£Zfr9-t8ts¿ xi s v n v a 0 6 9 Wdd Da il y T e x a n k Hospital death rates told airness, usefulness of U.S. list debated Associated Press WASHINGTON — The govern­ ment Wednesday published a list of about 270 hospitals reporting unu­ sually high or low death rates among Medicare patients, but warned against using it as a con­ sumer guide to quality health care. immediately con­ fronted by debate over whether it smears reputable institutions, pro­ vides valuable new information for consumers or repudiates hospitals with high death rates. The list was The Health Care Financing Ad­ ministration, which runs Medicare, released the statistical tables along with a host of precautionary state­ ments that the numbers themselves "have no intrinsic meaning" and, therefore, are unreliable for judging a person's chances of success in any particular hospital. That assessment was shared by industry representatives, some of whom called the report unfair, mis­ leading and meaningless. "It really is of no value to the con­ sumer," said Jack Owen, executive vice president of the American Hos­ pital Association. "You can't tell from the list whether a hospital is good or bad. Our concern is that it will frighten or cause apprehension among the elderly." "This is a terrible mistake," said Dr. Merlin DuVal of the American Healthcare Institute, which repre­ sents non-profit multi-hospital groups. Dr. Jo Ivey Boufford, president of New York City Health and Hospi­ tals Corp., said, "The list gives the dangerous and mistaken impression that certain facilities operated by the HHC have unusually high mortality rates among its Medicare popula­ tion. HHC considers the unquali­ fied public issuance of this list an irresponsible act on the part of this federal agency that does the hospi­ tals and public a great disservice." But others said breakdowns of the mortality figures to show death rates for specific operations, such as coronary bypass surgery, will pro­ vide important guidance for pa­ tients facing surgery and trying to choose a hospital — guidance that never before has been made avail­ able. "What it does is allow people to make choices they were shut out from making in the past," said Sid­ ney Wolfe of the Public Citizen Health Research Group, an arm of Ralph Nader's consumer organiza­ tion. "There was no information that was more secret" than hospital suc­ cess rates, Wolfe added. The data were compiled as part of routine reviews of the care given pa­ tients under Medicare, the govern­ ment health insurance program for the elderly or disabled. The hospi­ tals were picked by a computer as "outliers," hospitals whose death rates fell well outside the projected range. Last week, the agency said it was sending the list to state peer review organizations and asking them to check the reason for the aberrant figures. At that time, it refused to make the list public. But under heavy pressure, the agency did so on Wednesday while expressing skepticism about its value. "The numbers have no intrinsic meaning and they should not be cause for public concern," said Dr. Henry Desmarais, the agency's act­ ing administrator. "To use this data correctly one must view it in context with other relevant information.... We strongly caution the general public against drawing any conclu­ sions from these statistics alone." Some shortcomings in the data were immediately apparent. One Nevada institution, for ex­ ample, was cited because it had a death rate of 87.6 percent, while the government's computer said its pro­ jected death rate based on diag­ noses should have been 22.5 per­ cent. Blacks call director change racist Just hanging out J u d y W a lg re n /D a ily T e x a n S ta ff Lee Freewall and Jenny Thompson, both 15, take time Park near Deep Eddy Pool. Both girls are sophomores out of their lunch break to watch the ducks at Eilers at Stephen F. Austin High School. Nader urges students to abandon routines counsel I have received from him." BSA members sharply criticized King for not consulting them in choosing a new center director. "The Black Student Student Alli­ ance is opposed to the fact that black students were not approached about the changes in the African and Afro-American Studies Cen­ ter," said Nedre Deajon, psycholo­ gy/Afro-American junior and BSA member. "We should be notified. Our feedback should be solicited when any changes are being made. studies "Any move that is detrimental to (the black) community can be con­ sidered racist, and this was a detri­ mental move," she said. BSA fliers distributed around campus this week read, "As black students we can not tolerate or ac­ cept the racist actions of Dr. King." But Wright said King's action was not racially motivated. "I don't see how in the world the (BSA) can see it as being racist," Wright said. "Nothing King has done is racist. And I think I know what racism is. I get bothered when people racism around. It dilutes the term. It seems unfair" to King. the word toss Warfield said King approached him last week, saying it was time for a four-year evaluation of the cen­ ter director. But Warfield said King asked fewer than four of the 10 cen­ ter faculty to determine whether Warfield should remain as director. Johnny Butler, associate professor of sociology at the center and one of the faculty members King consult­ ed, said King did not pick faculty members he thought would recom­ mend Warfield's replacement. It wasn't a punitive change," said Butler, w ho has worked at the center for 12 years. "John had told me he w ished he had time to do more writing and research. So my com m ent to Bob was, '! don't think John would object (to a change).' "(King) could have contacted" more faculty as well as students, Butler said. "But I don't believe he should have to. I don't think the de­ cision was racist or violated any rules," Butler said. King is not required to consult faculty before appointing a chair­ man, Butler said. Darrick Eugene, econom ics/gov­ ernment senior and BSA member, said King's action was "an outrage and a violation of the black com m u­ nity." "The center is the focal point of our com munity," Eugene said. "It's where we feel w e have som e place that's home." Deajon said the BSA will meet with King Thursday. The group is not opposed to Wright, she said. said he does not think his stance was the reason behind his removal. But he said he would not rule out that possibility. "Somebody may have gotten fed up with Warfield's mouth," War­ field said. On Thursday, King appointed George Wright, a black assistant professor of history, to head the center effective Sept. 1. King declined comment on the decision Wednesday. But in a March 6 prepared statement King said, "I feel that John Warfield has done a fine job of leading the center since the mid-1970s. I appreciate the dedication that he has brought to his office and I value the advice and Spain votes to stay in NATO Associated Press MADRID, Spain — Spaniards voted Wednesday to keep their country in NATO in a surprise victory for the pro-European policies of Socialist Prime Minister Felipe Gonzalez, official projections showed. With 82.2 percent of the ballots counted, returns showed 53 percent of the voters favored the govern­ ment's decision to keep Spain in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Alfonso Guerra, vice prime minister, said. Speaking on nationwide television from his Mon- cloa Palace residence outside Madrid, Gonzalez called the referendum's results "a success for all Spaniards, not just one sector." "The res'ult reinforces and consolidates the path to peace and prosperity Spain undertook a decade ago," he said. Guerra said 39 percent of the ballots cast had gone against the referendum. The remaining 8 per­ cent constituted ballots that were either blank or had been disqualified, said Jose Barrionuevo, interi­ or minister. The projections, according to Guerra, show ed 59 percent of the country's 28.8 million registered vot­ ers had participated in Spain's third referendum since the return to democracy in 1977. During the 40-day campaign, the strongly pro- NATO conservative opposition called on Spaniards to abstain from voting to protest holding the re­ ferendum, saying it was unnecessary. As recently as last week, public opinion polls in­ dicated voters w ould reject NATO membership by a margin of 4 to 7 percentage points. The surprise vote results signalled strong rejec­ tion of the conservatives, and indicated Gonzalez could defeat conservative and com munist oppo­ nents to win another four-year term if general elec­ tions are held as expected in October. The U.S. State Department welcom ed the pro- NATO vote in a statement that said, "In strengthen­ ing the security of its democratic values, Spain has also strengthened that of its friends and allies." By MARILYN LAMENSDORF D a ily T e x a n S ta ff Consumer advocate and lawyer Ralph Nader told University law students W ednesday to experiment during law school and find a com ­ mitment and a cause "other than helping som e poor defendant." "Get yourself a cause — now is the time w hen you are free to pio­ neer and experiment with what kind of lawyer you want to be," he said. "You can earn a good living with a trained robot mind; there is a temptation to follow the conventi­ onal party line." Nader stressed to the students the value of summer internships, extracurricular activities and the in­ dividual's causes and ideals. "Sam­ ple it all. Don't get into the routine of spending all of your waking hours studying cases," he said. The speech opened activities of the law school's 18th annual W. Page Keeton Law Week. Nader said law students should be creative because of the growing use of computers and because law school curriculum is influenced by the conventional issues dealt with by lawyers. "The curriculum is shaped by the job market," Nader said. "Between your classes do you discuss the as­ sault on law or corporate crime?" tort Nader asked the students to im­ agine going into an interview for a big corporation and telling a compa­ ny representative that they special­ ize in corporate crime in law school with a special em phasis on prosecu­ tion. "Why don't you study corporate crime in law school? Because there are not enough appeals of corporate crime to get into the textbooks," Nader said. "Far more people are killed by corporate crime than crimi­ nal crimes," he said, describing the reason for his crusade for consumer protection. "No criminal ever gave you can­ cer no matter how hard he breathed on you," he said. In describing his cause of con­ sumer rights, Nader said law stu­ dents' appreciation of tort law is only at the microscopic level. "The system does not com pensate for a number of people" w ho have the Ralph Nader right said. to consum er safety, N ad er "The com pensation is one of so­ cial utilities," he said C onsum er protection cases serve a d eterren t function, N ad er said. "T hey cause the co m pany to re d e ­ sign prod ucts or be m ore careful," he said. "They also g en erate infor­ m ation that w ould never have seen the light of day. "For exam ple, trial law yers broke throug h with the asb rsto s inform a­ tio n ," N ader said Trial law yers catch far more defi­ ciencies in com pany p ro ducts th an d o regulating agencies, N ader said. That inform ation is in tu rn placed in the m edia and used by the regu lat­ ing agencies them selves, he said. to C orporate crim e cases serve further hum an n g h ts in the area of health and safety, N a d er said "B e­ cause if you're not aro u n d you c a n 't enjoy the p ro d u c t," he said O ther law w eek e v e n ts include a barbecue, race, aw a rd s p re se n ta ­ tion, a beer party, eating contests, gam e and athletic to u rn am en ts and speakers. State Sen. Ray Farabee, D-Wichita Falls, will speak on "Legal C a re ers in the Texas S en ate" at 