ve been playing top 20 players every time. In the Corpus (Christi) tournament, I played the top three guys in four m atches. Every team m atch is so important. You have to not get discouraged. You can lose a singles m atch, then have to com e right back and play doubles.” Before starting the spring season, som e highlights of his ca­ reer include a 15th ranking in the U.S. Juniors his first season and fourth his second. He made it to the sin gles’ final in the U.S. Junior Championships. He was 42nd in the preseason rank­ ings. after winning three singles titles. David beats Goliath Levine, the 18-year-old from Phoenix, had been through it all. Comebacks from first set deficits, m atches h e’d alm ost blown. Through 17 m atches, he had scratched and scram bled — even in defeat — against som e of co llege’s best. Then, Levine, he of young and sm all stature, faced SMU’s Rodney Harmon, he of experience and big stature. L evine’s 11- 6 record against Harmon’s 16-4. C ollege’s No. 17 ranked player against No 1. The player with the sore ankle against the one with the flu. Harmon, who had defeated Levine (7-5, 6-3) nine months prior, entered their March 24 m atch with im pressive creden­ tials Briefly, a sophomore All-America transfer from Tennes­ see who sat out last season, the 6-2, 180-pounder won the 1980 NCAA doubles title and was 10th in singles. Not to mention several national tournament titles. No way freshm an Levine could get out of Penick-Allison Courts with anything less than a lesson in the gam e, right? Even with a home court advantage. The situation would have been rough enough on a veteran player. The result: Levine wins, 2-6, 6-3, 6-0. “ I started slow, but I was able to make fairly consistent passing shots,” Levine says. “ H e’s got a big, very hard first serve and a good spin second serve. Because I had played him before, I knew I had a chance.” Levine, though, will never know how far he could have gone in his first season. When he returns from his injury, he will have but three w eeks to prepare for the NCAA Championships. “ I’d like to win the NCAA title, really, that’s where it counts,” Levine says. “ I think I just need to work harder and stay healthy. But I’d be surprised.” Shot putters lead men’s track team By JEFF STEPHENS Daily Texan Staff The Texas m en ’s track team is expecting the level of com pe­ tition from its challengers in this w eekend’s Texas R elays to be som ewhere up in the ozone. But Longhorn coach Cleburne Price expects his team to be com petitive. T exas’ strongest event is expected to be the shot put, led by Oskar Jakobsson, Kelly Brooks and Brian Donahue. “ I think w e ’ll do extrem ely well with three people in the shot put,” Price said. “ We have all three entered, and although you are only allowed two entries (per event) w e have a rule that if all the entries have m et the national qualifying standard you can enter m ore than two. Dana LeDuc, T exas’ strength coach and former NCAA shot put champion who works with the shot putters, said that even more can be expected from the three in the future. “ As good as Oskar is now, he’s just getting ready to start throwing really far,” LeDuc said. “ You might say h e’s just finishing his apprenticeship and about to enter the real thing. Kelly reminds m e a lot of Robbie Robinson (UT shot putter in 1975-78) as far as getting the m ost out of the natural ability they w ere given. Brian’s potential is unlimited. He doesn’t re­ alize how well h e’s been doing because he se es Oskar and Kelly throwing better right now, but it won’t be long before h e’s right up there with them. " Other notable Longhorn entries include sprinter Herkie Walls, distance runner Sam Sitonik and javelin thrower Einar Vilhjalmsson, all of whom have qualified for the NCAA cham ­ pionships. Walls will run in the Invitational 100-meter dash, along with the NCAA’s 60-yard dash champion Rod Richardson of Texas A&M and 1980 NCAA 100-meter champion Stanley Floyd of Houston. Walls was third in the 60 last season. Sports Page 13 Prospective coach visits Texas, Dodds By CHARLIE McCOY Daily Texan Staff Bob Weltlich, the head basketball coach at the U niversity of Mississippi who is considered a prime candidate for the vacant coaching position at Texas, visited the cam pus Thursday and met with the screening com m ittee that is coordinating the search for a new head man. Weltlich, the first prospective successor to Abe Lemons to tour the campus and its facilities, cam e to Austin at his own request and not by invitation of the University. D irector of Men’s Intercollegiate Athletics DeLoss Dodds said. The Uni­ versity did, however, pay for W eltlich's trip. “ He asked to com e in for a v isit,’’ Dodds said. “ He wanted to view the facilities and the town of Austin. We thought that was fine.” Weltlich's tour of the athletic departm ent’s Bellmont Hall offices was conducted by Leon Black, assistant to the athletic director for academ ics and form er UT basketball coach. The tour included an inspection of the office form erly occupied by Lemons, who was fired March 10 . When asked to comment, Weltlich, who was accompanied by his wife, said, “ We're just here to visit with Mr. Black.” Weltlich has compiled a won-loss mark of 83-88 (a winning percentage of .485) while at Mississippi. A form er assistant to Bobby Knight. Weltlich preaches aggressive man-to-man de­ fense and patient offense. His M ississipi team led the Southeast Conference in defense this season en route to a 19-12 year and a fourth place finish in the SEC. Dodds said Weltlich’s visit did not signal an imminent end to the U niversity’s hush-hush search for a coach. “Nothing has changed,” he said. ‘ The job is not Bob Weltlich’s. We’re still considering any number of six to eight, and that could be nar­ rowed down at anytime. We have not narrowed it down to two or three or a final four, but it's getting closer and clo ser.” Dodds said he did not discuss contract specifics with Weltlich. whose base salary at Mississippi is $48,000. Income from radio and television shows, basketball camps and other perquisites push Weltlich's salary package up to $75,000. Dodds has said that the University will not exceed the param eters of what he called “good reason’’ in offering a sal­ ary package for its new coach When asked if the University could match the compensation Weltlich currently receives, Dodds said. “ We're in the ball park." Relays showcase world-class talent By CHARLIE McCOY Daily Texan Staff Cleburne Price was smiling Thursday afternoon, and som e of his friends and co-workers at Bellmont Hall were worried about it. “You look so relaxed." said one concerned secretary. “ Is anything wrong?’’ Price, Texas' men s track coach, assured everyone that things were fine, no problems — a response that confounded his solicitous friends because these are the days of the Texas Re­ lays. and Price is expected to be harried and frantic, burdened by the responsibility of being the chief organizer of a track m eet that will draw 187 team s and close to 2,000 com petitors. “ I’ve been doing this since 1971." said Price, looking serene and untroubled as he oversaw the orchestrated m adness that attends last minute scratches, additions and registration. “ It ought to be getting easier. “ I am more relaxed about the R elays this year,” said Price, now in his 12th year as head coach of m en’s track. “Things are going sm oothly—too smoothly. We've got to have made som e m istakes for things to be going this well But folks aren’t fus- sin', so I guess we haven't made too many m istakes.” The Relays will be run for the 55th tim e Friday and Saturday at Memorial Stadium. Field event qualifying in the collegiate and university divisions begins at 9 a.m. Friday, with finals Friday night and Saturday. Running event prelims also begin at 9 a.m. Friday and continue through Saturday. The prime run­ ning event finals — including the m eet’s glamor events, the Invitational 100 and the sprint relays — are scheduled to start at 3 p.m. The huge field is testim ony to the prestige and popularity that the m eet has developed through the years. The Texas Re­ lays has com e to be considered a showcase m eet, and at a tim e when track extravaganzas on the scale of this one are in trou­ ble because of budgets shrunk by inflation, the R elays have prospered. “ Kansas Relays. Drake Relays, Penn Relays — Florida runs a big m eet — and our s — that's about all of the big on es,” Price said. “ And Kansas is im periled. They’ve lost money the last few years. We thought the money problems people have been having would hurt us, but what's happening is that people are picking maybe two big m eets to go to, and a lot of them are picking our meet. Instead of losing, we've been gaining." The attractions of the Texas Relays aren’t difficult to see. There’s the m eteorological factor. The relays have usually been favored with good weather, Thursday's gray skies and intermittent rain notwithstanding. It draws well, and goes off smoothly. “The Texas Relays is a tremendous m eet,” said Baylor coach Clyde Hart, a veteran of 17 of these affairs. “ It’s a showcase for your kids, and it’s run well. You can count on it being the biggest crowd of the year, and the caliber of com peti­ tion has always been very good.” This year’s field is once again loaded. Some of the top track talent on the planet has been attracted to the Relays, which this year will feature three world record holders in the m en ’s division: Abilene Christian U niversity’s Billy Olson, owner of the world indoor mark of 18-10 in the pole vault; Stanley Floyd, the University of Houston flash who holds the indoor record of 6.04 in the 60-yard dash; and Keith Conner of SMU. who estab­ lished a world standard in the triple jump when he went 56-912. Also on hand will be track luminaries such as Suleman Nyambui, UT El Paso’s splendid distance man who has am assed 12 NCAA titles since 1979. Bert Cameron, Nyambui’s team m ate and a three-time NCAA champion quartermiler, will also com pete, as will former Baylor star Todd Harbour, a four­ tim e SWC champion in the m ile and owner of the collegiate record of 3:50.34 at that distance. The women's division is expected to be stronger than it has ever been at the Relays. Tennessee, which became the first women’s squad ever to be named the Texas R elays’ outstand­ ing team last year, returns intact the groups that won the sprint m edley, 1,600-meter and 3,200-meter relays in 1981 The Lady Vols, who finished second in the AIAW Indoor National Championships last month, are led by their m agnificent sopho­ more. Delissa Walton, world record holder in the 600. Phil D elavan’s UT women's team is also expected to put in a strong showing. The Longhorns, led by All-America sprinter Robbin Coleman, won the 1,600 relay at the indoor nationals in a m eet record 3:44.66. Coleman briefly held the American record in the 600 earlier this year when she ran a 1:18.63, a mark that was later shattered by T ennessee’s Walton. The pole vault may turn out to be the highlight of the m eet. An astonishing field that includes six vaulters who have gone over 18 feet is headed by Olson, who has set the world record indoors three different tim es this year. Olson is a threat to better the world outdoor mark, currently at 19-3/4, every tim e he picks up a pole. “ I don’t believe there’s been a m eet in the last eight to 10 years that’s had six 18-plus pole vaulters,” Price said. “ You know, if the weather's good and things go right, som e of those guys might vault clear out ot the stadium .” Robert Baker tosses the shot en route to his second place overall finish in the decathlon. Thom Ewing, Daily Texan Staff Gus’ ‘thieves’ to host Arkansas By STEVE CAMPBELL Daily Texan Staff These guys are incorrigible bandits who have no respect for anybody’s property. When they’re around, nail down the fur­ niture, install m etal detectors, conduct strip searches — do s o m e t h i n g , for heaven’s sake — because this gang will steal anything. Cliff Gustafson is the m ob’s kingpin, and with able henchmen Spike Owen. Mike Brumley and Mike Trent plunder­ ing the base paths, crim e does pay. The highly organized Texas theft ring is only two steals short of the school- record 113 entering Friday's gam e against Arkansas at 7:30 p.m. at Disch- Falk Field, and it has played no sm all role in the Longhorns' 35-1 getaway. “There’s no question that it does in­ tim idate people, and I think it does it to any good ballclub as w ell,” said head mobster Gustafson, who, incidentally, does not carry a gun around to knock off suspected stool pigeons. “ I think our ballclub is certainly susceptible to it. Arkansas plays a very sim ilar style to ours, and I think a big key will be how well we handle it.” looks too harm less Like his other cohorts, the 5-9, 160- to pound Owen thrive on the seedy life of crim e. The fleet-footed leadoff man is the chief thief with 26 sw ipes in 27 tries — “ I want to break the school record of 33,” Owen says — and he is fully aw are of the havoc the base-running excursions wreak. “ When you’re defensing the steal, you have to cheat in,” said Owen, who is seem ingly on base perpetually with a .333 average and 37 walks. “ Most of the time if a guy is going, you have to give up som e ground to cover the base. And that’s an a sse i to the guy who's hitting, because it gives him a bigger hole to hit through. “ I think there’s a psychological ad­ vantage for us, because the opposing catcher is bound to have heard about our running g a m e,” Owen added. “ It’s bound to put som e pressure on them not to make any m istakes or bad throws." Owner of a 5-10, 155-pound build, Brumley is not likely to worry oppo­ nents by flexing his m uscles. But the sophomore center fielder has not been caught in 23 attem pts — “ As soon as I start talking about it, 1 11 get caught,” he says with a sm ile — and is second on the team with 26 runs batted in. “Speed puts pressure on people,” said Brumley, who is a converted third baseman. “ I know it was hard when I was playing in the infield. I was blessed with God-given speed Good speed is going to steal you a certain amount of bases on raw talent.” The he-man of the trio is the 5-10, 170- pound Trent, who has pilfered 15 bases in 17 tries. Although he seem s puzzled by his base-stealing success — “ I was only an average base-stealer last year, maybe a little above average,” he says — Trent cam e to Texas with an educa­ tion in larceny after spending two years at Seminole Junior College, where his MO was the trickery of primary and secondary leads. “ In the secondary move, you get way off the base and you try to draw a throw,” Trent said. “ You know you’re getting back, so you lean back towards the base. The primary m ove is the stealing little bit shorter lead, and they’re not looking for you to go, so you get a better jump. Coach Gus has stressed that a lot this year.” lead. You take a lesser-known thieves For Gustafson, the decision to em ­ phasize the running gam e was easy. With like Mike Simon, Randy Richards and Tracy Do- phied also in the fold, the 15th-year Tex­ as coach p ossesses more overall team speed than he has ever had. “ I’m m ore com fortable with a run­ ning tea m ,” Gustafson said. “ I think vou can do more things offensively. If you just depend on good hitting, the good pitchers can offset that by shutting you down. If you get in a tight gam e, you need to do the little things to score, like a steal or a hit-and-run. The more ways you can advance a base without using up an out. the better off you'll b e.” In Wednesday’s 5-4 win over St. Mary's, the Longhorns showed — as they have countless tim es already — the virtues of running with abandon. With Brumley and Owen on first and second and the score tied in final frame of a the seven-inning opener, the duo pulled off a double steal. The Rattlers then had to draw in the defense to cut off the winning run, al­ lowing Harlan Robertson to bang a game-ending hit, only Texas' third of the night, over the center fielder’s head. “ We've scored runs without a lot of h its,” Trent said of the Longhorns, who have only 23 more hits than runs. “Some gam es we'll get eight runs on like two hits. I knew we had a lot of speed. I figured w e’d run more this year.” Brumley, who hits right behind Owen in the batting order, said: “ It's a major part of our gam