oux 5*7Z^L X I ‘ s ^ l í K L 9 Z*7S*7 X0S 0 1 u u t i c u o t k Daily Texan Vol 80, No. 190 (USPS) 146-440) Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, July 28, 1981 Twenty Cents | Bush visits Austin to stump for tax cuts w I I Police apprehend suspect in rapes By TOM MULLINS Daily Texan Staff Austin police have arrested a a 27- year-old Hispanic male suspect follow­ ing another rape near the University area. APD Sgt. Ed Bunch said Daniel Bo- is charged in Municipal canegra Jr. Court with three rapes and possibly faces additional charges. Bocanegra was arrested by two officers shortly af­ ter the 13th in a recent series of rapes occurred early Monday. The latest rape, in the 1200 block of Enfield Road, was reported at 1:59 a.m . Monday. However, APD Sgt. Don M ar­ tin speculates that an hour elapsed be­ tween the assault and the victim ’s re­ port. Police took custody of Bocanegra at his 2902 E. First St. home, where he was sitting on his front porch, Sgt. M ar­ tin said. Bocenegra’s brother, who declined to give his first name, said the suspect owns Dan’s Body Shop, a garage at 2900 E. First St. The brother refused further comment. Police records indicate that Bocane­ gra was convicted of rape in 1973. Bocanegra was arrested with another man on five charges of rape in 1972 and both were sentenced to five years in prison, Sgt. Martin said. The two men w ere eventually parolled and discharged after a little over a year in a correctional institution, he said. The mode of operation in the recent UT-area rapes was sim ilar to Bocane­ gra s previous method of operation, Sgt. Martin said. Martin said that the attacker in the recent rapes had entered the victim ’s homes through unlocked windows and doors. The rapist then held a knife to the victim ’s throat, raped his victim and left, he said. Sgt. Martin criticized various media sources who referred to the assailant as being the “ bandana” rapist. A dark col­ ored wig might have been held in place with a bandana — hence the bandana reference, he said. Judge Cleave Moten issued an arrest w arrant, and bond for Bocanegra was set at $20,000. A worker at the Rape Crisis Center, herself a rape victim, said women are primarily responsible for protecting themselves against rape — contrary to earlier reports. The woman, who asked to remain un­ identified, said most rapes occur in the victim ’s home. “ Most rapes occur be­ tween midnight and six in the morn­ ing,” she said. “ Each rape is an individual situation. The approach we advocate is thinking your way through the crisis. If the ra ­ pist can see you as a person, then you have a chance of talking your way out of it,” the woman said. “The reason we don’t agree with self defense is that if you can’t completely render him (the attacker) harm less, then it can agitate the problem,” she said. The source suggested that rape vic­ tims take the following measures im­ mediately after the attacker leaves: • Do not destroy any of the evidence. • Do not bathe or douche. • Call the Rape Crisis Center at 472- 7273. The woman said Rape Crisis does not pressure victims into calling the police. “Sometimes the police can find the a t­ tacker by crim es connecting through the attacker’s ‘mode of opera­ tion’,” she said. the Elaine Martin, of the APD crim e pre­ vention division, said securing your home is essential to crim e prevention. “ The way things are nowadays, we must take certain precautions. Students should try to get ventilation in their homes with some sense of security rather than just leaving their windows wide open,” she said. Martin said 50 percent ot all rapes occur in the victim ’s home. Deadbolt locks and interior and exterior lighting are inexpensive measures to prevent crime, she said. “ Avoid using your full name on the mailbox or in the phone book,” she said. “ We are trying to get people to buy themselves some time since statistics show that if you deter a crim inal for three to four minutes, he will leave,” she said. Martin invites women to call the po­ lice at 476-3541, ext. 118 for a free home- security check. By DINAH WISENBERG Daily Texan Staff President Reagan's tax proposal - up for a vote this week before the U.S. House — will “make the United States once again the economic envy of the world,” Vice President George Bush said Monday at the state Capitol, where he and Gov. Bill Clements spoke to the press about the plan. Austin was Bush’s third stop of the day. Earlier he visited Georgia and Louisiana to promote the president’s plan. The bi-partisan administration bill, sponsored by Rep. Kent Hance, D-Texas. and Rep. Barber Conable, R-New York, calls for a 25 percent across-the-board tax cut over the next three years for all wage earners. The bill would also index tax rates after the third year to prevent workers from being pushed into higher tax brackets by inflation. The vice president said the plan would give tax cuts to business and industry “designed to provide jobs and in­ crease productivity through modernization of plants and equipment.” The measure provides for incentives “ to produce more oil and as a result lessen our nation's dependence on foreign producers,” Bush said. He said the Hance-Conable bill will give the American economy “ the opportunity to perform productively, effi­ ciently and competetively in foreign and domestic m ar­ kets.” Bush charged that the competing proposal — by House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski and House Speaker Tip O’Neill - would increase taxes over the next few years. That plan would increase Social Security taxes and cut tax rates 15 percent over the next two years, Bush said. “ This is not a Republican or a Democratic battle,” Bush said. “ This is a battle to carry out the president’s commit­ ments, a battle to keep faith with the American electorate and carry out the mandate of the voters. Bush said he hoped to employ Clements’ services to push the proposal, which will be voted on Wednesday. “The governor has enormous influence in Texas, and that includes the people of Texas, Bush said. “ What we want to do is have the people urge their repre­ sentatives, be they Republican or Democrat, to support the president’s tax cut,” Bush said. On the subject of congressional redistricting — a fiery partisan issue currently before a special session of the Leg­ islature — Bush expressed no objection to a Clements- backed Republican proposal to pack blacks into a minority- dominated district in Dallas County. Observers agree that move would empty liberal votes from a Democratic district in the area, creating a new Republican seat. “ I think when a Republican governor can carry the day with a Legislature that is predominantly of the other party, it says something about the m erits of the case, the vice president said. “ I agree,” Clements added. Bush said Texans have overwhelmingly supported Repub­ lican presidential candidates in the past. “ What’s wrong with sending people up there (Washing­ ton) who support the president?” Bush said. Vice President Bush speaks at the Capitol. Larry Kolvoord, T S P ataff House committee approves ‘minority-majority’ plan By DINAH W ISENBERG Daily Texan Staff After the chairman changed his proposal to resemble the Senate-passed version, a congres­ sional redistricting plan calling for two minority- dominated districts in South Texas and Dallas County passed a House committee Monday. The House Committee on Regions, Compacts and Districts voted 14-5 in favor of Senate Bill 1 as amended by Chairman Tim Von Dohlen, D- Goliad. The plan calls for a 67.3 percent “ minori­ ty-m ajority” district in Dallas and a district with a minority population of 56 percent — predomi­ nantly Mexican American — in South Texas. The Von Dohlen configurations in those areas are different than those in the Republican-sup­ ported Senate plan, sponsored by Sen. John Wil­ son, D-La Grange. Another difference between the Wilson and Von Dohlen plans is Von Dohlen’s pairing of U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Brazoria County, and U.S. Rep. Bill Patm an, D-Jackson County, in district 14. Von Dohlen said Paul has indicated he would move to Fort Bend County in district 22. Rep. Craig Washington, D-Houston, said after passage of Von Dohlen’s plan that he will submit a minority report from the committee to the full House. Washington did not tell specifically what would be included in that proposal, but said his pian will make changes in H arris County and South Texas. “ What we re sending out does not represent the . . . , views of the majority of the members of this House, nor does it represent the view of the m a­ jority of the members of this committee, Wash­ ington said. Washington predicted the House will reject the committee report, in which case the minority re­ port would become the vehicle by which the House draws its final plan. Prior to adoption of Von Dohlen’s proposal, the committee rejected a Washington amendment that would have formed a district 22 composed of Brazoria, Fort Bend and part of H arris counties. The committee also rejected a proposed substi­ tute measure by Rep. Paul Ragsdale, D-Dailas, which would have been more protective of incum­ bents and was geared more toward preserving Democratic seats in Congress. :___________ :_w His plan is a compromise between the Republi­ can-oriented Wilson plan and the Democratic-ori- ented Washington-Berlanga plan, Ragsdale said. * . . “ It is a conservative Democratic plan.” The Ragsdale plan would have formed a 57 per­ cent black and Mexican American majority dis­ trict in Dallas, as well as a South Texas Mexican American m ajority district. The Dallas representative said he will re-intro- duce his plan on the House floor. The weekend change in the Von Dohlen plan was manifested primarily in South Texas. Last week, Von Dohlen — trailing Ragsdale in votes — repeatedly stalled committee action on his plan which stretched district 14 from South , Mar r os San Marcos Corpus Christi. to Kennedy Countv. miW to Kennedy County, miles past The plan also drew the district 14-district 22 dividing line through Nueces and San Patricio counties. Under Von Dohlen s current plan passed by the committee, Nueces and San Patricio counties are entirely within Hispanic majority district 27. District 14 has been moved north, where it stretches from Brazoria County to Aransas Coun­ ty along the coast, and inland as far as Guadalupe County The committee also adopted a non-controver- sial amendment by House Democratic caucus leader Robert Bush of Sherman The amendment involves a county swap between districts 4 and 1. Capitol, Casey prepare for hearings • 1981 The New York Times WASHINGTON — Supporters and Senate investigators of William J. Casey, director of central intelligence, pr Monday for what seems likely to be an extern examina­ tion into Casey’s financial dealings and management of the Central Intelligence Agency. On Capitol Hill, Sen. Barry Goldwater, chairman of Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, « n « n o ito th a t the committee has retained as its special D- Thompson, who served as ftepublicaii commit for the Water- j N -hvO l. 1m * . « X . cto to d Senate Majority Leader Howard H .B a to Jr ..c f T rw r ie aba served as RepvbUcan counsel for «be coaflimaUan of Secretary of State Alexander M. Hal* Jr. He wffl aerw a n a consultant to the p u d it has con legal and other matters” concerning Caaey. Baker, who met with Thompson over the ww&oid, told reporters that the committee teten sd to finish its review j *“AagolL as circumstances permit, e; Baker said, following » t e ^ m e e t^ v ^ G o ^ a to r. _ to a of it,” i However, Sen. John H. Chafee, R-R.L, a nayipfc efthel intelligence panel, said that he thought “it wifi he a whfie before we can come to m rmm m i ‘T d s a o t t a H o v o h i a f a i r t r t e l / M S B B B t e r . w h o h a s •area id tte tO to o y éük m m Meanwhile, Casey’s friends continued to rally support for the embattled CIA director William E. Simon, former Treasury secretary; George P. Shultz, resident of Bechtel and a former Treasury secre­ tary; Leonard H, Marx, a former director of the U S Infor­ mation Agency ; and Geoffrey M.T. Jemes, president of the Veterans of the Office of Strategic Services, announced lunches in New York City, Aug. 3, and in Washington, Aug. 6, to support Casey. la a related development, the White House and Baker dented a report in N ew sw eek magazine that Casey and his former of clandestine services, Max C. Hugel, had approved a large-scale, multiphase and costly scheme to o v e r t h r o w the Libyan regime of Col. Moammar Khadafy. N ew sw eek reported that members of the House Intelli­ gence PommtH*» ted written President Reagan to protest t h e plan. Larry Speakta, White House deputy press secretory, said t h a t Hugei’s alleged meeting to discuss the (dan with mem­ t h e M o e n c intelligence Committee “never took b e r s o f p l a c e . ” I n r e s p o n s e to questions about the content of the committee letter, Sj a k e r s replied “The letter did not con- o c r n L i b y a o r K t e d a f j r . Beyond t h a t toere is no comment. W ed not condone or support the assassinate» if Iior- ^ ^ ^ ■ te added, ”Ve do not condone the overthrow IFfortegi «overamente by the United States governm ent! ® A tondter dntod como from Baker Ashed about whether Thatcher offers economic aid in attempt to calm urban riots • 1981 The New York Tim es LONDON — Prim e Minister M arga­ ret Thatcher announced Monday a pack­ age of emergency youth-unemployment measures, in a clear response to the re­ cent outbreak of rioting and the devas­ tating defeat suffered by her Conserva­ tive Party in a key parliamentary by- election. Thatcher’s approval of the package, estimated to cost up to $1 billion next year and opposed by the Treasury, was viewed here as further evidence of the rising political difficulty faced by her government, with unemployment now at 11 8 percent But as the House of Commons debat­ ed a motion to censure her because of the state of the economy Thatcher re­ jected contentions that the package, whose approval by Parliam ent will al­ most certainly be pro forma, constitut­ ed a reversal of her austere economic policies and that no “U-turn” would be forthcoming. signs of “There are success,” Thatcher maintained, as she spoke Monday afternoon in the oak and stone chamber. “There are signs that our pol­ icies are working in advance of an up­ turn in the economy The announcement to a packed Com­ mons chamber came just hours after renewed violence in Liverpool s Toxteth neighborhood, scene of some of the worst trouble earlier this month In general, the stoning and firebomb- ing by about 70 youths was not as bad as were the earlier incidents but the pros­ pect of the first riot-related death loomed Monday, as a taxi driver re­ mained in critical condition with multi­ ple skull fractures. Thatcher’s speech, like most of her recent statem ents on the economy to the Commons, was greeted with catcalls by the opposition. Labor Party leader Michael Foot denounced the measures as “a derisory package to deal with such a major problem ’ Mixed reaction came from labor and management. The Trades Union Con­ gress said Thatcher was trying to “stem x the welcomed the programs. Approval of the new initiatives repre­ sented a partial victory for the so-called • wets” in Thatcher’s Cabinet who have been openly campaigning for a substan­ tial move toward economic stimulus. But the partial victory may prove short­ lived as rumors of an imminent Cabinet shakeup increased over the weekend. 1 Among the provisions of the seven- point program are weekly payments of $28 50 to firms for each employee under age 18 taken on at $76 or less per week. Other steps include establishment of 20 computing and electronic assembly job- training centers in inner cities, expan­ sion of a youth opportunities program and $114 to encourage 50,000 youngsters to stay in school All told, the government contended that by March 1983, the new measures would affect 216,000 Britons, according to government estim ates At present, nearly three million Britons are unem­ ployed and Jam es Prior, the employ­ ment secretary and a leading “wet,” had sought a program that would pro­ vide some kind of occupational training or community service for every youth leaving school without a job. w jfidytoent rote mounted without pause last winter. In the spring, an upturn in the economy briefly became a possibility and at a re­ bellious Cabinet economic review in June, the prime minister stood firm. But since then, the hopeful economic signs have vanished and Britain w a s deeply shaken by two weeks of rioting. i Page 2 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Tuesday, July 28. 1981 Union seeks support with new committees By AMY MASHBERQ Daily Texan Staff New members chosen for University Council When the U niversity Council convenes for its first regular meeting in Septem ber, it will have 13 new faculty m em bers and four new adm inistrators The 13 faculty m em bers were elected to the U niversity Coun­ cil last spring by the G eneral Faculty. In addition, seven in­ cum bent m em bers w ere re-elected to their seats. The four adm inistrators who join the U niversity Council have been appointed to various adm inistrative positions The U niversity Council, which consists of the F aculty Sen­ ate, upper level adm inistrators and six students appointed by UT P resident P e te r Flawn, has not m et during the sum m er tion sem ester Senate. Pauline Hannah, adm inistrative secretary for the General Faculty, explained the workings of the U niversity Council Mon­ day and its relationship to the G eneral Facuity and the F acuity All voting m em bers of the G eneral Faculty (professors, as­ sociate professors, assistan t professors and instructors) may serve up to four years on the Faculty Senate, a component of the U niversity Council, Hannah said The term of service is two years, Hannah said, but m em bers may run for re-election once Hannah said the 53-member Faculty Senate m ay recommend courses of action on U niversity issues to the council but cannot ac t legislatively on its own. The U niversity Council has the legislative power. Hannah said legislation em anating from specific colleges is circulated among U niversity Council m em bers, who may, if desired, file protests within five working days of the distribu­ If a council m em ber protests, the legislation m ust be debat­ ed a t the council’s next scheduled m eeting The council may am end the legislation, accept it or reject it, she said Once the council accepts the legislation, it is passed on to the president’s office for consideration The four new ad m inistrators on the University Council are: David Drum, acting dean of students; J. Robert Wills, dean of the College of Fine A rts; Shirley Binder, recently appointed director of adm issions; and M artha W illiams, dean of the Col­ lege of Social Work. P rofessors elected to the U niversity Council include. G erard Behague, m usic; Ben Caudle, petroleum engineering, Jam es Daniel, m athem atics, T erry W agner, electrical engineering; and E arl Jennings, educational psychology. Newly elected assistan t professors include: Randall Char- beneau, civil engineering; Jam es Duban, English; Toni Falbo, educational psychology; E leanor Jordan, general business; L arry Lake, petroleum engineering; Ram on Saldivar, English; and Claire Weinstein, educational psychology. One associate professor of English, W alter Reed, was elect­ ed to the council. The seven re-elected faculty m em bers are: Mary C rockett, assistant professor in the School of N ursing; P ark er Fielder, ptofessor of law; W illiam Glade, professor of econom ics; Don­ ald G rantham , assistan t professor of m usic; F orest Hill, pro­ fessor of economics; Ira Iscoe, professor of psychology; and Mary Ann Rankin, assista n t professor of zoology. HRC’s collections contain notorious book forgeries Housing market tightens throughout student areas By MAQQIE WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff in The R a re Books Collection the UT Hum anities R esearch C enter is known for its original m anuscripts and first editions of works, but it is also known am ong libraries and