8 p.m . T h ursday in th e law school c o u rt­ room Law w eek's keynote sp eaker is Jo­ seph Jam ail, w ho will speak at 3:30 p .m . M arch 19 in the C harles 1. Francis A uditorium The H ild eb ran d M oot C o u rt Competition Finals will be at 3 p m. M arch 20 in the T ow nes Hail C o u rt­ room. Police officer survives point-blank range shot By KELLYE NORRIS Daily Texan Staff Session said. An Austin police officer escaped serious Atistin police Officer C.F. Adams said tfvera began to frisk Washington for weap­ injury Wedesday when a shot fired at ■ j ln s when the man pulled a .25-caliber auto­ ons when the man pulled a .25-caliber auto­ point-blank range struck his buUetpror'VV ¡Vatic pistol from his pants, pointed it at the vest. The officer's assailant, Courtne ington, turned the gun on himself after tir­ ing at the officer, police said. Washington, 23, died at Brackenridge Hospital of a single gunshot wound to the head, a hospital spokesman said. His death has been ruled a suicide, the spokesman said. The officer, Ramiro "Junior" Olvera, suf­ fered a bruised abdomen. Austin police Sgt. Earnest Session said Olvera was called to a disturbance at 7218 Teaberry Drive shortly after 6 a.m. Mon­ day. "He arrived, he was admitted to the house and he confronted the suspect in one of the bedrooms" o f the two-story house, 4 [ficeris stomach and fired a single shot. "If ¿truck the lower edge of Olvera's vest arid was stopped," Adams said. Session said the suspect was about two feet from the officer when he fired. Session said the suspect, still armed, fled the bedroom and ran downstairs. Adams said a resident of the house heard one shot followed by three or four more and went downstairs, where he confronted Washing­ ton in the living room. Adams said the two men struggled brief­ ly for the gun before Washington collapsed. The second man told police Washington was bleeding from the head during the scuffle. "He apparently shot himself immediately after firing at the officer," Adams said. '-¿He had shot himself by the time the other man reached him " An Emergency Medical Services spokes­ man said Washington had no pulse when paramedics arrived at the scene, but said medical personnel were able to revive the suspect. Washington died at Brackenridge about half an hour later, the spokesman said. Session said Olvera never fired at the suspect, although he did draw his weapon after Washington fired at him. Austin police Sgt. Don Martin said offi­ cers had answered two other disturbance calls at that address Wednesday morning. The first call came at 12:59 a.m. and the second at 5:26 a.m. Martin said Washington had gone to the house to attempt to talk to an old girlfriend. "He went there several times, but she would never let him in," Martin said. "The third time he went back, he was banging on one of the windows trying to get her to let him in. When she wouldn't, he pulled a screen off one of the w indow s and got in that way " Austin police also answered a distur­ bance call at the address earlier this month, records show. "She has had problems in the past with him (Washington)," Session said. Session said Olvera, w ho joined the de­ partment two years ago, could have been seriously injured if he had not been wear­ ing the bullet-proof vest. "He could have been hurt severely," Ses­ sion said. "He could easily have been killed. I would say the vest saved his life." Police are not required to wear the vests, which are routinely provided to all patrol officers. An officer called to assist Olvera said he was not wearing a vest and "might have been killed if I'd been the first one in there." will not be an internal affairs inves­ tigation into the shooting. Session said. By RUDY SUSTAITA Daily Texan Staff The director of the African and Afro-American Studies and Re­ search Center and members of the Black Student Alliance said last week's change in the center's direc­ torship may have been racially in­ sensitive. John Warfield, African and Afro- American Studies and Research Center director, was asked last week to resign his post by Robert King, dean of the College of Liberal Arts. Warfield said King's decision may not have been democratic. Warfield, center director for 13 years, said King should have con­ sulted all faculty members affiliated John Warfield with the center as well as black stu­ dent leaders before making his deci­ sion to make a change in the cen­ ter' s directorship. Instead, King discussed his deci­ sion with a small group of center faculty, Warfield said. "It wasn't my decision," said Warfield, who will continue to teach at the center. "I didn't choose to step down. It was racist, if in fact a full complement of black students and faculty were not involved in the change." Warfield said he would not resist King's request. Warfield, who has been outspo­ ken in his criticism of the Universi­ ty's low black faculty population, today STATE AND LOCAL Edwards Aquifer — The Cen-Tex Water Preservation Fund has raised money for a plane ticket for the chief executive of Goodyear to come to Austin and check out alternate routes for the proposed crude-oil pipeline that would run over the aquifer. The group is being joined by some state officials, including Austin’s own Sen Gonzalo Barrientos For the complete story and map. see page 8 SPORTS Grand slam — Texas third baseman Jay Searcy hammered a grand slam home run as the Longhorns swept Emporia State 12-0, 8-0 in a Wednesday double- header Searcy, who had 8 RBI, clubbed the ball 450 feet into the top of a tree in the Disch-Falk Field parking lot For the story, page 11. ENTERTAINMENT R eal Cool Tim a — Today marks the debut of a weekly music column in Entertainment It s by Enter­ tainment flunky Kathy McTee, and it’s called Real Cool Time, cuz that's what all us happy campers have when we read it For the scoop on this week­ end's scene, see page 14. WEATHER W h at'a a l this th an? — Those silly weather-type guys who give us these forecasts tell us it will be sunny and warm Thursday. Which is great, unless you have to go to classes Then it really isn't so won­ derful With the high in the upper 70s and the low Thursday night in the low 50s you just might want to It will be great to go sailing also, go to the lake because the winds will be from the west at 15 mph For more local and national weather, for those of you who want to know, see page 19 INDEX Around Campus 19 16 Classified C o m ic s .................................. 19 E d ito rials...........................................................................4 14 Entertainm ent...................................................... 10 Progress S p o r t s .......................................................... 11 State & L o c a l................................................................... 8 6 University 2 World & Nation . . . . . . . . . . . world & nation Page 2/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13, 1986 More astronaut remains found Associated Press CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Divers retrieved more remains of Challenger's astronauts Wednesday as the county medical examiner re­ ported that NASA had prevented a legal dispute by agreeing to let his staff observe the autopsies. The remains were recovered by divers* dropped overboard from the salvage ship USS Preserver in an area where the shuttle cabin and crew remains were located Friday 100 feet be­ neath the Atlantic surface, 18 miles northeast of the launch pad, sources close to the investiga­ tion reported. The sources reported the Preserver recovery effort was progressing well and that among other items picked up were a storage locker con­ taining personal effects of one of the crew mem­ bers, parts of the flight deck and two spacesuits that were aboard in case an emergency space­ walk had to be made. A four-man search submarine, meanwhile, lo­ cated a piece of solid rocket booster that a Navy spokeswoman said could be from the segment of the right booster believed responsible for the shuttle explosion. The 4-foot-by-5-foot piece of debris from the rear part of a rocket, weighing 400 to 500 pounds, is believed to contain propellant and part of the external tank attachment ring, said Lt. Cmdr. Deborah Burnette. the wreckage, found 32 miles She said ‘There are no planned lawsuits or court hearings concerning this in­ vestigation.’ — Dr. Laudie McHenry, Brevard County medical examiner offshore in 600 feet of water by the manned sub­ mersible Sea-Link 2 could well be from the right solid-rocket booster. Sources had said the medical examiner's office might seek a court order unless the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and Air Force turned over the remains in accordance with state law, which requires the local medical examiner to conduct an autopsy on any person who is slain or dies by accident. The statutes apply even if deaths occur on fed­ eral property, or, as in the case of the Challenger accident, they occur away from any jurisdiction but are taken to another one. Some remains of the astronauts killed when Challenger exploded 73 seconds after launch on Jan. 28 were brought ashore secretly Saturday night and were taken to nearby Patrick Air Force Base for examination by forensic experts, sources said. Dr. Laudie McHenry, chief medical examiner for Brevard County, said, "Since the discovery of the Challenger capsule with its human re­ mains, there has been essentially a blackout of communications between NASA, the Air Force and this office. "Two days ago, a conference between repre­ sentatives of Patrick Air Force Base Hospital, the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology and the Bre­ vard County medical examiner gave lip service to a coordinated, multiagency investigation, with favorable comments by all present. "As of 10 a.m. today, March 12, telephone communication from NASA indicates that repre­ sentatives of the Brevard County medical exam­ iner may be present at the investigations to be performed." The statement added, "There are no planned lawsuits or court hearings concerning this inves­ tigation." It also said that federal pathologists had toured the county facilities and found them ade­ quate "to provide services that are needed in the Challenger investigation." Still and television photos were taken of the newly found booster part and will be brought to shore for development and analysis. Launch-day photographs show a puff of smoke escaping from a joint between the two lower segments of the right booster at liftoff and a plume of flame spewing from the same area 15 seconds before the explosion that killed the sev­ en crew members. RADOIM D AN G ER? G e o l o g i c a l F o r m a t i o n s C o n t a i n i n g U r a n i u m D e p o s i t s R í i d o n G i i s Radon is a natural radioactive byproduct of decaying uranium. Radon is a colorless, odorless gas emitted by rocks and soil everywhere. Tests in homes above the Reading Prong indicate radon levels far above those allowed in uranium mines. Source: Penn. Dept, of Environmental Resources Radon-contaminated region Associated Press The geographical region shown, known as the Read­ ing Prong, stretches through southeastern Pennsylva­ nia, western New Jersey and southeastern New York. The region contains uranium deposits that produce radon gas, a product of the breakdown of uranium ore. Studies have shown that radon-contaminated dust can cause lung cancer in miners if the levels are high enough. The Environmental Protection Agency is expected to release a program next month to expand Pennsylvania’s cleanup program. The national Cen­ ters for Disease Control suspect similar formations in Florida, Maine and the Rocky Mountains. Senate begins radio broadcasts of floor activities on test basis Associated Press WASHINGTON — Radio broad­ casts from the Senate floor began Wednesday, marking what propo­ nents hailed as a new era in open­ ness after decades of complaints' that going on the air would shatter tradition and decorum. "There's no turning back," Mi­ nority Leader Robert Byrd, D- W.Va., told an opening ceremony. "The Senate is crossing the bridge and it's being burned behind us." The experimental broadcast cov­ erage, beginning with the prayer that traditionally opens Senate pro­ ceedings, runs through July 15 and includes a test of gavel-to-gavel tele­ vision broadcasts of floor action starting June 1. The lawmakers vote July 29 on whether to make the change permanent. After a flurry of initial speeches to mark the occasion, the Senate began to debate a proposed balanced- The Senate is crossing the bridge and it’s being burned behind us.’ — Robert Byrd, Senate minority leader budget amendment to the Constitu­ tion. Many radio networks picked up the Senate-supplied radio signal that became available at 9 a.m. Aus­ tin time when Sen. Charles Mathi­ as, R-Md., a longtime proponent of the broadcasts, threw the switch. The only daily, gavel-to-gavel broadcast of debate, however, is planned by the Cable-Satellite Pub­ lic Affairs Network, which already televises House floor action. It will supply audio over its cable-televi- sion hookup until June 1. Most of the first speeches to be heard by listeners across the nation concerned the start of the broad­ casts. to "Thanks radio," Majority Leader Robert Dole, R-Kan., said, "you, the people, on the great plains of Kansas, in our cities and on our farms, and up and down main street America, you are now listening to the sounds of the Sen­ ate." With a full round of committee hearings Wednesday on Capitol Hill, however, the chamber quickly emptied and proceedings got back to normal. The first quorum call — a meaningless roll call used, in effect, to put the Senate on hold — came 45 minutes after the start of broad­ casting. As the Senate got deeper into the balanced-budget proposal, Dole took the floor "to remind my col­ leagues that we're on live radio. ----- ----------------------- u From Texan news services U.S. calls tor end to torture in Chile WASHINGTON — The United States has tabled a draft resolution at the United Nations Human Rights Commission in Geneva call­ ing for an immediate end to "all forms of physical and psychological torture" by Chile's security forces, it was disclosed Wednesday. The resolution expresses concern "at the persistence of serious viola­ tions of human rights in Chile," in­ cluding disappearance, torture and other abuses and harassment of per­ sons involved in church work. The draft was tabled in Geneva by the U.S. delegation last week. State Department spokesman Charles Redman said the United States decided to introduce its own resolution this year because of dis­ satisfaction with the way the Chile issue has been handled in Geneva in previous years. Misslfo approval sought dosplto bad to st rosults WASHINGTON — Defense Sec­ retary Caspar Weinberger asked for congressional approval of an air-to- air missile despite advice from his weapons-testing chief that the mis­ sile had not been adequately checked out, according to docu­ ments released Wednesday. John Krings, head of the Penta­ gon's office of operational test and told Weinberger that evaluation, "there is a low probability of ade­ quate test results being available." The memo notwithstanding, Weinberger sent Congress a letter Feb. 28, seeking authority for con­ tinued development of the AM- RAAM missile, which has been pla­ gued by delays and cost overruns. In his letter, Weinberger said the weapon could be built within con­ gressional cost guidelines and said, "Before making this certification, I have conducted a thorough review of the AMRAAM program." French observer killed on Oreen Line by sniper BEIRUT, Lebanon — A French truce observer was shot dead by a sniper Wednesday, and there was no sign of a breakthrough in efforts by two French emissaries to win freedom for Frenchmen kidnapped during the past year. The observer was shot in the head at the gates of the former French ambassadori s the boundary between Beirut's Chris­ tian and Moslem sectors, said sourc­ es who spoke on condition of ano­ nymity. residence on Christian and Moslem militias fight in the area daily, and it was not known which side shot the ob­ server. The sources identified him as Capt. Marc-Antoine Corvee, 39. He was the sixth French observer killed since a 50-member team was deployed in Beirut in 1984 to help supervise a civil-war truce. H ealth officials advise not eating raw shellfish BOSTON — People should not eat raw shellfish, especially hard­ shell clams, because of the risk of catching a virus that causes severe vomiting and diarrhea, New York state health officials recommend. Clams and oysters gathered in polluted waters can contain a mi­ crobe called the Norwalk virus, the officials said. The warning applied to oysters and hard-shell clams, or quahogs, but not soft-shell clams, known to many as steamers, because they are usually cooked. In Thursday's N ew England Jour­ nal o f Medicine, Dr. Dale Morse and colleagues from the New York State Department of Health reported on an epidemic of stomach flu in 1982 that was traced to hard-shell clams and oysters contaminated with the Norwalk virus. Study shows drugs extend heert-failure victims’ lives Russians to televise launching Associated Press MOSCOW — The Soviet Union promises live coverage when two record-holding cosmonauts blast off to its new orbiting space lab Thurs­ day, departing from a long custom of telling the world about missions only after the fact. The Soviet Union has made ad­ vance announcements and televised launches only of flights that carried French and Indian crew members, and of the mission that linked up with the U.S. Apollo 11 years ago. State television and Tass, the offi­ cial news agency, said the Soyuz carrying cosmonauts Leonid Kizim and Vladimir Solovev would be launched at 3:33 p.m. Moscow time (6:33 a.m. CST) at the Baikonur Space Center in Soviet central Asia. The television said it would have live coverage beginning about 15 minutes before lift-off. Kizim and Solovev, who set a 237- day space endurance record in 1984 on the Salyut 7 orbiting complex, will link up with the new lab Mir, which means Peace in Russian. It was sent up with no one aboard Feb. 20 and is designed as a perma­ nent orbiting station, with docking facilities or six spacecraft. On Wednesday, the television showed the cosmonauts speaking to Soviet reporters at Baikonur, and it broadcast film of their spacecraft and rocket launchers being put into place. Neither the television nor Tass re­ vealed whether more crews would be launched later to join them on the Mir. Advance announcements and live coverage of launchings were pro­ vided in June 1982 when Jean-Loup Chretien was aboard a Soyuz, when Rakesh Sharma went into space in April 1984 and when a spacecraft blasted off in 1975 to join the Apol­ lo. Last week, the state television named five cosmonauts it said were in training for the first manned flight to the Mir. The other three were Anatoly Filipchenko, who flew space missions 1969 and 1974; Yuri Glazkov, who flew in 1977, and Alexander Alexandrov, who spent 150 days on the Salyut 7 in 1983. Kizim, 44, and Solovev, 39, set their endurance record in 1984, breaking the previous mark of 211 days also held by a Soviet crew. During their 237 days on Salyut 7, it was visited by two other crews that included Svetlana Savitskaya, the first woman to make two flights and the first to walk in space, and Sharma, India's first man in space. TWA talks net no gain in walkout Icahn’s absence cited as barrier Associated Press PHILADELPHIA — Three hours of negotiations between TWA and striking flight attendants, the first bargaining session since the walk­ out began six days ago, recessed Wednesday with no progress made¿ a federal mediator said. No new negotiations are sched-. uled, said Helen Witt of the Nation­ al Mediation Board. Victoria Frankovich, president of Independent the 5,700-member Federation of Flight Attendants, blamed the impasse on the absence from the bargaining table of Carf Icahn, who owns 52 percent of the airline's stock. "There is no possibility of reach­ ing an agreement without Mr. Icahn being here, but I am always optimis­ tic," she said. The talks were the first since bar­ gaining halted Friday at the start of the walkout. "No progress has been made in the talks. We intend to stay in touch with the parties and when there is a basis for resumption of negotia­ tions, we will bring them back toj gether," Witt said. Machinists reported for work as scheduled Wednesday at the air-* line's Kansas City overhaul base, where about 3,000 union members* perform governm ent-required maintenance and repairs on the TWA fleet, said Mark Burdette, TWA station manager. On Tuesday, the airline won an injunction issued in Kansas City, Mo., that bars machinists from stay­ ing off the job in support of the at­ tendants. The six-member TWA negotiating team, headed by William Hoar, vice president of labor relations, left the hotel swiftly after talks broke off, avoiding reporters and making no statements. Icahn had been TWA's chief negotiator before the strike began, and neither Witt nor union and management representatives ex­ plained his absence. The overhaul center had been closed during the sympathy strike because only a few people reported,* The Kansas City injunction was d major victory for the airline, which had canceled many flights because machinists had honored picket lines. But Frankovich, admitting that the injunction was a setback, said she did not expect the court order to deter flight attendants. "Our memi- bers are united and we're prepared to fight this fight ourselves," she * said. Icahn said in an interview Tues1 day in New York that he expected the airline to resume 100 percent ol its flights by next week. In New York, police arrested 16 union members Tuesday night after they linked arms and blocked an err- trance to a TWA cargo hangar at John F. Kennedy International Air­ port for nearly an hour. The protest was aimed at machinists returning to work under the injunction. The 16 were given summonses for disorderly conduct and released} said Allen Morrison, spokesman for the Port Authority of New York! which operates the terminal. TWA, which reported loses of $193.1 million last year, has insisted that flight attendants take a 22 per* cent pay cut and work more hours every day with less rest betweeij flights. The union offered to accept a 15 percent cut in base pay, which rang­ es from $16,000 to $28,000 a year, although some experienced attend­ ants earn as much as $36,000, in.