e I usually give him a couple of pitches to try to figure out the pitcher's move. He's got good speed, and if he can get a good jump, he's al­ m ost always going to steal the base." The occupational hazard of compul­ sive kleptomania is risk. But in the Gus­ tafson underworld of organized crim e, gambling enterprises are inevitable. And totally necessary. “There’s always a little bit of a gam ­ ble involved.” Gustafson said. “Som e­ tim es, a guy is going to get picked off. But there’s no difference in getting picked off or getting thrown out trying to steal. If they never get picked off, they’ll probably get caught stealing more anyw ay.” Unless they steal the baseball, too. Arnold comes back to run for women Freshman to head Longhorn charge into 1,500, 2-mile events By NANCY QAY Daily Texan Staff One of T exas’ women’s hopefuls in the 55th running of the Texas R elays this weekend is freshman middle-distance ace Tara Arnold, who is not a newcom er to collegiate com peti­ tion or the Memorial Stadium track. Arnold ran in her first Texas Relays when she was 14. “ It was my first really big m ee t,” said Ar­ nold, reflecting back on her 1978 performance. “ It’s funny that I’m running here now as a member of the Texas team . I never would have guessed it then.” Arnold’s performance in the 1978 R elays as a m em ber of the Crescent Citv Track Club raised a lot of eyebrows. The Baton Rouge, La. native finished second in the wom en’s 1,500- m eter run, posting a 4:27.20 against a predom­ inantly collegiate field. Not bad for a ninth grader. Arnold will com pete in the 1,500 once again, this tim e, of course, for the Texas Longhorns. “ It’s a different-feeling this year for m e,” she said. “ This is my third Texas Relays, but I’m at my home track now. It’s a different kind of pressure than before. I think it will mean m ore to m e this time. Arnold, recently named All-America in the AIAW indoor nationals, will also anchor the twn-milp rplav Although she exDects a tough race in the m ile, Arnold believes the relay will be the high point of the m eet. “ It’ll definitely be the m ost exciting race because the competition is so stiff,” she said. “ We want to win it really bad and w e’re going to be going for it.” In addition to Arnold, Texas will enter 16 competitors in this year’s event. Senior All-America Robbin Coleman, who at one tim e held the American record in the 600- yard dash (only to have it broken the sam e day by Tennessee’s Delissa Walton), will com pete in the sprint medley, the 1,600 and the 3,200- m eter relays. She will probably square off against Walton once again in one or two of the relays. The AIAW national indoor mile quartet of Coleman, senior Donna Sherfield and fresh­ men Susan Bean and Florence Walker is ex­ pected to be a strong contender in the event against a tough field. The Longhorns are also represented by a tough field events crew, with Mary Chrobak and Laurie Kokkola in the javelin and Jo Beth Palmer in the shot put and discus. The Longhorns com e into the Relays with an outstanding outdoor record to date: a first place finish in the Border Olympics, top per­ formances in both the Texas Invitational and the TSU Relays and a host of AIAW national n u a l i f v i n p tim p s ; Pape 14 □ THE DAILY TEXA N □ J a , Ao- 2 . * 9 8 2 if you re a senior and have the promise of a 51C,OOC careeroriented job, do you know whats stopping vou from getting the American Express* Card ? You guessed it. Nothing. Because Amencan Express believes in your future. But more than that. We believe in vou now. And we’re proving it. A $10,000 job promise. T h at’s it. No strings. No gimmicks. And this offer is even good for 12 months after you graduate. Bur why do you need the American Express Card now? First of all, it’s a good way to begin to establish your credit history. And you knew that’s important. Of course, the Card is also good for travel, restaurants, and shopping for things like a new stereo or furniture. And because the Card is recognized and welcomed worldwide, so are vou. So call for a Special Student Application or look for one at your college bookstore or on campus bulletin boards. T h e American Express Card. Don't leave school without itr Call today for an application: 800528-8000. 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Silfver. however wasr. t listed among the favorites Silfver who trailed leader Steve Al­ exander by 80 points at the conclusion of the first day of com petition Wednes­ day was able to com m andeer the top spot when Alexander withdrew from com petition because of an injury Alexander banged up an ankle in the 110-meter hurdles, the day's first event, and finished the race in a dism a: 16 18 seconds Still, he felt as if he could con­ tinue The pain worsened a fter the next event, the discus however, so rather than risk further injury, he bowed out somewhat awkwardly I II be out a couple of weeks Alex­ ander said left ankle totally submerged lc ice G etting through this thing de­ c a t l ó n in one piece is ju st as big a deal as winning it It s frestatin g though because with that tailwind behind me. I felt like I was on my way to one of my better tim es ever in that event His loss turned into Silfv er's gain Silfver won the hurdle^ m 14 56 seconds to p ick up 165 points and overtake Alex­ After he Alexander went ander. down in the hurdles, the 6-0 192-pound Swede said * I figured I should win the event Unfortunately, the other com petitors didn't quite figure it that way A few strong perform ances coupled with Silfver s weak ones, allowed Athletes in A ction's Tim Bright, and eventual sec­ finisher Robert B ak er to ond place into contention work their way back with B a k e r's strongest ev e r' the 1.500- m eters. com ing up Í had a lapse in concentration when I Alexander went out, eased up not thinking about the people behind me, and they started closing in on me Silfver said Closing in fact, in so fast that a strong showing by Baker in the 1 500- m eters could have earned him first. Baker who needed to cover the dis­ tance 45 seconds fa ste r than Silfv er to win wa eight seconds too slow in his attem pt. Silfver w asn’t n ecessarily expecting a win at the Relays He planned for it to be m erely one of a series of warmup decathlons on his way to his ultim ate goal the European National Champion­ ships to be held in the first week of Sep­ tem ber. His surprise conquest was not the only accom plishm ent of the evening. Bright set a new Am erican decathlon pole vault record with a vault of 17-414 , breaking I^arn- M aestretti s old record of 17-4. Sportswire From staff and «vire report* Walker undergoes knee surgery The Longhorns sophomore running back John W alker under­ went orthoscopic surgery Thursday on his right knee and it was determ ined that no further surgery would be necessary according to the U niversity's sports information departm ent Walker, who was expected to be Texas No. 1 tailback next fall, injured his knee in last Saturday s spring p ractice scrim m ­ age when a defender fell on his leg The 6-1. 200-pounder from Killeen will have his leg in a cast for six to eight weeks before he begins a rehabilitation pro­ gram It is unknown if the injury will a ffect W alker's status in the fall. Flynn, Tanana lead Texas over K C FO R T M Y E R S . F la — Doug Flynn had three hits and drove in a run and Frank Tanana pitched six innings to pick up his third victory in a 5-3 Texas R angers victory Thursday over the Kansas City Royals. B oSox shut out Astros, Ryan, 6-0 W IN TER HAVEN. Fla — Mike Torrez and Mark C lear com - bined on a tw o h itte r Thursday and Gary Allenson and Dave Stapleton each drove in a pair of runs to lead the Boston Red Sox to a 6-0 exhibition win over the Houston Astros. Longhorns jump to 7th in tourney Oklahoma State picked up 18 strokes on first-day leader Houston to capture the lead halfway through the All-American Intercollegiate Golf Tournament. Texas, coming into Thursday’s round in 11th place, used a second-day total of 289 on the Houston B ear Creek Course to jump into seventh place with a 584, 18-strokes-over-par and 24 strokes off OSU’s pacestting 560. Rangers get Mazzilli from Mets ST P E T E R S B U R G , F la. — New York Mets outfielder Lee Mazzilh a form er All-Star who couldn’t find a position this spring was traded Thursday to the Texas R angers for two mmor-league pitchers. The R angers, who one day ea rlie r traded A1 Oliver, their best hitter to the Montreal Expos, continued to m aneuver in an effort to enhance their standing in the A m erican-League West by dealing right-handers Walt T errell and Ron Darling for Maz­ zilli. 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TEXAS CHO ICE 86 P W Scotch W h * k y USHERS 80 Proof Scotch W h rtA y CUTTY SARK P re *t Seetch W h a fc y M A R T IN S V.V.O. 8 YR. M p-oo i Scotch W H i u y ................. . . . . . ......... VAT 69 GOLD M fin altaM fcW h tty ................................. 1 7 5 LT. M O H A W K V O D K A M ftaafVM fta ........... 1 75 LT 0 * o TO I V . / K A 0 0 . 7 7 OLD C R O W to Proof Straight fcovrboo Whukr, KENTUCKY BEAU BO Proof S tro « g M B o u rb o n W h ttk o y 1 , 7 5 LT. JT * o AO ¿7 « 9 0 1 . 7 5 I T . Jr » jr JACK DANIELS BLACK 9 0 P-oof T»nr>*,v*. W h r ik a y W A LKER C A N A D IA N 8 0 Proof C cm o d .o n W h tv k , 7 5 0 M L I U i « o o . 7 T 4 A O 7 5 0 M L . ‘ f . O / SOUTHERN COMFORT 7 5 0 M L . 1 l . I Q o Shoe Shop Rugs SH EEPSK IN C O W & CALF ★ SA DDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN Capitol Saddlery 1 6 1 4 L a v a c a A u $ fin , T e x a s 4 7 8 - 9 3 0 9 MARI JUAN AHOLICS You've tried to quit — now is the time fo r professional help. DR. FRANK PATTON Doctor of Psychology a n d Hypnotherapy By app o in tm e n t 5 1 2 / 3 2 1 - 6 7 8 9 JUAREZ U i TEHUTLA ...stands above the rest CLEARANCE SALE G u a ra n teein g th e Low est S h o e Prices in T o w n !! NIKE PUMA LE C O Q BATA LAST WEEK OF SALE Le Coq Ashe Team Nike Legend Converse Pro Star Converse Defender Nike Yankee Lady Reg 3875 Now 29.95 R«g. 56.95 Now 39.95 R*g 6175 Now 44.95 R»g. 2775 Now 19.95 Reg. 3475 Now 24.95 SPORT SHOE Featuring Runners World 702 W. 24th 477-9187 THE Friday, April 2, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 15 OF T h a t S a t u r d a y w as like a n y o th e r . T h e y t ho u g h t . W a r m sun, b l u e sky. " L e t ' s h a v e s o m e f u n , " t h e y t h o u g h t . O n the r a d i o t h e y h e a r d h e r H o n o r the M a y o r t e l l i n g t h e m that all " r i g h t t h i n k i n g " A u s t i n i t e s s h o u l d v o t e that d ay for the M o p a c e x t e n s i o n s . E v e n the o n e a c r o s s f r a g i l e B a r t o n C r ee k . Sh e was. A nd sh e k n e w w h a t w a s g o o d for A u s t i n , Bozo, so l i s t e n up! T h e y d i d n ' t c a r e . T h e d a y w a s too p r e t t y . Let s o m e o n e e ls e go v o te. W h a t di d the e x t e n s i o n s m e a n to t h e m ? So off t he y d r ov e , the w i n d in t h e i r face. M e a n w h i l e , the d e v e l o p e r - l o v e r s l i ned up f i f t y d e e p to v o t e . At s e v e n the p o l l s s h u t tr ir d o or s . By te n it w as o v e r . . . . A s u n b u r n e d m a n s a d l y p l a y e d a g u i t a r , his s o n g f l o a t i n g g e n t l y o v e r the c a m p u s g r e e n s . " W h e r e w e r e the p e o p l e w h o c o u l d h a v e s a v e d the S p r i n g s W i t h o n e l i t t l e p u n c h in a v o t i n g m a c h i n e ? T h e d ay w a s to o n ic e fo r that sort of thing, So o C f we all w e n t o n a S a t u r d a y f ling. To B a r t o n S p r i n g s . T h e p o l l s c l o s e d at s ev e n , the v o t e s w e r e all in. 'We beeit 'em, we l i c k e d 'em,' l a ug h e d w r i n k l e d o l d men. 'I f o r g o t, ' c r i e d a s t u d e n t , t ea r s on h is face. '1 c o u l d h a v e s a v e d B a r t o n ' s , but now. . . it's too l a t e . ' " P L E A S E — D O N ' T BE T H A T S T U D E N T . V O T E T O M O R R O W T O S A V E Y O U R S PR I N G S . MOPAC CAN KILL BARTON SPRINGS If y ou a r e n ' t s u r e h o w to v o t e , l is te n to a f o r m e r s t u d e n t y ou k n o w y o u c a n t r u s t — a f o u n d e r o f the Z i l k e r P a r k P osse. " B a r t o n S p r i n g s c o u l d d ie w h i l e we w a t c h , s t r a n g l e d by p o l l u t i o n . R i d i c u l o u s ? D e v e l o p e r s a l r e a d y h a v e o v e r 2 0 0 , 0 0 0 n e w u n i t s p l a n n e d . O v e r 2 1 0 , 0 0 0 m o r e p e o p l e in th e s o u t h e r n a r e a a lo ne ! I m a g i n e h o w m u c h m o r e f i l th a n d p o l l u t i o n wil l roll into B a r t o n C r e e k a n d S p r i n g s f r o m t h e s e H o u s t o n - l i k e d e v e l o p m e n t s ! T h e y c o u l d kill o u r S p r i n g s . T h a t is not a n e x a g g e r a t i o n . " — Ke n M a n n i n g , p a s t p r e s i d e n t , Z i l k e r P a r k P o s s e " T h e p r o p o s e d a c t i o n is u n s a t i s f a c t o r y b e c a u s e of its p o t e n t i a 11y h a r m fu l e f f e c t on the e n v i r o n m e n t . ' ' — U.S. E n v i r o n m e n t a l P r o t e c t i o n A g e n c y s tu d y f f e J bv o t o h P WHO WILL BENEFIT FROM THE EXTENSIONS? Y o u c a n j u d ge an i s s u e by its b a c k e r s a n d o p p o n e n t s . W h o s u p p o r t s the e x t e n s i o n s ? T a k e a l oo k . . . Bill M i l b u r n I n v e s t m e n t s T r a m m e l C r o w A s s o c i a t e d C o m p a n i e s ( D a l l a s ) J o h n W a t s on , P a r a g o n P r o p e r t i e s L u m b e r m a n ' s I n v e s t m e n t C o rp . G e r a l d 'lines I n t e r e s t s ( H o u s t o n ) N P C R e a l t y I n d u s tr i a l P r o p e r t i e s C o r p . ( D a ll a s ) A u s t i n N a t i o n a l B a n k R e p u b l i c B a n k A u s t i n T e x a s C o m m e r c e B a n k N a t i o n a l B a n k of C o m m e r c e C i t i b a n k . . . a n d m a n y , m a n y m o r e . WHO OPPOSES THE EXTENSIONS? A n d w h o o p p o s e s the e x t e n s i o n s ? H e r e ' s the list . . . A u s t i n P r o g r e s s i v e C o a l i t i o n A u s t i n N e i g h b o r h o o d s C o u n c i l A u s t i n C i t y C o u n c i l (Rog e r , L a rr y, R i c h a r d , a n d C h a r l e s ) U n i v e r s i t y Y o u n g D e m o c r a t s S t u d e n t s to S av e B a r t o n C r e e k C e n t r a l A u s t i n D e m o c r a t s We C a r e A u s t i n S t u d e n t s for E n v i r o n m e n t a l D e f e n s e S a v e B a r t o n C r e e k A s s o c i a t i o n Z i l k e r P a r k P o s s e . . . a n d m a n y , m a n y m o r e a v e r a g e c i t i z e n s . W h i c h set of b a c k e r s r e p r e s e n t s y o u r i de as ? W h i c h has y o u r i n t e r e s t s at h ea r t ? L E T ' S S T A N D T O C E T H E R T H I S S A T U R D A Y A G A I N S T T H E D E V E L O P E R S , T H E P O L L U T E R S , T H E N E I G H B O R H O O D D E S T R O Y E R S . L E T 'S S T A N D F O R O U R S P R I N G S — B E FO R E WE L O S E IT. tomorrow VOTE KINO Before they kill our Springs Pol. ad paid for by Students for Environmental Defense, Kathy Phillips, tres., 3815 Guadalupe1 #305, Austin 787 ^1 Page 1 6 D THE DAILY TEXAN Anri i i L i L 2 . "982 Ultimate Cassette... ITI3XEII Lifetime G u a r a n t e e m l®*1ll!i: I P V M I Buy 12, Get 13th Free ' low Nois« C- 4 6 ......................................... I . f 7 low Metso C -é C .....................................2.15 C - W ........................................ 3.27 lew low Metso C-120...................... 4.22 Ultra Dyeomk C-4 4 .................................2.17 Ultra Dynamic C -W .................................4.67 Ultro Dynamic C- 1 2 0 ............................. é.29 Ultra gnomic XL-II C-W......................... 4.50 High Epitaxial Xl-ll-S C- 9 0 ..................... 6.56 ,frMetal MX-C44...........................Í.04 lio 35-W 1*00 ft Reel-to-Reel 7" . . . Í .35 BERKmnns t h e s t e r e o s t o r e 2234 GUADALUPE • 476-3525 4930 BURNET ROAD • 454-6731 Hogs edge men; Bruins drop women By JOEY REISTROFFER and MICHELLE ROBERSON 3a y Te/a' S*a“ The Texas men s tennis ’.earn performed like an old battery or. a cold night at Pen- ick-Allison Courts Thursda> it just couldn t get ignited m the ear!'