book-collecting circles for another reason — about 60 volumes of its 19th century works are forgeries. “ It is one of the m ost widely known stories in the world am ong book-collecting circles, said Ellen Dunlap, research librarian of the HRC. In 1934, John C a rter and G raham Pollard, two English ra re book dealers, published a re­ port called “ An E nquiry into C ertain Nine­ teenth-Century P am p h lets.” It revealed the forgeries of Thom as J. Wise, an English book collector, of private editions of works by Vic­ torian authors like Elizabeth B a rre tt Brown­ ing, Alfred Lord Tennyson and Algernon Swin­ burne, said Dr. William B. Todd, a professor of English and a consultant to the HRC. The report explained scientific m ethods used to detect Wise’s forgeries, Todd said. E x­ am ination of the type, font and paper in W ise’s editions revealed th at they w ere not the kinds used in the actual private editions. Wise also used the wrong private edition of a work to fabricate the text, he said. If a work was pub­ lished and the author then revised it, Wise took the revised edition and created a forgery by saying th at it was published ea rlier than the first edition, Todd said. Of the approxim ately 5,000 volumes in the John H. Wrenn Collection, donated to UT in 1918, Wise forged about 60 of them . They a re all in the HRC, Dunlap said. Curiosity and dem and for the forged works m akes them m ore valuable than the genuine ones, said Sally Leach, assistan t to the d irec­ tor of the HRC. A second two-volume edition of An Enqui­ into C ertain Nineteenth-Century P a m ­ ry phlets” has gone to press and will soon be pub­ lished, Todd said. The 1934 inquiry, “ a classic in its own rig h t,” will be reproduced photo­ graphically in the first volume, he said. The second volume will update the facts on the for­ geries and evaluate the research done on the case since 1934. The work will also determ ine the culpability of another forger involved with Wise nam ed Buxton Form an, Todd said. F orm an’s p art in the case was not discovered until after the 1934 inquiry, but “ he was the m asterm ind behind the schem e,” Todd said. Dunlap said the HRC is always in the pro­ cess of adding m aterial. Anyone with a UT ID or an HRC re a d e r’s card m ay have access to the HRC collections, Dunlap said. All those not in the UT com m uni­ ty m ust show identification and fill out a reg is­ tration form for the m a teria ls they w ant to use. But the HRC is really open to all who wish to use it, Dunlap said The P alm Collection w as donated to UT in 1897, the sta rt of the R are Books Collection Then the Wrenn Collection and the Aitken and Stark Collections, donated in 1921 and 1924 re­ spectively, com prised the R are Books Collec­ tion, until 1958, when UT acquired the T .E . Henley Collection. The firs t three collections contained works and m anuscripts from the 17th through the 19th centuries. The T.E. Hen­ ley Collection contained first editions and orig­ inal m anuscripts of w orks by Jam es Joyce, D.H. Law rence, Dylan Thomas and Samuel Beckett, among others, according to sources com piled by the HRC. “ The 20th century B ritish, A m erican and French works a re the ones we a re m ost known for and for which we a re listed as one of the great libraries in the w orld,” Dunlap said. By ERIC WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff The Austin rental hous­ ing market is a game of musical chairs, and the music has stopped. “The rental housing market is very, very tight — and not just for stu­ dents,” said Jennifer Chase, a counselor for Apartment Selector, an apartment locator service. She said some students are desperately searching for suitable apartments and are simply unable to find any. The situation will probably get worse in Aug­ ust, Chase said, when hordes of students who waited until the last min­ ute descend upon apart­ ment locator services. Most of the preferable complexes are filled, Chase said, adding that many students balk at the idea of moving into some down complexes. Students who have not yet found an apartment might have few alternatives, she said. Mary Ellen White, man­ ager of the Bridgehoilow Apartments at 1906 Willow Creek Drive, said all of the two-bedroom apartments in her complex have been pre-leased since early April. The one^ bed room apartments have been pre­ leased since the middle of June, she said. The apartments filled earlier this year than they ever have — despite rent increases of approximate­ ly $20 per unit, White said. She added that the housing market in the Riverside area is tight because of the lack of new construction. A spokeswoman for Es­ trada Apartments, 1801 S. Lakeshore Blvd., said only three units in the 310-unit complex remain available for fall leasing. She said some units have recently been filled and that the people signing the leases seem very relieved find an apartment. to Renters will pay 15 per­ cent more than last year, she said. Chase said many stu­ dents are unable to find apartments in the River­ side area and are moving into complexes closer to location “The campus. compensates for the fact that they aren’t quite as nice,” she said. Some students have tried to find apartments in Northwest Hills only to discover the complexes will not accept students as tenants, Chase said. The price for an unfur­ nished apartment is ap­ proximately $275 for a one- bedroom and $350 to $375 for a two-bedroom, Chase said. Furnished apart­ ments cost $30 to $50 more, she said. Thieves plunder campus machines By J O D Y D E N B E R Q Daily Texan Staff T here appear to be a lot of th irsty people running around cam pus w ithout any loose change their pockets. Twenty-one soda vending m achines on the U niversity cam pus were burglarized last week, Sgt. Lance Idol of the UT Police D epartm ent said Friday. in “ The thieves are using som e sort of keys or lock-picking device and a re able to get into the m achines without a crow bar to rip the doors off,” Idol said. “ They may be working during the daytim e — we don’t know .” Idol believes that m ore than $300 has been taken from the m achines, although he is not sure because “ it is difficult to pin that down.” Only canned soda m achines have been bu rg lar­ ized, Idol said. Machines have been broken into in buildings including Mezes, Wag- all across cam pus, gener, G arrison, P arlin, Burdine and T.S. P ain ter Halls, as well as the Music Building. Police a re asking anyone with inform ation about the crim es to call the d ep a rtm en t’s Criminal Investigation Division a t 4714441 If you believe you a re w itnessing one of the crim es in progress, police ask that you call 1234 from any cam pus phone. 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A ssista n t E ditor N e w s E d itor A ssista n t N e w s E d itor K aren-A nn B roe, M e la n ie H ershon L isa B ey er J e ff S m ejk al R eynold s C ushm an R oy H ess Jody D enb erg S ports E d itor E n terta in m e n t E ditor F e a tu r e s E d itor G rap h ics E d ito r I m a g e s E d ito r A s s o c ia te I m a g e s E d itor R on S eybold V ick y T h om as W arren S oector M e lissa Hirscfa G en er a l R e p o r ter s C arm en H ill, C h arles Lunan, Am y M ash b erg, G ary R asp Dinah W isen b erg IS SU E S T A F F A s s o c ia te N e w s E d itor L eisa D enn ey N e w s A ssista n ts N e w s w r ite r s E r ic W illiam s. T om E d ito r ia l A ssista n t E n terta in m e n t A ssista n t . M a g g ie W illia m s J im H ankins . C .R F rin k, M u llin s. Doug M cLeod S tev e n Stepan C hris Jordan A ssista n t S ports E d itor D avid M cN abb D on P ed ig o S ports A ssista n t M ic h a e l F ry M ake-up E d itor M aureen P ask in W ire E d itor . P a m e la M cAipin Copy E d itor S a m H urt A r tist Susan A llen C am p P h otograp h er T E X A N A D V E R T IS IN G S T A F F E m ily Auld C a lise B u rch ett. J oel C arter, E rin D onohue. C laudia G ra v e s M arianne N e w to n , S am T orrey. Jim W ells T he D aily T exan , a stu d en t n ew sp ap er a t T h e U n iv e r sity of T e x a s at A u stin, is p ublished by T ex a s Stu dent P u b lica tio n s, D r a w er D , U n iv ersity S tation . A u stin. TX 78712 T he D aily T exan is p ub lish ed M onday. T u e sd a y , W ed n esd ay, T hu rsd ay and F r i­ d ay. ex c e p t h olid ay and ex a m p eriod s Secon d c la s s p o sta g e paid at A ustin. 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P U B NO 146440 TX 78712 or to T SP B uilding C3 200 \Om aqeA £ l o o o o p o o c pla y in g ev er y o n d a ) in T h e D aily T exan o o o By AMY MASHBERQ Daily Taxan StaH In an effort to increase student participation in the Texas Union, three new com m ittees will begin op­ erating in the fall, the in­ terim chairm an of the Tex a s U nion B o a rd of D irectors said Monday D arren Walker, a gov­ ernm ent and com munica­ tion senior, said one goal of the board - a goal in­ herent in the creation of two operating com m ittees and program m ing com m ittee — was to “ di­ rectly involve students in the decision-making pro­ cesses in dining services and in the development of the Union budget.” one The Finance Committee, the Dining Services Com­ m ittee and the Human Is­ sues Com m ittee are the re­ sult of the past y ea r’s planning, Walker said Barry Phillips, associate director of the Union, said the Finance C om m ittee would deal with budget and a c c o u n tin g p r o c e s s e s throughout the y e a r _____ The Dining S ervices Com mittee would, to some extent, work within the realm of finances, Phillips said, but will m ostly con­ issues sider operational the dining pertaining services. to Walker said w hereas the Texas Union Ideas and In­ t e r a c ti o n s C o m m itte e sponsors discussions and debates on political and in­ te lle c tu a l th e Human Issues C om m ittee will sponsor discussions of “ personal, human-type is­ sues ” is s u e s , He said Tom F o restier, a petroleum engineering m ajor, and Cynthia Haw­ finance m ajor, kins, a would chair the Dining Services C om m ittee and the Finance C om m ittee, respectively The ch a ir­ man of the Human Issues Com m ittee will be chosen in Septem ber “ Both students and staff involved in the Union feel very strongly there needs to be increased stu­ dent participation the Union,” Walker said. that in rH t GAME ROOM ARCADE ■ n TRI-TOWERS ■ 819 W. 24th OPtN 10am »• 12 midnit* W liB B S B , ONE FREE © A M E 25 VALUE vid*o games • pinball • pool P*r vW# L im it 9 0 0 p * I I I I I ^ !*♦ SPECIAL Mon. through Fri. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. All Day Tue*., Thur*., Sun. 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Mrvviep A , •ñu» r World & National Reagan sells Republican tax program WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan urged Americans Monday to ignore Democratic political fun and gam es” and pressure Congress to approve his three-year, 25 percent tax-cut program. in a nationally broadcast address to drum up sup­ port for his program. Reagan used tough language that betrayed the closeness of the contest the House will resolve Wednesday. Two top Democrats who followed Reagan on the television segment, however, said the real question is whether a taxpayer makes more than $50,000 or less than that. House Speaker Thomas O’Neill said, “ If you're over, take the Republican plan because that s what it’s geared for. It spells out as easy as that. And chairman Dan Rostenkowski of the House Ways and Means Committee said, Our bill favors the family of workers earning less than pC.OOO. His favors those making more that that. It s just that simple.” Reagan also pledged that no plan to restore the financial integrity of the Social Security system will be at the expense of present beneficiaries He charged the House Democratic leadership with never really wanting a tax cut, and with putting a tax program together for one reason only, to provide a political victory for themselves.” “Never mind that it won’t solve the economic problems confronting our country,” he said. “ Never mind that it won’t get the wheels of industry turning again or eliminate the inflation which is eating us alive. “This is not the time for political fun and games. This is the time for a new beginning,” Reagan said The Democratic plan would cover 21 months, with a third year of cuts triggered to improved economic conditions. Both bills contain “ sw eeteners” designed to attract support, including a reduction of the so- called “ m arriage penalty” and new tax breaks for oil producers. Democrats responded immediately, both in person and on television. All three networks scheduled the opposition response over a two-day period Sen Bill Bradley. D-N.J., said Democrats “ see two problems with the president's approach which we think reflect the true concerns of the American people.” The two flaws, he said, are the unqualified com­ m itment to a third-year tax cut and the failure to target tax relief for those making under $50,000 “ Wanting the president to succeed doesn’t mean rubber stamping everything he asks for,” said Brad­ ley. And Sen. Daniel Moymhan, D-N.Y., a member of the Senate Finance Committee, said in one of the broadcast Democratic responses: “ The adm inistra­ tion is seemingly willing to pay any price to win votes for their version of a tax cut ” He likened the bidding war to “ an auction of the Treasury,” and said, “ If the administration would stop making concessions to special interests and get on with the business of government, we would be a lot better off.” At the outset of his rem arks, Reagan made a brief mention of Social Security, which was first intended to be the subject of the speech He renewed his pledge that persons dependent on the retirem ent sys­ tem will not suffer from his efforts to make it finan­ cially sound He said he is “deeply disturbed” that elderly Americans have been “ needlessly frightened by some of the inaccuracies” about his proposals. While promising more rem arks on the subject later, the president said “ those of you who are dependent on Social Security have no reason to be frightened ” “ You will continue to receive your checks in the full amount due you.' he pledged. He made no men­ tion of persons anticipating retirem ent, however. 6 Weinberger links delivery fo peace plans FORT BENNING, Ga. (UPI) - De­ fense Secretary Caspar Weinberger Monday coupled the delivery to Israel of 10 embargoed F-16 warplanes to a Middle East cease-fire and the conduct­ ing of longer-range peace negotiations. A senior defense official traveling with Weinberger said the adm inistra­ tion plans to present its proposals for a new manned bomber and the basing for the MX missile to Congress next month and “ quite possibly” may offer both in one package. The official said the Pentagon will recommend to Congress the closing of several military bases, possibly in the Northeast and Midwest, as a money saving measure though such shutdowns arouse congressional opposition be­ cause of losses to local economies. Weinberger came to this Army infan­ try base and was to go on to the Marine installation at Camp Lejeune, N.C., as part of a periodic visit with troops in the field and morale booster. The trip also was an attem pt for Weinberger to seethe kinds of weapons systems he has been studying in his Pentagon office. Weinberger told a news conference the 10 F-16 fighter bombers whose de­ livery to Israel was embargoed by the administration would be released after a combination of factors were met. “ I don’t think there’s a specific fac­ tor that will trigger release of the planes.” he said. “ The planes will be released when a combination of factors happens or when it appears that things are stabilizing. “ I have no particular triggering event ... certainly we would make sure that the cease-fire held and I hope that it does hold while there can be some toward a good negotiations much longer-range type of (peace) set­ tlem ent.” looking The Pentagon chief ignored high tem ­ peratures and humidity and donned hos­ pital white coveralls to crawl through a prototype of the Army’s Infantry Fight­ ing Vehicle, a combination tank and a r­ mored personnel carrier. He fired its 25 mm canon, its 7.63 mm machine gun, drove it and poked his head through each of the hatches. The senior official said the White House will make a “ full-scale an­ nouncement” on the bomber and MX is­ sues by the middle or end of August, while Congress is recessed. He said it was “ quite possible” they will be pre­ sented to Congress as one package. Both strategic nuclear weapons sys­ tems together are estimated to cost $80 billion. Mexico quarantines California produce from infested areas LOS GATOS, Calif. (UPI) - Mexico Monday became the first nation to slap a quarantine on fruits and vegetables from California counties hit by the M editerranean fruit fly infestation. As a further precaution, Mexican au­ thorities doubled the number of insect traps set up along its northwestern bor­ der to monitor for signs of the pest. Mexico’s ban affected only the three counties in northern California’s Santa Clara Valley and required that any fruit and vegetable entering Mexico from the state’s main m arket of Los Angeles be certified as coming from outside the in­ fested area. No other nations have banned Califor­ nia farm produce, but five southern states have argued in the Supreme Court that they should have the right to protect their crops by stringent require­ ments on unfumigated fruit entering their borders. Japan last week, accepted U.S. De­ partm ent of Agriculture assurances that the isolated Medfly outbreak was being controlled by aerial pesticide spraying and a ground stripping pro­ gram in the populous and federally quarantined counties of Santa Clara, Alameda and San Mateo. Aerial spraying of 68 square miles with the pesticide malathion took place Monday in an assault by eight helicop­ ters — the most successful single drop so far in the $53 million war against the voracious insect over a 257-square mile target zone. In Mexico, Jorge Gutierrez Samper- io, general director of sanitation for the Agriculture Ministry, said traps con­ taining sterile fruit flies were being doubled around Mexican border towns such as Tijuana Ensenada, Mexicali and Tecate. He said Mexico, the world’s largest producer of sterile fruit flies, continues to release about 300 million of the non- fertile insects along the southern border with Guatemala because a fruit fly epi­ demic broke out there in 1979. The quarantine will mainly affect produce from Los Angeles’ Central Market bound for wholesalers in Tijua­ na, Ensenada and Mexicali, said San Diego and Imperial County agriculture commissioners. The move is aimed at halting spread of the destructive insect into Baja Cali­ fornia and Sonora states of northern Mexico. The battleship New Jersey leaves the pier at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard where It begins a trip turn It Into a missile fighting ship. to California for renovations costino $330 million to $330 million facelift UPI Telephoto NRC data reveal serious mishaps WASHINGTON (UPI) — Atomic reactor owners filed reports with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission last year on almost 4,000 mishaps — 104 of them m ajor — a Ralph Nader group said in a study released Monday. Critical Mass Energy Project, in its annual “ Nuclear Power Plant Safety Scoreboard” compiled from NRC data, uncovered 3,800 problem reports, up 65 percent from the 2,300 filed by plant licensees the previous year. The Nader group also said information obtained from the NRC under a disclosure order showed 104 of the events report­ ed in 1980 were officially regarded as “ especially significant.” Each so-called “ licensee event report” indicates a reactor has exceeded “ technical design specifications” in some way. The study attributed 20 percent to human error, 16 percent to design or fabrication error and 57 percent to equipment fail­ ures. Among the more serious 1980 accidents reported were: • A big spill of tainted water in the containment building of Florida Power Corp.’s Crystal River 3 plant. • A malfunction of vital control rods that quench the nuclear reaction and shut off the reactor at the Tennessee Valley Au­ thority’s Browns Ferry 3 reactor. • A