- cluding overtime. Pilots have honored a no-strike clause in their contract. v u i i u a L i . v * - v,wv Reagan sends Habib to tour C entral Am erica ATLANTA — Researchers have shown for the first time that drug therapy can prolong the lives of men with congestive heart failure, a disease that afflicts more than 4 mil­ lion Americans, according to a "landmark” released Wednesday. stu d y The study, conducted at Veterans Administration hospitals, found that a combination of two widely used drugs significantly reduced the death rate among men with mild to moderate heart failure. After three years of taking the drugs, their death rate was 23 per­ cent tower than that of men who did not receive the medicines. "It was a demonstration that life could be prolonged. This will be a landmark study in heart failure, said Dr. William Parmley of the Uni­ versity of California, San Francisco. Associated Press WASHINGTON — President Reagan, trying to bolster his case for military aid for Nicaraguan rebels, sent special envoy Philip Habib to Central America on Wednesday and said critics who claim the United States is not interested in a negotiat­ ed settlement "are making ridicu­ lous noises." There was renewed talk about the White compromise between House and Congress on the $100 million aid package Reagan has pro­ posed, but administration officials said privately the president had not heard any proposals he deemed ac­ ceptable. Reagan said he was not trying to signal a willingness to compromise but would listen to any offer. He did not rule out the possibility of delating delivery of aid for up to 75 days, to give negotiations a chance. ry S peakes said, "We're not inter­ ested in anything short of getting the president's package approved, without restru Habib's gp' (A k e w fire from of Nicara­ Daniel ~ gua. Rea gaff ^ _ ■ p ^ H p A s on international public opinion that he is interested in a negotiated solu­ tion, but what he really wants to do is complement his policy of war and terrorism against Nicaragua," Orte­ ga said in Managua. Habib's itinerary three-nation does not include a stop in Nicara­ gua. "You don't go where you're not invited," Reagan said. The Nicaraguan embassy in Washington, however, said Habib was welcome in Managua "if the administration honestly wants to negotiate." Reagan said Habib has the au­ thority to visit Nicaragua for talks with the Sandinista regime "if any­ thing comes up that would show that there might be any prospect or any profit in doing that." After conferring with Habib, Reagan met privately with several congressmen to try to win their votes for sending $70 million in mili­ tary aid and $30 million worth of non-lethal assistance to the Nicara­ guan rebels. Afterwards, Rep. Roy Rowland, D-Ga., reported that Reagan "said that they're looking at some alterna­ tives to the $100 million, and he said, 'I can't give you the specifics on that now.' But they are looking at some alternatives." At this point, the administration says it faces an uphill fight to win the money. The Democratic-con- trolled House is scheduled to vote Marcif 19 on the package, while the Republican-led Senate is tentatively scheduled to vote the next day. In another development, it wa$ announced that Reagan will go to the State Department on Thursday to unveil a display of weapons cajf- tured from Salvadoran rebels arid from elsewhere in Central America! The cache includes American-made M-16 rifles that the administration • * says it has traced to Vietnam. Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., pro­ posed Wednesday that Congress approve the $70 million in military aid but delay spending any of it fpr 90 days while Reagan tries anew to open negotiations with Nicaragua!' During the 90-day period, the contras could be supplied with "de­ fensive weapons" such as shoulder- fired anti-aircraft weapons, he said in a letter to George Shultz, secre­ tary of state. * Mcaraguart Prw idsnt DanM Ortega "We're continuing to talk about all possibilities like that," Reagan said. Yet, presidential spokesman Lar­ Ex-education chief blasts conservative critics Associated Press WASHINGTON — Former Education Secre­ tary T.H. Bell says his four years in the Cabinet were a constant battle against a "lunatic fringe" on the right who did not want to spend a dime on education. Bell claims his critics on the extreme right — both inside the White House and outside the administration — distorted President Reagan's own stands to pursue their own "revolutionary and shockingly radical agenda." Writing in the March issue of Phi Delta Kap- pan, an education magazine, Bell calls Reagan "a man of strength, convictions and courage." But he also said the administration failed to enunci­ ate a clear policy on education and "our actions were at times contradictory and inconsistent." Bell drew conservatives' wrath for failing to carry out Reagan's campaign promise to abolish the Department of Education and for what they considered his half-hearted advocacy of Reagan budget cuts and such initiatives as tax breaks and vouchers for parents of children enrolled in private schools. Two prominent conservatives dismissed Bell's account Wednesday. Burton Pines, vice president of the Heritage Foundation, a conservative-oriented think tank in Washington, called "this post-mortem a rather pathetic exercise." "It was Bell who was out of step with Reagan," he said. Paul Weyrich, president of the Free Congress Foundation, also a conservative group, said, "This is just sour grapes from a man now look­ ing for a high-paying post somewhere in the ed­ ucation establishment." Bell said, "Those are interesting comments. I don't have any comment on that." Bell, a professor of educational administration at the University of Utah since he left the Cabi­ net in December 1984, wrote that Reagan want­ ed to cut federal spending and strengthen state and local control of education, but not abandon all federal help for the disadvantaged, the handi­ capped and college students. "During my tenure as secretary, however, proponents of the doctrines of the extreme right advanced many far-reaching and, in my view, radical and off-the-rwall ideas that did not fit un­ der the major goals of the president and, indeed, did not even have his support," Bell said. "They took his guiding principles and carried them to the lunatic fringes of ideological political thought," he said. "These zealots blamed me for many policy proposals that were actually the president's. The true movement conservatives believe that not a dime of federal money should be spent on education. "They even have their own symbols, such ar­ cana as neckties bearing the likeness of Adam Smith and other items of ornamentation that identify them as true patriots and faithful revolu­ tionaries." "To this day, I'm not certain why I was select­ ed by the president," confessed Bell, who had testified in 1979 in favor of creating the Depart­ ment of Education. Bell came up with a plan to reduce the depart­ ment to a foundation along the lines of the Na­ tional Science Foundation. Edwin Meese, then a top White House aide and now attorney general, wanted to scatter the education programs among other agencies. But Bell won Reagan's backing to keep them under one roof. "My purpose was to preserve the traditional federal role in education," Bell said. Congressm an pushes ban on forced retirement EdNor Managing Editor Aaaocrate Managing Editors News Editor A sso ciate News Editor News Assignm ents Editor Associate Editors G raphics Editor Sports Editor . . . . Associate Sports Editor Sport swrrters . . . Entertainment Editor Entertainment A ssociate Editor Sp a tia l P a g e s Editor Associate Special P a g e s Editor Images Editor Associate Images Editors Photo Editors General Reporters Around C a m p o s Editor News Assistants Editorial Assistant Editorial Researcher Entertainment Assistants Entertainment Writers Special P a g e s Writers Sports Reporter Sports M ake-up Editor Sports Assistant M ake-up Editor C op y Editors Wire Editor C om ic Strip Cartoonist Volunteers Photographers The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 1 3 ,1986/Page 3 T h e Da i l y T e x a n Permanent Staff Ruase» Scott M ichael Whalen Ten Ager Barry CHne, Tim McDougaM Michaal Suttar Todd Pratt Matthew Geiger. Joe Yonan Matthew Matop waky Jeff Crosby Dan Jester, Brian Zabdfc Mark Greene Stan Roberts WM Hampton Howard Decker. E d Shugeri Rick Dyer K alNeen M cTee Triah Berrong Debra Mudar Michael G Smith Lorraine Cadem arton, Chris War* M o m s G oe n Garios Moreno Martha A she Lisa Baker Robert Bruce Brian Edwards Donrty Jackson, David Nether Uea Brown ............................... Issue Staff Paula Blesener Jeff C la ssen Kathy Jones, Marilyn Lam ensdorf Keffye N om s Steve Rung, Rudy Suetaita Patrick Murray Debbie Romnano Britt Buchanan. R L WMtame Jo e Balk. NrckDauelar Laura Bad. Judy Jonee Mike Hamilton JohnBridgaa Schuyler Dtxon Micky Inoue Daron Clark, Knstm Johansen, Sheryl Markn, Regina McAskkl Judaon Taylor David Gadbois Miles Mathis. Van Garrett M Kadey Kedy P a ce Jud y Waigren states forbid mandatory retirement for private employees at any age. Pepper's measure would retain exemptions under other existing laws. These exemptions from a ban on mandatory retirement would continue to apply to foreign service officers, CIA employees, law en­ forcement officers and fire fighters, air traffic controllers, certain high- ranking executives in private indus­ try and tenured college faculty members. He estimated his bill would affect more than 20 million workers who otherwise would be forced to retire simply because of their age. A re­ cent Labor Department study, how­ indicates ever, that only about 195,000 workers over 70 would choose to remain on the job if man­ datory retirement were abolished. Pepper said mandatory retire­ ment makes no sense considering the steady increase in Americans' life expectancy, which had reached more than 74 years by 1981. He said his bill "makes good eco­ nomic sense" because those 195,000 older employees would generate about $3 billion in revenues in the first year alone by contributing to their own support, paying taxes, and making contributions to the So­ cial Security trust fund. Rachel W ax man Lori Ruszkowski Chris B ake Leanne N ay Sherry Braslau Marc Muchmck Leslie W eflons Display Advertising Tam m y Hajovsky Susan Flood Karen Krail Kay Carpenter Edy E infer Jeff W allace Kim G oynes Sherri White Lynn Colgin Marty Schack Kristen Gilbert Bodgette Reed Denise Johnson Sara Shaw Ken Butts Leta Dor sen Jeanne Hill Ben Regalado 2 ? ! ! L l.* i,a' L ,U S P S 146 4 4 0 1 a student new spaper at The U niversity of Texas at Austin is published bv t Texas Student Pubte^ tions D raw er D University Station Austin TX 78715-7209 The Daity Texan is published a tA u s tx i Sd8y T h u rsd aY ant> Fr,91) at the editorial o d e a (T exas Student Pubkcabons Inquiries concerning local, national and classified display advertising should be directed to 512/471-1885 ^ — fiad word advertising questions should be directed to 512/471 -5244 Entire contents copyright 1986 T e x as Student Publications The Dady Texan Subscription Ralea One Semester (FaH or Spnng) Two Semesters (Fait and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fad, Spnng and Summer) * r r r ° 56 ~ 75 00 T S ^ « ^ 3X T c ^ 4 ^ £ '° TeXaS * * * * * Put* C* ’0"» p O Box D Austin TX 78713-7209, or to To charge by VISA or MasterCard call 471 5083 Associated Press WASHINGTON — Rep. Claude Pepper, a vigorous 85-year-old who declares that "ageism is as odious as sexism and racism," sought to enlist public support Wednesday for his proposal to outlaw mandatory re­ tirement of American workers at any age. Presiding at a televised House hearing, Pepper said the bill he has introduced with 50 House co-spon­ sors is intended to extend to every American — with a few exceptions — the right enjoyed by federal em­ ployees to "be as old as Methuselah and continue to work, if you can do the job." Pepper, D-Fla., said he probably would be dead today if he had been forced to retire at 65, three years af­ ter he was first elected to the House in 1962 after a Senate career that be­ gan nearly a half-century ago. Despite two hearing aids, triple­ focus glasses, a pacemaker in his chest and two plastic valves in his heart, Pepper said he enjoys the daily challenges he encounters as chairman of the House Rules Com­ mittee and subcommittee chairman of the House Select Committee on Aging. "I can't run 10 miles in the after­ noon, like I did in college, but I have a good car to take me there," he told a joint hearing of his sub­ committee on health and long-term care and the House Education and Labor subcommittee on employ­ ment opportunities. Pepper's bill would eliminate the mandatory retirement age of 70 which is allowed for employees in private business. That same require­ ment was lifted for federal workers under the Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1978. Thirteen Coping with life's every­ day P P O 0 L E as THMSDW S a t HOOtf. TODAY’S TOPIC Overcoming Shyness: From Wall Flower to HgarUly Texas Union Eastwoods Room, 12-13:30 Sponsored by Counseling, Learning and Career Services THE CHURCH IN THE SOVIET UNION Presented by DR. BRUCE RIGDON Chairman, National Council of Churches Committee on US/USSR Church Relations M O N . , M A R C H 1 7 , N O O N Eastwoods Room, Texas Union Sponsored by: United Campus Ministry of Austin B a c h e lo rs & M a s t e r s c a p s & GOWNS ORDER NOW M arch 17 thru April 11 I tách alo» $ 18.85 Blasters $38.00 DEADLINE APRIL 11 U N IV ER SITY ifO O P SPORTS STOP • UPPER LEVEL 2246 Guadalupe Phone 476-7211 Free Parking 23rd A San Antonio w $3 Purchase M octw Coftf REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES FR EE D ELIV ERY 476-1021 D A I L Y T E X A N 3 / 17/86 l O MILTO’S PIZZA PUB GREEK AND ITALIAN FOOD SUN-THURS 11:00 a.m.