- events And once the Longhorn machine finally chugged into action during doubles play, the match had already been decided Tennis Arkansas, the ninth-ranked team in the nation demol- /-ihed the Longhorns >1 in singles action before settling for a 5-4 win in the SWC lOth-ranked match against Texas The loss dropped Tex­ as to 12-7 in seasonal play Evidence of rusty play, be­ cause of a week-long layoff as well as two one-hour drizzle delays the Long­ horn- fate long before the ac­ tion finally terminated at 10 p m on the Westwood Coun­ the teams try Club courts foretold their matches at finished Westwood because Penick-Al­ lison Courts do not have lights Longhorn Paul Crozier and Ftazorbaek Pat Serret played the No 1 position for their re­ spective teams because both schools lost their usual first seed players to injuries — Texas Jonay Levine has thumb problems while Ar­ kansas Peter Doohan is .nurs­ ing a sprained ankle Serret in out maneuvered Crozier their No 1 singles match 6-4, 3-6 6-2 Texas coach Dave Snyder sent Craig Kardor. against Ar­ kansas' Kelly Evemden in the No 2 slot but Kardor. lott the match 3-6. 6-4, 3-6 as well as several controversial calls that umpire Helmut Younger had difficulty deciding Younger explained that since two umpires had to watch five matches proceeding at the same time, it was impossible therefore, to see everything the games are played under an honor system Lines balls bouncing close to the lines have to be called bv the individuals. SW IM COACH WANTED: Sum m er Sw mm ing Poe; Director able ’each coach and provide a fun and safe aquatic program . S1000.00 per mo to For details call City M an ag er Ken Taylor, Burnef, Texas 512-756-4858 Both players Younger said agreed on a particular spot where the ball bounced and I interpreted it as a good ball The call went against Kardon Not only did Texas lose that decision but it also lost the matches in positions three In fact, only four and six team captain Doug Crawford sustained a Longhorn victory in singles competition Although Crawford defeat­ ed opponent Jeff Nissenbaum 2-6 7-5 7-5. teammate Tom Fontana seeded third yield­ ed to Razorback Jose Lam­ bert 3-7. 6-4 1-6 Longhorn the Ted Erck. playing fourth slot learned a new ten­ nis Jean Van Rensburg. iosmg 2-6 1-6 and Texas' Doug Snyder plum­ meted to a 2-6 2-6 loss at the hands of Clark Diehl, who re­ covered from the flu to play only his ninth match of the year lesson from in Texas finally throttled into action when the No 1 doubles team of Kardon-Erck beat Diehl-Evernden 7-6. 6-4. while the No. 2 team of Cro- zier-Fontana won easily over Lambert-Van Rensburg Gavin Forbes and Crawford uprooted Serret and Nissen­ baum in the No. 3 seed. 7-6 6- L The Longhorns travel to Houston, playing the Rice Owls Saturday and Houston Cougars Monday • Just about everyone enjoys a sneak preview In sports, knowing in advance what the opposition has in store can be a big asset. A preview although not a very sneaky one is what the Texas women s tennis team got a taste of Thursday as it lost to No 2 ranked UCLA 7-2, at the Intramural Courts giv­ ing Texas a 12-2 season record But the match gave the Longhorns an opportunity to see what was in store for them this weekend when they host the Lady Longhorn Ten­ nis Gassic at the Lakeway Country Club UCLA will head a field that includes Trinity, the University of California at Berkeley. Rollins. Clem son, North Carolina Louisiana State University and No. 14 Texas Texas' Kirsten McKeen said she regards the prelimi­ nary meeting of UCLA as an asset In a lot of matches we’ve played she inconsistently. said. Against Rice it was 5-4 and the next day against Per­ mian Basin it was 8-1 But against Florida State we got good performances from ev­ eryone. all on one day Hope­ fully, the match with UCLA will be like that, make us more consistent McKeen added that playing UCLA first in a dual match and then in the tournament also helps confidence. "P la y ­ ing against a good team like UCLA, you're not sure how you will do. But when you get on the court and see they’re not that great, you get more confident for the next time you play them.'' Texas Coach Dave Woods said that a confident, consist­ ent Texas could fight its way into the finals at 9 a m Sun­ day But we will have to play well We will have to have one of our best days Texas two match wins against the Bruins Thursday were earned by fourth seed Jane Johansen who defeated UCLA s Krinn Heusner 6-4. 7- 5. and No 3 doubles. Chris Harrison and Gen Greiwe. who downed Heusner and Karen Dewis 6-4 6-3 Woods said the weekend's tough competition could only benefit the Longhorns. This tournament is like a mini-na- he said All these tionals teams could go to either NCAA or AIAW nationals, and it’s a good preview of the kind of competition we could ex­ pect at regionals and be­ yond ’ ’ The Invitational will also give the Longhorns' All- America doubles team, Kir­ sten McKeen and Jane Johan­ sen. the opportunity to get into tip-top form before the playoffs begin ‘‘We haven't played many top ( doubles) teams so far,” McKeen said "And we ha­ ven’t really played at our top ability to get ready for nation­ als.” dual Matches will be played out for all eight positions, so that each team will compete in three matches comprised of six singles and three doubles. First-round play begins Friday, with UCLA against North Caroli­ na, Rollins against Cal-Berke- ley, Trinity against LSU and Clemson against Texas. The Longhorns' dual starts at 1 p.m. Just one more flight up. Maude . . . watch \our >tep . . . okav— what do \ou think of rm new Mondo Condor You don’t like it? Really? Well, ; guess that's nice. I like heing one of the gang . . . Oh Bertha, its . . . why it's so interesting. The \in\l floor, the simulated woodgrain paneling— \ou know, it reminds me of H enn s place! \nd Gertrude’s and Sidney s, and W ally's and Priscillas and— I / Now Í didn t sa\ that! In fad. it's perfect for you, Bertha, it reflects wiur personality— so very average, my dear. It has what one might call The Common Touch. PRESERVATION SQUARE. A comm inity of twenty-one unique condominium homes, from the $40s. Ur*. servation Square i . more than a condominium; it’s an investment with distinction. L t information contact Rick Hardin at (512)474-5981 or come by the Ricardin Company offices at 22nd and Rio Grande. Certainly \ou do. Bertha. Uhy. you’d never want to live at Preservation Square, for example. French doors and ten-foot ceilings— hardwood floors— oh. no. you’d never feel at home in such distinctive surroundings. . . 1 / S mytRV4TN*VfUK f r w y y anto wot.ii ftjtw s ACROSS 1 Narratives 6 Apprehend tO Arrived 14 'Ltir up Obs 15 Irish river 16 A-5 coins 17 Way freight 2 words 19 Vases 20 Bed 21 Cessation 23 Molars 26 Breeze 26 Affirmative 2 7 f mial 26 Source 31 Stadium yell 33 Grande or E b r o 34 Harsh sound 36 Servants 40 Sion problem 42 Goads 44 Dirt 46 Shoe forms 47 ERA and RBI 43 Edible seed 50 Lofty peak 62 Employ 63 Ancient 54 Rural fete 57 Mr Landon, to friends 3 ~ T 4 Ti 15 18 TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE THURSDAY’S PUZZLE SOLVED 59 Roof pieces 61 Rejuvena­ tions 64 Of cuspids 67 — China 66 Speculation 70 Harrow’s rival 71 Canal of old 72 Old card game 73 Disperses 74 Preoccupied 75 Swings DOWN 1 Baby powder 2 Cupid 3 Sites 4 Circumvent 5 Drummers 6 Possessive 7 Periods 8 Ms Ekberg 9 French artist JO — d'etat 11 Marshal 12 Scab 13 Letters 18 Wyoming peaks 22 Baby buggy 24 Bands 27 Of a time 28 Type size 30 Fidelity 32 Begets 35 Mannerism 37 Swindle 38 Sword fight 39 Town, in Holland 41 Greek letter 43 Long step 46 Cabbage salad 48 Chooses 51 Mine 54 Zodiac sign 55 Slow Music 56 Bestow 58 Plants 60 Inner 62 Eternities 63 Fragment 65 Lined up 66 Leases 69 Plane I5T5TT IÁ □a □□ g aaaag ¡aaoa aaaaai a a a a i aa aai aaa ai aaaa i aaaaa aaa aa a aaa aaa k lU P E A i 11 12 13 I L r PEANUTS'?) by Charles M. Schulz .05T A6AIN HUH, 6I6 BROTHER 7 8 I KNOW HOW YOU FEEL...IT'S NO FUN TO l o s e a l l Th e t im e I WISH I COULP DO SOMETHING TO CHEER YOU UP. PLEA5E! DON'T 5IN6 CHRI5TMA5 CAROLS! 17 20 I T 45 61 67 __r 73 21 22 23 24 25 27 28 30 31 32 29 34 35 36 37 38 39 41 42 43 44 46 47 48 50 51 52 [49 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 63 64 65 66 69 68 71 74 72 75 T B .C . Í Y a lR N EW 0 F iC e T ÍM E A (X ¡? M e A i c WiTtA 5 £ aV s?C £ A L A R M - ------------------ tm tfaIR 6UMP OVTe TORN OÚT e e é=¿Me¿*ie wrt? u k e s t > ------------ w e UR S E X C M A H G t . W E C U R S E . E X C H AMCtE 4 2 BLOOM C O U N TY CX DfW M ANpeve mve HAMOS 0 \ I PONT m m a H6AR IT, MILO. \ f - vJik ua 'T % ,+L ^ ' m l . 7*JH ryU 1 26 by Berke Breathed m i YOU GIN JUST ROCK Meiosceep, r w r n r / yep. that's A 5TVWER. AT WESTMAU JESTER CENTER 24th t WHITIS R.L. MOORE 24th & SPEEDWAY v\ WHILE THEY LAST I ¿Pieftau’ .Sct: June 16 th L S A T E d u c a tio n a l Cen te r TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Class starting April 12th Call Days Exemngs & weekends in Austin: 1801 Lavaca, Suite 104 Austin, Tx. 78701 512/472-8085 In Dallas: 11617 N . Cent. Exprw y. Dalles T* 75243 214 750-0317 SELL IT H ave som ething to sell? Advertise it in the D aily Texan w a n t ads. xxx 454-5319 DEPOT 5700 BURNET R0 (O N E BLOCK SOUTH OF KOENIG LANE) COORS & COORS LIGHT 16 GAL. KEG 3 6 . 9 5 8 GAL. KEG 2 5 . 9 5 LONGNECKS 6-PACK 2 . 2 9 CASE 8 . 9 9 HENRY WEINARD'S CORONA EXTRA DORTMUNDER UNION BELHAVEN ALE 6 PK 6 PK 2 . 8 6 3 . 3 9 3 . 9 9 1 .8 1 u . 6 PK OVER 70 BRANDS OF IMPORTS IN STOCK —I h - CO ALL YOU CAN EAT REESE'S STYLE $6.95 5:00-10:00 P.M. You get generous portions of potato salad, cole slaw, and beans. With your choice of any 3 of the following meats: sausage, beef, chicken, or spare ribs. Then finish your delicious meal with a com plim entary scoop of ice cream . Open: Monday thru Saturday 11-10 Sunday 12-10 NO DO GGIE BA G S OR SEPA R A T E CH ECKS R E E S E S B A R B Q ------ 2728 So. Congress 444-9994 You have a voice in the affairs of your UNIVERSITY CO-OP Through the Student Members of the Board of Directors Two Student Members will be elected on April 7. Platform s of the Candidates will be in the Texan Mon. & Tues., April 5 & 6. VOTE for TWO Wednesday, April 7 T H E R E WILL B E EIG H T VOTING LOCATIONS W est M all M ain M a ll/E a s t M all F ou n tain /C om m u n icatio n C om p lex C o u rty a rd /J ester C en ter/R L M l ¿ d ay at Law School & LBJ School P rob lem y o tin g -T e x a s Union (Those not listed on Register) SERV ING LO NG H O RNS J* m ° Yk SERVING THE 1LONGHORNS SINCE 1896 v/ 2 b y jo h n n y h a r t /-S T U D E N T MEMBERS Friday, April 2, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN Entertainment Page 17 Miss Hannlgan (Williamson) B y A L E X P L A Z A Daily Texan Staff “ Annie” ; directed by Bryan Young; with Mollie Hall, Ron Roígate and Ruth Williamson; at 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday; at the Performing Arts Center. The Charles Strouse-Martin Chamin musical “ Annie” breathes the impudent confidence of artists joyously engaged in exploring the range and size of their gifts. It is as if they were whispering to the audience from the wings, “ Here is a marvelous toy that we’ve just invented; please observe the , ease with which we wind it up and set it spinning.” The ingen­ ious structure of the work, and the wit — or, on occasion, merely the high spirits — of the musical numbers make their marvelous toy practically foolproof. Based on the famous cartoon of the same name, “ Annie” is a , Depression-era fantasy about a small, sweet, gutsy orphan who ; escapes from the clutches of a child-hating headmistress named Miss Hannigan (Ruth Williamson) and winds up as the adopted child of Daddy Warbucks (Ron Holgate), one of the world s richest men. But “ Annie” is more than a light-hearted fantasy of rescue. It is a spoof celebrating the callousness, frivolity and insanity of the ’30s — its appetite for scandalous journalism, political hooliganism and highly charged empti­ ness. Nothing except speed and noisy acclaim has any value in this LEGENDS IN THEIR S P A R E T IM E For years Dan and D ave have been a w e ek ­ end tradition at the B a ck Room , so it’s only appropriate that their first record be a live album recorded there. It’s now available at the B a ck Room or your local record store. Live at the B ack Room. r w M K m . TH ETEXAS TAVERN Located in the Texas Union, main level Tonight THE DARTS Saturday THE DINOSAURS Sunday MEDINA proof of age required for alcohol purchase- Annie (Hall) and S and y (Roxanne, r) environment. Life is reduced to sensational headlines. Rule is by slogans and violent skulduggery. Politicians are ignorant people who have been spoiled silly by playing with power as with tin soldiers. To think seriously about all this would inevitably lead one to despair. But Strouse, Chamin and author Thomas Meehan, al­ though they deal with the matter with remarkable dexterity and lusty stage sense, didn’t intend for us to think about it; they want us to enjoy it, as they themselves seem to have done with crazy indifference. t But if “ Annie’s” creators are indifferent about Depression- era despair, they are sharply aware of theatrical style, bring­ ing together in effortless coalition all the arts of the Broadway musical for a production that sizzles with emotional electricity. The show is structured so that dance and action keep becoming each other, thus enabling choreographer Peter Gennaro to use spinach crepes Les Amis Cafe 24th & San A ntonio ¿ - Capitol C ity T la y h o u s e 214 West Fourth Street, Austin, Fvxas, (Formerly the Gaslight Building) takes pride in presenting the internationally acclaimed "FS.P Team," Glenn ¿ y Audience Mind Reading. " E . S . P . T E A M , " EALKENS m Fñ W i s i and ‘Frances ‘WlLLARD s p i r i t m e d i i m in an exclusive, week-long " $ 6 W e d I hut v, X in The University of Texas at Austin College of Fine Arts Performing Arts Center Rudolf Serkin A n All Beethoven Program "B y unanimous consent the outstanding living exponent of the German Romantic piano tradition.” The New York Times Friday, April 23 8pm Performing Arts Center Concert Hall CEC/PAC, senior citizens $10.50, $9, $7.50, $5.25 Public $14, $12, $10, $7 CEC/PAC member sales begin April 2 Public sales begin April 5 Tickets 10-6, Monday-Fnday at PAC, Texas Union, Erwin Center; also 9-3 Saturday at Erwin Center; Charge-a Ticket, 4 77 6060; Texas toll-free, 8 0 0 -2 5 2 9 90 9 6 0 c charge per ticket for all phone orders. Further information, 471 -1 44 4 No cam eras No recorders. Daddy Warbucks (Holgate) the hair-trigger kinetic energy of his actors to drive the whole thing forward. And yet his waltz between Annie and Daddy Warbucks in “ I Don't Need Anything But You,” showing the yearning of the characters for peace and happiness, is . rute calm and subdued, all the sweeter for not being saccharine It is not hard to yearn for the world that “ Annie” puts before your eyes, and much of the credit for this must go to its cast of expert actors. As Daddy Warbucks, Ron Holgate dispenses paternal charm (though not all his songs are suited for his voice). Mollie Hall s Annie is equally winning — a straight, gritty performer who sings appealingly, hitting her notes clean and phrasing like a mini-Merman. Ruth Williamson, as Miss Hannigan, is something else alto­ gether. She radiates evil. Her flamingo legs carry her with awkward zest from sin to sin, while her tongue utters frightful lies. Yet we are too conscious that she is a self-aware villain, scoring stunning acting points without carrying complete emo­ tional conviction. On the whole, “ Annie” is a splendid musical comedy. It a c ­ complishes what comedy has been doing ever since Aristo­ phanes burst upon the theatrical scene over 3,000 years ago it takes us into a realm where we are no longer bound by the chains of .the merely possible, which oppress us in the real world more than we know. How this transcendence is achieved is one of the fundamental mysteries of the theater, but is it achieved, intoxicatingly, in “ Annie.” T b e . iouri' r i n > e l o u g O o m p c § y Preseras Guitarist extraordinaire A! DiMeola and The Electric Rendevous Toui featuring P hi li pp e Saisse — Simon P h i l l i p p e Anthony J a c k s o n — and more! Austin O p era House ROCK AND ROLL CARNIVAL PART I ERNIE SKY & THE K-TELS * THE TAK, • THE JAMES ANDERSON 8AND • AUSTIN ALL-STARS • THE LIFT • CRAIG CALVERT & ALTER EGO • ROKY ERIKSON • VAN WILKS Free Balloon Rides • Carnival • Food * Drink Tl) FIESTA GARDENS • All Tickets Only $2 94 P resented by K LB J, ROCK ARTS & SCH LIIZ ROCK and ROLL CARNIVA; PART II MORRIS CODE • COBRAS • PRESSUM • POWDER BLUE • HEYOKA • WOMMACK BROTHERS • OCTAVE DOCTORS • PROJECT TERROR R FIESTA GARDENS • All T ickets Only $Z 94 P resented by K LBJ, ROCK ARTS & SCHLITZ ^PlPlPIPfPiP COMING ATTRACTIONS April 8 April 15 April 17 April 23 May 22 Sugar Hill Gang P alm er Aud. Opera David Crosby Opera Eric Burdon P aram ount Jaco Pastorius Opera Tom Waits For ticket information call 444 4301 Inner Sanctum • Record Exchange • Both Zebra Hastings, Barton Creek • Disc • Com puter Madness COMMITTEE WORK The Texas Union has nine program m ing com ­ mittees which sponsor speakers, cultural ever- films, art shows, symposiums and Union n te ex travaganzas. If you would like to nterv <¿v o' :4 committee, call 471-5653. Page 18 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, April 2. 