release of radioactive Iodine-131 that exceeded environ­ mental standards at the New York State Power Authority’s FitzPatrick 1. • The discovery of mussels contaminated with high levels of Cobalt-60 in waters adjacent to Boston Edison’s Pilgrim 1. Charles and Di rehearse as commoners camp out on streets LONDON (UPI) - The Archbishop of Canterbury rehearsed Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer Monday in the vows that will make them husband and wife behind the great doors of St. Paul’s Cathedral, shut to ensure privacy for the 20-year-old bride-to-be, who has shown signs of wedding nerves. The first sightseers took up their street positions for the pageantry 48 hours away and thousands of visitors to London caused traffic jam s as the ex­ citement mounted. The accid ent-p rone 32-year-old prince, who tends to fall off horses, tried to arrive at the church on time for the rehearsal but stumbled on the broad expanse of steps outside. He recovered quickly and hurried in to find Lady Dia­ na had been waiting for a few minutes. Banners and red, white and blue flags decked the 2 V* mile procession route and a gold-plate dinner and reception was planned Monday night at Bucking­ ham Palace, which first lady Nancy Reagan was expected to attend. Police laid plans for an unprecedent­ ed security operation. The rehearsal for what is being billed the “wedding of the century" w«*s not announced beforehand and even cathe­ dral functionaries were banned from earshot as Archbishop Robert Runcie, primate of the Church of England, took the couple through the hour-long ser­ vice millions will watch on televison Wednesday. Hours before, Mrs. Reagan had a sneak preview of what the huge domed cathedral will look like when she laid a wreath there in memory of American servicemen killed in both world wars. With private parties and celebrations of one sort and another scheduled all over the kingdom. Queen Elizabeth was to host the most sought-after affair of them all — dinner off gold plates for 90 people in the state dining room of Buck­ ingham Palace Monday night. That was to be followed by a recep­ tion and dance for 1,400 people, many of them royal employees, during which some of the 12,000 bottles of 1973 Boll­ inger champagne orderd by the palace for wedding festivities were to be served The first of the 1 million well-wishers expected to throng the streets for the wedding pageantry began camping out while crowds of sightseers on the route caused noisy traffic jam s in the gather­ ing excitement over the m arriage of the heir to the British throne. Trafalgar Square, a vital traffic switchpoint in the heart of the city, was almost at a standstill for awhile. Avrii Harrison and her daughter, Rosemary, 18, arrived at dawn Monday with sleeping bags, flasks of coffee and magazines at a strategic spot on the route the colorful carriage processions will travel. Flowers and banners went up on buildings all along the procession route from Buckingham Palace to St Paul’s Cathedral, where the son of Queen Eliz­ abeth will take the daughter of Lari Spencer as his bride and the future Queen of England before a glittering Events timed precisely LONDON (UPI) - Following is the timetable for Wednesday’s wed­ ding of Prince Charles and Lady Dia­ na Spencer All times are in Central Standard Time. 4 a m CST - General congrega­ tion seated in St. Paul’s Cathedral. 4:05 a.m. — Car procession of “junior members of the royal fami­ ly” leaves St. James Palace for St. Paul's, arrives 4:15 a.m. 4:14 a.m. — Car procession of “ foreign crowned heads” leaves Buckingham Palace, arrives St. Paul’s 4:25 a.m. 4:18 a.m. — Ecclesiastical proces­ sion begins within St. Paul’s. 4:20 a re — Bridesmaids and pag­ leave by car from Clarence es House, arrive 4:30 a.m. 4:22 a.m. — Queen Elizabeth and members of the royal family leave ty^ifighain Palace by carriage, ar­ riving at 4:42 a.m. 4:30 a.m. - Bridegroom’» car­ riage procession leaves the palace, arriving at 4:50 a.m. 4:35 a .m .- Bride’s carriage pro­ cession leaves Clarence House, ar­ riving at 4:55 a.m. 5 a.m. — Bride’s procession inside the cathedral. The service begins. 6:10 a.m. (approximate) — Ser­ vice ends and processions inside the cathedral begin. 6:20 a.m. (approximate) - Car­ riage procession of the bride and groom leaves St. Paul’s, followed by the queen s carriage procession 6:42 a.m. — Charles and Diana ar­ rive at Buckingham Palace. 6:45 a.m. — Queen and Prince Philip arrive at the palace, followed by car procession of foreign royalty and guests attending the wedding breakfast. 10 a.m. CST (approximate) — De­ parture of tike bride Md groom from the palace. Carriage procession to Waterloo railway station for their departure on hooeymoon. congregation of crowned heads and commoners Lady Diana decided to carry in her bouquet a sprig of myrtle grown from a sprig carried in the bouquet of another 20-year-old royal bride, Queen Victoria, whose m arriage in 1840 was one of the happiest in the annals of the House of Windsor Most members of the royal family Monday attended the christening of the daughter of Princess Anne, in the pri­ vate chapel of Windsor Castle, includ­ ing Queen Mother Elizabeth, dispelling doubts her leg ulcer might keep her from the wedding Scotland Yard said it had called in police from Northern Ireland to help in the massive security operation around the wedding because of the possibility IRA guerrillas may be planning an inci­ dent They will augment the thousands of British police assigned to the wed­ ding route. More police armed with weapons are expected to be on the streets of the cap­ ital Wednesday than ever before in his­ tory, a police source said. A palace spokesman said that since the engagement was announced, Charles and Diana have received 100,000 letters and 5,000 presents, tele­ grams and other expressions of good will. World in Brief From Texan news service* Cease-fire holds BEIRUT, Lebanon - The PLO and Israel accused each other Mon­ day of violating the U.S.-mediated cease-fire along the Lebanese-Israe- li frontier, but the 4-day-old agree­ ment remained in effect despite the war of words. The PLO’s Voice of Palestine radio said Israeli recon­ naissance planes overflew Beirut and south Lebanon for the third day in a row. But Israel Radio reported that Prime Minister Menachem Be­ gin said the reconnaissance flights were not included in the cease-fire agreement and will continue. Executions continue ANKARA, Turkey — Iran’s ruling clergy executed an anti-government guerrilla leader and 19 other oppo­ nents, and a top Iranian official called for a “ m ilitary victory” to crush dissident forces, Tehran Ra­ dio said Monday. The call for a crackdown against dissidents came one day before the expected official annnouncement that Prim e Minis­ ter Mohammad Ali Rajai won a lop­ sided election victory last week as Iran’s new president. Strike alert declared WARSAW, Poland - A Solidarity branch declared a provincial strike alert Monday because of Poland’s deepening food shortage crisis, and a ranking government official said the communist nation could not af­ ford to buy any more meat. The ac­ tion came as Solidarity union and government negotiators held talks on the food crisis and about 5,000 people marched through Lodz in the second “ hunger three days. rally” in Gandhi assumes powers NEW DELHI, India - Prim e Minister Indira Gandhi’s govern­ ment assumed wide new powers Monday to ban strikes, a move an opposition leader denounced as a “draconian” reminder of her 1975 emergency rule. Under a presiden­ tial ordinance promulgated after an urgent Sunday night Cabinet m eet­ ing chaired by Mrs. Gandhi, the government can prohibit strikes in services it defines as “ essential.” Among the industries now covered by the measure are railroads, air­ ports, mail, telephone, telegraph, banking, petroleum, sanitation, de­ fense and government-controlled hospitals. in Doctors to climb Everest KATMANDU, Nepal - An ad­ vance party of American doctor- the mountaineers arrived Nepalese capital Monday for the largest assault by medical men on Mount Everest, the world’s highest mountain. “The main purpose is to information about the get some functioning of the lung and heart at high altitude because we are inter­ ested in the effects of very low lev­ els of oxygen on the body,” Dr. John B. West, 52, of San Diego, Calif., said. West and four colleagues made up the advance group prepar­ ing the way for the actual climb of the 29,028-foot mountain, which is scheduled to begin around Sept. 1. Inmates refuse food BALTIMORE - Nineteen Mary­ land Penitentiary inmates Monday refused food in an eight-day protest of problems stemming from prison overcrowding, officials said. A spokesman said only one of the 19 men had been participating in the hunger strike continuously since July 20, and that the others were de­ ciding whether to eat on a day-to- day basis. Stamps spikad PIKESVILLE, Md. - Maryland state police Monday warned people to beware of LSD-spiked stamps featuring pictures of Mickey Mouse, Pluto and other Walt Disney char­ acters. Police said stamps with the hallucinogenic drug sprinkled on the back had been seized on the West Coast and in Delaware. Authorities in Anne Arundel, Baltimore and Howard counties in Maryland have recently seized quantities of LSD in £he form of paper embossed with red, green and golden dragons. Market register* gain NEW YORK (UPI) - The stock market, responding to a sharp drop in the nation’s money supply, regis­ tered its third consecutive gain Monday in a session that saw the bidding for Conoco heat up. Mobil Corp. raised its bid for Conoco stock to $8.2 billion, putting it ahead of DuPont’s $7.3 billion offer in the largest takeover battle in U.S. histo­ ry. The Dow Jones industrial aver­ age, which gained 8.18 points Fri­ day, managed to gain 8.13 points to 815.87. t Orumons tioreseed in The Daily Texan are tlioee of the editor or the writer of the article and are not n eiL aan ly tim e of the University a dm w i.tratior the Board of Regenta or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustee* — Page 4 Editorials THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, July 2B. 1981 Questioning Reagan’s appointees [ By TOM W IC K E R ] Important U.S. senators are demand­ ing the resignations of two of 1 resident Reagan's Cabinet-level appointees - William J Casey, director of central in­ telligence, and Jam es G. Watt, secre­ tary of the interior. But in both cases, the Senate itself bears much responsi­ bility for the controversies Casey, for example, is accused of ir­ regularities in his business career that, if proven, would make it less than fit­ ting for him to continue in high office — particularly as head of the CIA, with responsibilities for dealing on a basis of trust with the American intelligence community and with the intelligence agencies of foreign governments But the primary allegation that led to the inquiry into Casey s business deal­ ings had to do with an old case, dating back to 1968, that had been no secret at the time or since. The current flap about it arose from a court judgment last spring that Casey had been among those who “ omitted and m isrepresent­ ed" facts to potential investors in Mul- tiponics Inc. But when Casey was nominated as CIA director, the Senate made no great effort to look into the Multiponics case Nor did the Senate then inquire into an­ other m atter of public record now being raised against Casey — charges that in 1974 he contradicted or “ forgot his own grand jury testimony when appear­ ing as a witness in the trial of former Attorney General John N Mitchell on charges of having tried to aid the fugi­ tive financier, Robert L Vesco W att’s integrity is not an issue in the controversy surrounding him, but in a real sense his background is That back­ as an outspoken and profes­ ground sional advocate of development of resources rather than environmental­ ism - was perfectly well known to the Senate when it confirmed Watt with lit­ tle more discussion than it gave to Ca­ sey Now the Wilderness Society has called for Watt’s resignation, accusing him of exploitation of the nation’s re­ sources F ormer Interior Secretary Ce­ cil Andrus has demanded Watt s re­ placement with someone who would give “ proper stewardship’ to the public lands Sen Alan Cranston, the assistant mi­ nority leader who was one of only 12 senators who voted against confirma­ tion, said he’d hoped the secretary would grow in office, but that after six months Watt “ has exceeded even the worst-case estim ate of his harshest critics.” That’s true, and even Republicans in the West apparently are suffering polit­ ical qualms about Watt’s attitudes and actions No wonder, a June Harris Poll of western states — not one of which Ronald Reagan lost last November - showed Democrats now leading in the 1982 congressional races by a 55 to 36 margin But when 1 asked about the secre­ tary ’s performance, Ed Meese, the president s right-hand man, told me. “Jim W att’s doing just what Ronald Reagan wants him to do. ’ ’ Watt is doing just what the Senate of the United States should have expected him to do, too. Its confirmation gave him jurisdiction over 350 million acres of federal land, the national parks and wilderness areas, offshore oil leasing, stripmining, fish and wildlife, reclam a­ tion and endangered species. As part of a co-equal branch, the Sen­ ate has a responsibility co-equal with that of the president; he may nominate but the Senate must consent. That re­ sponsibility is slighted or defaulted when the Senate, as in the instances of Casey and Watt, acquiesces the spoilsman’s creed that a president — even a popular new president — is enti­ tled without question to put anyone he chooses into the most powerful govern­ ment offices. in © 1981 The New York Times Firing Line We’ll m ist ya, Harry Harry Chapin ... dead at 38 ... And the world is a much poorer place as a result. God bless you, Harry Ma u r i ce O han Aus t i n Herahon on Hite not right I found Melanie Hershon’s review of “ The Hite Report” disturbingly insensitive to the emotional and sexual needs of both men and women. Happi­ ly Ms. Hershon is an educated woman who under­ stands the mechanics of human sexuality, but one could argue that it was books such as “ The Hite Report" which gave her that education. No doubt many men and women knew that they did not fit in with the myth of the male sexual super-athlete or that of the vaginal orgasm. Unfortunately, there were (and are) just as many who did not know that they were myths It was only when books on sexology began to appear that people could begin to lose the fear that they were strange” for not enjoying the things they were “ supposed” to enjoy Ms. Hershon should be con­ gratulated on her luck in male friends, for it seems that she has never been with a man who was insensitive to her needs due to his lack of knowledge or fear of dispelling the myth. And it is nice to know that there are some women who have escaped the training which tells them that the man’s pleasure is the first priority. Obviously she has never been afraid to demand her rights. Other women are not so lucky. Ms. Hershon s statement that “ If (women) never told their p art­ ners, well, they have no one to blame but them­ selves" reveals the smug elitism that cannot for­ give women for being victims of a sexist society. No doubt the blacks had no one to blame but themselves for their enslavement. But we lesser beings will continue to appreciate Ms. H ite’s books for reassurance which we needed but didn t know how to ask for, or even that it could be gotten Cy n t h i a Wood L i b e r a l A r t s Rallis slips up that think You’d if an accounting student charges someone with playing around with “ facts,” he’d at least have his facts straight. But apparently straight facts are in the eye of the beholder. Bill Rallis (“ Sticking to the facts about big oil’s windfall profits,” July 23) charged that Jim High­ tower is lying about big oil companies using wind­ fall profits for non-energy related investments. But R allis’ article is just plain muddled thinking. He says that m ergers are brought about with stock transfers and loans — therefore oil compa­ nies don’t spend all their money on such non-pro­ ducing ventures. He s looking a t the wrong side of the balance sheet. The Energy Action Education­ al Foundation (a consumer group) found that of the marginal cash flow oil companies had in the last two years (i.e., money above what they had before deregulation), less than half of it was rein­ vested in petroleum. What proof does Rallis offer that oil companies spend their excess profits on energy? He says Exxon is spending billions on synthetic fuel development. What he didn’t tell his readers (did he even bother to find out him­ self?) is that the synthetic fuel program is being financed with tax money, not oil profits. Congress is forking out more than $17.5 billion over the next four years to Mobil, Exxon, Gulf, Conoco, Texa­ co, Occidental and Sohio in loans, grants and price guarantees for synthetic fuel development. Rallis also dismisses the fact that oil compa­ nies are spending money to acquire non-energy related ventures or to buy other oil companies. Sohio spent $1.8 billion in cash, not stock trans­ fers, to buy the world’s largest copper company, Kennecott. Mobil has just bid $7.8 billion for Conoco. Tenneco bought two insurance compa­ nies. Etc. And purchases made with loans still have to be paid off in cash, of course. Finally, Rallis cries about the “ low” profit rate of oil companies. Energy Action reported that oil company profits constituted 40 percent of total manufacturing profits in the United States last year - 30 percent of all corporate profits. Exxon profits, in fact, nearly equalled the profits of all the F o r tu n e ’s “ Second 500” largest compa­ nies. The oil conglomerates’ return on equity was 23 percent, compared to 15 percent for other U.S. companies. But if you just count their oil-related businesses, their rate of return is even higher. Exxon; 38 percent. Where do all these profits come from? They come at the expense of other industries. Assertions do not a case make. Rallis doesn’t even tell us where he got his figures from; his article reads like an oil industry press release. “Straight facts” are a m atter of comparing fig­ ures and seeing what the bases are for the fig­ ures. Rallis should do a better job of presenting his facts, or stop wasting our time. G a r y K e i t h Aus t i n EYEBEAM RERUN» Survivalist chic for the 1980s: keep on living, and with style! A n n - Levin Last spring I read a newspaper ac­ count of a movement called survival- ism, which is growing in different parts of the country. Survivalists, anticipat­ ing natural and human disasters, are buying bomb shelters, stocking them with weapons and freeze-dried food and practicing drills in radiation suits. A spokesman for a survivalism referral service said this movement will be one of the “ growth industries” of the ’80s, a statem ent not surprising when you con­ sider we all want to survive. But do we all want to be survivalists? Let’s have a show of hands. If yes, then you must shop for a bomb shelter. Not a plain concrete bunker — those went out after World War II — but a butcherblock and chrome bunker with sandbags that look like giant throw-pil- lows. Select plants which don’t need a lot of light. Should the bombs never fall, don't feel foolish that you spent thousands of dollars installing a useless structure be­ neath your house. You can brag to your neighbors that now you spend your va­ cations there, no longer threatened by bugs, rain, lost travellers’ checks or bad rates of exchange. And when the kids complain, “ Aww, do we have to spend Christmas in the bomb shelter to make believe again?” they’re prisoners of war like on Ho­ gan's Heroes them tell The next step is getting a radiation suit Choose a color you can live with — room pastels are nice — and check the inseams to make sure the designer left enough for easy movement. Should nuclear fallout not poison the a t­ mosphere, don’t feel you’ve wasted your money. If three of your friends own them too, you can start a new wave band, or better yet, wear it on Hallow­ een. Radiation suit acquired, go on to step three: stocking your shelter with dehy­ drated food. Here choices range from basics like cocoa and eggs to chicken tetrazzini and shrimp creole. For $920, a survivalist company in Austin offers customers 360 meals, or three squares a day for 120 days. But should famine not occur, don’t think you threw out good money. You never know when 360 peo­ ple might unexpectedly drop by for din­ ner. The last procedure is to buy lots of guns to protect your new possessions, and make sure no one else gets them. So, survival fans, are you ready? What’s that you say? You’d rather live life than survive it? Okay. If you don’t want to stockpile guns, food and ammo, then when calamity comes, don’t say you weren’t warned. But if you promise not to tell, I de­ vised an alternate survival technique for those of us who collect comic books, not guns, prefer novels to strategic-at- tack books and save magazines instead of life-sized human targets. In spite of our irresponsibility, we might get by. This is how I figure: when disaster strikes, and the survivalists are in their bomb shelters, restless and bored, I bet they’ll trade some of their chicken tetrazzini, and maybe even a gun, for the latest Harold Robbins. L evin is a T e x a n columnist. Prairie View deserves equal slice of PUF pie □ By JIM HIGHTOWER You’ve probably heard of “ Puff, the Magic Dragon,” and surely every child knows about the wolf that would “ huff and puff” and blow your house down. But have you ever heard of PU F0 It is the Perm anent University Fund here in Texas, and there is much huff­ ing and puffing about it right now down at the Legisla­ ture. The PUF is an endowment of 2.1 million acres of state land that was set aside more than 100 years ago to help finance the University of Texas, Texas A&M and a third college “ for colored youth " Guess which one of the three is not getting its slice of the pie. The income from the Permanent University Fund was not worth squabbling over until 1923, when Santa Rita No 1 cam e in — the first producing oil well on PUF lands Today, because of oil income from hun­ dreds of such wells, the PUF pumps out more than $100 million a year, which will buy a lot of bricks and books for the three designated schools Only Texas A&M and the University of Texas, howev­ er, are sharing this money. With A&M getting a third of it and UT taking twq-thirds. The original idea that a black college is supposed to be part of the endowment has been — well — ignored. Prairie View A&M, located in Waller County, lays good claim to being that college “ for colored youth originally contemplated in the state endowment. P ra i­ rie View is the second oldest public college in Texas, having been created in 1876 It has a long, distinguished history as the chief black college in Texas, and for its first six years it even received a share of the PUF income In 1882, though, because of racially discrimina­ tory politics. Prairie View was cut off from the fund and has never been cut back in Instead, it has had to come to the Legislature every two years to get what little funding it is allowed As a result, while UT and A&M are ranked among the very richest schools in the country, thanks to the PUF, Prairie View is ranked among the lowest in income. Rep Wilhelmtna Delco, chairwoman of the House Committee on Higher Education, has been leading a fight to restore Prairie View to its full stature as a primary recipient of P I F^ funds, modestly asking for only a one-sixth share But such a hue and cry went up from officials of the other two PU F schools that you would think she had asked for a piece of the Alamo to be shipped to FYairie View. They found a technical provision that required a vote of the people to be taken to designate the “ col­ ored” college, and, noting that such a vote never has been taken, they say Prairie View has no valid claim. There is no argument, however, that there is an em­ barrassing history of funding discrimination against Prairie View. To deter a federal civil rights action against the state, and as an appeasement to black legis­ lators, Texas A&M regents have acted in recent years to bring Prairie View more under its funding wing, and the Legislature considered making a special appropria­ tion to the school. But defenders of Prairie View say that this is nothing but hush money. They point out that UT and A&M are getting full endowments, while the black college is being unfairly relegated to handouts. How do you see it? Should UT and A&M be the only ones allowed to put a spoon in the gravy, or should Prairie View, after a hundred years, get back its spoon to take a rightful share in the PUF? Make your views known by writing to the House Higher Education Com­ mittee at this address. State Capitol Austin, Texas/ 78711. ___________________ ______________________ Hightower is p resident o f The T e x a s C on sum e r Association. A Word’s Worth. By SUSAN TRON Nowadays it seems we are exposed to announcers, politicians, even (gasp) writers who have execrable word usage Some words are confused and misused so alten, they begin to be aoctpted in the incorrect form Being the purist that 1 am. 1 would tike to see the students at an esteemed university sock as our own avoiding common errors. One word commonly misused is trre- gardless. R eg a rd less meant without to. “I will do this regardless of the consequences . ” Irregardless has no logical meaning and is not a word. D isin terested and u n in te re ste d are sometimes used interchangeably, but there is a distinction between than. Uninterested means bored, indifferent or lacking ihterest, as in “I am unin­ terested in this column.” D isinterest­ ed means unbiased, impartial or not personally involved, as in “A judge should be a disinterested party.’* Between should be used when talk­ ing about two chotees, “the difference between two extrem es.” A m o n g should be used when talking about three more things: “I chose the best or the three presidential candi- among d ates' same distinction is made be- The b e tte r and best and between tween lesser and le a st: ‘‘the better of two choices,” the heel of three choices” ; “the lesser of two evils” and “the least of three evils (see ’presidential candi­ dates’ above).” Tron is a Texan w r ite r Lots to say but no place to say it We want to hew from you. The Daily Texan en­ courages marten to submit columns and tetters rteal- hg with subject» of interest to the University commu­ nity. O h— . and M m* *nM be typed, sfcned and mMt indade the writer', home addras, «ajee end telephone amber. SabtnMoae rineld be In food teste, accurate and bee of libel, mattce and pwwmel controversy. Because of space limitations, column» and tetters j may be edited for clarity. Letters and columns intend­ ed for publication should be nidr isi d to Utters to the Editor, The Daily Texan, Drawer D. ttevm H y Station, Austin, Texas 71711 All become the property of The Daily Texan, ; v t : New humanity in UTPD policy By TOM PHILPOTT Last Tuesday there was a demonstra­ tion on the West Mall sponsored by Pal­ estinian students protesting Israel’s air attacks against crowded sections of Beirut, Lebanon. Six sweeps by Israel’s American-made jets failed to hit the supposed target, a PLO headquarters, but they leveled a number of dwellings, killing nearly 400 people and wounding 1,000 more. The Texan reported what happened during and after the demon­ stration, but omitted some details which are significant. I want to supply those details and comments. After the protest there was a “ scuf­ fle” between two rival Iranian groups, one pro-Khomeini, the other against. These same factions had confronted each other a month earlier in discip­ lined counter-demonstrations at the Capitol. But Tuesday discipline broke down. The pro-Khomeini students had not joined the Palestinian protest; the much larger anti-Khomeini group criti­ there was cized shouting, then some shoving. As the Texan stated: “UT police broke up the scuffle,” and “no arrests were made.” That is correct, but it leaves much un­ said. them vehemently; Here was a scene involving some 70 Iranian students, the despised “ sand niggers,” angrily accusing each other of betraying the revolution they had all fought and prayed for and which is now in peril, to the anguish of all the partici­ pants, watched by 30 jeering American students, urging — and expecting — the police to lock all the Iranians up. Certainly the pretext for a mass ar­ a n u y UL1C p i C l C A t a H i a o o rest was there, on the grounds of disor­ derly conduct, disturbing the peace, even assault. What was the predictable police action? As I said in Faculty Sen­ ate in 1980, when free speech and unpop­ ular protest are at issue at UT, “ the precedents of the past are all bad. In fact, several students in the row are among those arrested by University po­ lice, convicted in criminal court and placed on permanent probation by the University. If these students had been arrested again they faced automatic ex­ pulsion, possible deportation and ulti­ mately a firing squad back home. What was predictable, then, was what the American onlookers expected: the big­ gest bust in UT’s sad history of repres­ sion. And I, who testified that last year’s arrests were unjust, would have been forced to admit that, this time, ar­ rest could be justified. I tried to stop what was coming. Just before I reached the center of the con­ flict, the campus police, in the person of officer Pamela Gignac, arrived and an­ nounced, in a firm but friendly way, that everyone had to calm down and be careful or else be placed under arrest. The students argued. Then I said to her, “Officer, may I help you in this?” And, instead of warning me off, which is the usual procedure, she let me talk with the students. As other officers moved in to back up Gignac, I reminded the stu­ dents of the jeopardy they had fallen into and urged them to obey the order. Now Glenn Maloney of the dean of stu­ dents office came on the scene. Five minutes passed, and the uproar did not subside; but instead of ordering the ar ------------------- w ~ * rest, Maloney decided to give the stu­ dents time to cool off. He gave them over an hour. He and Gignac and the other officers talked with the students, then withdrew to let them work it out themselves, came back when things got hot again, then withdrew to observe. And the situation settled down The American students were dumbfounded —■ the University was not only not trying to jail these unpopular foreign­ ers, it was openly trying not to. The peace officers genuinely helped to re­ store peace. Instead of pounding and punishing the “ troublemakers,” which is the practice here, the police protect­ ed the people in trouble. That is news. UT police officers like Pam Gignac and Billy Cox, who togeth­ e r calmed a previous disruption (when an overwrought spectator attacked the -speaker at a Salvadoran rally and the officers subdued the man, comforted him and let him go) are doing things in a new way. Similarly, Glenn Malop^y, whose job is to monitor the West Mall, wants to keep things both open and peaceable, a difficult task, and to pro­ tect students, not prosecute them. So far these officers and Maloney have the support of their superiors, and their new, humane approach is working. A time of trouble threatens this campus because of issues and events pressing in from all corners of the world outside. And we will need people like these in positions of authority, people of goodwill who are prudent and dedicated to peace and academic freedom. Philpott is an associate professor of history. The Moral Majority: making life better by halting moral decay -------------------------- --------------------------- By JOHN J. KIRSCHMAN Just a few thoughts ... I hear people complaining about the Moral Majority because they want to control our country and impose their views on us. These people have the right to worry as religious control in the past has meant disaster for the people under control. But then so has “white supremacy” over the minorities and male domi­ nation over females. So what should.be done? We need qualita­ tive thoughts for equality. For religious groups are rising up against the decaying morals, which they have watched quietly. They have been attacked by many. Why do people get upset at the mass slaughter of animals or their brutal killings yet cannot understand it when the “ Right to Life” movement tries to ban abortion. Why do people who feel bad when they kill a pregnant animal yet don’t mind abor­ tion. Is it that the fetus is lower than the animal world? When does the subanimal being become human? Save the harp seals, forget the fetus? Driving along a road, there’s a prostitute over there by the curb, a massage parlor down the road a ways and two guys holding hands by that tree. Going into the convenience store, I see a magazine behind the counter with a naked girl on it and a few others that have girls on it that are barely covered. I turn on the TV to find a good program for my family and I to watch. One station has a couple in bed kissing, another has a guy kissing another man’s wife, another has a program condoning homosexuality as just an alternate way of life and the other station has a program full of stupid things that insults anyone s intelligence. Later during the week, I see a minister who is “holier than thou” and has a “damning” attitude, I see a priest who can’t talk like a normal human being because he only knows religious things and not current events; I see a religious guy who ques­ tions his morals and decides to accept immoral views. Then I read attacks on the Moral Majority for trying to give me the chance to walk down the street without being offended and having offensive views and morals shoved down my throat. So I think “It’s better to have strong morals on the outside and let everyone do their thing privately.” We have two morals being shoved at us. The prevailing one is offensive. So we should let the Moral Majority clean up the offensiveness. But to . . . i__ Annnin thom nn it ’c nnt nnchina vnur morals on them. You re t some degree. Clean to the degree that no one is offended openly but not to where they dictate their morals to us. Sure, I’d like to see America cleaned up completely, but then it s wrong to force people to accept my views, which may be too loose or too strict. So we’ve got to keep our eye on the Moral Majority and other similar groups, so as to keep them in line, but to condemn them for trying to make life better for me is wrong. Let’s find a neutral area. Let’s go to a life that doesn t offend people. Sure there are people who get offended at the littlest of things but that’s going too far. Think of the most offensive sexual acts you can think of. Now what if it became accepted by others and it was performed in your view? Well, wouldn’t you want to see it outlawed? Why should offensive scenes be forced at you? For some people there’s nothing sexually offen­ sive, some feel that bestiallity is offensive, others homosexual­ ity, some nudity in public, some known adult stores or massage parlors in public, some heavy petting, some heavy kissing, some holding hands, some dancing, and the list goes on. What if you had children and they were aware of these offen­ sive things or what if you had trouble taking them places with­ out seeing these things? If you started a movement to clean them up, it’s not pushing your morals on them. You’re trying to make life bearable. You push your morals on others if you enter their homes to prevent things. Shouldn’t the moral be: “ Do your own thing in your own place as long as it doesn’t hurt or offend anyone (hurt, such as in child prostitution, slavery, etc.)? This also includes teachers of my children who profess or practice openly their acceptance of these acts. Now, of course there are those of you who disagree with me. Please ask yourself whether it’s because I’m wrong or you’re too used to doing your own thing without the care of who you offend. Please don’t attack my character (“ not facing reality,’’ “old-fashioned God” or whatever else can be said), but disa­ gree logically. The problem with too many people is that they feel they have “ rights” because this is a “ free country.” They have the right to not help someone who needs help, the right to smoke where there are no “no smoking” signs even though others are right there not smoking, the right to speed or hold up traffic, the right to drive when intoxicated, etc., and now the rights of those who took someone else’s rights away (these are called criminals). Let’s care about others.______ _________ Kirschrnan is an electrical engineering student. British cops: the high price of protection By MAXWELL GLENN and CODY SHEARER It’s natural to get caught up in the “wedding of the century” between now and Wednesday. Morning television spe­ cials full of beefeaters, double-decked buses and bobbies might be enough to make Americans yearn to be royal sub­ jects again. But Americans should be glad they are free from the realm that will one day be “ ruled” by Lady Diana and Prince Charles. For all its civilized tradition, merry ole England is becom­ ing somewhat of a police state. One doesn’t make this observation simply on the basis of plans to deploy 3,000 constables on the day of the wed­ ding. Nor is it because Scotland Yard has installed inconspicuous television cameras along the parade route to mon­ itor the crowds. > V‘ After all, Britain is living under a state of siege. Bomb scares on subways and buses are a daily occurrence. Last month a mad gunman took a shot at the queen, and it was two years ago that • Elizabeth’s beloved uncle, Lord Louis Mountbatten, was blown up by terror­ ists while fishing in Ireland. < — . % Yet, while doubling their numbers, the British police have been unable to preserve order without committing excesses that wouldn’t be allowed in America. Several of the recent civil dis­ turbances here have actually been pro­ voked by the police themselves. Part of the problem is that those friendly looking bobbies, an almost all- white force, share Britain’s unfortunate impatience with what Americans call lence WlUl wuai. iUUW ita u s v « u - I On going B T R O SSE L L BAKER j ttttedby reporting that the family had .. ■ a “teams Unless a» my are dectavtag r”e* gone'"into s^clasktt. ” ■ W e n I was a lad certain people tra- veled incognito. That’s right: incogm- to. The newspapers published pictures of these people, who always wore dart bereaved mother entering sunglasses, and the captions said the photographers had caught them here darter N ^ t after night,J*» ttvmg or there while they were traveling in-^row iw ^dsit^^^jw ffw ii^m othew 'who, having lust viewed their chil­ dren’s lifeless bodies, try to articulate a reply to television’s inevitable ques­ tion: “How do you feel?” Sometimes these mothers actually try to say how they feel, which is one of the hardest things to the world for anybody to do even when you are feel­ ing nothing more than dull, lazy, . ^ a m ^ u o r . DescribtogfeeUngis wort for poets, not for poor mothers n * t e poete, not t e p o o e | “How It sounded like a mighty glamorous way to travel. Those who did it were mighty glamorous people, too. Movie .stars were always traveling incognito. Though uncertain what this meant, I had the impression it involved wear» jing dark sunglasses. Later it became jclear that these travelers were simply trying to get around a biMyjthout being drowned in deluge, of pnbUettjr. I Let me confess: At that age, one of my dreams was to grow up and be- come so famous that I, too, wooM be do you feej? is really « re rted a t fte able to travel incognito. It was the op- audience. P at to a «hoctad MM aywer portunity to wear those dark sunglass- lea]I mother. Ikt qfataUH h libotte. It m ates sense m m a k e s aenae ooly in the cairn of the es - that s what fetched me Bottfaen parlor where people w aiting to hear the world changed, . the w tatoer fowsato started wearing sunglasses,! dinner m aot «outog much «I M g-1 the mug who lifted your w a t t r t ^ R v ' V ; 'C thing escejpt l - ^ . WylddUd the his knife tickled your rib cage, a dl mother watt from a detached vantage that ended the allure of traveling in­ point, they eau «rawer with u mooM t / cognito, at least for me. 7 / of emotion before pussin* on to the ! f t rou- stow and a «tad about the « .1T derttan « etOTjú and toe * * w k' - 'í . a '* i go on about all th is because I be- _ : . lieve going incognito was s sound practice that ought to be restored to American life. There was an extraor­ dinary piece of television news fttn l v ^ * 't ?V_.v* -V‘ the other day to illustrate the virtue a n tM ddac the % ttSSWSftK k 7 — . m eat WhatTfeel after watchtogthem is «abarraand. Doesn’t everybody? ■We have been toned tato voyeurs Z , 3 " ! p e e p t a g into a family s most private < ■ T e tortto», after all, i s a high^ tto es boatos» trying to astttoy toma da» m ast for vulgarity. The straaga de­ velops»* Is the growth *W**a-. tton wttttog to give w Us jwtayy; to| cetatorityl N«ae «I those devastated motoard 7 - < are heeled to papota* into toe Hpts —gatot toayha toa deaply tootoad to television reporter talking m w nernu- w* crophone while standing outside a non- this antique custom. I descript brick house. It sms toe | All it showed was the ubkpdtoual,^ v..’