-Midnight FRI & SAT 11:00 a.m .-la.m . 1985 THIRD COAST MAGAZINE BEST PIZZA AWABD 2 9 0 9 G u a d a lu p e MOST TRIVIAL LUTHERANS live in N orth Dakota. That means they know a lot ab o ut rocks, sem inóla wheat, and neighbors. They like being cold, singing hymns, and M o o se h e a d beer. They know hell is hot, full o f rock 'n roll, a n d dry. Smart ones m ove to Texas. They bring another accent fo r y'all; they prom ote beef production; and they keep us honest w hen w e think provincially. The best part, how ever, is that they g o to church. That's not tr iv ia l. .. it is convivial! Sunday Worship at 9:45 am Lutheran Campus Ministry 2100 San Antonio 472-5461 Pastor Curtis A. Johnson ALETAS Mexican Restaurant and Cantina St. Patrick’s Day celebration ... get a Green Margarita for 750 When you wear anything green into our restaurant on March 17th. We promise not to pinch you . . . and we’ll even give Green M argarita for 750. That’s Green You Can Enjoy! St. Patrick’s Day . . . An E xtra Special Day at ALETA’S 479-0940 Guadalupe A MLK EVERY WOMAN S CONCERN C o n f i d e n t i a l , P r o f e s s i o n a l R e p r o d u c t i v e C a r e • F r e e P r e g n a n c y T e s t i n g • P r o b l e m P r e g n a n c y C o u n s e l i n g y • A b o r t i o n S e r v i c e s S S = n • B i r t h C o n t r o l • P a p Te s t • B o a r d C e r t i f i e d O b G y n e c o f o f j i e t s • L i c e n s e d N u n i n g S t a f f • E x p e r i e n c e d C o u n s e l o r * • O n C R « b u t t l e 4 5 8 - 8 2 7 4 1009 K 4(hh CLASSES BEGINNING NOW DAY OR NIGHT SESSIONS AVAILABLE INTENSIVE ENGLISH ft tt- si & ANGLAIS INTENSIF {Ms. INGLES INTENSIVO NINE LEVEL COMPREHENSIVE COURSE SMALL CLASSES, INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION NEW LEVEL EVERY 4 WEEKS AUTHORIZED UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO ENROLL NON-IMMIGRANT ALIEN STUDENTS (1-20 FORM) DURHAM-NIXON-CLAY COLLEGE 119 W. 8th at Colorado 478-1602 Test yourself. W hich early pregnancy test is as easy to read as red, n o-w hite, yes? W hich is a simple one step test? W hich has a dramatic color change to make the results unmistakable? W hich is 98% accurate, as accurate as many hospital and lab tests? W hich is portable for convenience and privacy? ^ brother is play RAGE, with some guy cdled Xfeg?“ mean, all 1 have 1b do to be ci t m I M a c P r o d u c t s We Really Know Your Mac Sony Disks Kodak Disks Double Sided Box of 10 18.90 “ 25.50 512-1024k Upgrade $28 128-512k Upgrade $149 “ 2200 áJicJaí(?pe4ste .216 above Kinkos on the drai ¡ s n i d e j o g n o A *U|8 u 9 J fn o A Prices Good ■ ■ H with Ad GONIKAAID Page 4/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13,1986 editorials Opinions expressed in The M y Teatan are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not neces­ sarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees viewpoint Laughing and learning with absurdism Y ou may have noticed the series on this page endorsements of political candidates and social is­ on absurdism and politics at the University. sues. This showed the students don't believe the These voices from the past might seem like SA can handle the responsibility, so they took it ancient relics in the now and wow '80s, but current away. student leaders should examine the truth behind the jokes. The absurdists were bom in a post-1960s, pre- 1980s transition period on campus. They thrust a middle finger at every sacred cow at this Universi­ ty. Student government caught its share of the heat. The association had degenerated into an or­ ganization of namby-pamby politicos and self-right­ eous twits. The absurdists had a field day, and the students followed their lead in 1976 by electing ab­ surdist candidates as president and vice president, prompting the destruction of student government. During the past year, we have seen signs that the old student government is returning. Many leaders in the Students' Association have a common prob­ lem: self-interest. They take themselves seriously, but not their jobs. This trend has not gone unnoticed by students, as the referendum election showed. The students removed much of SA's power when they rejected SA leaders are not the only offenders. Some spe­ cial interest groups appear more concerned with generating publicity and sympathy than getting their jobs done. If they could solve significant prob­ lems, there would be no problem. But publicity stunts only lead to bickering and lost credibility. Not all student leaders are afflicted with this dis­ ease. SA has stayed afloat during the past year be­ cause a few responsible leaders did it all, carrying the dead weight with them. But if SA continues to dawdle during the next year, absurdism will right­ fully come back and destroy it again. However, this weekend student leaders have a chance to begin a reversal of the trend. The leaders of the absurdist movement are reuniting to cele­ brate their past victories. Student leaders and SA officers and candidates should attend the seminars and take a look at what their failures could bring. Laugh and learn. — Jeff Crosby absurdism 8k politics: a retrospectiva Where has all the humor gone? Editor's note: This is the last of a three-part series on politics and absurdism at the University. This is not a joke. The Dead­ ly Texan is dead. You prob­ ably don't remember The Deadly Texan, and that's what the guys who dress sloppily and avoid brushing their hair, who quit Kant and Kierkegaard and Nietzsche intermittently, who join their female counterparts in bouts of anguish and depression at Les Amis and "Quack's": those men of mystery, as you termed it. What about these men? Are not these the men for whom Annie Hall and Paris, Texas were, in fact, written? (You erred greatly in attributing these cine­ matic works to angst-ridden girls, by the way, they focus on neurotic men.) Aren't these the men who take 15 minutes to intelligently describe in detail something that could be described — much more simply, mind you — in three sentences? Are these not our philosophers and poets of tomorrow? Please, we can't ignore this substantial faction at the University. They're here. They're depressed. They have to prove to all their supposed (and, admit­ tedly, oftentimes genuine) intelligence. They're pseudo-intellectuals. And also, they hate stupid people. But that's okay; the feeling is mutual. Stacey Freedenthal Liberal arts/undecided More advice for undergrads The undergraduate dean's office in the College of Business Administration is pleased to announce a special advising program for students in the college. Known as the alternatives advising program, it was developed last semester and is currently staffed by two graduate students from the School of Social Work. The program is designed primarily to assist students who would like to explore options other than a bachelor of business administration degree from UT Austin. The counselors are available to discuss students' academic situations, educational goals and career plans. In addition to being available to assist in the decision-making process of choosing a major, they provide information on various campus resources for students. Also, they have current catalog information on all the undergraduate business programs at other colleges and universities in Texas. Finally, the staff is in touch with other counselors on campus and ad­ missions directors throughout the state who can fur­ nish any additional information not already on hand in the office. If you would like to find out more about the alter­ natives advising program in the College of Business Administration, call 471-9482 and ask for an appoint­ ment with either Kammy Willems or Bill Kearns. Or you can come to the undergraduate dean's office in GSB 5.142 and ask to speak with them. Bill Kearns Graduate student in social work they want. If it weren't for Jews you probably wouldn't remember the Holocaust either. Whoops! There I go again. Nas­ ty, crude humor. But that was what The Deadly Texan was all about: salting wounds, milking sacred cows, flatulence in crowd­ ed elevators. Some students at the University of Texas once had a sense of hu­ mor. The Deadly Texan was not the first humor publication to sling mud around the Longhorn halls. Long ago, the Ranger, a humor magazine, rolled ink around the faces of the University population. The Ranger staff hid dirty words in blocks of type, ran photo essays of leering frat boys chukin' up on their new blue blazers, detailed hints on how to cheat, assassinat­ ed Santa at Christmas, printed a Drunk Driver's Guide to Dallas and invented the Armadillo sym­ bol. This was the '50s, folks. The Ranger was ultimately hounded out of existence by Uni­ versity and Texas Student Publica­ tions officials who kept firing any­ body who had the chutzpah to be funny, replacing them with jour­ nalism jocks. Nerds. Groveling yesmen. Boring. They all work at the Austin American-Statesman now. In the early '70s, a few years af­ ter the fall of the Ranger, an annu­ al parody of The Daily Texan was produced for April Fool's Day. What happened to The Deadly Texan and why was 1982 its last year? Some say it was too painful­ ly funny, that it was obscene, li­ belous and offensive. Exactly. Stomped on testes around the hallowed administra­ tive halls, so to speak. too many I don't know what really decked The Deadly Texan. Any one of a dozen articles or stories was offen­ sive enough to one faction or an­ other to warrant its execution. The front page wan't so bad. The banner headline read: "Woman sticks toddler's head in ceiling fan after boiling enema, beaten by leg­ less dwarf / Sibling axes father J. SCOTT CAMPBELL GUEST COLUMNIST thinking badger loose in house, shooting spree ensues, police baf­ fled." Poking a little fun at the lo­ cal American Snakeoil here. Also on the front cover was a humongous photo of a naked male body face down in the Littlefield Fountain with the caption: "Float­ ing to Relax." The UT President's Office was a tad peeved over a little box on the bottom of the front page titled: "Editor bequeaths aid." Peter Flawn's office was unable to con­ duct any business because of stu­ dents calling in for "free money," the story, which according would go the first 1,000 students who filled out a simple form. The president's phone number was printed (471-1233) with the ad­ monishment, "This is not a joke." to "Fetishes of the deans," a full- page feature on the dean of each school and a fabricated fetish based on fact didn't endear itself to some of the deans. Macho Dean Robert "Dee" King for example, was reported to harbor a fancy for frilly underthings and was lam­ pooned thusly: " 'This is one of my prizes.' The Dean gingerly stretched the piece between his in­ dex fingers. 