1982 Nasty Habits Happy Hour Specials from 5-8 50 XZ. *1 8 5 Ail Longnecks Miller coors Lite 6 0 0 W. MLK Mon-Sat 12-12 4 7 2 -2 1 5 5 Sun. 12-10 Malle’s 'Dinner': the joy of talking By G R E G B EA L Da y "exa^ Staff “ My Dinner with .André” ; d irected by Louis M a lle ; w rit­ ten by and with W allace Shawn and Andre G re g o ry ; at the V arsity T h eatre. P : I got to tell you about this m o vie I ju st saw . I m ean, you won t believ e it T h e re 's th ese two guys and a ll's that happens is they sit in a r e sta u ­ rant and talk and talk, telling you about the tim e A ndre w as in P olan d teach in g actin g to 40 w om en who couldn't sp eak E n glish and how he h a s these d r e a m s, like when he saw a m o n ster during a w edding and W ally. the other guy. is listen in g, kinda thinking his frien d 's gone ban an as ... T : Hey, w ait, w ait What m o v ie? W hat're you talking a b o u t0 P : S o rry , I m a little e x c it­ ed. But. hey. I ’ve n ever seen anything like it. Nothing. Not ever. T : What m o v ie 0 ' P : "M y Dinner with An­ dre “ I t 's by Lo u is M alle, who d ire cted "A tla n tic C ity ” and " P r e t ty B ab y c>r I'M a JAMOUs Uteafs * ,fe! 1 « in Life Beer : CoBfe**5 m th ird f e » er ^ ^ G r e u t t o u r . . . M ail this coupon and a ch eck or m oney order for the total am ount to: Lite Beer T-Shirt Offer PO Box 1153 M ilw aukee, Wi 53201 " I’m a Fa m o us Lite Beer Drinker’ T-Shirt ($5.00 e a c h ) ___________________ Sm all (Q ua n tity) _________M e d iu m La rge X-Large Lite Beer Dictionary T-Shirt ($5 00 e a c h ) (Q ua n tity) Sm all _________ La rge M e d i u m _________ X-Large No purchase necessary Allow 4 -6 weeks for d e live ry Void in Ohio Kentucky a n d where p ro h ib ite d by low Wisconsin re s id e n t a d d 4°c soles tax Otter expires June 30 1982 1982 Miller Brewing Company. Milwaukee. Wisconsin. T h e a t e r THE R ITZ: T e r r e n c e M cNally’s bawdy farce, "T he R itz,” will be p erform ed a t 8 p.m. F rid ay and S aturday and at 2:15 p.m. Sunday a t the Zachary Scott T h e a tre Cen­ ter, 1421 W. R iverside Drive. E S T H E R ’S F O L L IE S : E sth e r’s Follies brings topi­ cal spring sa tire to Sixth S treet a t 8 and 11 p.m . F rid ay and Saturday in the R itz T he­ atre , 320 E. Sixth St. F or inform ation call 479- m ore 0054 LITTLE MURDERS: The Fifth S tre et P layhouse will " L ittle M u rd ers," present Jules F e iffe r's sa tiric a l look at society, a t 8 p.m . F riday and Saturday a t 120 W. F ifth St. Call 472-9733 for tick et in­ form ation. CHANGES: The UT Shoe­ string T h eatre will p resent “ C hanges," a th esis play by Cheryl Hawkins, a t 8 p.m Friday and S aturday in the Lab T h eatre, behind the Win- ship D ram a Building, 23rd S treet and San Ja c in to Boule­ vard. Admission is free. Call inform a­ for m o re 471-1444 tion. CHILDREN’S THEATER: Three C hildren’s T heater P re- Thesis P lays, "A ll About Ja c k ," "L a T riv ia ta " and "The Toad and The F ro g ," will be perform ed a t 3 and 6 p.m. F rid ay and a t 2 p.m. S at­ u r d a y th e C r e a tiv e D ram atics Room, 1.134, of the Winship D ram a Building, 23rd Street and San Jacin to Boule­ vard. A dm ission is free. Call 471-5793 betw een 8 a.m . and 5 p.m. F rid a y for m ore infor­ m ation in BOO!: "B o o !, a new com ­ edy w ritten by M arla M ac­ donald and directed by Mona Lee Fultz, will be perform ed a t 8 p.m . F rid ay and Saturday at the S torefront Studio, 900 W. 29th St. Call 472-6455 for m ore inform ation MARIA STUART: The UT G erm anic languages d e p a rt­ m ent will p erfo rm "M aria S tu art" by F ried rich von Schiller at 7:30 p.m . F riday a t the W inedale H istorical Cen­ te r T h eater B arn, five m iles east of Round Top on FM 1457. Call (713) 278-3530 for m ore inform ation. M u s i c HORN ENSEMBLE: The F C Q F I O c ll O I I w § UT Horn E nsem ble, directed by Wayne B arrington, will perform a t 4 p.m. Sunday in B ates R e c ita l H all, 25th S tre et and E ast Cam pus D rive. Admission is free. Call 471-1444 inform a­ for m ore tion. D a n c e AUSTIN CHOREOGRA­ PHERS: Independent Choreo­ g rap h ers A lliance will p resent new w orks of E m ily Burken, Nancy Dean, B arb ara Hofren- ning and M yrna Renaud and "R uins a t Round M ountain: T hree D ays," a film by R ita S tarp attern , a t 8 p.m . S atu r­ day and Sunday at Studio 29, 2900 Rio G rande St. F or m ore inform ation call 447-4437. A r t ART FACULTY EXHIBI­ TION: The 43rd annual A rt F aculty Exhibition will be on display from 9 a.m . to 5 p.m . and F rid ay from 1 to 5 p.m . Sunday in the and S aturday A rt Building, 23rd S tre e t and San Jacinto Boulevard. S PR IN G FE ST : The Austin Com m unity College A rt Guild will p resent its annual Arts and C rafts F estiv al from noon to dusk S aturday a t ACC’s 12th and Rio G rande stree ts cam pus. In addition to arts, cra fts, food and facepainting, the festival will fe a tu re Alvin Crow and the P le a sa n t Valley Boys, the G eesinslaw B roth­ ers, the ACC Jazz E nsem ble and others. W O RKS ON collages, P A P E R : paintings P rin ts, and draw ings on p aper by UT a r t students will be exhibited from 9 a.m . to 5 p.m . F riday in the E astw oods Room of the T exas Union Building. Call 471-5651 inform a­ for m o re tion. C A JA H U A R IN G A AND VARON: P aintings by Bos­ a r ti s t ton-based P e ru v ia n Corinna V aron will be on dis­ play from 5 to 7:30 p.m. be­ ginning S aturday a t P u e rta del Sol A rt G allery, 606 W 12th St. Call 472-7542 for m ore inform ation GROUP SHOW: An exhibit featuring draw ings, paintings, photographs and an in stalla­ tion by John H alverson, Ricky Hawkins and C arm en K enne­ dy will be on display from 7 to 11 p.m. S aturday a t The Ho­ tel, 407 E . Seventh St. RANDY EHRLICH: R e­ cent color photographs by Randy E h rlich will be on d is­ play S aturday through May 1 the Austin P hotographic at G allery, 3004 G uadalupe St. F i l m CLOSE ENCOUNTERS: the "Close E ncounters of Third K ind" will be shown a t noon F rid a y in T exas Union Building 3.308. Admission is free. Misc. WINEDALE SPRING FES- ‘Owen’: not your run-of-the-mill opera By JOHN STOKES Special to The Texan "Owen W ingrave” ; written by Benjamin Britten; direct­ ed by Anthony Addison; con­ ducted by William Reber; with the UT Opera Theater performers and the UT Sym ­ phony Orchestra; at 8 p.m. Saturday and Sunday; at the UT Opera Lab Theatre. “ I ’d m ake draw your sw ord it a c rim e to for your these w ords to com m and the country, and a crim e for gov­ it." ernm ents With title c h a ra c te r of B enjam in B rit­ 'O w e n W in g ra v e " te n ’s sta te s outright his personal creed, as well as the o p era 's prim ary them e. While the sto­ ry begins w ith the conflict be­ tween the p acifistic sole heir of a m ilita ry fam ily and his a u n t, t r a d i t i o n - a d h e r i n g g ran d fath er and it gradually tak es on m ore su r­ friends, real and sin ister qualities. A haunted room , the ghost of O w en's fath e r and a p e rv a ­ sive a ir of decline a t the fam i­ ly house a re interw oven into a story which deals m ore w ith personal courage and in te g ri­ ty than conform ity and p ac i­ fism. It is not your run-of-the- m ill opera plot. N or is it a run-of-the-m ill opera. "W ingrave" w as o rigi­ nally w ritten for b roadcast by the BBC. and while ce rtain techniques seem to have been intended for th at m edium (si­ m ultaneous scenes a t d iffer­ ent locales, m im ed action over song, close-ups of c h a r­ a c te rs each expressing their own thoughts), they neverth e­ less tra n sla te nicely to the stage. N either is "W ingrave" a grand opera in the usual sense: it is econom ical, using short m usical m otifs (re p re ­ senting c h a ra c te r attitu d e s) as transitional devices, call­ ing for only eight c h a ra c te rs and requiring no m ore than two se ts (one is sufficient). It is a w ork w ell-suited for the intim acy of the sm all th e ate r. "O w en W ingrave" will be presented under such suitable circ u m sta n ce s a t the O pera this weekend. Lab T h ea tre This is a r a r e opportunity, not only to h e a r this seldom p e r­ form ed work, but to h ea r op­ e ra in Austin a t all. D on't m iss it. Friday, April 2, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 19 an d a r t i s t H ill C o u n try je w e le r Ja m e s Avery will speak w ith the public and dis­ cuss his philosophy of design from 10 a.m . to noon and from 2 the to 4 p.m . F riday a t Ja m e s A very sto re in N orth- wood P laza, 2900 C. W A nder­ son Lane and S aturday a t the Barton C reek Square store, 2901 C apital of Texas High­ way. IN T H E A T R E TH E ROUND: E dw ard M angum will speak on "T he Vices and the V irtues of T heatre Round." the Austin C ircle of T heatres. Inc., a t 2 p.m S aturday a t St in sponsored by Edward’s University. Call 451-8787 to make reservations. POETRY READING: A po etry reading in the open air by Jam es Cody, Ricardo San­ chez, Charles Taylor and Guillermo Delgado will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday at The P ark . 1820 Manor Road LANDSCAPE PHOTOG­ RAPHY: Laguna Gloria Art Museum will sponsor a day trip S aturday to Enchanted Rock for 35mm c a m e ra nov­ ices to le arn landscape pho­ tography from Bill Kennedy. F or inform ation and p re re g is­ tration call 458-8196 TIVAL: The seventh annual Winedale Spring F estiv al and T exas C raft Exhibition, this year celeb ratin g the birthday of Im a Hogg, will be from 10 a m to 5:30 p.m . Saturday and Sunday at the W inedale H istorical C enter, on FM 1457, five m iles e a s t of Round Top. Call (713) 278-3530 for m ore inform ation. JAMES AVERY: Texas 9102 Burnet Rd. Austin, Texas 83 7-1824 Doors open 8 pm Tues.-Sat. C O M IN G UP THIS WEEK: TONIGHT THE DEBONAIRES $3 .0 0 Cover SATURDAY WILLIE NELSON . AND FAMILY Roy Robbins 6k. The A vailables SOLD OUT w ith special guests DOORS OPEN 7 PM WEDNESDAY APRIL 7 * 8 .0 0 S A L U T E TO WILLIE w ith JERRY JEFF WALKER Guest Host...T. G o s n e y T h o r n to n a n d a TILLM AN, GEEZINSLAW BRO S., JO HNNY GIMBLE & m ore, plus VERY special gu estsl including G ARY P. NU NN, FLOYD line up of Aus tin's best, tr em e nd o us Tickets n o w on sale a t Bus. O ffice w e e k d a y s 9 a m -6 p m 8 3 7 - 5 9 2 4 "BE SURE TO SEE THIS WITTY AND UR­ BANELY CAMP THRILLER. YOU'LL SMILE AS MUCH AS YOU'LL SHIVER, AND YOU'LL EN­ JOY EVERY M O M EN T." t o n i g h t - DAN & DAVE SATURDAY-JET S U N D A Y -W .C . CLARK BLUES REVIEW — N o r m a M a c l a i n Stoop A f t e r D ark “NUMBER ONE PICTURE OF THE YEAR ..: JOEL MLCKI UM TV THE TRAP La L.U.Ch.A. Teatro Presents A Play in 2 acts about Barrio Life in East Austin Capital City Plavhouse April 2nd, 3rd For ticket in fo rm a tio n, call 4 7 7 - 5 7 7 0 or 4 7 2 - 2 9 6 6 A p ro je c t o I L.U .C h .A . w it h s u p p o rt fro m The C o n c ilio , C ity o f A u s tin , th e T e ta s C o m m is­ sion for th e A rts , th e N a t io n a l t n d o w m e n t lo r th e A rts , th e A u s tin B ilin g u a l R esource C e n te r ADMISSION $ 3.00 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS In c lu d in g BEST PICTURE BEST DIRECTOR BEST SUPPORTING ACTO R CHARIOTS O f FIRE _ — j - PGj E X C L U S IV E S H O W IN G a LADD COMPANY a n d WARNER BROS, « lease AWNC-n Biros M L MPAS* A WARM1’ VM A- »\ T O D A Y AT ( 5 : 1 5 1 - 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 5 0 SAT & SUN 1 2 : 4 0 1 - 3 : 0 0 - 5 : 1 5 - 7 3 0 - 9 5 0 in the Greek Isles, famous detective Mercule Poirot spotted a beautiful woman on the / beach. Realizinq that she mas dead, he did not ask her to dinner. PGOTWP CHRISTIE'S tVIL UnDfQ Tttt Sm P e t e r U s t i n o v D ia na Rigg VILLAGE A | LAKEHILLB 2700 ANDERSON .451-8352 ■ 2428 BIN WHITE *444-0552 1.20-3.30-5.40-7.50-10:00 CAREER CENTER The C a ree r C enter o ffe rs assistance to stud ents by p ro v id in g : a lib r a r y c o n ta in in g in fo rm a tio n on v a rio u s oc­ cup atio ns and job tre n d s, vo ca tio n a l tests to help w ith y o u r selection of a m a jo r, and counselors to tea ch you how to job hunt e ffe c tiv e ly . J e s te r C enter A115A 471-1217. W30 REMTE On your College Ring e , ^ t h ’Back 201 ? E. R IV E R SID E Room r I r n i A FOX TRIPLEX 4 54 2711 6757 AIR PO R T BLVD 1 THEATRESAUST1N IMANN 3 WeSTGATEl 8 9 2 2 7 7 5 1 4608 W ESTG ATE BL | CHARIOTS OF F I R E (pg) ( 5 : 1 5 ) - 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 5 0 W inner / ACA DEM > A W ARDS including B E ST P K T l RE ON G O L D E N P O N D (P G ) , ( 1 : 1 5 ) - 3 : 2 0 - 5 : 2 5 - 7 : 4 0 -9 :4 5 CAT P E O P L E a. ; 5 .0 0 ) - 7 : 1 5 - 9 : 3 0 R IC H A R D PR YO R UVE ON SUNSET STRIP (R) ( 1 2 : 3 0 ) - ( 2 : 1 5 ) - 4 : 0 0 - 5 : 4 5 - 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 1 5 - M ISSIN G (R) ( 5 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 2 0 - 9 : 3 5 R ic h ard Pryor SOME KIND OF HERO (R) ( 1 : 3 0 ) - 3 : 3 0 - 5 : 2 0 - 7 : 1 5 - 9 : 1 0 C O M IN G S O O N "R O C K Y 111” & " B A M B U -F O X THEATRE & E X TR A T E R R E S T IA l'-W E S T G A T E . REDUCED ADULT ADMISSION A L L FEATUR ES IN (B R A C K E T S ) — C AP A C ITY ON LY 1 $ WINNER OF 3 A C A D E M Y A W A R D S including B E S T ACTOR Henry Fonda B E S T AC TRE SS K atharine Hepburn O n e o f t h e Y e a r’s 10 B est. Time Magazine Kathleen Carroll/K ) Daily Sen s Judith Crist/WORTV Rex Reed/S ) Daily Sens Joel Siegel '.ABC 7V Sheila Reason LA Times Norma McLain Stoop/ After Dark Magazine Boh I homos A F Jeffrey LyonsVI FIX C SS Stewart Klein, 'WSEW-TV Fred Yager/A. P. m M ANN T H E A T R E S I H H M ^ ^ MANN WESTGATE 3 l * A t ■ ,A’ F BLVD ■ 1 : 1 5 - 3 : 2 0 - 5 : 2 5 - 7 :4 0 -9 : 4 5 VILLAGE 4 2700 ANDERSON • 451-8352 1 : 1 0 - 3 : 2 0 - 5 : 3 0 - 7 4 0 - 9 : 5 0 E v try d a y N o d iu o u n t m a tin » *» ^ BLAKf fDWARDS’ ...... APRIL 2 & APRIL 5 through APRIL 9 Texas U nion Inform ation Lobby $15 discount on all 10k gold and lustrium rings 130 discount on all 14k rings most ladies’ 14k styles - $ 1 53.00 lowest gold ring prices since 1979! Josien rings are available exclusively through The Texas Union "H Bñ u M A N H A T T A N M I S T R E S S x FDlC 4 8 0 * 1 * • M I P . f M » C H A | l J J U t lU A ÍD IP 1 0 N • C MR! t T |f ÍO B U i O l t A orwl O f O P O t R * * N | I arh Bird SP tcia l \L f rom 6*00 I O 7:30 I. ML 4 78-4 f 1* * * * * * , D '# o f aq* PG>waT«i anwet sukstto •a* ^ ttv'i, M l*M United Artists O.stnbut'On and Marketing G E N E R A L C IN E M A CAPITAL PLAZA I - 3 5 at CAMERON ROAD 452 - 7646 2 : 15- 4 :45 - 7: 15- 9:45 RIVERSIDE 1 9 3 0 R IV E R S ID E • 4 4 1 -5 6 8 9 4 :45- 7 : 10- 9:35 Sat/Sun also 2:20 Page 20 □ THE D AILY TEXAN □ Friday. April 2, 1982 EST H ER ’S FOLLIES TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY 8 & 11 820 E. 6th 479-0054 W in n er of 3 A cad em y A w ard s including BEST A C T O R H e n ry F o n da n I S W IN N E R OF 5 A C A D E M Y A W A R D S ! ,f the LOST IZ/Z/Í a little Tim Mdthe*on 1:25-3:25- 5:20-7:20- 9 :20 f t m W m IN DOLBY STEREO WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS including M U S IC A L R E V U E BY EST H ER 'S FOLLIES C O STU M E CONTEST APRIL 3 SU RPRISES PA R A M O U N T THEATRE 8 PM Tickets on sale thro u g h S a tu rd a y a t the P a ra m o u n t Box O ffice; through Frid a y a t R iversid e T w in C in e m a , Lakeh iils C in e m a Four, D o b ie T w in Screens a n d the V illa g e C in e m a Four. R Sponsored by KLBJ-FM and the Riverside Theatre BEST DIRECTOR W arre n B eatty Walt D is n e y 's PETER USTINOV BEST S U P P O R T IN G ACTRESS Maureen Stapleton VILLAGE A 2700 A N D E R S O N • 451 8352 tAan®1 ^em'n9'J FR EE PAR KIN G IN D O BIE GARAGE D O BIE M A LL « 7 7 1324 MIDNIGHTER SHOWN FRIDAY ONIY-Í3 00 Sat at Paramount RIVERSIDE 1930 RIV E R SID E • 441-5689 B a r g a in M a t in e e s M o n .