•-\ i/-/7 dence of a child who had just been! ¡television reporter talking tato her ttdr brutally killed. The reporter hid ar­ rived as usual in these cams to ato toa mother how she felt and obtain a lew seconds of film showing the poor I woman’s grief, or rage, or breakdown. | to this case, however, toe mother had resisted and refused to «totaj t o of toe hone or lei theoBBsetta* wtoH televito» reporter dealt wito IMtt # 1 markable demand for privacy bfM H «hieing another antique phnaato^ H truvewito- town the age when people cognito. ■ s2& a S iS !£ s ■camera? . The mother, toe reported, wa* seclusion.” An excellent place, secta» tom. In the age of travettag tatoptte* next of kin c o m a flp U H i M M B f c d One theory for this bofcb that tetevi-l p ífíá ^ ífe d o to u has heootot such a vital dattyl ^ v ^ ^ 4 p e e a e n e e to tanartesn Wa that we ca n * be am* we « to t wtftt we have to stop, search and arrest anyone on suspicion. Though "the Sus Law, as it’s known here, was finally repealed, modern substitutes are in the works. Equally astounding is that the London police force doesn’t answer to local offi­ cials. The 92-member Greater London Council has no jurisdiction. They are controlled by the Home Office (a com­ bination of the FBI and America’s Cus­ toms Service). Even more surprisingly, the bobbies have admitted they’ve gone too far on occasion. They agreed last week to pay almost $20,000 in damages for a long list of transgressions incurred by residents in a Brixton raid. The police were re­ sponsible for shattered windows, bro­ ken locks, forced doors and ripped-up floor boards of 10 Brixton homes. Aside from the joyous royal wedding, the news from Britain has focused on the injuries suffered by police during the recent disturbances in areas such as Brixton. Little has been written, howev­ er, about the hundreds of people who’ve been beaten by police in the past few weeks. We’re not against maintaining public order, but how far off is a police state when Prime Minister Margaret Thatch­ er’s chief aim is to “ protect the po­ lice” ? It may be reassuring to see all those dome-hatted bobbies lining the streets, holding back the British crowds on tele­ vision this week. But we should silently thank our nation’s forefathers for spell­ ing out a Bill of Rights giving us a Con­ stitution that protects us from our gov­ ernment c 1981 Field Enterprise* Inc. “hanging out.” Standing around on street comers here is an immediate cause for suspicion, especially if you’re black. \ - In Brixton, a largely West Indian sec­ tion of London, we watched bobbies on regular foot patrols “sweep” the street comers of idle unemployed residents. Many of these people have been unem­ ployed for three years and have no place else to go. Moreover, the police will, according to one member of the Greater London Council (London’s City Council), “com­ in ethnic monly areas and round up everyone’s passport in search of illegal aliens.” — ------------------- invade restaurants With behavior like that it’s easier to understand why angry mobs recently marched on police stations chanting “kill, kill, kill.” While Britain has a model constitu­ tion, the British have no Bill of Rights. Police aren’t required to read suspects their rights before an arrest. Nor are they required to allow a suspect imme­ diate legal counsel. Citizens here aren’t permitted to make that one important phone call after an arrest. And it was just several weeks ago that the British discovered our Fourth Amendment rights. The House of Com­ mons repealed the 1824 Vagrancy Act which traditionally gave police the right A new revolt t taking the *tax out of Taxachusetts — m— m 4 By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK Dwarfing in importance the nationally publicized state fiscal crisis concluded last week is a political transformation making Massachusetts the unlikely van­ guard of the national tax revolt. No longer is this “Taxachusetts,” the nation’s most heavily taxed state where government prospers as the economy languishes Oppressive property taxes are mandated to fall, and unconscionably heavy income taxes may come down next. More than the level of taxation has changed. Confi­ dence in government has fallen while business confi­ dence surges, unemployment drops and economic growth accelerates. In what may be a transcendent po­ litical development of the 1980s, Massachusetts rivals California as a laboratory for supply-side economic the­ ory. The source of this shock was poputtstic, a spontane­ ous rage against bloated bureaucracy and unbearable last November voted tax overwhelmingly to cut property taxes 41 percent by rates. When voters __ PrnmMitian 2/4. Tto»tshnoralocal politicians that chaoe would result from reduced government services are proving as emp­ ty here as they did in California after Proposition 13 Passage of a state budget last week, after antics that produced a payless payday for state employees, means that towns will have about half their revenue loss made up by the state, which in turn also has tightened its belt Strains of class conflict add a dimension to the tax revolt not found in California. It is rebellion by working- class neighborhoods in Boston and industrial towns, led by South Boston’s astute Billy Bulger, against the es­ tablishment: the rich suburbs, Beacon Hill, Harvard. This ought to yield a windfall for maverick Democrat Edward King, a former professional football lineman who in 1978 was elected the state’s first Irish Catholic governor since 1950. Instead, his unpopularity seems without limit. Unable to fulfill tax-cutting campaign promises, Gov. King joined the political pack criticizing Proposition 2/4 while the people enacted it. His performance in this year’s budget fight was a fiasco, aligning himself against erstwhile ally 1 and with bureaucrats desperate to save their J ^ Po 11s show the governor running far btotod two liberal Dem­ ócrata: former Go». Michael Dukakis and L t Go». Thomas P O’Neill ffl (aoo of the speaker) But can Dukakis retain hit suddenly revived populari­ ty in today’s political climate? A lecturer at Harvard s Kennedy School of Government since his upset loss to King, Dukakis repudiates 2/4 and disputes public alien­ ation toward government. “I still think government can help make the individual’s life better,” Dukakis told us in confessed admiration for Joseph Califano. If future state revenue is needed because of Reagan’« cuts in federal grants, Dukakis opposes the sales tax as regressive But regressive or not, it seems the wave of the future advocated by thoughtful liberals — such as state Rep Gerald Cohen, chairman of the Joint Taxa­ tion Committee Influenced by a supply-side study of Massachusetts finances by Professor Arthur Laffer, Cohen proposes substantial income tax relief while ex­ panding the sales tax. King, seeking to regain leadership of the new BosUgi Tea Party, vows to veto any net revenue gainer. But more revealing of this state’s political metamorphosis is Cohen’s belief that state income tax cuts coupled with Reagan’s federal cuts will further invigorate the state’s revived economy. When liberals embrace sup­ ply-side doctrine to the only state carried by George McGovern, farewell to “Taxachusetts” seems at hand. • I N I F i e l d E n t e r p r i s e s t o e . Paae 6 Sports THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday;J,uly 28, 1981 UT football players appear in Playboy Magazine chooses Sims, Tausch for 1981 All-America team got to be pretty good friends, I like what he has to say,’* Sims said “ He said that I would always have a seat on the bench rm The 6-4, 260-pounder said he is looking forw ard to the Longhorns’ change in offensive form ations from the I-form ation to the Wing T , n rl n r- fir» K n 1 A 1 . B y D A V I D M E L C O N Daily T exan Stall How does an all expenses paid weekend at the P lay boy resort at Lake Geneva, Wis., sound to y°H you have never had that experience, the two neople to ask about it are Texas defensive tackle Kenneth Sims and offensive tackle Terry Tausch, who were named to P l a y b o y ’s 1981 Preview All- America Team, which is featured in the maga­ zine’s current issue Tausch and Sims were guests of the magazine, which annually selects its own All-America team from the country’s top collegiate football and bas­ ketball athletes Etch athlete is given a weekend at one of P l a y b o y ’s resorts Sims said it was a great honor to be named to the magazine’s All-America squad Playing behind All-America Steve McMichael his first two years, Sims acquired enough playing time to letter both seasons and gained experience comparable to a starter As a junior last season, he responded to his first year as a starter by fin­ ishing second on the team in tackles and sacked opponents behind the line of scrim m age 17 times tn 1980 Sims was also named a first-team ai America selection by Associated Press and Unit­ e d Press International A native of Kosse who played his high school football at Groesbeok, Sims also has a unique part-time job in the off-season He is the unoffi­ cial bodyguard for the m en’s basketball team. The position opened up in a very informal man­ ner. . . Coach (basketball coach Abe) Lemons anu i “Coach (basketball coach Abe) Lemons and 1 . As it turned out, Sims accompanied the team to College Station for the Texas A&M game this past year When the crowd seated behind the Texas bench became a little too boisterous Sims decid­ ( ed to see what the commotion was all about. “ I just stood up to see what was going on Sims said. “ LaSalle (Thompson) told me that if anything happened out there, that he and I would Lake care of it We had a pretty young team last year, they needed to be looked after a little. For the remainder of the year, Sims made spe­ cial appearances behind the team s bench at home games and at the NCAA playoffs in Erwin Center With the season fast approaching, Sims is more interested in playing football than in his body­ guard duties Tausch, a four-year starter from New Braun­ fels, was originally recruited by Darrell the former longhorn head coach As one of Fred Akers’ first players at Texas, Tausch began his career with the Longhorns as a tight end Howev­ er, his tenure there did not last long Felled by torn cartilage in his knee on the fourth day of practice, Tausch underwent surgery and sat out the remainder of the 1977 season. Af­ ter undergoing a second operation following spring practice in 1978, Tausch was moved to tackle where he has started every game since. At first, he was a little hesitant about playing the position. “I was happy as a starter, I had a good game against R ice and that built up my con­ fidence,’’ Tausch said “ I think it will m ake Rick M clvor into a better p a sse r’’ Tausch said “ It will m ake the lineback­ ers hold up due to all the faking and m isdirection plays that w e’ll be using ’ Sims and Tausch will anchor experienced of­ fensive and defensive lines for Texas this fall. The lines should prove to be m ajor assets of this year’s team Along with Sims, Dewey T urner and Kiki DeAyala return as defensive ends while Mark Weber is slated to fill the position vacated by graduated tackle Steve Massey. Joining Tausch on the offensive line will be Mike Babb a t center and Joe Shearin a t guard. The two new com ers should be Doug Dawson at right guard and Bryan M illard a t left tackle where la st year s s ta rte r John Tolbolka is coming off knee surgery As for the coming season, both seniors are looking forw ard to their final year at Texas. Like many other players, they rem ained in Austin this summer to get in shape for the upcoming season. Tausch said he thinks off-season conditioning can only help the team which has 12 returning senior starters “ With all these seniors, hopefully we can start off quick and the underclassm en can follow our lead.” Tausch said. With the first day of practice not far away, both Sims and Tausch feel that this is going to be T exas’ year. “ The tim e is now” Sims said. “ We have to put it on the field and produce.' Or as Tausch simply said, “ The only place I w ant to be on Jan. 1, is in the Cotton Bowl in D allas _ Linehan sets new record at Games second at 67.2. second at 67.2. . . BUCHAREST, Romania (UPI) — Another member of the University of Texas’ champion­ ship swimming teams won a gold medal Monday to put the Americans ahead of the Soviet Union in swimming gold medals, 10-7. As expected, Kim Linehan, the world record holder for the women’s 1,500 m eters, won the 806- meter freestyle, setting yet another Games record of 8:37 50, 41 seconds faster than the mark . > Rr^kohank in 1979. set by American Margaret Brookebank in 1979. Linehan becam e the sixth Texas swimmer to win a gold medal and brought the total number of gold medals won by Longhorn swim mers to eight. At the National Sports Festival in Syracuse, N Y., Texas shot putter Kelly Brooks took ninth place in the m en’s shot put. Brooks’ toss of 56.3 fell short of winner Bnan Oldfield’s 68 5. SMU’s Michael Carter finished However, swimming and tennis becam e the la t­ est sports to be hit by controversy a t the U niver­ sity Games. Three sw im m ers w ere disqualified and East German player Thomas Emmrich stormed off court on the eighth day of competition at the World U niversity G am es. tennis There have already been disputes in gymnas­ tics, basketball and track and field. July 28 thru Aug. 1 Live Rock n Roll with Crystal Image and Special bP Guests Nightly MOTHER EARTH Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Ftmndur of tho lYwnec e n d e n fa l Meditation Program Free Lecture Today 8 p.m. Union Room 4.110 The perfect slem UCLA's assistant volleyball coach, Nina Matthias, makes a perfect slam In the Marine State Women’s Volleyball Tournament at Manhattan Beach, Calif Monday. Matthias and her partner, Linda Robertson, woni the winner's bracket but must defeat the loser's bracket finalists for the $750 m Tolophoto first prize. Gilbert's Im port-Car Service T r a n s c e n d e n t a l . J f e d i t a t i o n l „ h o t apple pie w ith haagen-dazs is: natural, effective systematic, refreshing, simple, effortless, spontaneous easily learned, scientifically verifiable, practiced twenty minutes morning It evening to develop the full potential of the Individual isn t: a lifestyle, self-hypnosis concentration, contemplation, mind control, a philosophy, a yoga exercise, an intellectual practice, a religion, a diet, a special way of dressing, or difficult to learn Service and M aintenance for |,, s Vini* ( aft' 2 Ith cV ''.in \nti>iii<> A u d iC í^ Datsun Mercedes Factory Trained, Certified Mechanics 7 5 1 4 B u r n e t R d._____________ 4 5 1 - 8 6 0 2 CONTRIBUTIONS U niversity of Texss S um m er C abaret Theatre Contributions Deep South Com edy July 25 -A u g u s t 2 at 8 pm Exce p t A u g u s t 1 at 6 & 9 pm C abaret Theatre, 23 rd & San Jacinto Drink and sn ack service Tickets $5 general adm ission $4 S tudents. PAC b o x office or Erw in C enter 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 T I O C O N O R S » ! 4 7 9 - 8 2 5 0 H efklia “CLA SH o r THE TITAN*” (PO) 5 : 1 5 , 6 . 0 5 , 9 : 5 5 all sca ts •WMUMDSOMTUNTIS- 1 2 : 3 0 , 4 : 2 0 , 8 : 1 0 ~ 2402 GUADALUPE • 47i~£‘W l A f A D C I T V uPstairs 110401 Aoo.oioo. i® °o The Posrman THE o r i g i n a l p TONIGHT ONLY | dow nstairs FELLINI ■1TY o f WOMENfc^^IgS STARRING M ARCELLO M A S T R O IA N N I A Govmor*/N*w Yorim F*ro Sohoto o 1981 SHOWTIMES: 7 :0 0 , 9 :3 0 ADULTS $ 3 .5 0 AFTERNOON SHOWS O N SAT A SUN ONLY CINSMA ■West I ^ O ^ ^ g T e s s ; Open 11 a.m. rntélfitm ■ « 4 ^ " " - u y - y " 'y * Tuesday & W ednesday Night Specuil Catfish & Boiled Shrimp ALL YOU CAN EAT! S-10 PM $ 6 95 Served W ith Salad Bar, Beans, French Fries & Hush Puppies N o w Serving Cocktails! THE BRANDING IRON 6 % M iles Past O a k Hill on H w y .7 1 W est 7 6 3 - 2 8 2 ^ 7 ^ TONIGHT CATCH A CLOUD THE LIFT 99' COVER TOMORROW OVERKILL 99* a u g « t h m c k a m ... AUG 8TH M V C M B IU C F V M ¿une T H E A T R E S T I M E S S H O W N F O R T O D A Y O M Y moucid »«C(S ran STuoawra a saw*» cmzma wrm u tc cum SHOW» L im p TO SaATW^MMMMMttM A M E R I C A N A W453-6641 ftlfl MKK« Mitt ME MEM E. XORRO.TH* OAT MAM A Q U A R I U S 4 ■ B L O W O U T fc m * 4 S /S lJ S V * 1 5 - 1 M t E A N t m a m m a m kl5/$USF7i4HI:15 ^ 4 4 4 - 3 2 2 2 i$M t p u m m t m u it m G A S *1S4fcN/Sl-7Sk*lS-1felS ZO URO, THE GAY SLADE I N O R T H C R O S S 6 4 5 4 - 5 1 4 7 - J K ’S S W » " — S T R I P E Í MUSja/susncia-iAi* S . O e B . NOSODY’S PiKWKT fci54*1S/$1 • T O » * * * 4* H T A R Z A N " i * " H . u a e e /s i- H n a s - i* * H SO U TH W O O D 2 K442-2333 ittlt MMRt N O O A L L M O V IE S $ i | §| I EXCLUDING monmmt SHOWS _______ ■ | * ; 7 i:;V . A U S T I N ’ L O O S E [ N I C E P R I A M > m I jC - J bIS -M S -JjSS-M S The M arshall Tucker Band m en for the past 20 years. With plenty of room here for Buddy to stretch out and to dem onstrate his m aniacal blues licks and seething vo­ cals, the long w ait for this L P has been well w orth it. The Jelly Roll Kings are the top blues outfit working in and around the historic blues center of Clarksdale, Miss. As the album title will a tte st, Joint “ Rockin’ The Down,” (Earw ig Music Co., Box 25235, Chicago, 60625), this cookin’ LP! Com prised of blues veterans Big Jack Johnson on guitar and vocals, L ittle Sam C arr (son of Robert Nighthawk) on is one Juke the and drum s legendary F rank F rost, of Sun and Jew el Record fam e, on F arfisa or­ gan, piano, harm onica and vo­ cals, this band churns out an earthy brand of down-home Mississippi juke joint blues that is all too often ignored in this day of high-powered elec­ trified urban blues. Indeed, this is the sam e infectiously raucous m usic th a t produced a whole generation of Chicago blues giants like Muddy Wa­ te rs and Howlin’ Wolf. Kudos to producer Michael F rank for this am bitious and long overdo offering. — J a y T r a c h t e n b e r g “ D e d ic a te d ” ; M a r sh a ll Tucker Band; Warner Broth­ ers R ecords. “ D edicated” offers typical M arshall Tucker fare: Doug G ra y ’s deep, unrem arkable vocals; sim ple, straig h tfo r­ w ard love songs; Appalachian allusions; desperado ballads and the flute interludes that w ere so prom inent the band’s biggest hit, “ H eard It in a Love Song. ” in The album is dedicated to the band’s b assist/vocalist Tommy Caldwell, who died in a ca r accident last year. re p la c e s F ra n k lin W ilkie Caldwell on bass, and Norton TONIGHT- PRICE PARAFIN W EDNESDAY-BAYOU RHYTHMS N e ve r A C o v e r r Tuesday, July 28, 1981 □ THE P ^ IL Y TEXAN R e c o r d s R e c o r d s R e c o r d s Since the end of World War II, the m ost exciting, substan­ tive and m em orable blues re­ cordings — both album s and singles — have been recorded for sm all, independent record labels. This is especially true today. The following is a run­ down of some of the top blues album s in recent months, all products of sm all labels. the past year My choice for the best blues album of is “ The Chief,” by Eddie C lear­ (R ooster Blues Re­ w ater cords, 2615 N. Wilton Ave., Chicago, 111. 