'The fellow who sold me this garter, said it was the one Brook Shields wore in the movie Pretty Baby. Sometimes I like to wear it on my head.' " Good clean fun, right? A story about a new UT minority enroll­ ment program called FARCE got most of the non-soda-cracker stu­ dent element really bent out of shape. FARCE stood for Floating Admissions Requirements for Cer­ tified Ethnics and its slang-spout­ ing director was named Rufus "Combreadhead" Grits. Okay, so maybe we were a little racist with the humor. But it didn't hold a candle to Lilywhite State U. C'mon, call a spade a spade. Whoops! Relatives and friends of the late­ ly deceased scotch-guzzling for­ mer chairperson of the Board of Regents, Frank C. Erwin Jr., were incensed over a photo of a dark figure hosing down a tombstone. The caption read in part, "An an­ nual grave-side ceremony of silent prayer and urination was conduct­ ed. Celebrants brought their own scotch." So what killed The Deadly Tex­ an? It wasn't the mighty Erwin. And it wasn't Dean King, either. No, the stake through the heart came from a libel suit. The Deadly's editors had pulled a photo of three swimsuit-clad beauty pageant contestants off the newswire and run it with a caption and headline that implied a lack of virtue on the part of the young la­ dies. One of the ladies, a UT stu­ dent, was not amused. She filed suit against Texas Student Publica­ tions, claiming libel. The lady had no sense of humor and the Univer­ sity didn't have the sense to tell her to take a hike. TSP rolled over and played dead, settling out of court. So ended The Deadly Texan. So ended a long-standing tradition of UT student humor and an era of absurdism on campus. The heavy- handed censorship of the student publications had beaten back any semblance of what makes a great university. Harvard has a lam­ poon issue. Sometimes it's even funny. What makes the University a second-rate college is its lack of humor, its stuck-up, prissy atti­ tude. As my editorial said at the time, "This issue was intended to do one thing: make people react. So if we made you chuckle, cry, scream, angry, mad, or most of all laugh out loud, then we succeed­ ed. We sincerely tried to attack ev­ erybody (in some way or another) and offer our regrets if we inad­ vertently left you out. We tried to live up to our name: The Deadly Texan. To those of you who didn't think it was funny, we offer our motto, FUCK 'EM IF THEY CAN'T TAKE A JOKE." If there is a drop of humor left on this campus, I beg you to save this great University and be true to your school. Re-erect The Deadly Texan. The eyes of Texas are upon you! Campbell was the last editor of The Deadly Texan and is a mem­ ber of the Pasta Society in fat standing. firing line Opportunity key to equality Guy R. Petty's letter ("Reader blaming wrong peo­ ple", Firing Line, March 3) completely misses the point of "our fight" as referred by Letitia Dyer ("They won't stop the fight," Firing Line, Feb. 26). Our fight for equality has nothing to do with our willingness or ability to compete on an equal basis; how and why does he think we were admitted to, and enrolled in, this university? We blacks have proven for quite some time now that, given the opportunity (meaning not being for­ bidden to participate), we can compete succesfully in business, athletics and the various professions. Our complaints therefore center around our being denied the opportunity to compete. Our shortcomings (as Petty so eloquently puts it) are not in mental capacity, but, in the eyes of people like Petty, in the color of our skin. If Petty had done his homework, he would have found that most blacks are not "weeded out" because they lack the necessary skills, but that they transfer to schools with higher black populations (and fewer resources) in or­ der to escape the whites' racist behavior. Incidents such as Randy Bowman's and other, more subtle, incidents such as the funny looks we receive on campus (yes, we do notice them) are prime examples of such behavior. It seems to me that we get this treatment because the people administer­ ing it are afraid to compete with us, not the other way around; and this is their shortcoming, not ours. Regardless of the motivation behind them, these inci­ dents leave deep psychological (and in Bowman's case, physical) scars that some blacks are unable to cope with. Tell me, Petty, wouldn't you be inclined to com­ plain, or transfer for that matter, if you were the subject of this type of abuse? Are you suggesting that we blame ourselves for your negative attitudes about our being black? Try again, Petty, for you have completely missed the point. Our demands are not for special treat­ ment, but for freedom from impediments to our op­ portunity to compete. Therefore, we are blaming you for your shortcomings, not ours. Remember: "what goes around comes around." AJ Odom Accounting/pre-la w Bryan Lakey Computer science/DPA College angst is gender-neutral In response to your clever, insightful articles on "angst-ridden" girls, I think it's only natural to ex­ plain their male counterparts: the anxious, neuroses- ridden, pseudointellectuals. Yes, I am referring to soapbox Do you feel that teacher testing is necessary, and what is your evaluation of it? PwtHofiand Electrical engineering junior ■ " I t should be the ones that are just graduating from school, the ones just getting started. IPs not I fair for people who have already ¡¡¡■ ten out. They should never Hveto take it again if they have I gone four years and passed the I te s t the first time. You can't 1 daa^e a system all of a sudden. I The reason they are doing that is I to B ik e it better. So the new lin c h e n that are starting now, H fcey should be comfortable. They I rimaU trite it when they get out of I iS fM ff Accounting sophomore "I really don't see any need in it. I figure if they've already gotten their teaching certificate or their degree, they've proved it once. I don't see why they have to again. Teaching isn't just a test, it's a tal­ ent also. So I think it takes a lot more than measuring on just those standardized tests. I don't think it's necessary and I'm against it. In taking a standardized test, you are saying you can measure teaching by that. And no, I think it's a tal­ ent." ■ a ^ i a i n r H a ^ W I W i R 8 0 v T 8 l Organizational communication junior "I feel like it's a good idea to make sure that all the students are taught by capable adults. At the same time, I don't think that one test has the capability to do that. I don't really think it has anything to do with whether they can pass one test or not. I think it has to do with something that's inside, their desire to keep learning about their profession and how to best reach the students. ThaPs what teaching is all about, iPs not about taking tests." Rusty Chavey Biomedical engineering graduate student "Every profession needs some way of testing competency, and deciding whether or not people are competent in their field. But you are testing knowledge and not testing communicative skills. A teacher is more than just a pool of knowledge. A teacher is a coun­ selor, a leader, and someone to communicate with the students. IPs difficult to rate someone quan­ titatively as a teacher when you are rating their knowledge, and not their ability to communicate fruit knowledge." Paul Palacios Advertising senior "I think iPs unfair to re-evaluate teachers' qualifications. They're evaluated in class by superiors al­ ready, and by the kids' perform­ ance on achievement tests. IPs just an added evaluation. IPs more stu- dent-teacher communication that determines what a student gets out of class. There must be a better way to evaluate this. I think iPs unfair to make the older teachers put it on the line. The new teach­ ers should have to take the test, and thaPs it." Tracsy Reinberg Humanities junior "I don't see why teachers are objecting. It seems the goal is quality education. I don't think it's a personal affront. If they are going to pass it, why not take it. They should be concerned with education. Granted, knowledge is different than the ability to teach, but how does one test the ability to teach other than by experi­ ence? I think a certain amount of knowledge should be standard. I've seen excerpts from the test, and they're ridiculous. I think they should be tougher." JP Ik _ ■ _ _ a m Severed natural gas line triggers explosion in Fort Worth The Daily Texan/Thursday, M arch 13, 1986/Page 5 AcenrifilA^ Associated Press FORT W ORTH — A building dem olition crew severed a natural gas line W ednesday, triggering a large explosion an d five-alarm fire that injured at least 17 people and shattered w ind ow s in d o w n to w n buildings. A fire investigator said th e force of th e blast at the site of a closed car th e Fort d ealership w as W orth Fire D epartm ent about 12 blocks aw ay. felt at Lone Star Gas Co. em ployee Ronald Butts said h e w as in a m an­ hole, attem pting to sh u t off a gas line w hen th e explosion occurred a few feet from him. "T here w as just an aw esom e, tre­ type of ... o u tlan d ish m endous p o w er that w as forced aw ay from the explosion," he said. "It w as so pow erful ... it nearly threw m e (out of th e hole). I th o u g h t at the tim e the explosion was u n d e rn e a th my feet. It w as so strong. "A t that m o m en t the p o w e r w as Still p u sh in g me, so I rolled w ith it an d noticing th a t I w as lagging behind the o thers as they w ere ru n ­ ning and w ith the debris in the air I decided that I should scram ble," Butts said. N o total dam age estim ate was available, b ut officials at Frank Kent Cadillac said new cars w orth about $1.5 million w ere destroy ed near the building. Tw o construction w orkers w ho w ere dem olishing th e old Frank Kent building south of Interstate 30 ru p tu red the natural gas m ain w ith a backhoe, said Fort W orth fire d e­ p a r t m e n t s p o k e s m a n C h a r lie M cCafferty. At the Fort W orth H ilton Hotel, across 1-30 from the building, peo­ ple w ere injured by flying glass from the 10:11 a.m . blast, said fire C apt. Bill Pierce. "It so u n d s like m ajor dam age to the b u ild in g ," said Pierce. "T here w as dam age across 1-30 at th e Hil­ ton hotel. T here w ere broken w in­ dow s, an d som e people w ere in­ jured w ith broken glass. "W e are probably 10 to 12 blocks from it and it shook th e building h e re ," said Pierce. Eight people w ere treated a t John P eter Sm ith H o sp ital, h o sp ita l spokesw om an R uth E ason said. A spokesw om an at H arris H ospital said six people w ere treated w ith various injuries. A nd three people w ere taken to St. Joseph H ospital, said sp o k esw om an Beverly Robb. Butts said h e suffered cuts and abrasions in th e blast. "A t th e tim e of the explosion, we w ere trying to sto p the sp ew in g gas from com ing o n o u t a n d try to p re ­ vent so m ething of this n atu re from h a p p e n in g ," said Butts. Police officer H .O . M iddleton said th e explosion blew out w in­ dow s a n d a glass d o o r at th e Fort W orth A d m in istra tio n B uilding ab o ut seven blocks aw ay. Officers div erted area traffic a ro u n d th e explosion site. from the "I saw all th a t tim ber an d debris going u p in th e air," said M iddle­ ton. H e said th e blast caused his po ­ lice car to sw erve. "T hen I h eard the blast a n d saw th e m u sh ro o m cloud an d I said, 'W h at in th e w orld!' " Ted M osley, vice p re sid e n t of o p­ eration s at th e Fort W orth H ilton, said 45 w in d o w s w ere d am ag ed by the blast, w hich also knocked loose ceiling tiles. H e said fire investiga­ tors w h o checked th e hotel fou n d no structural dam age. «MMM MM I Casa Verde Florist 451-0691 I FTO D«Hy I p ic llh ÍllM IIH IIIH M Iim im iM IIIIH IH IIIN IIM IIIN M IN n in n n iH M Í ■ - V. V H I t m ■ : I wlB * 111iv C * § ! » ’III; > * i v if IS?' 1 11 f j --•••i t e » ' 'm m I B Hi I MARCH 14 & 15, 1986 8 P.M. ITT PERFORMING ARTS