-F ri. o n ly for s h o w s s ta rtin g b efore 6 p.m. kJ I K J I l U i l e J . It is unlikely that any other American Trim this year will exceed ‘The French Lieutenants Woman”' -Gene Shatit, \BC-TV (Today) ( x r z / i i / S / f / / exquisite toastf^t o th e d iz z y in g uncertainties Of rom ance. Q&lnd Detiby. fttew Vbrlc Magazine ,?• A THOROUGHLY DELIGHTFUL EXPERIENCE... R O H M E R 'S MOST EXCITING AND MOST ENCHANTING W O RK SINCE M Y N IG H T A T M A U D S AND C L A IR E S K N E E Andrew Sams Village Voice Sx rh . y//y/t'm erS' •’j *A ’I r:ihe trench í lieutenants ¡ •¡FRIDAY & SATURDAY ^ w o m a Union Theatre 1.50 U.T 2, 6 2 German with subtitles FRIDAY & SATURDAY Batts Hall Aud. 1.50 U.T ‘ MONUMENTAL! IT RIVE TS THE MIND AND THE EMOTIONS! The Memory of Justice expands the possibilities of the documentary motion picture in such a way that all future films of this sort will be compared to it! ’’ — Vincent Canby, New York Times Marcel Ophuls’ Th* motion pic turn that ron a yeor on Broodway N O W COMPLETE INTACT yi* » with every jong and - * r ’A*«h M AR IE RJV lFk f f l lll It l i M A H i .Al I» ANNE I A! RE M U RY M ATIIIKl Premier Engagement FRIDAY & SATURDAY 7:30 p.m. Batts Hall Aud. French with subtitles 2.00 U.T. 2.50 Non-U.T. RODGffSi M A H O M f F R ID A Y & S A T U R D A Y Academ ic C enter Aud. 7:30 p.m. 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Non-U.T. SUNDAY at 7:00 Burdine Aud. Andy Warhol presents R FRIDAY & SATURDAY Union Theatre w a r r e n b eatty julte c h ris tie • goidie h a w n s*V'- Fri & So# BETO x ¥ L O S F A IR L A M S S „ Now We're \ ^ Got You \ I S A i C ¥ Covered! | N U N N Dollar D a yt C o m in g l unc AUSTIN & 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml. S. OF M0NT0P0LIS PHONE: 385-5328 24 HOUR ADULT THEATRE C O M PLEX VIDEO TAPE RE NTALS Et S A L E S L A R G E S T S E L E C T IO N - L O W E S T P R IC E S SEE UP TO 8 MOVIES ON SEPARATE SCREENS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE AUNT PFH CALIFORNIA MARACHINO G|fim n FANTASY deep throat CHERRY LITTLE P t b F RE NCH MAI Dl W O R I D I DEVIL & MISS JONES DISCOUNT MILITARY • STUDENT • SENIORS • COUPLES R £ B £ L Dri»e-Jn 6902 Burleson Road Radio Sound Sy ste m 385-7217 P riv a c y of Your Auto XXX Original Uncut SEX BOAT ATJAlr s h e l o v e s i t . . . YOU’LL LOVE I AM ALWAYS READY HER! STARTS 7:00 • Whatever you are looking * • for, chances are good you'll • •find it in the classified sec-* • tion of The Daily Texan. * THE TEXAS UNIO N *As the campus community » •center, the Texas Union* ^provides facilities, services • •and p ro g ra m s fo r U T * Jstudents, facu lty, staff, • • a lu m n i an d f r i e n d s . * *L.ocated on the West Mall, • • the Union includes an infor- • Jm ation center, student ac-* • t i v i t i e s c e n te r, T e x a s * •Culture rooms, m eeting* • rooms, TV rooms, a recrea-* Jtion center, an art gallery,* • a copy center, 14 food ser-» •vice areas, the U niversityJ • T i c k e t m a s t e r , T e x a s » •Tavern and the G e n e ra lJ • Store. • • • • • • • • • • • • • « • • • • • • a Once upon a time even aecadenc o was an art. QUARTET AfHmBylAMISWrY # ALAN BATES MAGGIE SMITH ISABELLE ADJANI l c h a i t t e T h i n c f e :50'7:50*9:50 K_) ALL S H O W S $1 v ó t h A n n u a l Rocky Horror C o stu m e B irth d a y B a s h A pril 3. Tickets on sale at all Presidio T heatres a n d the P a ra m o u n t. En te rta in m e n t by Esth er's Follies._______ rngnj NEIGHBORS JOHN BELUSHI DAN AYKROYD S T A R T S T O N I G H T ‘VERY FUNNY, EXTREMELY SPECIAL.. INVIGORATING.” Vincent Canby, New York Times directed by produced by GEORGE W. GEORGE & BEVERLY KARP m t M N N m WITH ANDRE written by. and starrm e ANBJRE GREGOW WALLACE SH AW N and Winner . of Ten 1 Acidemy A w d i | F R ID A Y & S A T U R D A Y Academ ic C enter Aud. 10d)5 p.m. 1.50 U.T. HARK GABLE VIVIEN LEIGH S U N D A Y Union Theatre 1.50 U.T. 1 2.( P E N E lO P f SPH EERIS JEFF PRETTYMAN ... v - * : LATE SHOW FRIDAY I SATURDAY Union Thootre GORDON BROWN 12 midnight 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Non-U.T. LATE SH O W 11:40 F R ID A Y & S A T U R D A Y 8am Hall ________________ 2.00 Non-U.T. 1.50 U T. A New Yorker Film s Release ©1981 ^ ^ TIMES FOR TONIGHT: 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 TIMES FOR SAT AND SUN: 2:00, 4:00, 6:00, 8:00, 10:00 2:00 SHOW ON SAT AND SUN $2.00 Available from Grove Press in paperback 2 4 0 2 G U A D A L U P E 4 7 4 -4 3 5 1 GENERAL CINEMA THEATRES mm * 7 A A w o * THRU SAT A U SHOWHIGS KFO Kf 6 M L ntSTMAnug showoniy Wimmm P IG G Y ’S BAR & GRILL DEATHTRAP M IC H A E L C A IN E C H W S T O EH EA REEVE | P G | Q DYAN C A N N O N 1 :0 0 - 3 :1 5 - 5 :3 0 - 7 :4 5 - 1 0 :0 0 Nail Simons] I O U G H T B E IN P IC T U R E S (Foil 1:0 0 - 3 :1 0 - 5 :2 0 - 7 :3 0 - 9 :4 0 * .. y — *-* CAPITAL PLAZA c\NnK¡SA 4 5 2 - 764 6 1*35 at CAMERON RO. PORK Y ’Sil PORKY’ 1 :0 0 - 3 :0 0 - 5 :0 0 | { 2 :0 0 - 4 :0 0 - 6 0 0 7 :0 0 - 9 :0 0 ( R ) | g .Q O - lO iO O ( R ) VICTO R V ICTO R IA I 2:15-4:45-7:15- 9:45 (PG) — IB"• STATE ■ 71 § C O M O R I U 47*-*2tO “This school is our i home, we think it's worth defending.** GEORGE C. SCOTT TIMOTHY HCJTTON TAPS 5 :3 0 , 9 :2 0 ■ I O f T W B W O i L P P A R T I ( R ) H I S T O R Y 7 :4 0 i fA R S IT y A M W K A N W n i W O l f I I I L O N D O M O-n a I N L O N D O N 9 0 5 | I ^ “ J 4 « 0 U A 0 A C U P « • 4 7 4 - 4 3 6 1 ■ M A C U L A 7 :1 5 S T A R T S T O N I G H T MY DINNER WITH ANDRE T IM E S F O R T O N IG H T 6 :0 0 , 8 :0 0 , 1 0 :0 0 Rock-n-Roll at RENEGADE with live music every Sunday & Monday Late happy hour 50‘ highballs, draft, w ine 1 2 :0 0 - 1 :3 0 7 2 7 W. 23rd 479-8888 LEARN TO FLY Spanish & English Flight Instruction Available Private, commerical, multiengine, instrument AUSTIN PIPER Call for special demo flight 9 2 6 - 5 6 9 0 The Army is doing it to him in the daytime. His wife isn’t doing it to him at night. And his girlfriend charges him by the hour. Richard Pryor keeps getting caught with his pants down. W IP in E R ^ a c a d e m y BEST PICTURE B E ST ORIGINAL SCO RE - VANGELIS B E ST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY COLIN WELLAND B E ST COSTUME - MELINA CAÑONERO CHARIOTS OF FIRE F r id a y , A p r il 2, 1 9 8 2 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ P a g e 21 THEY ARE SOMETHING MORE THAN LOVERS WHO ARE ABOUT TO BECOME SOMETHING LESS THAN HUMAN. L A K E H I L L S 2 4 2 8 B E N W H I T E • 44 4 -0 55 2 1 2 :2 5 - 2 :4 0 - 5 :0 0 - 7 :2 5 - 9 :5 0 5: 15- 7: 45- 10:15 R E S T R I C T E D i: íb • • a t S »CCOWP»»* HG Pitnn- 0* >0o,’ Gti«"D»N TODAY AT ( 5 : 0 0 ) - 7 : 1 5 - 9 :3 0 SAT & SUN ( 1 2 : 2 0 ) - ( 2 : 3 0 ) - 5 :0 0 - 7 :1 5 - 9 :3 0 ■ C h V - a R l, ■ A \ \ r PAUL SC HRAD ER Sírctnp j, bv A L A N ORMSBY B.ised :,r s:o-, by DEW ITT B O D E EN Special Visual Effects by ALBERT W H IT L O C K Muvc by G lO R Q C v O R O D E » Drc-ct.r P - c - L 'j p N )O h N BAILEY Erecut .c P-oducer JERRY B RU CKHEIM ER Produced by C H ARLES FRIES D m t e d by PAUL SC H R ADER -'l; .-.t r. G-CK0:O HCMtOOí»! y0u*C!R4C* ava-lífel jpN WLCrOHtKl'HCciEsT7-- AVA LASiE ON Ai' RKO Of'tvcnjl m i CXXBYSTEREO I M A N N T H E A T R E S = n i x c m w v t ‘ " « ’/ j V l’í S a m J HE’S TRYING TO BE FAITHFUL, AND FAILING HILARIOUSLY. a little PARAMOUNT PICTURES PRESENTS A HOWARD W. KOCH PRODUCTION - A MICHAEL PRESSMAN FILM RICHARD PRYOR • SOME KIND OF HERO • MARGOT KIDDER RAY SHARKEY-CO-PRODUCER JAMES KIRKWOOD BASED UPON THE Bf OK BY JAMES KIRKWOOD SCREENPLAY BY JAMES ’ JRKWOOD AND ROBERT BORIS PRODUCED BY HOWARD W. KOCH • DIRECTED BY MICHAEL PRESSMAN’ aaaTmcrea d » I «owfurrw j Copyngrtt i MCMLXXXH ! A PARAMOUNT PICTURE . V PKartourit Pintee Corooraaon *J FHru Hwrveo . QQM ANN T H E A T R E S l MANN WESTGATE 31 4608 W E S T G A T E BLVD 892-2775 1 :3 0 - 3 :3 0 - 5 :2 0 - 7 :1 5 - 9 :1 0 ANDERSON UNE 1 BURNET 454-5147 Scraan 1-6:15-8:30-10:30 Screan 2-5:15-7:30-9:45- 12 midnight CHARIOTS OE EIRE 41 LIED 5TAKS KHÍ St'IT S AP* fSlOMA PRODUCTION Starring BEM C R O S S • IAN CM ARLt SO N - N I G t l MAVf R S • C M f RYL C A M P BELL • ALICf. K R lG f Our si Stars LIN D SA Y A N D E R SO N • D f N N IS ( M R IS T O H tf K • N IG EL DAV't NPORT • B R A D D A VIS P f T ER EG A N • S IR JO H N G IE L G U D * IAN H O LM • PAT K IC K M AG EE m , npi.n b> C O LIN W E LL A N D Musk by V A N G E L IS Cwtutivr Produtff D O D I FAYED PVikIik ««I In DAVID PU TTNAM thtvt it «i tn H UG H H U D SO N [onyrv» W y * ... - P G 7 W » r4 CUOMO SUBg»n8E GEORGES DELERUE ROBERT DE LAURENTIS ROBERT DE LAURENTIS ' BRUCE PALTROW M llSIl COMPOSED ANO CONDUCTEDBY 1>! k K.L.1T >k t >L PH*1 T< KkM ID PRODUCED BY WRITTEN PA — y — " “ tcTma S V ¡ A i ¡N IV F .R S A L R E L E A S E BRUCE PALTROW R TITLE s o n g F S t K M flE t M n ’YOUR PLACE OR MINE." MELISSA MANCHESTER AVAILAB! M A ARISTA RECORDS Filmed Before A Live Audience UCftl 17 MQUHKS ACCMFAIYIW j R/UXE1 M MUI’ 8UAMUI R * i» T R IC T * 0 ® i m m i Iv ANOfRSON t ANt 4 BUHNfT 454 514?) Fri. 5:45-4:00-10:15 Set 1:15-3:30-5:45400-10:15 San. 1:15-3:30- S45-100 r n ^ ■ I MANN T H E A T R E S | MANN WESTGATE 31 4606 W E S T G A T E B l V D 892-2775 12:30-2:15-4:00-5:45-7:30-9:15 ■ M 1M I ism s eie*s«N’ v«, t» 44: lit izz< STARTS v v . a T A ñ A V Fri: 6:15-1:30-10:30 Sat: 1:45-4:00-4 15-1:36-10:30 Sun: 1:45-4^0-4:15-0.30 Smiwb'í#aaa6aafaKWaa^áBKaHBSfcwnawB Fn-Th: U S 3:25-5:20-7.70-»:» REDUCED PRICES FOR STUDENTS & SR. CITIZENS WITH AMC CARD. DAILY REDUCED PRICES DURING TWI-LITE SHOW LIMITED TO SEATING T IM ES SH O W N F O R TODAY O NLY “R iv a ls ‘2 0 0 1 ’ a n d ‘STAR W ARS’ ”■STEPHEN SCHAEFER, US Magazine CHUCK NOBBIS i ^ H n i COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents An ANTHONY B. UNGER/TOPKICK PRODUCTION CHUCK NORRIS in SILENT RAGE also starring RON SILVER STEVEN KEATS TONI KALEM WILLIAM FINLEY BRIAN LIBBY and STEPHEN FURST Music by PETER BERNSTEIN and _ MARK GOLDENBERG Wntten by JOSEPH FRALEY Produced by ANTHONY B. UNGER Co-produced by ANDY HOWARD Directed by MICHAEL MILLER m «m fC T «p UMQfl 17 R| QuiOf S ¿CCWMMTI* FMfMT 00 WUlT SUAROUB C 962 COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES >NC ■ M l M l H i f 444 322!J I ,500 s ru»s»Ht «AU1» 5:15-7J8-M5-11:45 m i p w oiasow Straaa I: 530-745-4:55-12 d » Screen 2: 4:30-4:45-1(M 5 lex Offka OfMM et 430 »M>a ice MIfRIATIQIAl CHIMA CORPORAIION pmm «»JM» JACOUf! ANNAHO * QUÍSÍ fBfi IVERtr McGill - RAÍ DAWK CHONG - HON PfRlMAN • NAMUR 11 (AO! «cu- «nMBtHMh ANTHONY BURGESS l*t «w * >«» * * BfSMONO MORRIS c » - . Soendeli G1RAR0 8RACH Usa a at Ik wj.fi ROSNY Sf r a w 6 «cr I > * » » JOHN (ÍMÍIY m DENIS HEROUX Uaw n >mna »•* UIm« iw s © lew '***'» Ww m ttt -tmti* at «u * JEAN JACQUES ANNAUD g j g f f f f . . . M»TR»CT«0 um t «^ -, . . T V T / T l T ■ NORTH ,458-6111 PAUL S. MEISLER PROPERTIES NORTHW EST ; 345-6350 • ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E A P R IL 1st M o v e - in 2 Bedroom - 1 Bath, South Location $ 3 7 5 O t h e r 8 A v a il a b l e C A Y W O O D L O C A T O R S 4501 G uadalu pe Suite 201 458-5301 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ___________________ Apartm ent Referral Service T a r A p a r l n \ e n ( t S e l e c t o r ® ’ s4t Fee Paid By Apartment Owner 1 BY LOCATION] Central 474-6357 Interregional 350 7 N North 451-2223 8501 -B Burnet Road South 441-22 77 Riverside 'Our Professional Service Also Includes Houses, Condomimums and Duplexes 4 7 5 ; l: LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL! SUMMER RATES Lighted Tennis Courts • 1, 2, 3, 5 Bedrooms • • Shuttle Bus Stop • Security Service • City Transportation • Poolside Icemaker • Poolside Restroom Exercise Rooms/Saunas • Putting Green • 2 Pools - 1 large, 1 hug< • Furn./Unfurn. • Walk-in Closets • • • : E n j o y o u r u n i q u e l i f e s t y l e all s u m m e r fo r as l ittle as $ 5 1 0 ★ SECURITY ★ : 801 W. 24th St. 476-7636 P r o fe ss io n a lly M a n a g e d b y M a r lin e P ro p e r tie s, In c. CONDOS FOR SALE 10-6 Daily 479-6618 We've Done Your Homework Servicing all of Austin, specializing in campus a n d tlT shuttle areas. Walk over or call for a previewing áftyjwinf men t 'CompareCondominiums I t's an in v estm en t for the future. B efore you invest in a condom inium , visit P ecan Square. A fter you c o m p a re quality, location, and cost, y o u ’ll be glad you looked a t P ecan Square. L ocated a t 2906 W est Ave. 2 bedroom s av ailab le 6 blocks north of UT Quiet neighborhood P rofessionally d e co ra te d F ire p la c e & m icrow ave Sw im m ing pool 52” ceiling fans A W orn Septate Model Open 11-3 Daily or by cippomtment contact: Linda Ingram & Asioc. 130? Nueces 476-2673 ^Condominiums with the luxury you're accustom to On a wooded hilltop in the heart of Austin. The Treehouse sets the standard for University living. The UT campus is just six blocks away, so the pace is an easy one. Starting at $52,500 —P riv a te g a rag e w opener —P a n o ra m ic view of Shoal C reek —Split level hot tub —F ire p la ce —M icrow ave M a r k e t e d by Linda Ingram 1306 N ueces 476-2673 M i l le r & D r y d e n D e ve lo p er s CONDOM INIUMS 2612 San Pedro THE GAZEBO CONDOMINIUMS The p e rfe ct h o m e for stu- d e n t s , the b e st in v e s t m e n t tor M o m a n d D a d . R ig h t in the h e a rt o f the U T a re a , the G a z e b o is built a r o u n d a n in v it in g H o t Tub for o re la x e d , p e a c e f u l a t ­ m o sp h e re . In sid e , th e se s p a c io u s o n e b e d r o o m p l a n s offer a loft­ e d b o n u s ro o m o n se c o n d sto ry units. L a u n d r y , in d i­ v id u a l s t o r a g e a n d a m p le p a r k i n g all sp e ll c o n v e n ience A n d there is sp e c ia l fi­ n a n c i n g to q u a lif ie d b u y e rs. P rice s st a rt in g at $39.950. M o d e l O p e n D a ily 1 1 6. I B M g P W W I f < ® - ■ a U ríiúPI I Marketed by I.indn Ingram 13(16 Nueces Austin. Texas 78701 476-2673 NRO Otvt kpm*fit I#THE VERLOOK E ighteen elegant condom inium hom es, located on a wooded bluff w ithin w alking distan ce of UT. Prices s tartin g in low 40’s F e a tu re s: --1 & 2 bedroom —Pool & hot tub —Security system —Mini blinds —W ash er/d ry er M a r k e te d by: Linda Ingram 1306 N u e c e s 476-2673 AUTOMOTIVE i FORJALEJ r • » a » o i i r a 810 Duncan Lane AUTOMOTIVE FOR SALE 2101 Burton Dr. AUTOMOTIVE FOR SALE features include- • Sun decks with gas grilles 1 0 7/b % A.R.M. • Security Gates • Ceiling fans • Microwave evens • Hot tub • Sw im m ing pool • Optional garages • Ü.T. shuttle IfinalI PHASE 1 ■ Sale* office open dally 10 am til dark. CONDOMINIUMS BO B GARRE 910 D U N C A N L A N E A U S T I N T E X A S 78705 A Texcor Development 512/473-8602 THE SEARCH IS OVER J A P A N E S E A U T O P A R T S 8557 Research (next to Target) 835-0274 Replacement Parts and Accessories 447-4130 FURNISHED APARTMENTS $225-5265 F O U N T A I N T E R R A C E A P T S . N o w p re le a s in g for su m m e r. L a r g e 1 B R apt. furnishe d, w a lk -in clo­ sets, w a ll to w all carpet, c a b le ' T V , s w im m in g pool, w a te r a n d g a s paid. W a lk in g d ista n c e to UT. N o ch ild re n / pets. 610 W. 30th A pt 134, M a n a g e r 477-8858 472-3812 PRELEASING EFF. THROUGH 4 BRMS. SUMMER AND FAU SUMMER RATES FROM $235 SHUTTIE BUS MODERN, SPACIOUS FURNISHED, UNFURNISHED POIM SOUTH 2700 Willow Crook ( Riverside area ) 444-7536 TRAVEL T R A V E L I N G T O E u r o p e ? R a in b o w T o u r s /A Y H has A m e r ic a n Y o u th H o s te l passes, E u r a il passes, c h a r t e r flig h ts . (713)681 2733; 7407 K a ty N o 102, H o u s ­ ton, T X 77024 TUTORING E N G L IS H T U T O R I N G a n d e d itin g by E n g lis h te a c h e r w ith a P h .D . an d 23 47^8909>f c o ^ e 9 e te a c h in g e x p e rie n c e . SERVICES SERVICES The Laundry Basket 1 6 3 4 E. 1st 4 7 4 - 2 6 9 9 5 Blocks East of 1*35 On yo u r w a y to cam p us, stop in and =*ry o u r WASH & FOLD SERVICE. Cost is only 4 0 c p e r lb .( and w e STEAM PRESS a ll 'p a n ts a t no e x tr a c h a rg e . (Service provided Mon.