60614). Leave it to Jim and Amy O’Neal, co­ editors of L i v i n g B l ue s m ag­ azine and two of the g enre’s m ost articu la te spokesper­ sons, to be the first to lay down a full album ’s w orth of C learw ater’s v ersatile blues stylings. To be sure, O’N eal’s production here is first-rate. Mixing am ple portions of Chuck Berry, a sprinkling of Latin rhythm s and plenty of stone Chicago blues, C lear­ w ater really gets down to business. The ever-so-smooth shuffle of ‘‘Blue, Blue, Blue Over Y ou,” replete w ith gen­ tly riffing saxophones, super­ lative harp-blowing by Carey Bell and stinging guitar licks by C learw ater, is an absolute killer th at alone is w orth the cost of this outstanding LP. If it’s a good-time party and dance record you’re in search of, look no fu rther than the self-titled album by Big Tw ist And The Mellow Fellow s (Flying Fish R ecords, 1304 W. S chubert, Chicago 60614). With a . deep, rich, mellow voice like Bobby Blue Bland s and A lbert K ing’s, Big Tw ist is one of the finest rhythm to com e and blues singers along in quite some tim e. The m usic is a tight, uplifting and urbane m ixture th at borrow s the best elem ents from A m er­ ic a’s black music capitals — the percussive drive of Mo­ to w n , th e b a c k b e a t of Memphis and the second-line rhythm s of New O rleans. It is highly recom m ended. from What separates Roomful Of Blues the num erous rhythm and blues ensem bles touring the country today is their swinging five-piece horn section and their am azing versatility. This Rhode Is­ land-based band’s la test re­ lease, entitled ‘‘Hot L ittle M am a,” on their own label, (Blue F lam e R ecords, Box 49, Bradford, R.I. 02808), im pres­ sively dem onstrates both of these attributes. Their im pec­ cable choice of m a teria l rang­ es from the jazz elegance of c lassics, Duke E llington “ J e e p s “ C a ra v a n ” and Blues,” the guitar- crazed onslaughts of Johnny G uitar Watson and G uitar Slim, to the low-down Louisi­ ana sw am p blues of Lazy Les­ te r ’s ‘‘Sugar-Coated Love.” Any way you cut it, this LP is a w inner all the way! through Attention guitar freaks in general and Buddy Guy fans in particular. H ere is the type of album Guy’s m any ad m ir­ ers have been avidly w aiting over a decade to hear. “ Stone C razy” (Alligator Records, Box 60234, Chicago, 60660), re­ corded re­ leased in F ran ce on Isabel show cases Guy’s Records, finest playing and singing since his classic Chess 45s in the early 1960s and shows why he has been readily regarded as one of the p rem ier blues- and originally ¡THE ¿OÑTÍMEMTAL CLÜB IB Ü1 Wm ■ HM 91 pt\)S ¡1 3 1 5 S . C o n g re s s ■ ■ ■ 4 4 2 - 9 9 0 4 R £ 8 £ £ Drive-In 6902 Burleson Road Radio Sound System 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto X X X Original Uncut ‘TORRID!” HIGH HEELS and SOFT SKIN Angel want» to take the town... One at a time! p A ffc lA T T A 1S T R E S S « AMAZING DR JECKYL OPENS 8:00 STARTS DUSK The adventure continues The Last y Mei ro ti. k i OS 1:00-3:00-5:00- 7:00-9:00 5 • 00- 7:30-10:00] VHPMRMN tr-WBTGATI TRUTH. S I M DAY TUH0AT-WKTGATI TRUTH O R IW P n T I CAPIt" 4 'TMPtKS IQ V r SPORMRtt IT I ( W I»-* HRS SHOW THIS VHN T M g ■ UCED ADULT A D M IS SIO N . I . H R NMLiCTCOTHEATACS MANN I Ml ATHES g j F M N N K f PKTURC/ B i^^ rnmrlohl A FllmW«V« P*ClUf«« l«C FOX TRIPLEX iivo ■ ■ ■ 454 271II— 6 5:1 5-7: 1 5-9: 1 5 in 115W s Plt/UAIfT ¥Min 444-3322J 2:00-5:45-8:15-10:30 FIND IT IN m a n :-X¡*A I Wm I 454 2711 1 6757 AIRPORT BLVD I P I M OF THE LOST ARK A PARAM O U NT PtCTURI 5:05- 7:30-9:45 BLOWOUT (*) 5:15- 7:15-9:15 f t f | p 3 b u r * UNIVERSAL K] ■ ¿ ■ B B B M wctum ca _1:00-3:00-5:00- 7:00-9 00 jt H I AD V E NT U » «9M R8 » < O N T I N U I > H ÍI§ ÍÍÍlS f ■ GENE HACKEAAN CMEEtSTOWECEE RH“% NCO MATTY JACK 1C COOPER te-smwhlms-tk-slhi CLASSIFIED HOT UNE 471-5244 A u s t i n s f i r s t w i n e bar C heeseboards fin e wines b \ t h e g l a » ^ 1200 West Lynn 472-3790 late show n p a Umm TW r. 1 JO Ü.T. 2.00 Nae-U.T. Joan Renoir's clonic GRAND ILLUSION w ith Je o n Q o b in ( 1 9 3 7 ) frit von Strohohn French w ith $vbtith » TODAY el h M & 7:15 M»- tlmm TWefcro U S Ü.T. 1M Na-U.T Umm Tkaotro 1S S U-T- 7.1» ■ V J u J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit An Animated film TODAY «t 1, 5:45 L 9:15 p.* IWm TW tr U S ILT. tM Nm-U.T. Entertainment Buffalo and Charlie Daniels fill in on harm onica and fid­ dle, respectively. Their 11th album follows the self-proclaim ed “ family- oriented” band s tradition of appealing to people who like easy listening m usic pack­ aged in the guise of country love music — safe, sw eet songs and ballads with a few steel guitars thrown in here and there. No one could accuse M arshall Tucker Band they of being pretentious; have such an honest, sim ple, “ le t’s go fishing” attitude that they couldn’t possibly of­ fend anyone. At the sam e, ‘ D edicated’’ is, on the whole, polished, form ulaic and, well, boring. Even the title track, which is an elegy to Caldwell and “ all lost loved ones,’’ doesn't m uster much em otional re­ sponse. It is a traditional, vio­ lin tinged honky-tonk tune, and G ra y ’s Tom Jones-ish vocals and the song’s lyrical blandness make the dedication a distant, pure­ ly symbolic gesture accordion and “ Tell interludes. “ This Tim e I Believe” fea­ tures an introduction straight from the “ Saturday Night Live” them e and some jazzy the sax Blues to Take Off the N ight” is a basic, straightforw ard blues num ber — not a bad a t­ tem pt although a bit too pol­ ished. Most of the songs, how­ standard ever, the follow M arshall T u ck er fo rm at, which prom pts the standard album review advice: if you like the band, buy the album ; otherw ise, forget it. “ F ire of Unkown Origin” ; Blue O yster Cult; Columbia R ecords. in is determ ined the through Bands that release 10 a l­ bums generally have trouble sam e with insularity, songw riters go the sam e paces over and over un­ til the original ideas they once had a re bled white Blue Oy­ ster Cult to avoid this trap by bringing in some the fresh blood songw riting departm ent The first three cuts on “ F ire Of Unknown O rigin,” the C ult's 10th album , are co-w ntten by P atti Smith, R M eltzer and M ichael M oorcock F our other none-Cultists also con­ tribute to the rest of this a l­ bum This approach apparent­ ly works, because the new LP is surprisingly varied and en ­ joyable. BOC songs have always fit into a standard creep y /ty ran ­ nical mold regardless of who was w riting them, and the songs on “ F ire ” are no excep­ tion However, the input from o u tsid e c e r ta in ly a r t i s t s helps “ V eteran of the P sy ­ the Moorcock chic W ars,” contribution, the is one of best , it com bines a slow p er­ cussive pulse with a syn­ thesized undertow that will rem ind the spacey of vintage Hawkwind The most m em orable cut of the lot was w ritten by two p arties nam ed R otter and in collaboration with Rigg, “ Joan Craw ­ E ric Bloom ford” is a cam p classic, a highly wrought production num ber that features a neo­ classical intro, m ore special effects than you could shake a stick at and an unforgettable chorus “ Joan Crawford has risen from the grave! ” Surely the best song of this sub-genre since Blondie’s “ Attack of the G iant Ants ” As Blue O yster Cult album s go, this is a pretty good one. J e f f W h itti n g to n presents AMATEUR COMEDY WeElnesday Night SHOWTIME 10:00 p.m. 3500 Guadalupe For Auditions call 453-9831 G E N E R A L C I N E M A T H E A T R E S 4 0 A A MON THRU FRI All SHOWINGS BIFORF 6PNI 1 f i . V V SAT SUN A HOLIDAYS 1” MATINE! SHOW ONLY j I ’ H I G H L A N D M A L L c , r ? . T A 451-7326 HIGHLAND MALL BLVD. Roger Moore “ FO R YOUR E Y E S O N L Y ” ( * » 13 30-3 55-3 30 7 45-10 10 . ” V ■VI OF TNI NKIDLI 12:45-3:00-5:15- 7:30-9:45 (R) C A P I T A L P L A Z A c ¥ l ñ » A 452-7646 1-35 at CAM ERON RO. ■V CANNONBALL BUN i.5ryt tw o w o rd s m a y be a ll c a p ita l le tte rs 25 to r each a d d itio n a l w o rd In c a p d a i le tte r s Ads m u s t be non < o rrtw e i c ia l OCADUNf VCMfOUll M e i d v y t i i v n T u e s d a y T e . a n F#*4i*y 3 p m M o n d a y H o r n W e d n e s d a y T e e a n t u e s d a y H o r n T h u is d a y T e e a n W e d n e . d e y H o r n T o d o y T e e a n T h u rs d a y M o m In lh e e v e n t e f e r re rs m a d e m a n o d v e r tis e m e n i im m e d ia le n e fh e m u s t h e g iv e n as th e p u b lis h e r s a r e r e s p e n s tb te te r e n ty O N I in r e r r e r t m s e tite n A lt r tn im s te r a d ( u s tm e n ts s h o u ld b e m a d e n e l l a te r t h a n JO days ahat public«*♦»•»* H om «*-Fo r S a l* C O U N T R Y L I V I N G 5 b lo r k s S o u th B a r to n S p r.n g s Rd S m a ll 3 2 h id d e n f r o m s tre e t la rg e fre e s *33 000 *8,000 d o w n , S4(X) P I TI N e ed s w o rk C a n J a n e t G i l l * * 4410646 B ill S m ith Assoc 4 7 / 3651 SHADOW HILL 2404 LONGVIEW UT AREA WALK TO CAMPUS fa» tem ptation toady Clow to ta m o tlo f larga I batftaam d o tu ia v n tti toft Built-in Microwave* D i s h w o t h e r s Disposals Calling Fan* Swimming Pool Separata Storaga Aroa* Across From Cos wall Tonni* Courts Pick Carpet Color Now Priced $38,500 up OWNER FINANCED Fot M m * Inti* Call Irv Melitz A Assoc. Ownor-Agont 345-2833 AUTOS FOR S A II r e b u ilt, *549 /W E N G IN E S In s ta lle d , « C h a n g e G e n e ra l V W r e p a ir , re a s o n ra te s 452 3821 W e b u y b ro k e n ib le l A M E N T E R P R IS E S 2Ws 972 D A T S U N 280 Z 4 sp ee d A C, A M ' ■M g re a t c o n d itio n *5,150 t l r m C a ll la y s 474 8384 C III! 6 D O D G E A s p e n s ta tio n w a g o n la m a la n b lu e , A T , A C , p o w e r b ra k e s , p o w e r ,le e r in g , lu g g a g e ra c k 327 0984 II T O Y O T A C o ro lla , 5 sp ee d, a ir , A M / " M , 4 500 m ile s o n g u a r a n t y I J53 8119 lA G B 76 E n c a lle n ! c o n d itio n , n e w t ir e s , 10.000 m ile s C a ll C a ro l 44 1 2021 i.'O N V F R T I B L E K A R M A N G h la 1971, s e w ly re s to r e d , n e w e n g in e *3800 o r yes! o tte r 443 4121 a ft e r 5 p m : A M P E R V A N f u l l y •q u ip p e d P o p lo p , s te re o , s to v e , e tc 13700 n e g o tia b le 442 0883 1974 V W f j A U D I F o x 4 d r , b lu e , a u to , ru n s g o o d w ith goo d m ile a g e , A M / F M , M k h e lln s 32250 neg 459 4768 1971 I W B C h e v y V a n , f i r s t *J00 ta k e s It 147 7131 1972 K A R M A N G h la o ra n g e , in e x c e l le n t c o n d itio n , A M / F M *2 /5 0 C a ll D a v id 458-3331 V O L K S W A G E N B U G 1974, a u t o m a tic , A M / F M c a s s e tte d e c k , g r a a t c o n d itio n 31800 472 7697 a ft e r 6 p m 1973 M E R C U R Y C o u g a r m e c h a n ic s spe c in i n ee d s b lo c k r e b u ild B r a k e w o r k PS P B , AC, A T , e ig h t t r a c k s te r a o *700 441 4388 1924 V W 412 W a g o n , g r e a t c a r , ro o m y , r a d ia l* , ro o t r a c k , A M / F M M u s t s e ll *1700 473-2545 72 V W 411 W a g o n O r ig in a l o w n e r G o o d c o n d itio n *1250 758 7782 S te e l b e lle d r a d ia l * le a v in g c o u n t r y M U S T S E L L , 197/ A M C P a c e r W a g o n G o o d c o n d itio n , v e r y r e lia b le C h r is 471 7412 ( d a y s ) , 478 3756 ( e v e n in g * ) 1973 P IN T O H a tc h b a c k A T , A C, g o o d t ir e s N e w ly w e d s m u l l * e li *1,000 C a ll 346 0818 a ft e r 6 F O R SALE M otOfcycl*-Fotr S o l* Y A M A H A X S 2 6 50, c h e r r y c o n d itio n 00, 5,800 m i le * 479 8837 M u s t s e ll O N D A E X P R E S S 2500 m ile s M u s t II m o v in g to M in n E x c e lle n t c o n d l- sn *300 926 1042 a f t e r 6 p m 76 Y A M A H A 4 0 0 R D G r e a t c o n d itio n ily 7200 m ile s *1700 o r b e s t o ffe r 447 46 8 ! H O N D A C M 7 0 0 T T w in s t a r E x c e l n t In p e r fe c t ly c o n d itio n 100 C a ll 472 9822 B r o k e n A M A H A 350 o v e r h a u le d b y d e a le r *450, c a ll yod m e c h a n ic a l c o n d it io n 474 8168, 451 7700 80 B A T A V U S R e g e n c y m o p e d i l l D e b r a a f t e r 3 p m 978 2225 *350 TREEHOUSE CONDOMINIUMS IN T H E H E A R T O F H Y D E P A R K Nested beneath huge live oaks are 21 spacious and d is tin c t iv e one bedroom, one bath units w ith all new appliances, c e il­ ing fans, m in i-b lin d s and an assortm ent of personalized in­ te r io r finishes A p riv a te sundeck and all new la nd s ca p in g w i l l g r a c e the n e w l y r e n o v a t e d 3 - s t o r y redwood com ple x convenient ly f r o m a neighborhood pa rk and w ith easy access to the UT campus. lo c a te d a c r o s s P R IC E S S T A R T IN T H I M I D 40 S A N D B E L O W M A R K E T IS A V A I L A B l E f I N A N C I N G For m ore in fo rm a tio n call D A N I E L L. ROTH & ASSOCIATES 478-8277 A t t e n t i o n , Parents tw o f ir e p la c e s , y e a r s o ld B e a u tifu l d u p le » In T R A V IS H E IG H T S G o o d , a s s u m a b le lo a n F ir s t d a y o n m a r k e t P r iv a c y , e le g a n c e , tre e s U n it s c o m p ie te ly s e p a ra te , c o n n e c te d b y < a r p o r t A b a r g a in a ! *117,000 B e a u tifu l, q u ie t r e s id e n t ia l n e ig h b o r h o o d V e r y n e a r s h u ttle ( a l l M a r y C u lle n h o m e 788 2078, O fflc e 442 7833 The Cullen Com pany G a r a g *-F o r S a l* M O V IN G S A L E ' C h e s t o f d r a w e r s , f u ll s u e b ed , c o u c h , a r m c h a ir , li t t l e ta b le s , h o m e a p p lia n c e s 345 4019 a lt e r 6 p m Mitc*llan*out-For Sal* SAL F. 1 I N D I A N le w e lr y Is 25% o f f ! N e l son s G ifts . 4507 S C o n g re s s 444 3814, 10 6, c lo s e d M o n d a y s P O R T A B t E T V B la c k w h ile P a n a s o n ic A lm o s t n e w T w in bed, s t r o lle r B o th v e r y g o o d c o n d itio n 454 9624 M U S T S E L L C o lo r T V , M o t o r o la 22 in c h e s , o ld b u t f u n c t io n a l, *55 L lo y d * tu r n t a b le . 2 s p e a k e rs , A M F M 8 t r a c k S /0 t w o n e w s in g le m a tre s s e s , *45 e a ch t a l l 346 4054 E N C Y C L O P E D I A B R I T A N N I C A I I I , lo w e s t p n c e e v e r , U n iv e r ls t y o f T e x a s s tu d e n ts |u n io r o r a b o v e m u s t f u l l tim e e n r o lle d C a ll M r R o s e 451-9150 B A L B O A C A F E s ty le 1920 s o v e - s lo tte d s o ta a n d w in y h a r k c h a ir , r e a l c h e a p t a l l K e n 477 5228 81 650 Y A M A H A E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , te n d e d w a r r a n t y P le x ig la s s ( a ir i n g *2000 n e g o tia b le liu s t a b le b a c h r e s t W A I T I N G F O R t a l l UT M H P s p a c e ’ M o v e m n o w ' See a d h o m e s S a m e p h o n e 472 7819 6 P IE C E N a u g a h y d e r o o m set *3 50 14 f t w o o d 5 s h e lf b o o k c a s e *200 835 1848 a ft e r 4 p m liv i n g F O R S A L E D o u b le b ed M a t tr e s s s p r in g , t r a m e g o o d c o n d itio n *85 C a ll P a l a lt e r 5 30 «47 2907 F U R N I T U R E G O O D c o n d it io n Sofa a n d c h a ir c o ffe e t a b le d in e t t e C a ll 454 3915 a f t e r 5 30 P R E M E D S T U D E N T S C o m p le te m e d le a l IS s p e c ia ltie s *300 o r m a k e o tt e r 443 3650 lib r a r y te x ts laO O B R I E N C O M P E T I T IO N s la lo m 66 w o o d e n P e r fe c t c o n d it io n *150 472 7697 a f t e r 6 p m K E L T Y L A R G E p a c k c lim b in g ro p e 4513437 f r a m e T io g a b a c k X E R O X 800 M a g n e tic c a r d W o rd P ro c e s s o r s u p p lie s G r e a t c o n d it io n *3000 C a ll 472 9772 B A R B E L L S E T a n d b e n c h *S© C 8 b in e t s e w in g m a c h in e *7 5 T O K re e * to re e . ta p e s . *3 e a c h 472 8652 C T V Q U A S A R 19 *295 o r b e s t o ffe r 346 5836 in use I I m o n th s D R 78 14 T I R E ( w h i t e w a l l ) G o o d y e a r a lm o s t n e w 471 1328 D o v We buy je w e lry , estate je w e lry , dia m o n d s and old gold H i g h e s t cash prices paid C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N . L a m a r FURNISHED APARTMENTS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I 088.1 2500 m ile s , A I 80 H O N D A C B I2 5 S a p e , a d u lt o w n e d , b e s t o ffe r C a ll jm in i q u e 345 4019 a f t e r 6 p m H O N D A 550 4, 24,000 m ile s , su ir s m o o th , fa s t d r iv in g , n e w t ir e s h el et. a c c e s s o rie s *1200 n e g o t ia b le 458 70 _ _ 80 K A W A S A K I 1000 L T D E x c e lle n t n d it lo n , 7 000 m ile s *2600 C a ll 444 39 a f t e r 6 p m H O N D A C X 5 00 13,400 m ile s E x c e l at c o n d it io n *1500 4 78-5035 75 400 M A C I I K a w a s a k i *600 o r b e s t le r T w o D o t h e lm e ts , *2 0 e a c h 258- Bicycle-Fot Sol* L E I G H 3 -sp e # d b ic y c le . 2 1 " m e n s, e iie n t c o n d it io n *100 o r b * * t o tt e r 8481 e v e n in g s . St*r*o-For Sal* IC L E S T E R E O p r o m p t re a s o n a b le to v id e o s e r v ic e U s e d e q u ip m e n t y h t a n d s o ld P a r ts a n d a c c e s s o rie s I R e d R iv e r 476 0947 Mutical-For Sal* M A H A F G 160 w ( ase 45? J ’ 8> IN E Z B L A Z E R s e rie s e le c t r ic g u l im m a c u la t e , *250 b lo n d e w c a se , o tia b le 453-0588 Photography-For Sal* .I G O R O L Y M P U S m o u n t m a c r o m 85 205, 3 8 U V *2 40 n e w J t i r m C h u c k 458 4036 f i l t e r cK O R 2 0 0 m m F 4 *160 h r m M in o lt a 5 7 8 m m F 2 8 1 3S m m F 3 5, 5 0 m m 4 13S0 474 28*3 Nti-For Sol* E R IC A N P IT B u ll T e r r ie r s n a is a n d R C A d o g lo o k a iik e s it i e v e n in g s lo v a b le w a tc h d o g s L it t l e i n t e li i *1 25 00 452 C I R IS H S e tte r p u p p ie s , a ll s h o ts i m a ie s a n d tw o f e m a le s le f t w e n d y l s ( a r m S m i t h v i l l * 1 237 38.19 a ft e r i a n d w e e k e n d s E E K IT T E N S T ig e r s t r ip e d a lr e a d y I sh ots, n e e d lo v in g h o m e C a ll 452 H o m ** -F o f S a t* O L L S 35 t r a v e l t r a i l e r , p a r k m o d ­ uli b a th , s le e p s 6 p e r fe c t t o r s tu *6500 1720-M B a r to n S p r in g * . 477 ¡L E H O M E U T lo t 12x60 2-1 n e w d e c k . et d ra p e s n e a te r w a te r C A C H *8500 472 7 |I9 CO NDOMANIA in g tr o u b le w it h k e e p in g u p w it h Jos m th e U n iv e r s it y a r e a ’ W e h a v e I b e d ro o m c o n d o s a v a ila b le w it h es s t a r t in g in th e m id 3 0 's C a tt th e *o s p e c ia lis ts i d a I n g r a m a n d A s s o c i a t e s 476-2673 L E A S E P U R C H A S E it t a k e * to g e t m to *7 500 *10 000 s a* ie v e r a 1 »•«" *2 0 3 R**» * fvmnheé et onhtrntgheé A*Nee, pern, CÍVÍKOOW, A CO64. r v lo c o W an CtuW'.» »«•*>»• m ile w e s t M o p a c ___________________________________ 9442. 5 £ P T i F re n c h P la c e B a o b h n g B ro o k L a r g e 2-1. AC p a tio f ir e p la c e *500 C a ll _______________ J a n e t 441-0646 477-3651 r e f r ig e r a t o r 2-1 H O U S E , s t a r t in g A u g u s t 1st AC, s to v e fe n c e d v a rd . h a r d w o o d flo o r s N e a r G u a d a lu p e s h u t­ tle 201 W 55th b u t c a ll 452-3452 a f t e r 5 p m . _____________________ _____________ tre e s 2 B R 1 6 a C H H z m ile U T . 2502 M a n o r R d D e p o s it 836-4343 to see t e r r i f i c B E A U T I F U L L Y K E P T y a r d tre e s n ic e n e ig h b o rh o o d E a s t o f a ir p o r t . *425 N a n c y B o w le s 327 415) 477 1200 'a r g e 3-2, T?\aAíÁtx ft.nn \iv(gu M B A Q 4 RESUMES w i t h or w i t h o u t p ic tu r e s 2 Day Service 2 7 0 7 H e m p h ill Park Just N o r t h of 2 7 t h a t G u o d a l u p e 472-3210 472-7677 FURNISHED HOUSES H O U S E TO s h a re w it h q u ie t r e s p o n s ib le g r a d o r la w *190 m o n th p lu s s h a r e e le c ­ t r i c i t y , p h o n e J e tt 451-6974 ROOM AND BOARD C H A M B R E S A lo u e r ch e z L a M a is o n F r a n c a is e 710 W e s t 21st S tre e t, te l 478- _________ 6586 A U G U S T V A C A N C IE S in S a n d ia C o-op. 9 m e m b e r s , s e m i- v e g e te r ia n B e a u tifu l, la r g e h o u se n e a r la w s c h o o l a n d R L M . 474-2026, 472-6091, 474-1395.