CENTER SUNG KWAK, MUSIC DIRECTOR H en ry k S z e r y n g , v io lin ist T he Birds RESPIGHI Firebird Su ite STRAVINSKY V iolin C on certo in D M ajor BRAHMS . V R l C E S i l l . i i 1111! Stay on the bay Spring Break \86 in Corpus Christi at Holiday Inn Emerald Beach. It's located directly on Corpus Christi Bay and is just minutes from gulf beaches. Holidome Recreation Center Jacuzzi, Sauna, Pool, Large Sundeck Lucy’s Night Life, Music Videos, Dancing Good Food Zaks Fifth Avenue Deli and Oyster Bar & The Sandpiper Restaurant $AQ00 * ^ Ph*s tax (four to a room Maximum) * 3 9 01 1 Holiday Inn Airport rate The view from inside an office building across Interstate 30 from the gas explosion Wednesday morning. Associated Press W H W I H K » • Ghottwrtflng • Iwuinw • Covar latter • Typing • Tutoring • Fnw Confutation 473-2803 A * * * * * * THANKS TO A HONEST MAN DANIEL MARTIN & FRIENDS AND THE U.T. POLICE FOR THE , RECOVERY OF M Y * PROPERTY. R, SHERWOOD * 4 Í IMMIGRATION Permanent Visas Relative Petitions Labor Certifications Naturalizations Adjustment of Status Consular Processing Asylum H, Work Visas PAUL PARSONS r* Attorney at Law BOARD C ERTIflED • IMMIGRATION A NATIONALITY LAW «TEXAS b o a r d o r IJiOAL SPECIALIZATION 704 R io G ra n d e 477-7887 e s Hw 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1 £0 O p e n 11:00am M o n -S a t O p e n Sun 3:00pm H a p p y H o u r M o n -F ri 5-7 CO u co co M edical Hair Center provides Total Hair Restoration As Seen on “20 20” 20 Beer o u And Replacements P ark St. David Prof. Bldg. 800 E. 30th at Red River 472-6777 We ca re - We can help S u i t e 2 10 ^ A y •Ti Read what people are saying about Pass* g c to Ivibte 1985 ... is the y e a r A u stin got a first-class Ind ian re s ta u ra n t Passage to In d ia ” Third Coast 11 85 ... the tender chunks of chicken (tik k a m a s a la 1 were delectable the mint chutney ... w as so good we had to order more n aan to go w ith it D a ily Texan S eptem ber 12 Our ... wait was rew arded w ith w onderful chicken tandoori, a fiery vindaloo ... T he sam p ler plates are a g r^ at barg ain Texas M onthly Oct 1985 “N aan ... was wonderful. Shrimp m asala was a w inner. So w as the sag paneer (a spinach dish)” A ustin A m erican S tatesm an 10 16 “A beginning soup w as w onderful The (chicken ti k k a ) had a m arvelous sm oky flavor and te n d e r te x tu re ...” A u stin Chronicle 10 18 The breads ... a re superb ... The m eal wras delicious A u stin M agazine 11 85 So if your tastebuds are restless, discover a new taste adventure. Discover Passage to India. Student tickets available concert week at U T - PAC Box Office, 23rd and East Campus Drive, Monday through Thursday 10 a.m . to 6 p.m . and on concert days from 10:30 a.m . to 8 p.m . Call 476-46 2 6 for ticket inform ation. iW ¥V Holiday Inn Emerald Beach 1102 Shoreline Drive in Corpus Chnsti For Reservations, Call 512-883-5731 REC CENTER SPRING BREAKS M O M THAN 10% OF ALL AUSTIN G tO C ItV FURCHASIS LAST YEAR w t r a mode by stu- donts, faculty and staff of th« University of Taxas. S O U tC Ii UMTVIKStTY O f TCXAS C O lU O i NCWSTAPf I STUOT, M LD CN ASSOCIATIS. DALLAS, A T X Il 19S4 S A U S A N D M A M I D N O M A N A O U W N T SUR VIY O f b u y i n g r o w » . JUIT, i s m I I I I I I I I J ' T III V2 Price Billiards l Good betw een noon a n d 8:00 pm only. T h is coupon is n o t valid w ith o th e r specials. Two person minimum for 'A price billiards. C oupon ex p ires M arch 31 ,1 9 8 6 . I I I I Price Bow ling Good between noon and 8:00 pm only. This coupon is not valid with other specials. Coupon expires March 31,1986. TEXASUNIONRECCENTER downstairs in tho Texas Union downstairs in the Taxas Union I TEXASUNIONRECCENTER ■ A + POSITIVE LIVING GROUP + A Discussion Group for persons with concerns about Positive AIDS Antibody Test Results LUNCH-TIME OROUP: for UT stuctente only co-sponsored by the UT Counsel­ ing and Mental Health Center and the UT Student Health Center. Every Monday, 12-1 p.m. March 10 through May 12,1986 UT Student Health Center Bldg. Room 429 EVENING GROUP: open to the general public sponsored by the Austin Aids Protect Every Monday, 8-9:15 p m University United Methodist Church Room 307 24th Street and Guadalupe (across from Varsity Theatre) CAPITOL SADDLERY EQUESTRIAN HEADQUARTERS FOR AUSTIN ENGLISH WESTERN Boot & Shoe Repair ♦ H a n d to o le d B elts & C h ap s* ♦ H a n d m a d e B oots* ♦Sterling Silver Belt Buckles* 1414 LAVACA 47S-93S9 ¡3E , P A S S A 5 C t o I v tb Í A Authentic cuisine from the Subcontinent Luncheon Buffet— A l l y o u c a n e a t $ 5 .6 5 Open daily for lunch & dinner Luncheon buffet Mondav through Fnda\ & Sunday (Saturdays dinner oniy t 3023 Guadalupe 4 66 > /£$> ’HILLEL H ILLEL!= H ILLEl! T h is W e e k a t H ille l Austin Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry invites you to a BENEFIT SH ABBAT DINNER A N D DISCUSSION Friday, March 14 {following services at 6:30 pm) featuring: Joe Liken of Dallas Action for Soviet Jewry on 'The Soviet Jewry Movement after Scharansky" $5.50 Hillel members2$6.50 non-m em bers (price includes a $1 donation to ASSSI) Mease make reservations by March 13 HOW TO JOIN IN: Just drop In at any meeting. There are no sign-up procedures and you may attend as many sessions as are helptul to you. For more information call the UT Counseling and Mental Health Center 471-3815 with Kathy at Hillel Hillel 2105 San Antonio 476-9125 university Page 6/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13, 1986 Astronomy professor wins grant By JEFF CLAASSEN D aily Texan Staff An assistant professor of astronom y has won a $25,000 research fellowship — his second grant in two years and the third such fellowship awarded to a University astronomy faculty m em ber in three years. Ethan Vishniac, 30, won the Sloan Re­ search Fellowship, which gives $25,000 for two years of research or four years with an extension, Vishniac said. Hans Frauenfelder, fellow ship physics committee mem ber, said Vishniac was chosen from about 100 candidates for the fellowship. Frauenfelder said 23 fellow ­ ships are granted by the physics com m it­ tee. Frauenfelder, an astronom y professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana, said the Sloan Foundation requires that fellow ­ ship nom inees be under 32 years old. T h is way you encourage younger peo­ ple and give people help w hen it is most important to th e m ," Frauenfelder said. Vishniac said he will apply the m oney to research cosm ology, "th e origin of struc­ ture in the u n iv erse." He said four gradu­ ate students and one post-doctoral fellow will work with him. Vishniac said his research begins where the "big ban g " theory ends. "T he big bang theory is the most plausi­ ble, but not the most com plete pictu re," Vishniac said. T h e big bang theory does not explain the formation of galaxies and their positions, he said. Vishniac said the universe's early histo­ ry could be traced in patterns of hypotheti­ cal interstellar material. "W e're looking into radically different matter in the universe — not based on at­ o m s," Vishniac said. He said the matter is made up hypothetical sub-atom ic particles called axions. Axion matter can be detected by its gravitational effects on nearby stars, and its pattern could provide clues to the early formation of the universe, Vishniac said. In 1985, Vishniac won the Presidential Young Investigator Award of $25,000 a year for five years. Donald W inget, assist­ ant professor in astronom y, won the Sloan fellowship in 1985 and the presidential in 1986, and Paul Shapiro, assistant professor of astronom y, won the Sloan fellowship in 1984. "T h e astronom y departm ent has pretty good luck in aw ard s," Vishniac said. "It's an active departm ent, one moving up na­ tionally." W inget said the Sloan fellowship is flexi­ ble. "It m eans you d o n 't have to worry too much about the details of w hat you're going to do, you ju st do it," he said. W inget, 30, said the age limit on Sloan Research Fellow ships is a boon to younger scientists. "O n e of the major problem s fac­ ing a young scientist is finding funds for research," he said. The National Science Foundation, the largest source of research grants, aw ards grants primarily for past research, W inget said. "If you want to branch out into a new track record ," he said. field, you d on't have the students two graduate W inget said his Sloan fellowship study group of is researching the age of the galaxy. By studying a star's properties of pulsation — changes in brightness — the star's internal structure and age can be found, he said. By studying the oldest stars the age of the universe can be estim ated, he said. Tip o’ the hat Rommy Goode/Special to the Texan Leah Glossbrenner, a programmer in the Bursar's Office, tries on a hat from a vendor on the West Mall Wednesday. The display of Guatemalan goods was a popular stopping point for lunchtime passers-by. Neurologist, author to give lecture on romantic medicine By JUDY JONES Daily Texan Staff A noted neurologist and author will discuss the concept of "ro m an ­ tic m edicine" to pre-medical stu­ dents and the public during a three- day lecture series next week. Larry Carver, hum anities pro­ gram coordinator, said Dr. Oliver Sacks' concept of "rom antic m edi­ cin e" com bines the hum an side of medical practice with the technical side. "Sacks has brain-damaged people ... cine only takes learned treating in that medi- us so far. W hat he's Inventors By STEVEN F. RUNG Daily Texan Staff trying to do is to wed knowledge and technical skill with understand­ in g ," Carver said. Sacks will be the first Dr. Joe Thorne Gilbert C entennial lecturer in health professions. The lecture­ ship was established by family and friends to honor Gilbert, who prac­ ticed medicine in Austin for 53 years and was surgical consultant to the Student Health C enter for 29 years. The lectureship is co-sponsored by the UT Humanities Program and the Health Professions Office. Sacks will be on cam pus M onday through W ednesday. The speech on "A Ro­ mantic M ed icine" will be held at 7:30 p.m. M onday in the University Teaching C enter 2 .112A. "H is experiences have som ething to say about w hat pre-medical ed u ­ cation is supposed to b e ," Carver said. It is enlightening for medical students to encounter a doctor w ho can join art and science, he said. Jeanne Lagowski, associate dean in the Health Professions Office, said Sacks is an especially appropri­ ate speaker for the lectureship be­ the cause his work overcomes boundaries betw een the practice of medicine and appreciation of the hum anities. "H e crosses medicine and the hu m anities," she said. Sacks has written four books, M i­ graine, A w akenings, A Leg to Stand O n and The M an W ho M istoo k H is W ife fo r a Hat. A w a ke n in g s, the m ost w ell- know n book, was published in 1973. The book is an account of Sacks' work with patients in the 1960s who had suffered serious neurological disorders in the 1920s. The 18 patients had developed se­ vere symptoms of Parkinson's dis­ ease. Although they remained nor­ som e had been mal mentally, com atose or physically incapacitat­ ed for 30 to 40 years. After Sacks began treating them with the drug the patients experienced L-dopa, "aw ak en in g s," becom ing physically able once again. The book tells of their accom m o­ dation to the loss of 40 years of their lives, and their struggles to deal with the drug's side effects. Sacks has done research in neuro­ physiology and neurochem istry. His clinical work has included the treatm ent of migraine headaches, work on behavioral developm ent and behavioral disorders in chil­ dren, neurological disorders in chil dren and elderly patients and the ef­ fects of limb injury and am putation. in UTC At 3:30 p.m . Tuesday 2.112A, Sacks will show a film