-Sat. 8am-IOpm) W e also o ffe r you DRY CLEANING, and W ith this ad y o u 'll re c e iv e 20% OFF. i% e h ave fo r y o u r e n jo y m e n t a COLOR T.v. and s e v e ra l VIDEO GAMES. D ouble L o a d e rs a t 5 0 ' per load g ; T r ip le L o a d e rs a t $ 1 .0 0 per load G ia n t L o a d e rs a t $ 1 .5 0 per load W ' . Ü OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8am-10pm PERSONAL PERSONAL Roommate problems? Telephone Counseling con help 476-7073 Quiet Accommodations for Summer Sessions 15 meals per week, p a rking , m a id service, s w im m in g pool, study rooms, color TV, all acr c o m m o d atio n s are p riv a te rooms. Ideal fo r g ra d u a te students & professors too! $ 5 2 5 per session 2706 Nueces 477-9766 BARGAIN OUTLET ROOMS 11 FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES TYPING Motorcycle-For Sale Homes-For Sale Miscellaneous-For Sale 1980 H O N D A CB900 d r iv e s h a ft, e x c e 1 le n t c o n d itio n , u n d e r 3300 m ile s M u s t s ell. B e st o ffe r . C a ll n ig h ts , w e e k e n d s 467-9911. Bicyde-For Sale S P R IN G S A L E $5 00 o ff a ll used and n e w b ic y c le s E x p e r t r e p a ir s e rv ic e S tu d e n t d is c o u n ts South A u s tin B ic y ­ c les 2210 South 1st M - S a t 10-5 p m 444 4819 a f t e r 5 p .m 12 speed. E X C E L L E N T C O N D I T I O N 24 ' S c h w in n V o y a g e u r M a n y e x t r a s $350 n e g o tia b le 476-9162 G r e a t c o m m u t­ ing tr a n s p o r ta tio n 10 L A D IE S S C H W IN N C o n tin e n ta l s peed. G ood shape, re a s o n a b le S w ith lock a n d c h a in E liz a b e th 452-3147 a f t e r 6 p m . 2 3" B L A C K M e n 's 10-speed, a ll a lu m i ­ r e c e n tly n u m c o m p o n e n ts , new tir e s , o v e r h a u le d $200 B r a d 473-2579 Stereo-For Sale F O R S A L E P o r ta b le re c o rd p l a y e r ru n s on 220 a n d 110 volts O n ly $35 C a t 444- 2320 U L T R A A C O U S T IC s p e a k e rs $800 v a l ­ ue. 125 w a tts . M a k e o ffe r 477-0722 or 477-9908 J V C A M F M S W la r g e s ize c a s s e tte r e ­ c o r d e r . V e r y good c o n d itio n $120. 474- 7181. F O R S A L E : 71 M G B - G T A A f t/F M s te re o c a s s e tte , n e w b a tte r y good tire s , exce* le n t c o n d itio n . S2250 A f te r 5 :30 c a ll 442- 4 553. Musical-For Sale P E E V E E T -4 0 bass g u ita r , p e r fe c t c o n ­ II P -b a s s c opy als o d itio n $320 H on d o p e r fe c t c o n d itio n $230 B oth h a v e been p la y e d less th a n one h o u r. P r ic e s n e g o ti­ a b le . C a ll B ru c e 444 5419 a fte r 4. H O N D O II e le c tr ic g u ita r , s ev en m o n th s o ld G ib s o n c o p y S a c r ific e $ !7 5 /o ff e r . 467-0676 R E C O R D S A L E O v e r 200 c la s s ic a l, no v e lty , o th e rs . E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n $2-4 477-6033 a f t e r 6 p .m . a n d w e e k e n d s T H E R E C O R D E x c h a n g e . Q u a lity used tra d e , S a tu r d a y a nd L P 's . B u y , sell th e S u n d a y 12-6, 6700 G u a d a lu p e N o r th to w n F le a M a r k e t . in Y A M A H A G U I T A R e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n $50 w ith c a s e 441-2164 R E C O R D C O L L E C T O R 'S sa ie A p r i f i n d th r u 4th. M o s tly m in t c o n d itio n r o c k a l ­ b u m s a n d sin g le s , p ro m o tio n a ls a n d c o l­ le c tib le s 454-8291 A L I E N N A T I O N R E C O R D S S p rin g s te e n a n d B e a tle s b o o tle g s L a r g e s t s e le c tio n in to w n 307 E a s t 5th T h u r s d a y , F r id a y , S a tu r d a y l l - 6 p m 472-3058, 447-3633 Photography-For Sale F I L M F O R s a le . C o lo r p r in t, c o lo r slides, b la c k a n d w h ite a n d m o v ie f i l m a ll speeds K o d a k an d Ilfo r d 3 5 m m , 120, 126, a n d 110 fo r m a t. 2 0% b e lo w w h o le ­ in to w n , c a ll d a y o r s a le . B e s t p ric e s n ig h t. 474-9712 Homes-For Sale 3-2, O R 2-1 plus r e n ta l, c h a r m , 1 block E a s tw o o d s P a r k . 2914 B e a n n a $89,500 B ill S m ith a n d Assoc. 477-3651, J a n e t G illis . 441-0646 D U P L E X E S F O R s a l^ T S o u t t T s p e c t a c - u la r B a r to n C re e k v ie w , hug e , d e ck s , p r iv a c y . 2 -1 '2 e a c h side, stone, c e d a r J a n e t $120,000. a s s u m e $50,000 n o te G illis 441-0646, B ill S m ith a n d Assoc. 477- 3651. _______________ N E A R U T , 1727 G ile s . 3-1 ' 2, C A /C H , $ 52,000, h a r d w o o d s , tr e e s , o w n e r fin a n c in g . 327-0713, 327-4801. g a - a g e To x T T m O bT l E h o m e (2 -1 ), W D. p a r ­ t i a ll y fu r n is h e d , new c a r p e t, $6500. U T M o b ile H o m e P a r k , 478-7088. 1981 R E D M A N d o u b le w id e on V4 a c r e la n d n e a r O a k H ill. 3-2, C A C H . $3500 lo a n a nd o w n e r c a r r y d o w n . A s s u m e $390 m o n th . M a r k p a y m e n ts a p p ro x P re h n , a g e n t. 442-9595 1976 12X60 2-1, C A /C H , *o be m o v e d Book $9,100, w ill sell $7800 c ash M a r k P r e h n , a g e n t. 442 9595. 1980 14X 60 2-1 set up, s k ir te d , s to ra g e ta k e o v e r p a y m e n ts $163 $2,850 a n d m o n th A r e a l d e a l. M a r k P r e h n , a g e n t 442-9595. 10X55 M O B I L E h o m e , U T P a r k , $6 000. 479-0277 b e fo re 7 a m a n d a f t e r 7pm FOR SALE-MOBILE H O M E 1 9 7 9 R e m b r a n d t 1 4 x 5 2 ' - 2 b e d 1 b a t h V ery good condition Furnished Carpeted Sot up in park. C onvenient location in S. Austin S I 2 , 0 0 0 n e g o . CASH or N e w Loan Kequired 4 4 3 - 8 0 2 2 o r 3 2 7 - 6 3 0 0 .< • 227 C h e a p O l d H o u s e G r e a t N e i g h b o r h o o d T h e k in d e v e r y o n e looks fo r a n d no on e c a n fin d . O w n e r c a r r ie d a t 12% , a ll o th e r te r m s 2 B R . N e e d s w o r k . v e r y C o u ld be n ic e , old fa s h io n e d b u n g a lo w C a ll o w n e r a g e n t, 442-9323 288-2078 - o ffic e 442-7833 re a s o n a b le ★CONDOS'* HOMES-DUPLEXES I f you w a n t to liv e w ith in e a s y d is ­ ta n c e of c a m p u s c a ll th e U T a r e a s p e c ia lis ts , $39,900 to S '20.000 THE UT AREA SPECIALIST John B. Sanford, Inc. Realtors 4 5 4 -9 21 8 4 54 -6 63 3 ROOMS 506 W. 3 3 RD F i v e e l e g a n t n e w t o w n h o m e s . 3 b e d r o o m s or 2 plus s t u d y . P r i v a t e c o u r t y a r d , d o u b le g a ­ r a g e . $185,000 O p e n d a i l y , 1-5 p . m . 345-0574 Condos-For Sale in te r e s t P O O L S ID E 1B R condo N o c lose o u t! U n b e lie v a b le fin a n c in g , e x ­ c e lle n t s tu d e n t lo c a tio n you o w n if fre e a n d c le a r in 5 y e a r s . C a ll J im E llio tt , 451-8178 O w n e r -a g e n t ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ B Y O W N E R 1-L $39 950 s u m e a t 14 5 % v a r ia b le m o n th 4409 G u a d a lu p e 836-5652 a f t e r 5 p .m ' $13 900 to a s ­ r a te , $366 Buy direct Say# $$$ j Diamonds! $ ♦ j ♦ ♦ Back .'rom Ant warp : $ ♦ Vs carat c a ra t h % carat 1 ca ra t H u n d r e d s of s e ttin g s a v a ila b le a t ra 1 la tote a» 7 w h o le s a le p n c e s E a r r i n g s 8, ▼ 4 ',t e rr D ro p s C ■: M r $ 3 5 0 ♦ $ 7 0 0 J $ 9 9 5 ♦ $ 1 8 9 5 I ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ A* 1832 A u ttm N o tion a l Bank Tow#r ♦ ♦ 4 7 8 - 4 6 4 9 A p p o in tm e n t O n ly ♦ ♦ S P A C ÍO U S E F F I C I E N C Y Fn E n fie ld a r e a n e a r s n u ttle bus. $32,000, low do w n p a y m e n t, 117s % fin a n c in g 476-2414 F U R J A C K E T . N a tu r a l b e a v e r w ith t r i m , a p p ra is e d v a lu e $1,200, le a th e r s e llin g fo r $300 472 1321 B Y O W N E R 1-1 tc w n h o u s e con d o fo r s a le . A s s u m a b le fix e d r a te U ’ « % m o r t ­ g a g e $15,000 e q u ity F ir e p la c e , c e ilin g fa n s . 447 9146 A C A P U L C O C O N D O -H o te l L u x u rio u s , lo ad ed , on b e a c h M e x ic a n o w n e r c a n n o t fin a n c e . E x c e lle n t in v e s tm e n t w / g r e a t $75.000. W ill discuss m o n e y p r ic e . C a ll E d u a r d o 928 3206 r e tu r n S P A C IO U S C O N D O W I T H V IE W n the h e a r t of N o r th w e s t H ills S in g le le v e l, 2 B R 2 B A w ith f i r e p la c e a n d d e c o ra to r to u c h e s -p e r fe c t fo r r o o m m a te s $65.000 l l 7» % fin a n c in g Ross A n d e rs o n , w ith 327-3676. L U X U R Y 1 B R IB A 3 b lo c k s f r o m c a m - pus. C e ilin g fa n s , b a lc o n y , a ll a p p li­ an c e s E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n $37,500, f i ­ n a n c in g a v a ila b le . 477-4113 ★ C O N D O S * H O M E S - DUPLEXES I f you w a n t to liv e w ith in e a s y d is ­ ta n c e o f c a m p u s , c a ll th e U T a r e a s p e c ia lis ts , $39,900 to $120,000 The UT AREA SPECIALIST John B. S anford, Inc. 4 5 4 -6 6 3 3 R eahoft 4 51 -7 26 2 H P 38C c a 'r u t a f o r 2 m o n th s old P e r f e c t c o n d itio n 1 B es* re a s o n a b le o ff e r . C a ll M a r x P h o n e 477-2874 y/A T E o B E O. C O F F E E fa b le , T V , re- t i m i n g c h a r, p a in te d m e ta l b o o k c a s e s . W ill sell fo r best o ff e r 441-2844 M E X I C A N D R E S S E S im p o r te d in v a r i ou$ c o lo rs a na s’ yies C a ll D o u g e v e n ­ in g s 467 0383 $40-45 M I C R O W A V E G o lfc tu b s $225 W ils o n X 31 453-3634 $ 2 0 0 n e g o t i a b l e . S Q U A N D E R Y O U R R E A G A N T A X I m m o r a l C U T 1 A s u b s c rip tio n to T h e M n o r ify f a jo u r n a l of p o litic a l t r a s h )- issues B ox 732, fiv e b u c k s fiv e (S e n d a g if t G r a n d H a v e n M l 49417 s u b s c rip tio n to y o u r fa v o r it e b ig o t.) fo r L A D I E S ' D E S IG N E R s k ir ts . F a c t o r y c le a r a n c e Sizes 3-13 Be mg sold a t m a n ­ u f a c t u r e r 's c o s t-S 6 -ll C an be s een a t A u s tin S ound Co, 305 W M L K , 476-6733. E M B R O I D E R E D M E X I C A N d resses* L o n g S40 s h o rt $35 ( a ls o ta k in g o r d e r s ) . f A f te r 5 : rr 443 R O L E X P R E S I D E N T I A L 18 c a r a t g o ld S e v e n w a t c h m o n th s old w ith Sw iss b a n d A s k in g J5.00C 458-3003. 451-3102 E x c e ll e n t c o n d itio n O R A N G É TREE N U E C E S P L A C E , T H E G A Z E B O , T H E T R E E H O U S E , H Y D E P A P K O A K S , P A R K E R S Q U A R E an d H Y D E P A R K a r e iu s t a fe w of th e U .T condos w e h a v e a v a ila b le F O R S A L E a n d F O R L E A S E C a ll in fo r m a tio n a b o u t us th e s e a n d o th e rs . W e 'r e th e cbndo s p e c ia lis ts fo r m o r e IIN D A INGRAM AND ASSOC ______________ 4 7 6 -2 6 7 3 CAM PUS C O N D O M IN IU M S We H a v e Th em W e h a v e c o m p ile d a c o m p le te lis t­ ing of a ll c a m p u s a r e a condos. W e a r e th e C on d o E x p e r ts R ON H A N N A & ASSOC. 3 5 0 9 Jefferson 4 5 9 - 4 8 9 2 RICARDIN CO. proudly announces P R E S E R V A T I O N SQUARE 21 u n iq u e c o n d o m in iu m s nest ed n th e e x c lu s iv e w es t c a m p u s a r e a P 'e s e r ,a •io n S q u a re is a u n i ; e b ie r of e le g a n t r e s to ra tio n s a n d re p ro d u c tio n s w t h a ll th e m o d e rn c o n v e n ie n c e s F o r in f o r m a ­ th e e x c lu s iv e m a r k e tin g tio n c o n ta c t a g e n c y R I C A R D I N C O J74-598' DORM L I F E D R E A R Y ? I n t e r e s t e d in a c o n d o m i n i u m ? T h e n d o n 't b e a t a ro u n d th e bush, g e t th e to P o in te C a ll B ob to d a y a t T h e P o in te C o n d o m in iu m s 473-8602 o r 476-1509 910 D u n c p n L a n e . ORANGE T R E E CONDO S o p h is tic a te d , u n u s u a lly la r g e 1 B R plus s tu d y lo ft. L R w ith fir e p la c e , s e p a r a te d in in g ro o m , p r iv a te b a lc o n y , o v e r lo o k ­ tr e e -h n e d s tre e t, pool, 2 c o v e re d ing p a r k i n g s paces n ig h tt im e s e c u r ty 4 7 8 - 7 7 4 4 ___________ G a ra g e -F o r Sale Y A R D S A L E : hou s eh o ld ite m s , 3 m o r e . S a tu r d a y 9-5, 1702 S. F i f t h F u r n i t u r e , r a d a l p o tt e r y , t i r e a n d T ic k e ts -F o r S a le Z Z T O P in c o n c e r t A p r a n d a r e n a a v a ila b le B es* p r ic e s 989! a n y t im e Jose. 16 B e s t * oor *4 7- R O Y C L A R K t c k e ts F r o n t flo o r $ * » '• in g a v a ila b le in f r s t $•» -pw s $2'.' o r se$- o ffe r 471-7607 Z Z T O P * v x e 's E x c e en» f na s ea 's G . a r a r * e e d w h e r e 4 71 -7 60 ' H u r r y 3 0 ' 3 ' 3 3■ seats 3 - • s G u a r a n B e s ' A N N I E T I C K E T S . Orcnes'r ing available in first fear rw teed best seats anywhere 471-760' ZZ T O P . G r e a t f r o r » T i o o r l »cw L e w e s * b r ces 3 - tim e , C r a ig 4 74 -5 83 ' ZZ T O P ' ; « £ 's v ; • j e t 1 c - ;c c C 2 r P n o n e 4 7 7 - : S ' 4 a ' . ' m e v >- ZZ T O P tic k e ts © tion )0 row 3 pr ,:ec 1499. 3c.' sea's Sec Phc- se '■ A n n E T t C K E T S G ' - T sea's. p r ic e A p r 1 3 p e r fo r m a n c e 443-976 M i s c e l l a n e o u s - F o r Sale G R E A T SE an d ou td o o Y a it c o m e E C T I O N B e a u tifu l i t M ndOOr easonaMe 54-0834 Ave. C H I N E S E SHO ES-VS ;«.> > a 'u r a : soaps lib e r t a r a n Do o m sc e nce fic tio n used b ooks p a c i f i c S U N R IS E , 1712 S. C on­ g re s s . 441-4565. R O L E X M E N 5 D a te 1 us t G d d -s ta m - less. G ood c o n d itio n S120C 480-8632 F I N E S T A M E R I C A N plus 2.500 g ifts N e 's o n s G ifts 3814. In d ia n r e ta il a n d w h o le s a le 4502 S C ongre s s, 444- je w e lr y U N D E R W O O D E L E C T R I C '. p e w r i t e r J u st as n e w $95. 474-7181 1981 S A N Y O r e f r ig e r a t o r , b ra n d new w ith w a r r a n t y , $130. 476-0356. F A C U L T Y & s tu d e n ts : U s e y o u - ow n p o r ta b le t e r m in a l to acc es s tim e s h a r in g c o m p u te r s y s te m s fr o m y o u r h o m e or a p a r t m e n t N e w & used 7 I. te r m in a ls a t cost. ( 5 ) 2 ) 492-3180 T Y P E W R I T E R d u a ' C O R R E C T I N G p itc h , 2 '2 y e a r s o ld , iu s t re co n d itio n e d , p e r fe c t s h ap e , m u s t sell S700, $1000 new K a th e r in e , 836-8620, 258-9883 G R E A T - V A L U E I B M M o d e l ’C ' e le c tr ic t y p e w r ite r , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , o ffic e an d 7 c a rb o n rib b o n s $200.472-1321 * * * * * * * ; ESTRADA * Preleasing fo r S u m m e r * 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms Special Su m m er Rates $235-475 On S h u ttle * 442-6668 1 801 S. Lakeshore * * + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + * * * * * * * * * * CASA DE BARCELONA P R E L E A S I N G FOR S U M M E R EFFICIENCY, 1, 2, 3 BEDROOMS FROM S256 O n shuttle-children accepted 2 2 0 1 ELM ON T 4 4 4 - 2 4 6 8 F L E U R DE LIS APTS. 404 E. 30TH N o w L e a s mg F o r S u m m e r 1 a n d 2 b e d ro o m apts s ta r t in g a t $250 p lus E W a te r , ga s. c a b le p a id . S h o rt w a lk to c a m p u s . C a ll C liff M u s g r a v e , 476-7011, o r J e r o m e Cox 472-65! 5 D O N ' T W A I T G e t B e s t S u m m e r D e a ! N o w 2BR-S275 plus E Sm all Complex 40' Pool Covered P a rk in g LA CASITA APTS. 2900 C o le 3 e lk s . to L a w S c h o o l) 472-3318 258-2152 2BR-1BA Townhouse 4 '0 8 D e p e w Clk E Of Reo R .e r Near Hancock Cen'er and shuttle $285 plus E No pets. Open 3; 30-5 30M -F Cal 926-1219 for special appointment Unexpected V aca n cy 1B R a t 302 W . 38 th. G a s a n d 2 b l o c k to s h u t t l e . w a t e r p a id . 453-4002 L U X U R Y A P T . fo r s u m m e r S p e e d w a y a n d 3 3 rd • Spacious furnished 3BR • V c r o w a v e • P ool • S h u ffle step 3 o r 4 a t lo w s u m m e r r a te s 477-0718 478-9787 O L D V A I N A p a rt-e n » ; 25t» a n d P e a - 1 B R . e ffic ie n c ie s F o u r b lo c k s U T , s n a f­ fle , c a b le pool. 476-5109. 2502 N U E C E S B ro w n le e e ffic ie n c ie s Close to c a m p u s . $200 A B P . 478-1532 W E S T C A M P U S B ig 2 5 R H o lly w o o d b a th . O n ly 4 b lo c k s c a m p u s C A C H q u ie t an d coz> Ca K e n M e W :: a m s -i'7-9937 478-2410 af» er 6 p m . - J r ex w ♦ - fr o m TUTORING TUTORING M A T H T U T O R E x p e rien ce d , p ro fe ssio n a l tu to rs can h e lp you m ake b e tte r g ra d e s. S tru g g lin g i I F r u stra te d on te s ts I Call or come by for a p p o in tm e n t. M -3 0 1 M -3 0 2 M - 3 16k M -3 1 6 L M -6 0 3 a M -6 0 3 b M -3 0 4 e M -3 0 5 g M -8 0 8 a M -8 0 8 b M -3 6 2 k M -3 1 1 M -6 0 8 e a M -6 0 8 e b M -3 2 5 M 427K -L A C C -312 D o n ’t p u t th is off u n til the n igh t before exam . Too late then. ST A T -309 ACC-311 • C lose to U T cam pu s • L o ts o f p a tie n c e • V e ry re a so n a b le ra te s • V A a p p ro v e d A lsu h ig h school courses, SA T, GRE, and LS A T Revieu 4 S S - S 0 6 0 t o o W . 