____________ _ F A L L V A C A N C IE S f o r w o m e n in a n e d ­ u c a r o n a! a n d c o o p e r a tiv e e n v ir o n m e n t. L a u r e l H o u se C o op 1905 N u e c e s 478- 0 4 7 0 . ______ _______________________ H E A L T H A N D n u t r it io n o r ie n te d c o -o p se e ks r e s p o n s ib le in d iv id u a ls w e o ff e r q u ie t n e a r c a m p u s v e g e ta r ia n , s m o k e -fre e e n v i­ r o n m e n t s u n d e c k o p e n f ie ld a n d g a r ­ d e n R o y a : C o-op. 1TOS P e a r l 478-0880. n e ig h b o rh o o d re s d e n tia ! F A L L O P E N I N G S fo r w o m e n W e a re a v e g e t a r ia n c o -o p o ff e r in g an e n e r g e tic a n d s u p p o r tiv e e n v ir o n m e n t n e a r c a m ­ p us T h e C o m m o n s , 2610 R io G ra n d e _____ 4767905 G E R M A N H O U S E C o -o p has v a c a n c ie s t o r S p a n is h o r G e r m a n s p e a k in g F E ­ M A L E S th is s u m m e r a n d f a l l 47 8865, 2103 N u e c e s TYPING TYPING AT MASTER TYPIST, YOU GET TYPING FOR THAT At-PAPER WE DO RUSH WORK SAME DAY OR ONE DAY SERVICE FRESHMAN THEMES PAPERS REPORTS, TABLES ONE DAY SERVICE FOR RESUMES PROFESSIONAL REPORTS THESES AND DISSERTATIONS S 35 PAGE FOR ROUGH DRAFT WITH FINAL AND THIS AD DEPOSIT REQUIRED FOR FINAL 2 0 2 1 G u a d a l u p e S» D o b t e M a l l N o 3 6 P a r k t n c 4 7 2 - 0 2 9 Í A M I 4505 Duval 4 5 4 -4 7 9 9 NOW PRE-LEASING • Special Summer Rates • All Bills Paid • Exercise Room & Saunas • Pool & Clubhouse • Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedroom Call or Come By TodayI Professionally Managed by Martine Properties, Inc. •a * - » RIVER HILLS Now Under N ew Managem ent 4 Swimming Poois On Shuttle Bus Route Adult Complex Sauna KEG PARTY. SAT., AUG. 1 Lease Saturday and receive Vl OFF second month's rent. 22 Different Floor Plans 1601 Royal Crest Dr.________ 44 4 -7797 The Arbors 8 2 10 Bent Tree Rd. (corner Stack & Bent Tree) 3 4 6 -4 5 5 0 Students! Bring Mom and Pop We're 10 minutes to campus! (via Mo-Pac) 12%% - 30 year loans 5%-10% down payment! Five Floor Plane to Choose from. Prices start at $49,950. Pool, clubhouse Models open daily, 9:00-6:00 Marketed 6v CRES REALTORS__________ _ Tuesday, July 28, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEX AN □ P age 9 Brown succeeds in blocking offshore drilling leases LOS ANGELES (UPI) — A federal judge Monday blocked an attem pt by Interior Secre­ tary Jam es Watt to issue 29 leases to drill for oil off the coast of Central California, finding the proposed explora­ tion violated federal law. ‘This is a crucial first step in the fight against the spoil­ ing of scenic and natural re­ sources in California,” Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., who sought the injunction to block the sale, told reporters at San Jose Airport. “ But it does not mean that northern California is safe The decision was also h ailed by en v iro n m en tal groups, who argued that issu­ ing the leases would threaten wildlife and the beauty of the coastline. representa­ Oil company tives predicted the m atter would eventually reach the U.S. Supreme Court. U.S. District Court Judge Mariana Pfaelzer blocked the leasing of the 29 tracts off Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties — with bids totaling $220 million already submitted — on grounds the Interior Department had vio­ lated federal Coastal Zones Management Act the The act requires that cer­ tain coastal activities be in conformance with a federally approved costal zone plan submitted by the state. However, she denied a con­ tention by the state that the Interior Department had vio­ lated the National Environ­ mental Policy Act, the En­ dangered Species Act and the Outer Continetal Shelf Lands Act of 1978, and therefore ap­ proved lease of tracts in the same area. the three The ban halts the leasing of tracts in the Santa Maria geo­ logical basin, stretching from Point Conception to Morro Bay. “The defendants are en­ joined from approving or awarding any leases for any of the tracts at issue under the Coastal Zone Management Act,” said Judge Pfaelzer The judge also ordered that bids and money submitted be returned to the bidder The three tracts opened by the judge s ruling were closed by Judge Pfaelzer’s May 28 preliminary ruling The earli­ er ruling held that 32 of the 111 tracts involved be exclud­ ed from drilling Brown and five state agen­ cies went to court to block President Reagan from open­ ing fragile Northern Califor­ nia coastal environments to offshore oil and gas drilling Brown argued successfully that the offshore oil leases the Coastal would violate Zone Management Act, which savs that any federal offshore activities that “directly af­ fect" a state’s coastal zone must be consistent with the state’s coastal management plan. The Interior Department and several oil companies a r­ gued that the leasing does not “ directly affect" the coastal zone The judge rejected the state’s arguments that other federal statutes also prevent Watt the from permitting drilling, saying oil drilling would have been permitted under other, tederal laws. U.S. Deputy Attorney Gen­ eral Jam es Arnold said a de­ cision on an appeal would not be made until next month. Judge Pfaelzer herself be­ came an issue in the case when news reports revealed in May that she had served as treasurer in 1976 for Brown's first presidential campaign and had to Brown’s 1974 and 1978 guber­ natorial campaigns She in­ sisted there was no potential conflict of interest, however. co ntributed Japan pleased with Ottawa summit • 1981 The New York Times TOKYO — Prim e Minister Zenko Suzuki returned over the weekend from the Ottawa summit of the leading indus­ trial democracies without any comment on its results, but senior officials re­ flect a sense of deep satisfaction. inspired What has this sentiment within the upper reaches of the admin­ istration is not any sense of accomplish­ ment but rather contentment that noth­ ing happened to m ar Japan’s relations with the United States and western Eu­ rope. Briefing the Japanese press on his return, Foreign Minister Sunao Sonoda emphasized that Japan had not been re­ quired to take on any new obligations. What the men preparing the briefs for the prime m inister and his associ­ ates had feared was that Japan’s West­ ern friends would take it to task for the uncomfortably in large their trading accounts. Japan’s exports continue to run much higher than its imports from the United States, Canada and Western Europe. imbalances The prime m inister’s staff had pre­ pared arguments for his use if the issue had come up. The view that Japan had intended to present was that the answer to trade imbalances was not the con­ tinual offering of “ breathing spaces” to weaker trading partners in the form of Japanese export restraints, because this would only lead to a vicious circle of restraints and would result in the contraction of all free economies. In the Japanese view, the answer lies in the “ revitalization" of the less com­ petitive economies, with export re­ straints to be used only rarely. F re­ quent recourse to such restrictions would only damage the image of free economic systems in the eyes of the de­ veloping world and lessen Western in­ fluence. a senior Foreign Ministry offi­ cial said. The official acknowledged that Japan was in the fortunate position of being able to state such virtuous arguments while at the same time serving its own cause. In any event, he said, the argu­ ments did not need to be stated at the level of the seven heads of government because lower-level Japanese aides were able to make their view prevail in the drafting of the official summit statements. Criticism of the Japanese trading po­ sition did not go beyond “vague insinua­ tions” in the speeches of some of the government leaders, the official noted, and the communique did not mention the desirability of self restraint on the part of exporting nations, a code term usually addressed to Japan On the positive side, Japanese offi­ cials noted that by avoiding divisive de­ bate, the seven leaders presented to the Soviet Union an image of cohesion that might act as a deterrent to armed Sovi­ et intervention in Poland. But they said the leaders did not not discuss a con­ tingency position for joint action if Mos­ cow invaded its neighbor. Suzuki was reported as equally satis­ fied with the only bilateral conference that he held within the summit fram e­ work. In his meeting with President Reagan, Suzuki was relieved, according to a Foreign Ministry source, that he was not confronted with another Ameri­ can demand for speedy Japanese action to raise its defense spending. Japanese officials are pleased that Reagan is following his adm inistra­ tion’s stated course of not publicly pillo­ rying America’s allies for defense spending that it deems insufficient and appreciating the president’s restraint in not needling Suzuki after Japan's un­ specific commitment to endeavor, de­ spite constitutional, budgetary and po­ litical restraints, to increase military spending. Presently, Japan is along among major powers in spending less than one percent of its gross national product for defense. Boneheads provide ‘solutions’ for Dallas’ woes we re going to be for it, but in a Bonehead m anner,” spokes­ man Brad Angers said. is “ One of the things we de­ mand to do everything wrong. Because if you do it right, you won’t have to do it over and that will put some­ one out of a job. “ If we increase air traffic, then all the people in Irving (a Dallas suburb) will move back into Dallas and solve our tax problems. “ If we import the M editer­ ranean fruit fly, city officials will have to spray and that will solve our mosquito prob­ lem .” In addition the group, which sponsors a Christmas party each spring, wants to make all the streets in Dallas one way — out of town. “ Can you imagine how that will relieve downtown traffic congestion?” he said. The group is best known for its annual Bonehead Award, an honor given to a non-mem­ ber who best exhibits Bone­ head tendencies. Unlike other prizes, the recipients of the Bonehead Award actually beg the bestowers to pass the tro­ phy on at year’s end. include Past winners of the Bone­ head prize former President Richard Nixon for his football advice and, most recently, Nelson Bunker Hunt and W. Herbert Hunt for “ los­ ing a billion dollars or so in the silver futures m arket ... (and managing) to get them­ selves blamed for the entire fiasco.” The Bonehead Club’s phi­ losophy is simple, captured in it’s motto: “ To learn less and less about more and more un­ til, eventually, we know ev­ erything about nothing.” Members enjoy boasting they each have a small piece of grey m atter lodged in their skulls, and they have their own school — Bonehead U — which confers the doctorate of Cerebrum (brain) Ataxia (confusion). On the premise that any building can have a founda­ tion, but not every foundation can have a 57-story edifice, the Boneheads have con­ structed a 57-story tower (on paper) with the foundation and bottom floor on the top. That leaves 56 floors suspend­ ed in midair above a one-story gap “ We haven’t decided where we want to lay the founda­ tion,” Angers said. “ So we left it there on the top.” Charges, threats hurled In nationwide strike fever By United Prees International Striking municipal workers in Minnesota and Rhode Island began the second week of their walkouts Monday, and 80,000 grocery clerks in California threatened to shelve their jobs unless store owners gave them a 65 percent wage increase. Minnesota union leaders charged that state hospital patients were being drugged to keep them quiet and under control. The commissioner of administration promptly denied this. Several hundred pickets rallied on the capitol steps at the start of the second week of the Minnesota strike by more than 16,000 state workers. They carried picket signs, sang union songs and chanted “Down with (Gov. Albert) Quie in ’83.” But Minnesota officials said all depart­ ments of government were “open and oper­ ating,” although on a curtailed basis, with help from management, supervisors, non­ union employees and members of other unions. Paul Goldberg, an official of the Ameri­ can Federation of State, County and Munic­ ipal Employees, said at the rally, “We know patients are being drugged in state hospitals to keep them quiet and under con­ trol.” Union leaders said they had received re­ ports about mishandling of drugs at Cam­ bridge State Hospital, the Walker State Nursing Home and Willmar State Hospital. In Providence, R.I., city garbage work­ ers, fired last week, showed up at Westmin­ ster Mall Monday and demanded other workers stop cleaning the sidewalks along the downtown shopping area. Police broke up a shouting match and stopped scuffling incidents. There were no arrests or inju­ ries. Mayor Vincent A. Cianci threatened to fire the estimated 1,800 striking clerical and blue collar workers if they do not re­ turn to their jobs Tuesday and end their illegal strike. The ultimatium was the boldest move by the city to end the municipal dispute, triggered July 20 when sewage treatment plant workers walked off their jobs in pro­ test over reduced overtime hours. It soon escalated to a full-scale strike by members of Local 1033 of the Laborers Union. Representatives for major league base­ ball players met in Chicago Monday to dis­ cuss the strike that threatens to force can­ cellation of the rest of the season. Face-to- face negotiations were on hold pending the players' meeting. Marvin Miller, executive director of the Players Association, was to brief player representatives on the latest offer from the owners’ negotiating committee on the is­ sues of free agent compensation and ser­ vice time credit for the games lost because of the strike. The players were not expect­ ed to accept the proposal. More than 80,000 grocery clerks threat­ ened to strike California supermarkets from the Mexican border to San Luis Obispo If their demand for a 65 percent wage increase was not met. The unions had termed the owners’ previ­ ous offer “ridiculous and insulting.” Federal mediators said management had improved its contract offer and that negoti­ ators would return to the bargaining table early Tuesday. The grocers have set a mid­ night Tuesday strike deadline. A journeyman grocery clerk makes about $9.10 an hour in wages with another $4 or so in benefits. In Pennsylvania, negotiations resumed between representatives of Allegheny County and its striking workers. A judge set a hearing date on whether to issue an in­ junction ordering 537 striking employees at Kane Hospital for the aged back to work. The talks broke off last Thursday after lengthy bargaining sessions failed to pro­ duce new contracts to end the strike, now 20 days old. Air traffic controllers nationwide were shooting down their recent settlement with voting running 90 percent against it. Although the official results of a ratifica­ tion vote will not be known until Tuesday, a UPI survey of early returns showed strong rank-and-file dissatisfaction. Union sources predict it will be rejected. The 15,000 members of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization have been voting on a tentative pact reached by union and government negotiators on June 22. About 8,000 construction workers in east­ ern Massachusetts returned to work Mon­ day after settling a five-week strike. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 AM EST 30.00 PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz ll|F A FOUL BALL 15 HIT BEHIND THIRD BASE, IT'S THE SHORTSTOP'SPLAY!' THAT'S THE ME5SA6E I FEEL THE AN6ELT0LP ME TO GIVE TO THE WORLD... ZT MONDAYS PUZZLE SOLVED ljs>_ M IN N E A P O L IS ''Y '/-') l— R CHICAGO ¿ ¿ //r '■ IQW, Jf& X ~-»,xJ5n> f a i r y ^ M I A M t fa im) -rv-i „ % ] »NOW •qt Ain PLOW I UPI W EATHER FO TO CAST ® Th« forecast for Auatln and vicinity calla for partly cloudy aklaa through Wadnaaday with an Incraaslng chanca of thun- darahowara Tuaaday. Tuaaday’a low will ba In tha uppar 70a with tha high approaching tha mld-90a. Winds Tuaaday will ba from tha southaast at 10 to 15 mph. Tha probability of praclpl- tation Tuaaday Is 30 par cant. Nationally, thundarahowars ara axpactad In tha mid-Miaais- aippl Vallay, tha Ohio Vallay and tha lowar Graat Lakaa araa. Ctaar to partly cloudy skios ara axpactad alaawhara. j ^ 2 t THERE ALSO MAV BE A FEU) EARTHQUAKES ANP SOME F100D5 B .C by johnny hart HELP WANTED \ TELEPHONE SALES 5 4 . 5 0 /h o u r. M o n d a y -F rid a y , 5 30-9:30 p.m . 815 Brazos Suite NO. 201. Call 472-1708. R E S E A R C H A S S I S T A N T D o w n to w n la w f i r m needs a s s is ta n t fo r e n viro n m e n ta l, energy, and state agen­ re s e a rc h U n d e rg ra d u a te d e g re e cy p re fe rre d $700 m onth Send resum e to: D a ily Texan, Box D l, A u stin, T X 78712. TOKYO STEAK HOUSE ta k in g a p p lica tio n s fo r is w a i t p e r s o n ( J a p a n e s e s p e a k in g ), ho stperso n and busperson. Call 453-7482 a fte r 2:30 p.m . M O T E L N IG H T C L E R K To w o rk 9 p m -7 a m fiv e n ig h ts w e ekly or e v e ry o ther n ig h t. (A lso need a f te r ­ noon c le rk .) W ill have tim e to study. S a la ry neg o tia b le W ill tra in if you have had some pre vio u s business expe rience. M u st be neat app e a rin g , sober p e r­ sonable, dependable, honest, in good health. A p p ly in person. W EST W IN D S M O T E L A ir p o r t B lvd . and IH 35 FALL RUSH '81 T e m p o r a r y p o s i t i o n s a va ila b le at the U n iv e rs ity Co­ op. Stop by the Personnel O f­ fic e b e tw e e n 12 no on -4:30 t o p . m . , M o n d a y - F r i d a y receive job schedules. E.O .E . ALTERNATIVE EDUCATION counseling c e n te r seeks fu ll tim e d ire c ­ tor, exp e rie n ce d as teacher, c u r ric u lu m d e s ig n e r, s u p e rv is o r T h e C re a tiv e Rapid L e a rn in g C enter is a u n iq u e g ro u p of persons w o rk in g w ith out of school youth funded by the A u s tin area, g r a n ts f r o m b o th g o v e r n m e n t and p r i v a t e sources W rite by A u gust 1st, to C R L C / A . I .L . , 2330 w ith G uadalupe, A u stin , T x. 78705. A tte n tio n B M ille r . re s u m e , in A u s tin 's GALLERIA One fin e st of C o ntinental R estaurants has lim ite d openings fo r noon s h ift (10:30-3 p .m .) T able service personnel - A p p ly in person - West 38th and K e rb y Lane. P A R t T Í M E and fu ll tim e te c h n ic a l e d i­ to rs needed. M u s t have stron g b a c k ­ gro u n d in c h e m is try , physics, e le c tric a l eng in e e rin g , o r c h e m ic a l e n g in e e rin g . P rio r e d itin g e xp e rie n ce p re fe rre d P a rt-tim e e d itin g to be done at hom e. Good pay and e x c e lle n t expe rience. Send q u a lific a tio n s to T ra n s la to rs , P.O. Box 7552, A u stin , T X 78712.__________ J A P A N E S E T R A N S L A T O R S , p a rt or fu ll tim e , u rg e n tly needed. W o rk at yo u r own speed at hom e or in o u r o ff ice. Send q u a lific a tio n s to T ra n s la to rs , P.O. Box _________ 7552, A u s tin , T X 787)2. A P A R T M E N T M A N A G E R fo r student com p le x . R e ply by m a il to M a n a g e r, 104 E 32nd, A u stin , Texas 78705 A ID E FO R p riv a te k in d e rg a rte n , n u r ­ sery school in W e stlake H ills , 2-6 p .m . C a ll 327-1530 a fte r 5 p.m .