2 8 t h f t . 477-7003 Office 103 • -------------- « Pat Lucey * TYPING TYPING 1 0 to 2 0 % STUDENT DISCOUNT CALL FOR FURTHER INFORMATION SECRETARIAL WORD PROCESSING SERVICES (MANUSCRIPTS, RESUMES, TERM PAPERS ETC.) 1 106 CLAYTON LANE, SUITE NO. 120-E 4 5 2 -9 2 2 4 TW IN TOWERS OFFICE BUILDING O N U.T. SHUTTLE (CR STOPS ACROSS STREET) Friday, April 2, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 2 SUMMER RATES W A L K T O C A M P U S O R S H U T T L E B U S l b e d ro o m , 1 b a th , sh ag c a r p e t, C A /C H A C T 111 4312 S p e e d w a y 453 0540 A C T IV 3311 R e d R iv e r 474-8125 A C T V I 2801 H e m p h ill 476-0411 A C T V I I I 2808 W h itis 474-5650 A C T IX 2803 H e m p h ill 476-0411 A C T X 301 W 29th 474-5650 T h r e e O a k s 409 W 38th 453-3383 P ec a n S q u a re 506 W 37th 459-1597 W e s te rn e r 2806 H e m p h ill 472-0649 2711 8, 2721 H e m p h .il 472-0649 Ed Padgett Co. 454-4621 $185-S200 Plus E S u m m e r r a te s W e a r e lo o k in g fo r q u ie t, c o n s c ien tio u s, n o n s m o k in g s tu d e n ts in ­ te re s te d lo c a ­ tio n s . W e s t c a m p u s /H y d e P a r k C A /C H , la u n d r y , d e a d bo lts 458-2488 la r g e e ffic ie n c y . 2 in a S U M M E R R A T E S n o w o r s u m m e r r e n t­ ing W a lk to c a m p u s . L a r g e e ffic ie n c ie s , 2 B R 2BA e ffic ie n c ie s S h u ttle a n d c ity bus, pool, fu r n is h e d o r u n fu rn is h e d 472- _________________ 2147. S T I L L L O O K IN G fo r t h a t p e r fe c t lo ca - lu x u r y e ffic ie n c ie s fio n ? B ra n d n e w fe a tu r in g C A C H , a ll n e w b u ilt-in a p p li­ a nces $385 H o w e ll P r o p e r tie s 477 9925 'B R orT s h u ttle . E F F I C I E N C I E S A N D F ir e p la c e s , pool, la u n d r y . T a k in g s u m ­ m e r and fa ll leases, $225 a n d $265 plus E T h e C h im n e y S w eep, 105 W 3 8% St 454- _____ 2339 E F F I C I E N C I E S O N shuttled m a jo r r e - n o v a tio n u n d e r w a y , so d o n 't pass us up! lea s es , $230 plus E S u m m e r a nd fa ll T h e W in flo A p a r tm e n ts , 808 W in flo , 480- 9732 S H A R E S P A C IO U S house in N o r th A u s ­ tin P r iv a t e b a th 'b e d ro o m M a l e g r a d u ­ ' . b ills a te s e n io r, no pets S200 plus 837 3078, 476-9269 to S h a re F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R T r a v is H e ig h ts house $175 b ills p a id . 442-6891 C H R IS T I A N F E M A L E S ( 2 Í n e ede d to s h a re la r g e 2 B R a p t 1 block fr o m c a m ­ $ 1 2 5 /m o , pus P r e f e r g r a d u a te s tu d e n t C a ll A B P M a r s h a a fte r 6 e v e n in g s 458-6971. S u m m e r an d or fa ll '0 s h a re 2-2 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D A B P a p a r t m e n t, $175 p e r m o n th . C a ll 452 77 8 8 ___ R O O M M A T E - S h a r e la r g e F E M A L E b r ig h t a ir y tw o b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t, on I F s h u ttle P ool P le a s a n t s u p p o r tiv e en v ir o n m e n t 454-5080 fe m a le T W O S T U D IO U S n o n s m o k in g s tu d e n ts n e ede d to s h a re b e a u tifu l spa la r g e y a r d , c e ilin g cious house w ith fa n s , s u n ro o m , H B O , a p p lia n c e s O ff C a m e r o n R d S u m m e r , fa ll, s p rin g . C a ll L e s lie 453-8943 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e ede d. S h a r e 4 b e d ro o m d u p le x b ills W a s h e r . d r y e r , c a th e d r a l c e ilin g s . 345-3538 $ 1 5 0 /m o n th plus H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D V F 4-2, f i r e ­ p la c e , fe n c e d y a rd , c a r p e t, c a b le n ice , s h a re e x p e n s es 837-6831, k ee p tr y in g G R A D O R ciou s house o ff E n fie ld . C a ll 480-0537. la w s tu d e n t to liv e in s p a ­ G A Y M A L E need e d to s h a re v e r y n ic e in H y d e P a r k . $191.67 3 B R 2 B A house p lu s W b ills . 458-1944 a fte r 5 00. N E E D E D M A L E s tu d e n t r o o m m a te fo r A p r il, M a y in 2 B R IB A a p a r t m e n t. R e n t $180 plus E . C a ll C h ris a fte r 6 :0 0 p .m at 459-5507. ‘ N O N S M O K E R N E E D E D u n til M a y 31* fu r n is h e d . S tu d e n t p r e fe r r e d , F u lly close to s h u ttle . A f te r 8 p m 467-9583. W A N T E D M A L E or fe m a le to s h a re 2 b e d ro o m house. $167.50 plus W u tilitie s . S e lm a 472-6114 M / F S H A R E b e a u tifu l th r e e b e d ro o m tw o a c re s . W e s tla k e H ills h o m e on W o o d ed a n d s ec luded. $200 p /m o . plu s W u tilitie s 327-4379. E X T R A * N IC E e ffic ie n c ie s C a b le T V , fa ll s m o k e d e te c to rs , leases $250 plus E 1115 W 9 th , 480-9732. s u m m e r a n d G R A D S T U D E N T needed to s h a re house on B a lc o n e s D r iv e . $220 plus Vi of u t ili­ ties P le a s e c a ll 454-1259 6 30-8 30 p m Sm<0 Ht I PH! G AM M A DELTA HOUSE * f I BURGER \ \ KING 27th STREET M i l A 0 i TYPING. PRINTING, BINDING T h e C o m p l e t e P r o f e s s i o n a l FULLTIME T Y P IN G SERVICE 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 HEMPHILL PK P lenty of P arking ARK RESUMES! QUALITY RESUMES I J Us* the style employers a m looking YOUR unique qualities a ft skills. Sliding stale ready for printing. for! Emphasis P.O. Box 9275 Austin, TX 78766 Call 444-6105 345-9744 for details t E X T R A L A R G E 1 B R on s h u ttle , ta k in g s u m m e r a n d fa ll leases $265 plus E . T h e H a llm a r k , 708 W . 34th, 452-0561. ___ S U IT E A V A I L A B L E n e x t door to c a m ­ pus, s h a rin g k itc h e n a n d b a th w ith a n ­ o th e r m a le P a id gas a n d w a t e r 2802 W h itis . $150 re n t, $100 d e p o s it 478-0911 L U X U R Y O R A N G E T r e e c o n d o m in iu m a v a ila b le fo r s u m m e r le a s e o n ly . C o v ­ e re d p a rk in g , A B P e x c e p t e le c tr ic . F o u r fe m a le s o n ly . F o r m o r e in fo r m a tio n c a ll 1-888-5616. 1-854 0905 F U R N lS H E D E F f I c T e N C Y , 45th St*, n e a r U T s h u ttle , c a b le a n d g a s p a id , la u n d r y , $230 plus E 458-9929 _ G R E A T P R I C E , g r e a t lo c a tio n . F u r ­ nish ed tw o b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t, 2810 Rio G r a n d e n e a r W C R e n t n e g o tia b le . C a ll A n d y o r D a v id a t 478-1900 A V A I L A B L E A P R I L 15, 1B R w ith p r i­ v a te b a lc o n y T w o b lo c k s fr o m s h u ttle in a q u ie t H y d e P a r k n e ig h b o rh o o d . M a y r e n t a t $275 plus b ills S u m m e r a t $235 plus b ills . F o r a p p o in tm e n t c a ll H u g h a t 459-9592 a v a ila b le now N O R T H W E S T Í B R , S h o rt te r m le a s e pos sible C eii ng fan, A C , g r e a t pool no pets 478-1493, 474-8987 a fte r 6 p .m . a n d w e e k e n d s . L A R G E , A I R Y , fu r n is h e d one b e d ro o m to le t in v e r d a n t n o rth c a m p u s lo c a tio n . W a lk , pe d al U T . S m a ll, n e a t c o m p le x . In q u ir e 453-4082. F O R R E N T G ia n t 2 b e d ro o m Ó R A N ­ G E ! R E E condo A ll b ills p a id $575. 472- 5233 a n y tim e . F U R N I S H E D 2 B R 2 B A n e w w e s t c a m ­ pus c o n d o m in iu m a v a ila b le to r s u m m e r re n t. $ 5 5 0 /m o n th . C a ll 214-360-2580 in nice Q U I E T , C O N V E N I E N T s pace 2B R R iv e r s id e condo. F u l l y fu rn is h e d b y o w n e r-ju n io r fin a n c e m a jo r A v a i l ­ a b le I M M E D I A T E L Y th ro u g h s u m m e r an d n e x t y e a r to s erio u s m a le s tu d e n t. C a ll J o n a th a n 445-5778 IB R U N I V E R S lT Y N E IG H B O R H O O D n ow a v a ila b le S u m m e r r a te s C a b le , c a r p e t, c e n tr a l h e a t a n d a ir . H ig h c e il­ ing c le a r story w -d e w O ff s tr e e t p a r k - in g . 472-2273._____________________________ M A R K T W A IN W a lk to c a m p u s S m a ll, q u ie t, a t t r a c t iv e ly d e s ig n e d c o m p le x I B R s - lB A s v a r ie t y b a lc o n ie s , v a u lte d c e ilin g s , fir e p la c e S u m m e r r a te s $250- J a c k 451-8122 W e s tw o r ld 305 plus E R e a l E s ta te . UNFURN. APARTMENTS T e r r ill H ill T ow nhom es in B e a u tifu lly d e s ig n e d s m a il new c o m e ex 1 c a r g a r a g e , u p ­ s ta ir s p a tio w a s h e r d r y e r c o n n e c tio n s , d is h w a s h e r , d is p o s a l $425 m o n th . 2 B R T U B A H a r r i s o n P e a r s o n Assoc. 3 0 5 W . 6 t h , 4 7 2 - 6 2 0 1 N E A R S H U T T L E t . s 9th a -id W inflo. Excep onaD y nice ' 3 R'S s ta r' ng $295 plus c. is, lease 477-4609 N E W L Y REP V S H E D 3 rqe 1BR ao' f o r nr a e s '- d e " s - best ocat or * e s t of L T :a — p-s CA Ch ca 'p e 'e c AB P $385 ~ :we p - o p e " es 477 9925 E X T R A N C E e x 'r a a 'g e 1 a n d 2 B R , a u n q r y . s h u ttle p le n ty of a 'g e poo fa ll p a r k in g e ases $255 a n d $365 c-us E T ne T h r e e E lm s , 4 0 0 W 35th. 451-3 9 4 L_______________ c a b le T V , s u m m e r a n c T R A V S H E I G H T # 2 -’ " iR u ie t c o m p la * o v e r ook ng S ta ce y P a r k . N e w p a m t, po o l, la u n d r y $350 CaU m a 'a g e r 443- 9074 T h e E i L o tt S y s te — Q u ¡e ' com E F p~ C IE N C Y -S 2 6 0 d . s ! v e n ie n t to d o w n to w n . U T . s h u ttle . E x - c e p ' : na • ' :e CA C H 441-2467. L U X U R Y I B R 'B A condo. 3 b lo c k s fr o m c a m p u s C e ng fa n s ba c ony aM a p p li­ a nces E x c e e n t c o n d itio n $300 m o n th . 477-4113 S P A C IO U S E F F I C I E N C Y $225 p lu s E in C o n v e n ie n tly n ic e c o m p ;e x 451-4206,442-4076 o c a te d n e a r s h u ttle \ L L A O R L E a NS A p ts n o * e a s in g to ' s u m m e r an d fa ll 1 a n d 2 b e d ro o m s , c o u r ty a r d sett ng ots at g r e e n e r y , q u i­ et j block to s h u ttle r o u t * , n e a r c a m ­ pus. 206 W 38th. 452-3314.________________ N E W L Y R E M O D E L E D g a 'a g e a p a r t ­ m e n t A v a i¡a b ie " o w u n til A ug 20. 2 B R , 3 b lo c k to s h u ttle 1BA n H y d e P a r k A d a ce n t to c ity p a r k w ith poci N ic e !ot w ith tre e s a n d p r v a c y . S350, g as and v .a te r pa d 345-1374 ROOM AND BOARD T H I N K I N G A B O U T CO-OPS? 21st Sf C o lle g e H o u s e is a s u cc e ss fu l e x - p e r m e n t ( n c o -o p e r a ' ve (¡v ng A p p lic a ­ tio n s a r e now be ng »aken fo r s u m m e r an q fa t v a c a n c es C a ll o r c o m e by 21st Sf C o lle g e H ouse 707 W 2 1 * t S t. 476- 5678 H O U S E M A T E S T A B L E * lib e r a l to s h a re s p ac io u s o ld e r 3-1 w ith 26 y e a r old m a le p ro fe s s io n a l. D is h w a s h e r, W D. g a r a g e C R s h u ttle , p r iv a c y $250 C a ll 459-5563 a n y h o u r a f t e r 6 p .m . N o c ig a r e tte s L A R G E R O O M w ith b a th a v a ila b le in in c lu d e s u tilitie s . n ice house. $182.50 V e g e ta r ia n n o n s m o k e r. 441-2844. R E S P O N SI B L E , N O N S M O K I N G , p ro - fe s s io n a l fe m a le h o u s e m a te , 25-35 y e a rs , w ho v ie w s house as a h o m e , s h are h o u s e /y a r d w o r k good tim e s $165 plus V3 b ills . 451-2904. M E L I N D A ' S T Y P I N G S E R V I O 95c per standard page 15 y e a r s e x p e r i e n c e S tr ic t ly p ro fe s s io n a l ty p in g g u a r a n te e d 458-2312 H o u rs n o o n -m id n ig h t V ic in it y of IH 3 5 a n d 38! ? St. R O O M M A T E 21-25 need e d J u n e 1st 3 b e d ro o m house. $122 m o n th plu$ 1 j b ills . 928-4810 e v e n in g s . L E G A L A N D K a th e 's Q u ic k -T y p e en ce . I B M I I I . 443-6488 South A u s tin ty p in g 15 y e a r s e x p e i 1 p r o fe s s io n a l F E M A L E T O s h a re house n e a r St E d ­ w a r d s $128 S m a ll c h a r g e fo r c h ild 's b e d ro o m . 445-6056, k ee p tr y in g . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E : 4-2 house on s h u ttle $180 plus % b ills . A v a ila b le now . P a t ti 467-2127 a fte rn o o n s r o o m m a te N O N S M O K IN G R E M A L E need e d to s h a re house n e a r c a m p u s w ith th r e e o th e rs . S 9 9 /m o n th an d ¿ b ills 478- 4958 R O O M M A T E N E E D E D i m m e d ia te ly to s h a re 2 B R 1B A O n ly S155 p e r m o n th p lus ' j b ills . O n e block fr o m IF s h u ttle . C a ll 467-9085 2 B R H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D n ic e IF s h u ttle . $175 plus house, V3 b ills . 459-5142 a fte r 10:30 p .m ., a f t e r ­ noons la r g e y a r d T W O N E A T re s p o n s ib le m a tu r e perso n s n e ed e d fo r 4-2 d u p le x $125 plus % b ills 345-6099 to w n - M A L E T O s h a re tw o b e d ro o m house, $ 1 0 2 /m o n th plus V3 b ills . I m m e d i ­ a te o p e n in g , S R s h u ttle . R oy 443-4690 d u p le x , R O O M M A T E W A N T E D *2-1 fe n c e d y a r d , fir e p la c e , c a b le O n S R , RC S h u ttle $175, Ya b ills 445 2566 fe m a le W A L K T O c a m p u s r o o m m a te fo r spacious 2 B R a p t A v a il­ a b le im m e d ia t e ly M e lis s a 472-0543 P r e f e r re s p o n s ib le N O N S M O K E R , C L E A N , r o o m m a te n e ede d to s h a re 1 b e d ro o m a p t n e a r I F s h u ttle $147 50 plus 2 b ills . 467-9383 S P A C IO U S 2 b e d ro o m d u p le x C a r p e te d fu r n is h e d k itc h e n U t ilit y r o o m . $425/ m o n th . $300 d e p o s it. 454-5237. 2914 B R io G r a n d e . C o n v e n ie n t, la r g e , r e f r ig e r a t o r . c le a n L e a s e , $250 478-5739, 472-2097. R a n g e an d 1-1 PROBLEM P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L IN G . REFERRALS & FREE PR E G N A N C Y TESTIN G Teio« Prob4*m Pregmjnty 507 Pow*il StrM t M-F. 8 30-5 00 4 7 4 - 9 9 3 0 SINGLES-COUPIES A u n iq u e w a y to m e e t p e o p le w ith s im it a r s e x u a l in te re s ts a n d d e s ire s . CAM TO i SW ING o u t is a c o m p le te ly in tro d u c tio n s e r v ic e . c o n fid e n tia l to C .S .C ., B o x 3635, S e n d $2 00 A u s tin , T e x a s 70746 f o r d e ta ils a n d a s a m p le m a g a z in e : P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e p r e g ­ n a n c y te s tin g a n d r e fe r r a ls . 474-9930 IN S T E A D O F a b o r tio n, c a i 454-6127. M A N W A N T S ^ s t r e s s , 18-25 W r ite B o* 307, 4502 S ou th C ongre s s, A u s tin , T e x a s 78745 D I A L - A - D a t e — A u s tin 's n e w an d e x c it­ in g d a tin g s e rv ic e . F o r info, d ia l 453- 6928. In c lu d e s T -s h irts . N E E D A fa s t a c c u r a t e ty p is t? I ha ve in E n g lis h , a c o r r e c tin g S e ie c t r i' B A an d 12 y e a rs s e c r e t a r ia l e x p e rie n c e C a ll A n n a t 447-5069 8-6. w h e n yo W O O D S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e w a n t It d one r ig h t. 472-6302, 2200 G u a d a lupe, side e n tr a n c e ¿ e l e c t r i c T Y P I N G C O R R E C T I N G o v e r n ig h t s e rv ic e , p ic k -u p a v a ila b le ti 11:50 p m E x p e r ie n c e d , p ro fe s sio n s P a t t y , 345-4269 t ill r m d n ig h t A c c u r a ti P R O F E S S IO N A L Theses, s e r v ic e , d is s e rta tio n s , p ro fe s s io n a l re p o rts , etc B a r b a r a T u llo s , 453-5124 T Y pT s T a ro u n d t u r n fa s t E X C E L L E N T T Y P IN G - r e p o r t s T d is s e r ta tio n s , r e s u m e s , e tc . C o r r e c tin g Set*" tr ie 836-0721 __________ I Ñ T E L L i G E n T T * A C C U R A T E ~ ty p i r 1 g R e p o rts , re s u m e s . H ig h lite r a c y , cus to m e r m is s p e llin g s c o r r e c te d R ush $er v ic e a v a ila b le T u to r in g . C r e a t iv e S er ¡. ces, 2420 G u a d a lu p e , 478-3633 ty p in g A C C U R A T E* * P R O F E SS 10 N 4 L Si pa g e, m o s t c as es . C a m p u s p ic k u p d e liv e r y O v e r n ig h t s e r v ic e . S e le c tr k J a n ie . 250-9435 ______ ___ '’ E S E A R C H p a p e rs , theses s ta tis t ic a l. C o r r e c tin g T Y P I N G : d is s e 'ta tio n s , S e le c tr ic , p ic a e lite W ill proof, e x p e r e n ce d , re a s o n a b le . 441-1893 p d q T y p i n g s e ' v i c r o f A u s tin is e . L a v a c a . P ro fe s s io n a l, a c c u r a te ty p in g T im e ly ru s h w o r k a v a ila b le . 474-2198 95' P A G E D o u b te s p ac e d . 