____________ M A IN T E N A N C E P E R S O N w a n te d . $3 40 to s ta rt. A p p ly w e ekdays 1-6 p.m . R iv e rs id e T w in C inem a L I K E TO ta lk on the phone? G et paid fo r it. $3.50-$5.50'hour No s e llin g N o rth area M o n d a y -T h u rs d a y 6-9:30 p.m . C all __________________ Renee at 837-0045. B A B Y S IT T E R N E E D E D fo r tw o boys 6, 8 O ccasion al evenings, m y hom e. W ill p ro v id e tra n s p o rta tio n 447-5932._______ S E C U R IT Y G U A R D S needed E x c e lle n t pay fo r dep endable in d iv id u a ls A p p ly in person. D obie C enter, 2021 G uadalupe. B A B Y S IT T E R W A N T E D in hom e P a rt- tim e even ings One in fa n t. S a la ry nego­ __________ tia b le . C a ll 327-0000. ____ roses in yo u r spare tim e M A K E $200/week s e llin g in n ig h tc lu b s and din- nerhouses. It's fu n . M u s t be a ttr a c tiv e and o utgoing and w o rk n ig h ts T ra n s ­ p o rta tio n re q u ire d . C a ll Shannon 447- 9 3 4 2 . ____ _______________ S E C R E T A R Y /W O R D P rocesso r needed im m e d ia te ly in young, g ro w in g re a l es­ ta te a p p ra is a l f ir m in d ow ntow n area. M in im u m 2 ye a rs s e c re ta ria l e x p e ri­ ence and 6 0 /w p m R esum e and r e fe r ­ ences h e lp fu l. Jo L y n n 472-3802 P A R T -T IM E d ire c to r of d a y c a re p ro ­ g ra m fo r e le m e n ta ry age c h ild re n M u st be a v a ila b le e ve ry w e ekday a fte rn o o n b e g in n in g m id -A u g u s t. E x p e rie n c e m a n d a to ry E xte n d -A -C a re , 4006 Speed­ _______ w a y. E . O . E . E N E R G E T IC E X P E R IE N C E D a d u lts needed to r p a rt tim e c h ild c a re M u s t be a v a ila b le e ve ry w e ekday a fte rn o o n to w o rk w ith e le m e n ta ry school kid s Job begins m id -A u g u s t E x te n d -A -C a re , 4006 Speedway. E .O .E . P A R T T IM E pre-school te acher needed a t c h ild d e ve lo p m e n t ce n te r near UT. E x p e rie n c e w ith young c h ild re n a m u st. A p p lic a tio n s close J u ly 31st. C a ll M rs . Reid, 478-5424 between 9-5 _ _ F U L L T IM E pre-school teacher E x p e ­ rie n c e and e du cation needed. C all 459- __________________ 0247 W A N T E D G E O L O G IS T B.S and up to one y e a rs ' expe rience, p re fe ra b ly in South Texas U ra n iu m p ro v in c e fo r te m ­ p o ra ry p osition C a ll Sandy (303) 761- _____________________________ 5921 Ñ ÍG H T H A W K S T E A K House is ta k in g a p p lic a tio n s tim e hostperson. fu ll H ours T ue sd a y-S a tu rd a y. A p p ly in p e r­ IH 3 S _ __________________ son 6007 N W IN E E N T H U S IA S T needed fo r f u ll­ tim e sales p osition M u s t be a s e lf- s ta rt­ tra n s p o rta tio n . re lia b le er and have Good o p p o rtu n ity to b u ild a fu tu re C all Isaac fo r in te r v iew a t 473-6415. fo r 4 t h fo r you. H o urs are M A D DOG and B ean's is now a cce p tin g fu ll tim e c o u n te r help A p p ly in person, 512 W. 2 . ____________________ NEEDED MAINTENANCE person to help in re s to ra tio n of h is to ric a l hom e, if you are a ja c k -o f-a ll-tra d e s , th is is the iob fle x ib le . Pay $4 65 hour. A p p ly 611 W 14th St be­ ______________ tw een 10 and 4 PART TIM E po sitio n a v a ila b le in paw n shop Some m o rn in g s 8-11 a m , som e evenings 5-8 P m. E v e ry S a tu rd a y 9 a m 6 p m C a ll D ru fo r a p p o in tm e n t to ________________ in te rv ie w 476-7772. N E E D E D BU SP ER S O N S, lu n ch and d in n e r A p p ly in person between 2 p mi.-4 p m B rid g e r's Creek R e sta u ra n t. 414 B a rto n S prings Road WANTED WE WANT YOUR BIKES! We buy re p a ir sell and tra d e b ic y c le s B ob's Bike and Key 5413 N. L a m a r 452-9777 ____________________ FA ST CASH: We buy or loan on gold and siiver m any form 454-0459 5134 Burnet Road CLASS R IN G S , gold ¡ewelry, old pocket stamps wanted watches, currency, High prices paid Pioneer Coin Com pa­ ny 5555 Nor*h L a m a r aidg C-113 in Com m erce Park, 451 3607 N E W L Y a P P o F n T E D assistant protes- sor seeks house sitting position tor 1981* 82 Call 471-3211 TUTORING M ES S P E C IA L IS T needed to help tutor two courses Call otter 11 30 a m MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R I E N C E D P IA N O G U I T A R teacher Begm ners-advanced U T de­ gree A fter 1 p m 459-4082 451-0053 G U IT A R LESSOÑS-classical and folk N ear campus, experienced teacher 479- 1065.____________ _ ___________________ P R IV A T E M U S IC instruction .n voice Brno a d music tftaery Beginning ough advanced Students accepted 3Z7-5404 DALLAS (UPI) - Anyone who watches prime-time tele­ vision knows that being rich and influential in Big D is not all wildcatting and steerwres- tling, and sometimes even that gets dull. So 57 of D allas’ jaded elite gather every Friday at noon to devise ways to liven things up. For their latest feat, the Bonehead Club decided to call a strike. In addition to picket­ ing a movie called “ Nobody’s P e rfe k t,” the group has called for higher w ater rates, bigger potholes and importing the Mediterranean fruit fly. “ Instead of protesting ev­ erything city hall is doing, SERVICES ORAL SURGERY PATIENTS S tu d en ts in n eed o f having third m olars (W isd o m te eth ) rem o v ­ ed a n d w ho w o u ld be w illin g to p a rtic ip a te in an analgesic drug study a t red uced fees, please call Donald R. Mohlisch, M.D., D.D.S. 451-0254 S urgery can be a rra n g e d to be done a t the U niversity o f Texas i f S t u d e n t H e a lt h S e r v ic e desired DON'T L E A V E TOW N! F R E E P R E G N A N C Y TESTS a n d r e f e r r a l s t o AU STIN R E S O U R C E S W o m e n ' s R e f e r r a l Center 603 W 13th No 210 476-6878 M S Shuttle 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 PR EG N A N C Y T ESTING Texas Problem Pregnancy 507 Powell St M -F , 7:30-5 30 474-9930 J E N N IN G S ' M O V IN G and Hauling D e­ large or pendable personal service, sm all jobs 7 days/w eek. 442-6181 A R T'S M O V IN G and Hauling any area 24 hours, 7 days 447-9384, 442-0194 G R E P R E P classes for sum m er exam s beginning June 9th E xcellent instruc­ to r/m a te ria ls Call now 443-9354 fa ir has A Q U A F E S T M O T O R C Y C L E free exhibition space available for mo­ torcycle clubs and individual bikes Con­ tact 258-6927 day or evening or 282-3923 evenings C O N C R E T E W O R K of any kind, large or sm all, free estimates, call anytim e _________ 443-4104 G R E P R E P classes for F a ll exams. Complete m ath verbal review, excel­ lent m aterials-in s tru cto r 443-9354 now LOST & FOUND FO U N D B L O N D E fem ale m ixed breed puppy w ith flea collar. Found Sunday night, corner of 26th 8, Leon C all 472- ____________________________ 3254 F O U N D K IT T E N W 33rd Black col­ lar with m asking tape 472-8970, 453-7833 LOST SUNG LASSES Black w ire rim , m m en's room by Cactus Cafe on F r i­ day Chris 458-5762 FOR RENT O N E M O N T H free Office, warehouse space available i 000-17,500 sq ft a v a il­ able at 5214 Burleson Rd Realtors w el­ come Cali leasing agent at 441-4044____ SH AR E O N E room office w ith 48K com ­ puter prestigious West Austin location $240 453-6171 PERSONAL P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ’ F re e preg­ n a n c y testing and referra ls 474-99» w a n t e d " C O N S C IE N T IO U S creative individuals tor the betterm ent of m an­ kind Call Dyonne 472-8796 affer 7 p m__ F E M A L E S 'H H A N D S O M E guy needs date for Kinks concert Aug 6. Your tic k ­ e t free. C all 4S9-8124 t 53 Containers 55 Keep out 56 Enjoyed a rink 61 Old Greek city 62 Give 64 " — ben Adhem" 65 Calgary Stampede, e g 66 Strength 67 Thoroughfare 68 Sad sound 69 Accom­ plished DOWN ACROSS 1 Fatten 5 Intrigue 10 Gem 14 Wings 15 Prior to Dial 16 Melancholy 17 Calamity 19 Lake 20 Paper Pref 21 Man s nick­ name 22 Duck genus 23 Forest area 25 Go quickly 26 Team 30 Lamb's parent 31 Cloaks 34 Liqueur 36 Mail 38 High in pitch 39 Reagan, et al 2 words 42 Babylonian god 43 Cudgel 44 Bay window 45 Caressed 47 Obstacle 49 Anxiety 50 Help 51 Ballots 1 2 3 14 17 20 34 39 42 45 ¿1 é4 <7 18 R 23 35 143 I 1 Light source 2 Other Lat 3 Grate 4 Stand up to 5 Girl's name 6 Ship area 7 City near Denver: 2 words 8 Asian buffalo 9 Dregs 10 Be prevalent 11 Solar system models 12 Emanation 13 Camera part 18 Assn 24 Expect 25 A Marx 26 Altercation 27 Peace deity 28 Delegation 29 Ratite 31 “Hoot — !'' 32 Reset 33 Designate 35 Declined 37 French artist 40 Young 'un 41 — light 46 Kind of paper 48 Old French coin 51 Bravery 52 Snow runner 53 Meat 54 Love poem 55 Ice mass 57 Sour 58 Beginner 59 British school 60 Physics unit 63 Hudson Bay, eg 10 I 11 I 12 | 13 6 7 8 4 5 9 ■ ” J _ ■ 24 37 I T ~w 22 [38 41 B L O O M C O U N T Y H6APP ANY- 7H/HGTHOM UMOdUe# YCT? \ YCAH. HSS GOT A LIV£ INTER­ VIEW HfTH TH€ PRJNCi ABOLTT TO COM€ /N 0V6H TH€ S A rcu rrc. b y B e r k e B r e a t h e d 28 30 ...HO, S&t/OVSCY... /SH'T MAKfNG A HWWAOe WOM SOMETHING UKC STAYING ON A HO A SC, CHOCK? h [47 [50 Water trust fund debate rescheduled Discussion postponed because biii lacked votes to pass By GARY RASP Daily Texan Staft Debate on a controversial plan to create a wa­ ter trust fund from excess state revenue was de­ layed by the Texas Senate Monday because the proposal’s sponsor did not have the required votes for passage. Sen Ed Howard, D-Texarkana, said he post­ poned the debate until Tuesday because he need­ ed votes from two senators who were absent Mon­ day House Joint Resolution 6 proposes a constitu­ tional amendment that would set aside one-half of the state’s surplus from each biennium to be de­ posited in a fund for water conservation, quality enhancement and flood control. The plan, supported by House Speaker Bill Clayton, would also authorize the Legislature to pledge $500 million of the state debt to guarantee municipal water project bonds up to $1.2 billion. In addition, the proposal would raise the inter­ est rate from 6 to 12 percent on authorized but unissued bonds. The raise would allow municipal­ ities which have submitted applications for water projects to proceed with construction The House of Representatives passed the mea­ sure with minor changes last week The legisla­ tion needs only Senate approval before being put before voters in a special November election. Legislators are in general agreement over both the bond guarantee provision and the increase in interest rates. However, in last week s meeting of the Senate Finance Committee — which even­ tually passed the measure by a 9-3 vote — opposi­ tion arose to the dedication of excess state reve- nue. Sen Ray Farabee, D-Wichita Falls, led the op­ position, continuing his resistance to earmarking excess revenue for such a fund , . , Farabee said he acknowledges the need for wa­ ter development, but, he said, it would not be in the best long-range interests of the state to set aside surplus monies. “ As we dedicate more funds, our hands will be tied m ore,” Farabee said following Monday’s Senate adjournment. “ It will take away our flexi­ bility and lead to a tax increase.” Approximately two-thirds of the state s $26.6 billion budget for 1982-83 is already tied up in ded­ icated funds, either by the Constitution or legisla­ tive mandates. The Wichita Falls senator said he intends to introduce an amendment to Clayton’s resolution that would strike the provision calling for the sur­ plus dedication. Farabee said that a sufficient water develop­ ment program could be created if the Legislature would pledge $500 million from the state debt as a guarantee of water project bonds up to $1.2 bil­ lion. “ I think that if they (the Senate) honestly look at the dedicated fund concept, they’ll see that it will only tie us up further,’’ he said. Howard said the vote on the resolution will be “ very close” and that he preferred to wait anoth­ er day so Sen. Bill Meier, D-Euless, and Sen. Bob Glasgow, D-Stephenville, could be present. Airport plan ‘desirable’ for city, Air Force air traffic Jerry Jackson, Patti Joseph and Robert Tablta (i-r) sí fan Allen ¿am p, TSP Staff UT staff members turn softball players at night By JIM HANKINS Daily Texan Staff By day they work for the University, but at night they don their uniform s and take their places on Austin’s top-notch softball teams Robert Tabita, Jerry Jackson and Patti Joseph lead dual lives as members of the Austin Terror, winner of the AquaFest Co- Ree Softball Tournament last weekend Tabita, an associate professor in micro­ biology who coaches and sponsors the “Ter­ ror,” said 16 teams competed in the double elimination the Austin area and two from Tyler tournament 14 from The Terror was undefeated in four games when the championship game Sunday against one of the Tyler teams was rained out, SO “ we were declared the champion,” Tabita said Tabita said he plays softball for several team s three or four nights a week, which helps him unwind after a hard day of teach­ ing and research “ There’s a lot of pressure in science,’ he said. “ I have a big lab, which is a lot of res|M»nsibility This is a real good relaxa­ tion outlet for m e.” Tabita got his Ph.D. from Syracuse Uni versity and did post-doctorate work at Washington State University before coming to the University in 1973 He played high school baseball in New York and even had offers to play for profes­ sional ball clubs. But Tabita refuses to re­ veal which teams tried to recruit him be­ cause “ I’d for my professional ability (in microbiology) than for my baseball or softball playing rather be known Tabita is researching the biological regu­ lation of nitrogen fixation in non-legumous bacteria Nitrogen fixation is a process PINBALL MACHINES VIDEO GAMES POOL TABLES GAMKROOM ARCADE IN **’ IH >11 IK, M A LL LOWER 1.EVKI 10 am 12 midnight Mon Sat whereby bacteria converts atmospheric ni­ trogen into ammonia to form protein “ I don’t want people to think that all I do is play softball,” he said. But Jerry Jackson, an assistant instruc­ tor in philosophy, admits that he is a bit of a softball junkie “ Sometimes it’s addictive rather than re­ laxing,” he said “ I feel bad if a game gets rained out.” He said he plays city league softball nine months a year and also finds tim e for ten­ nis, bowling and touch football. Jackson said softball has not led him to any profound philosophical insights, “ I just go out and have fun,” he said. “ It does introduce a spirit of cooperation and competition that I think is important for the moral development of children. “ Unfortunately, a lot of adults haven’t migrated past that stage Sometimes par­ their kids like in Little ents will ride League baseball, but it’s usually not that bad in city league softball ’’ Jackson said the women on the co-rec teams are tough competitors. Co-rec soft­ ball rules call for 10-member team s con­ sisting of five women and five men, with women and men alternating in the batting order. “The women are no drop-off from the men,” Jackson said “ We have a woman outfielder who's got a rifle arm Patti Joseph, who works for the Office of the Registrar and catches for the Terror during tournaments, said the co-rec games can be “ pretty physical, but I like the com­ petition,” she said Joseph won the women’s “ Most Valuable Player” award for the AquaFest tourna ment. “ I was happy,” she said. “ We were be hind in the last game and I hit a triple and we went ahead By JODY DENBERG Daily Texan Staff The new municipal airport proposed for Bergstrom Air Force Base “ is desirable be­ cause it seems to solve se­ rious problem s for both Bergstrom Air F'orce Base and the City of Austin,” City Manager Dan Davidson said Monday. Davidson presented the plan for construction of the airport, developed by Austin’s Department of Aviation, to the City Council last Thurs­ day. The plan calls for the con­ struction of two parallel run­ ways just west of the exist­ ing Bergstrom AFB runway at a slightly different align­ ment. The easterly runway would be used for Air Force operations while the westerly runway would be used for ci­ vilian air carriers. The re­ quired 4,300 feet of separation between runways would allow for simultaneous use. two the A second municipal airport for small, private aircraft would also be built at an un­ determined site under the plan. City officials have said that funds from the sale of lands currently used for Rob­ ert Mueller Municipal Airport would finance the sm aller fa­ j v A N T I I I I ONE F R E E ! GAME 25» V A L U E | ! I I I I I ■ I | B — J H igh Q u a lity p lan ts, pottery a n d accessories w ith lo w prices. Free in fo rm a tio n on p la n t care. any plant purchase w ith this coupon I 20% off | I I II I I ■ LOWER LEVEL DOBIE MALL 2 0 2 1 GUADALUPE OPEN 10 a m -9 pm M o n .-S a t. 4 7 4 - 7 7 1 9 L IM IT ONE P E R CUSTO M ER Offer not good during other in -,toro special, cility. think “ We’re excited about the proposal and it has great potential for the city as well as the Air Force,” Roy Bayless, Austin’s aviation di­ rector, said. “ In joint use, we’re talking about sharing a tower and common control air space, but we do agree with the Air Force’s concern for mixing high-performance aircraft with light general aviation.” The Air Force has ex­ pressed concern about locat­ ing an airport for smaller air­ craft in close proximity to the main airport. The proposed com plex would include a terminal ca­ pable of accom m odating more than 30 aircraft, as well as additional areas for airline and support services, accord­ ing to press releases from the city. ed to d ec id e T h u rsd a y whether to pursue the project, and if it does, a joint use re­ quest will be prepared and submitted for Air Force offi­ cials to consider, Davidson said If a joint use request is filed, the Pentagon will make the final decision, he said. “ We re hopeful a decision could be expedited, because they have looked at similar plans before, and the land is being looked at by prime in­ dustrial investors,” Davidson said. “ While the Air Force has indicated joint use is fa­ vorable under certain circum ­ stances, they’ve also indicat­ ed if included with conflicts at the airport.” favorable it ’s not The cost of the airport de­ pends on whether the Air Force will pay to have its run­ way realigned. A faculty committee judgement prompted the bureau to give the 1981 graduate the United States L a w Week Award. The award is a year’s subscription to United St at es Law Week, a national survey of current law. Federal agency rul­ ings, recent court decisions and all Supreme Court opinions make up the publication. Calderon has been hired as a trial attorney in the tax division of the Internal Revenue Service. Film library closed M aterials in the Film Library, a unit of the UT General Libraries, will be unaccessible until Aug. 16 while repairs are made to floors damaged in recent floods. Films and equipment were not damaged, but flooring will be completely replaced, causing the three-week delay. Faculty members needing films or previews of films during this time should contact Jane Hazelton, media coordinator for the Film Library, at 471-3572. Around Campus Law student receives award Conference postponed Byron Calderon, a UT law school graduate, has received an award from the Bureau of National Affairs for making the most satisfactory progress in the final year of law study. Conference to close with Spanish TV show By C.R. FRINK Daily Texan Staff Mexican television star Raul Velasco will tape his show, “Siempre en Domingo,” at the Frank Erwin Center Satur­ day. Sponsored by the Mexican-American Chamber of Commerce, the presentation coincides with the 1 U.S./Mexican Sister Cities Conference which will be held . in Austin Wednesday through Saturday. Richard Roland, of the Mexican-American Chamber of Commerce, said ‘‘Siempre en Domingo” - “Every Sun­ day" — js “considered to be like an Hispanic Ed Sullivan Show ” The show, which airs Sunday afternoons, presents ipusic, dance, comedy and history from the Hispanic cu- tiire, he said. ^ The Austin segment will be broadcast Aug. 9 on the Spanish International Network — Cable Channel 13 in Aus- ' tin." MACC literature states that “Siempre en Domingo ’ is . Seen by 200 million people every week in the Southwest, Mexico, the Carribean and Central and South America. The national finals of the third annual “Señorita Amis­ tad Latina - U.S.A.” beauty pageant will be part of the show. The winner will represent the United States in the “Señorita Latinoamericana” competition Oct. 17 in Aca­ pulco, Mexico. The program will include Austin scenes, such as the Capitol, Fiesta Gardens and the UT campus, Roland said. The taping will showcase the different cuitares of Austin and the exposure ‘ ‘will really put us on the map, Roland ___________________ ___ said. “ Urban Education Renewal: Reorganizing for the F uture,” a conference sponsored by the Department of Educational Plan­ ning, has been postponed. Planners are considering dates in late October or early November. The conference was originally scheduled for July 27-30. Parenting session set The American Friends Service Committee and the Friends Meeting of Austin (Quakers) will sponsor a workshop and dis­ cussion on “ Peaceful Parenting,” Wedenesday at 7:30 p.m. Mark Gregg of the UT RASSL Learning Center will lead the discussion, designed to enable participants to deal non-violently and positively with their own children and those they come into contact with. The workshop will also deal with encouraging positive attitudes in children’s relationships with each other. 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