13 y e a rs e» p e rie n c e D is s e r ta tio n s , the s es also. C a D o n n a 441-9245 noon-6 p .m . T E C H N I C A L T Y P I N G servTce* Disse» ta tio n s , theses, speeches, m a n u s c rip ts T h e s e r v ic e y o u c a n a ffo r d . C a ll 836- 3902 A n n , J t - m y sure we DO typ* FRESHMAN THEMES why i» t stert * v t w ith ge*4 j r * 6 * i 2 7 0 7 H e m p h i ll Juii North of 27th ai Guodolupo «72-3210 «72-7677 T H E T Y P IS T -P r o fe s s io n a l ty p in g , s a tis ­ fa c tio n g u a ra n te e d C a m p u s d e liv e r y a n d pick up. I B M C o rre c tin g S e le c tric H e le n 836-3562. ________________ tape E N G L IS H M A J O R tr a n s c r ip tio n done. M y ho m e . R e su m e , essays, te r m p a p e rs , e tc . 444-2851. T y p in g and J E A N N E 'S T Y P I N G S e rv ic e T y p in g ■ m y N o rth A u s tin h o m e . F a s t, re a s o n ­ able a c c u r a te 836 4303 P R O F E S S IO N A L M a N U SCR Í P T * T Y F IN G G u a r a n te e d A ll fie ld s . 5 p a g e m in ­ im u m . Y v o n n e 474-4863. T Y P I N G - P A S T a n d a c c u r a te , s e v e ra (te c h n ic a l $1.25/ ty p e s ty le s le a v e r e c o rd e d p a g e ). C a ll C a n d y or m ess ag e , 451-9596, 451-9360. i l / p a g e - T Y P I N G B Y D E A N N E S p e c ia liz in g theses, te r m p a p ers , d is s e rta tio n s , te I B M C o r r e c tin g S e le c tric R eason g a l. a b le ra te s . 447-7284 T A M A R A 7 ^ T Y P I N G S e rv ic e . E a s t R w e rs id e a r e a . 443-9570. F U N L O V IN G "-'a le h o u s em a te s stu­ in d e n t a n d p ro fe s sio n a l, m e e tin g A u s tin w o m e n . C a ll 478-0470 fo r M ik e , T o n y , J o h n n y o r D a v id in te re s fe o W O R D P R O C E S S IN G do n e In m y h o m e N o r th A u s tin , 6 y e a r s e x p e r ie n c e . P e r ­ to r school p a p e rs . R e a s o n a b le f e c t ra te s . C a ll 837-1738. H E A L T H Y , F U N lo vin g , e d u c a te d g r a d ­ u a te fe m a le w a n ts to m ee» m e n w ith e q u a l q u a litie s R e p ly D a ily T e x a n , Box D -4, A u s tin 78712. S U S A N IN U n d e 'g r ad Business School. H o w w a s Tao s? R o b e rto s '’ W h a t a b o u t o u r re n d e v o u s ? C a ll m e ! 467-2354. 'e s ' C O Ü F !*D E N T ¡ a l ~ P R E G N 4 Ñ C Y r e f e r r a l , b ir th c o n tro l, a b o rtio n . in g , P ro fe s s io n a l m e d ic a l s e rv ic e s R e p r o ­ d u c tiv e S e rv ic e s , n o n -p ro fit c h n ic . 458- 8274 to r T H E P E T S I T T E R S L o v in g c a r e y o u r pe ts a n d p la n ts w h ile y o u 'r e a w a y . C a ll 474-9029.___________________ M O V I N G T O H o u s to n -5 C a ll P H a r r R u p - le y w ith R a e P fe ffe r A p tm e n t L o c a to rs 713-871-0602 it's tr e e ! WANTED T Y P I N G S E R V I C E s o n ab le r a te s , 451-2332___________________ ____________ I B M S e le c tr ic fa s t s e rv ic e ren I I I . C a ll S U P E R T Y P I N G . S e le c tr ic I I I . 17 y e a 's e x p e r ie n c e C a m p u s a 'e a $1 25 a n d up M o r g a n , 472-7498 a fte r 6 p .m T H E S E S A N D t e r m p a p e rs by c a r e f u 1 e x p e rie n c e d ty p is t w ith a P h D ., m a n y y e a r s o f c o lle g e E n g lis h te a c h in g a n d a n e le c tr o n ic t y p e w r it e r . C a m p u s p ic k up a n d d e liv e r y . 479-8909 L I N D A 7S T Y P I N G , south c ie n t, a n d in e x p e n s iv e . 442-7465 a fte r 5 p rr, F a s t, e ft Ñ B T y p in g S e r v ic e E x e c u tiv e s e c re ­ t a r y w ii, do y o u r ty p in g q u ic k ly a n d p ro fe s s io n a tly . L o w r a te s 474-9115. H E A L T H A N D n y tr tio n -o r ie n fe d CO-OP seeks re s p o n s ib le in d iv id u a ls W e o ffe r n e ig h b o rh o o d n e a r q u ie t c a m p u s v e g e 'a ' an. s m o k e -fr e e e n v i­ r o n m e n t sundeck ooen fie ti an d g a r ­ den R o y a l Co-op 1805 P e a r l. 478-0880 re si0ent>a S E N E C A F A L L S F e m in is t C o-op O p e n ­ ings n ow a n d s u m m e r . S u p p o r tiv e e n v i­ 2309 r o n m e n t, N u e c es 477-0225 c o m p a n y . p r iv a c y , ROOMS C O -E D D O R M 1 0 oes fr o m c a m p u s . P r v a te and s h a re d ro o m s a v a ila b le im - m e d a te ly an d fo r s p rin g 474-6905 N IC E L A R G E c a r p e te d ro o m s fo r m e n a n d w o r r e - :n 2 g r ea* oc ahon s n e a - U 1 c a m p u s CA CH A B P $165 S 75 $ 95 m o n th d e p en c ng on o c a t on H o w e ll P r o p e r tie s 477-9925 T W O - S P A C E S a v a n a b 'e in coed d o rm 'r o m c a m p u s A f te r 6 p m one block c a ll 479-0677, 474-576 H O U S E M A T E - 7 m o n th s s u b le t N on- s m o k e r Bed ba tn a -g e house n e a r U T . H o u s e p r v ieges y a r c $200 m o n th , $100 ^ depos t 476-2789 a ‘ te - 6 p m ‘ u rn .s h e d W A L K 7 0 m p u s ro o m S hared D am uti> ties p a id $115. J a c k 451-8122 W e s tw o r ld R e a l E s ta te u s -g e F U R N I S H E D P R V A T E ro o m CA CH 1 b lo c k fr o m ca — pus S’ 60 m o n th A B P 400-0766 UNFURNISHED HOUSES A V A I L A B L E N O W tw o an d th r e e sed ro o m o id e ' hom es a p a r t m e n ts C a ll now fo r 24 ho r n fo r m a ’ ion 452-5979 U T S H U T T L E 3-1, im m a c u la t e $595 479-6153 No pets. 3 b- c a 'i 477-1915 Classifieds C o n tin u e d On N e x t P a g e At t h e Castilian t h e ut il i ti es are i n c l u d e d in y o u r p a y m e n t . I f y o u ' v e had to p a y a n y u t i l i t y bills lat el y, you k n o w that a l one is w o r t h t h e m o v e . B u t t h e Castilian off ers m u c h nutre - i n c l u d i n g a 15 m e a l pl an ( t h r e e meal s dai ly, Mo n- Fri), m a i d ser vi ce, a lease d e s i g n e d f o r t h e s t u d e n t . . . a n d we re to The Castilian. It's a bargain! B o t h p r i v a t e a n d d o u b l e r o o m s Double $358 a vai l abl e f o r both S u m m e r S es s i o ns , Single $505 to y o u r classes. Make t h e m o v e (lost' The Castilian a p riv a te ly o w n e d co e d re sid e n ce h a ll in the h e a rt o f the s tu d e n t c o m m u n ity 2323 San Antonio St. 478-9811 The T y p in g S to re 7 SO U TH OF BEST PR O D UC TS) Page 24 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Friday, April 2, 1982 SER V IC ES HELP W A N T ED HELP W A N T ED HELP W A N T ED TRAFFIC TICKETS Affordable Profewional Defense for your Traffic Violations ATTORNEY: Edith L. James Call 477-8657 L e g a l Fees: $55 per city ticket $85 DPS 3 0 6 E l l t h St. S u it e L-7 Austin, TX 78701 PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 minute service MON-FRI 10-6 SAT 10-2 477-5555 THE THIRD EYE 2530 GUADALUPE . P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y COUNSELING, R E F E R R A L S & F R E E PREGNANCY TESTING Texas Prob lem P re g n a n cy 507 Pow ell St M -F, 7 30-5:30 474-9930 DON'T L E A V E TOWN! F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E ST S A N D R E F E R R A L S TO AUSTIN R E S O U R C E S Women's Referral Center 2404 Rio G ran de 476-6878 4 blocks from cam pus PROBLEM PR EG N A N C Y COUNSELING, REFERRALS & FREE PREGNANCY TESTING T«xat Problem P reg n an cy 507 P o w o ll Stroot M-F, 8:30-5:00 474-9930 A S T R O L O G Y A N D T arot Intuitive coun­ seling. Computerized astrology ch arts (22-75 pages) are also a vaila b le F o r ap­ pointment call 454-4060. A S T R O L O G Y A N D T A R O T C L A S S E S . Beginning W ednesday A pril 7th at 8 p.m. and Saturd ay A pril 10th (d a y ). F o r inform ation call 454-4060 and 447-3792 Y A R D S E R v T c E 2 off d u ty A u s tin fir e ­ men taking on a lim ited number of yards. Reasonable rates -vd responsible service P lease call 442-2719. oV e Ñ W E Í I G H T ? V O L UN T E E R S~need­ ed. L ifesty le Clinic. 452-0082. H Y P N O S is-A N effective aid to w eight loss, habit control, obstetrics, re la x a ­ tion D iane M itchell, 474-1066 S e rv ic e . W H I T E W I N G C L E A N IN G Apartm ents, condos, houses, offices Bonded, reasonable 152 8911. WE'LL PAY YOU TO GET IN SHAPE THIS SUMMER. TRY ARMY ROTC BASIC CAMP! $600 plus room, board and transportation costs to attend a cam p at Fort Knox, KY. 17 May-24 Jun 24 May-1 July 31 May-8 Jul 28 Jun-5 A u g 5 Jul-12 A u g 12 Jul-19 A u g N O Military Obligation Limited O p e n ing s - A p ply Early CALL NOW 471-5919 W A N T E D T W O dental assistants/recep­ tionists One full-time, one part-time Pleasant, relaxed U n iv e rsity area den­ tal practice P le a se send resum es to D a i'/ Texan, Box D-5, Austin, T X 78712. W H O L E S A L E A R T Part time production person­ nel needed immediately. Job entails mat cutting, framing, packaging, F lex ib le schedules. Contact Frost Fine Art Co. 8868 Research No. 205. etc. Pleasant? A G G R E S S I V E ? D O N 'T work for m in im u m w age and louzy ten t raises, see us S4-6/hour. G rea t hours, full or part tim e. Casual fun atm osphere. A fte r 1 p m 600 W 28th No. 107 S5.88/Hour 3 day tem po rary assignm ent A pril 12-14, 8am-5pm, located in North Austin. M ust know B A S IC com puter language. Call now to set up an appointm ent. Temporaries Incorporated 806 A m erica n B a n k Tow er 477-1655 7719 W oodholiow Dr 346-4171 AC CO UN T I N G C L E R K Accountipg/business maior preferred, no experience re­ quired. 10-15 hours/week, flexible. Apply personnel off­ ice Monday-Friday, 9-1 lam, 2- 4pm, Austin Hilton Inn, 6000 Middle Fiskville Rd. School bus drivers needed Must be 21. Starting pay 54.99/ hour. Apply Criswell Center, 315 W. 5th St. 474-5773 M C D O N A L D 'S has full and part time posi­ tions available. No experience necessary. Apply in person at 2021 Guadalupe in DobieMall. Y E S T E R D A Y 'S R EC O R D S AND T A P E S W e have full and part tim e positions a vailable. W e are looking for a person, V E R Y knowledgeable in most categor- es of recorded m usic from the 40's, 50's, and 60's. W e are most interested in someone looking for a perm anent job. S a la ry co m m ensurate with knowledge. In terview s by appointm ent only. 459- 5421. S E R I O U S A P P L I C A N T S O N L Y Creative, artistic person need­ ed for full or part time display department position. Salary commensurate with experi­ ence. Good store benefits and opportunity for advancement. Contact Mr. Lindgren at 452- 5757. Y a r in g 's R O O M C L E R K S applications taken for two part tim e shifts from 2:30 p.m. to 9 p m da ily F irs t shifts, M W F and Sun-26 hours, and TT and Sat-19 hours, a lte r­ nating w eekly Consider training per­ sons with previous business experience at m inim um wage. M ust be a vaila b le thru spring and sum m er term s. Apply in person, W est W inds Motel. A irp o rt Blvd. and IH 35. retired gentlem an M ale student or m arried couple needed for live-in position with widowed 66 year old in N orthw est Hills, cardiac patient P r iv a te room, bath, and board provided plus negoti­ able s a la ry in exchange for evening cooking, light housekeeping and live-in situation Please respond with lette r/re­ sum e/references to D a ily Texan, Box D- 3, Austin, T X 78712 L E A S I N G A G E N T 20 hours/week, Sat- urday, Sunday and Tuesdays S a la ry plus com mission. Call C ere lle at 451- 4896 P A R T N E R W A N T ED -d uo . P ro g ressive country, light rock, folk. Cape Cod sum ­ m er M ust sing harm ony and lead. M ust play keyboards or g uitar 926-9622. H A W A II J O B S ! Also, affordable hous­ ing and recreation inform ation. Send $2 00. H a w a ii Consum er R esearch , 1330 Heulu, Honolulu, H aw aii 96822. N E W B R A U N F E L S C P A firm áis seek­ ing M a y and August accounting g rad u­ ates Send resum e to F red M atthew s, 389 S. Seguin, New Braun fels, T X 78130. S T E R E O T E CH N IC I AN p o s itio n 'a v a il­ able with E-Z Corporation E x p e rie n ce required. Benefits Apply at 500 Chlcon. 476-7772. B A N A N A S A N D The Red Tom ato” res­ taurants are accepting applications for all positions. M ust be able to w ork some lunch and some diner shifts. A pply in person between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. Tues- day-Friday, 1601 Guadalupe. W A N T E D P A R T tim e secre ta ry/ re c e p ­ tionist needed for real estate offices. Typing skills. 30 hours/week. 458-1554. JO N A H 'S R E S f A U R A Ñ T , A ustin's fin­ est seafood restaurant, is now hiring cooks and buspersons P lea se apply 3407 G reysto ne at M opac 2-5 p.m d aily. P A R T T IM E cashier needed in w om ens' specialty store. A pply in person to Cindy Berkow itz between 2-5 p.m. Y a rin g 's 2406 Guadalupe. E X P E R I E N C E D S I T T E R needed N W H ills church, Tues. 8:45-1:15, occasional evenings. $4/hour. 453-0295. F U L L T IM E day cashier starting $3.65/ hour. Apply In person at 1210 Barton Springs Rd., K entucky F rie d Chicken. P A R T T IM E nonsmoking housekeeper for Quail Creek area fam ily. 20 hours/ week. Upper level college student with references and transportation $3 50/ hour. Call 836-2380, 6-9 p m. S A L E S E X C E L L E N T incom e opportu­ nity as nutrition consultant. T raining provided. Be your own boss. Set your own hours. Neo-Life, A m e ric a 's H ealth Company. 458-4651. E X P E R I E N C E D C H IL D ca re w orkers needed at M a r y L e e School, South C a m ­ pus. F o r inform ation and appointm ent call Chris, 444-7435. P R O F E S SI ON A L O F F I C E (located on shuttle route) needs friendly, a ttra ctiv e person to work part tim e as receptionist. F lex ib le hours, 10 hour week m inim um S3 75/hour Call Sheri, 472-2477. W ID O W E R N E E D S dependable house­ keeper for afternoons and e a rly even­ ings M ust have own transportation. C hildcare p rim a ry responsibility with some light housekeeping and occasional cooking S a la ry com m ensurate with de­ pendability. Call 472-5456 ext. 304 be­ tween 9am-5pm w eekdays. E C O L O G Y A C T IO N needs half tim e w orker for office paper recycling . F le x i­ ble hours. Good pay 478-1645 announces T H E A U S T IN P a r k s and R ecreatio n De­ partm ent sum m er p la y­ ground job opportunities; dem onstrated recreational leadership in working with children and adults; experience in pro­ gram m ing leisure activities. Interested applicants need apply M a rch 13 and A pril 3, 9 a m at H ancock R ecreatio n Center, 811 E 41st. F o r further In fo rm a ­ tion contact H ow ard N o rris at 477-6511 ext. 2743 JU A N G O L D S T E I N 'S C a v ia r B a r is now accepting applications for prep cooks. Wage plus tip percentage. Apply at 404 E 6th a fte r 4 p.m. No calls please. ¡ N T E R N S H I P A D V E R T I S I N G Sell, promote, and distribu te the D.O .C .A student coupon book. G ain invaluable experience w hile earning m oney and college credit. 458-2223 for appointm ent. O V E R S E A S JO B S - S u m m e r/ y e a r round. Europe, S A m erica , A u stra lia, A sia. All fields. $500-1200 m onthly. Sightseeing. Free inform ation. W r ite IJC , Box 52- TX2, Corona del M a r , CA 92625. R E C E I V I N G C L E R K hours 6am-lpm M on day-Frid ay, occasional weekends. 10-key and typ ew riter experience help­ ful A pply Austin Hilton Inn Personnel Office M o n d a y- F rid ay 9-1 la m , 2-4pm. 6000 M id d le F is k v ille Rd. H O S T P E R S O N / C A S H IE R / w a itp e r s o n . P a rt tim e weekends and some m ornings in our coffee shop. E x p e rie n ce and good work history a m ust Apply Austin H il­ ton Inn Personnel O ffice 9-1 la m , 2-4pm M on day-Frid ay. 6000 M iddle F is k v ille Rd DURHAM NIXON-CLAY COLLEGE INTENSIVE ENGLISH Classes forming for March 29 — TOEFL/University preparation — Nine month comprehensive course — Short courses and private instruction — Sm all classes/conversational method — Auth. under federal la w to enroll non-immigrant alien students (1-20) N e w registration hours: 10am to 2pm & 3pm to 5pm 8th and Colorado/2nd floor 478-3446 THE AUSTIN CIASSIC FEATURING NFL PLAYERS NFL pro and former Texas Longhorn Doug English, with Lonnie Rodgers, 1982 Capital Area Chapter MDA Roster Child Tickets available now... $3.00 D o n ’t miss the chance to w atch y o u r favorite N F L players tee o ff at the Great Hills G o lf Club to benefit M D A A p ril 3 and 4. Y o u ’ll enjoy a great weekend while helping the M uscular D ystro p h y Association. The Austin Classic is presented by the Austin Jaycees, w ith all proceeds to benefit M D A . Two-day tournam ent tickets are available now for o n ly $3.00 at all area M cD o n ald ’s restau­ rants. I ickets are also available for other Austin Classic functions including a F rid a y night banquet and Satu rd ay night C o u n try Western dance at the Double Eagle. Call 478-5666 for addi­ tional inform ation. The A ustin Jaycees also thank Southw est Airlines, The H y a tt Regency and The Sail and Ski Center for their support. MANCHACA 4