based on A w akenings, and will dis­ cuss his clinical work. A brown bag lunch discussion will be held at noon W ednesday in the Texas Union Building G over­ nors' Room. A reading of a play, A K in d o f Alaska, written by Harold Pinter and based on Aw akenings, will be at 3 p.m . W ednesday in F. Loren W inship Drama Building 2.180. create new group name to attract entrepreneurs Members of an area inventors group are changing their image to attract Austin en ­ trepreneurs interested in developing and marketing new inventions, said the board chairman of the Inventors Association of Austin. Chairman Dean Murray said the organi­ zation is officially changing its name Thurs­ day to the Inventors and Entrepreneurs A s­ sociation of Austin, the to appeal” of the association. "broaden One goal of the association is to encour­ age interaction betw een the people who have the ideas and the people w ho have the money, Murray said. "W e hope to develop a bit of com m erce in this to w n ," Murray said. "W e would like to see a local idea produced and com m er­ cialized and funded by local investors, and that's the whole k ey ." IAA hopes to draw together students, professional businessm en, entrepreneurs and inventors. "T h e association encourages students to jo in ," Murray said. "T h ey have the opportunity to m eet some business peop le." Dan Vogler, the association's president, said three UT students currently belong to the organization, but many more attend the meetings. IAA is lenient about making the students pay the $15 m em bership fee, he said. Murray said IAA has a twofold purpose: "num ber one, to educate the individual on the invention process and the commercial­ ization process of that invention, and num­ ber two, to provide a netw ork of resources through education and m em bership. The experienced entrepreneur can share ideas with the n ovice." The IAA w as created only five m onths ago, but has attracted many Austin busi­ nessm en, accountants and entrepreneurs, Murray said. About 40 people attend each meeting, he said. "So m e of the m ost prom inent business­ men in Austin are on the (IAA) board of directors," Vogler said. The association is sponsored by the UT Center for Technological Transfer, part of the Bureau of Engineering Research, Vogler said. "T h e purpose of the center is to achieve better ties betw een the University and the business com m unity and to stim u­ late new g row th," he said. The group will m eet Thursday at 7:30 p.m . in the Joe C. Thom pson C onference Center. The meeting will be open to the public. Because the group meets on the UT cam ­ pus, IAA "d oes attract people in academ ­ ia ," Vogler said. How to buy a performance You can use the American Express® Card to buy concert tickets for your favorite groups or airplane tickets for your vaca tions. It’s the perfect way to pay for all the little things, and the big ticket items, that you'll want during college. How to get the Card before you graduate. Because we believe college is the first sign of success, we’ve made it easier for you to get the American Express Card Graduating students can get the Card as soon as they accept a 510,000 careeroriented job. If you're not graduating yet, you can apply for a special sponsored Card. Look for student applications on campus. Or call 1-800 THE-CARI), and tell them you want a student application. The American Express Card, ’t leave school without it;"M C E JOHN “MAIDEN DANCE G ra m a v isio n R ecords and Cassettes m arketed b y P o ly g ra m JOHN BLA _ t w i n k l i n g o p a n e r r fOIMD UIARCH0UÍC Quanlilte Limited Sale ends Sunday, March 16th. M o v ie S , M u SÍC & M o V C l •Burnet at 49th •Manchaca at Ben White S E E JOHN B LA K E IN CO N CERT MARCH 1 3 th AT THE CONTINENTAL CLUB I RELATED I SERVICES II TRAVEL YCT endorses Loeffler for governor By MARTHA A8HE Daily Texan Staff Young Conservatives of Texas en­ dorsed gubernatorial candidate Tom Loeffler in the Republican primary at its annual state convention Sun­ day, naming him "most able to beat Mark White," a YCT officer said Wednesday. Richard Munisteri, YCT state po­ litical affairs vice chairman and UT business sophomore, said the 125 delegates to the convention were convinced that Loeffler would be the most efficient in fiscal matters. The group also believes Loeffler would permit higher education in­ stitutions as much autonomy with their spending as possible, Munist­ eri said. "I'm really convinced that he would support autonomous educa­ tion administrations, |iscally opera­ ting with as much efficiency as pos­ said. YCT s ib le ," M unisteri members feel Loeffler is the most fiscally responsible of the Republi­ can candidates, he said. Sixty-five percent of the delegates to the convention voted to support Loeffler. Kent Hance followed with 23 percent of the vote, while Bill Clements received 12 percent of the vote. The conservative youth group en­ dorsed gubernatorial candidate An­ drew Briscoe over Mark White in the Democratic primary, with 77 percent of the vote going to Briscoe. David Davidson won YCT's en­ dorsement for the Republican nomi­ nation for lieutenant governor over Virgil Mulanax and Glenn Jackson, with 55 percent of the vote. "Davidson has shown a strong commitment to the traditional val­ ues of free enterprise, limited gov­ ernment and family values that have over the 150 year history of Texas made us the great state we are," YCT State Chairman Frank Reilly said in a statement. Munisteri said YCT delegates did not endorse a candidate in the attor­ ney general's race or in the 1988 Re­ publican presidential primary be­ cause none of the candidates received "a clear consensus" of YCT members. John Roach received 45 percent of the delegates' votes for endorse­ ment in the Republican race for at­ torney general, while Roy Barrera and Ed Walsh received 31 percent and 24 percent, respectively. Republican Jack Kemp took 38 percent of the vote to Vice President George Bush's 31 percent in the Re­ publican presidential primary en­ dorsement vote. Munisteri said the group will wait until the elections are closer to make endorsements in those races. The YCT delegates also endorsed Ed Emmett in the Republican pri­ mary for railroad commissioner, George Collis for Texas land com­ missioner, Bill Powers for agricul­ ture commissioner, and Justice Raul Gonzales and Judge Hugo Touchy for the Texas Supreme Court. Reilly said Loeffler's support for President Ronald Reagan and con­ servative ideals is unequaled by other candidates. 'Tom Loeffler is best able to resist pressure for a state income tax, to in make necessary in spendihg, higher education and other areas, and preserve our valued right to work laws," Reilly said. reductions improve efficiency Nancy Dorn, spokeswoman for Loeffler, said Loeffler will not sup­ port another increase in college tui­ tion. "He is very supportive of the (Select Committee on Higher Edu­ cation's) work, and will be giving a very hard look at their recommen­ dations," Dorn said. Loeffler sees higher education as the key to recruiting high technolo­ gy and industry to Texas, Dorn said. Summer Positions Open in Sales Training Killer protests execution stay Late reprieve saves 1 from planned double injection Asaociatad Press - from HUNTSVILLE Convicted killer Roger DeGarmo, who was in jectio n saved Wednesday late thanks reprieve, said he still was upset that the state has not carried out his death sentence. leth al to a "I'm protesting that the state does not kill according to the law ," DeGarmo, 31, said. "They pick the easiest cases. My people were willing to show some spunk. So they took Charlie," he said, referring to Charles Bass, a convicted killer who was put to death earlier Wednesday. Bass and DeGarmo had shared the exe­ cution date and would have be­ come Texas' first double execution since 1951 if a federal judge in Houston had not granted DeGar­ mo a stay late Tuesday. DeGarmo, a California drifter convicted of abducting and shoot­ ing to death a 20-year-old Houston woman, gained publicity in recent weeks after declaring he would auctión off witness seats to his ex­ ecution. He also said he would narrate his own execution so wit­ nesses would know what he felt and thought. DeGarmo said he has received letters criticizing him for his plans and also questioning whether he gave his victim any consideration before shooting her. He showed one letter, signed by a Lt. Helen Cooper of the Chatta­ nooga, Tenn., Police Academy, in which she volunteers to be his exe­ cutioner. identified as "You may pass this on as an of­ fer to perform the injection," the officer wrote. Cooper, the training division of the academy, was out of town Wednesday and could not be reached for comment. "This is a real nice lady," De­ Garmo said. "I'd hate to be in Ten­ nessee." in But he said he did not find the letter offensive and planned to write her a response. "Everyone's entitled to an opinion," he said. "If the state had done their job under the law, I would be dead," he said. EXCUSE The Daily Texan advertising department is accept­ ing applications tor traineeships. This is paid train­ ing that oilers invaluable experience in media sales. Trainees who excel are ollered sales posi­ tions. We supply your training and a chance to work with the largest and best college newspaper in the world. QUALIFICATIONS: U.T. Student ability to work 20 hrs wk sales experience a car Applications available in TSP Building. Room 3.210. -The University of Texas at Austin is an equal employment opportunity and an affirmative action employer GRAND M g ' OPENING!!! March 1 3 - 2 0 Software Sug. Retail Salo Prleo Lotus 1-2-3 Microsoft Windows MadnTax Ultima IV Gato $495.00 $349.00 $99.00 $75.00 $59.95 $39.95 $65.00 $52.50 $41.96 $24.50 Diskettes S uq. Retail 8 a I a P r le * Accessories 3 1/2* SS/DD $59.99 *$ 1 7 .5 0 Macintosh 800K Drives 31/TD S/D D $74.99 *$ 2 5 .0 0 Diskette Cases 3 1/T 5 1/4* DS/DD $29.95 *$ 1 2 .0 0 Diskette Cases 51/4* •per box of 10 Paper 2500 Sheets Lasercut Sug. S a l* Ratal Price $495.00 $275.00 $14.95 $9.75 $19.95 $11.75 $35.00 $19.94 Convenient parking behind the store! Sale Prices Good 3/13 - 3/20 Hours M-F 930-6 Sat 10-5 Mastercard. VISA. Checks, and P.O.’s Accepted Serving / faculty, staff, full-time graduate students and their families. Open M onday-Friday, 9 - 4 ; Thursday, 9 - 7 / Open a new IRA account and get a free mug! (While supply lasts) University Federal Credit Union 46th and Guadalupe•467-8060 Say “YES to ACC” March 15 Why A CC needs your support. T h e Texas Legislature has d em anded th at A ustin provide a local tax base for A ustin C om m un ity College by 1987 o r risk losing $ 2 0 million in state funds. T h ese funds acco u n t for Vjrds of A C C ’s operating budget and their loss would virtually shut dow n the college. W e’re asking voters to approve a tax base for A C C on M arch 15. This tax would be capped at 5 cen ts per $ 1 0 0 p roperty evaluation and would include a $ 7 5 ,0 0 0 exem ption for the elderly and disabled as well as a 10% hom estead exem ption. Vote “Y E S ” M arch 15 to establish the tax base so A C C can remain open for the citizens of Austin A u stin 's eco n o m ic fu tu re depends on well-trained w orkers. A C C is the prim ary source o f the diverse types o f training that will be req u ired . • Last year, o ver 2 7 ,0 0 0 A ustinites benefited from classes at A C C and enrollm ent is expected to reach 3 5 ,0 0 0 students by 1995. • A C C provides valuable vocational skills often n ot available anyw here else in A ustin. • A C C offers ed ucation al opportunities to non -traditional students such as returning housewives, single m oth ers, public school d ropou ts, people seeking second careers, senior citizens, workers trying to upgrade job skills and students needing rem edial work before pursuing academ ic programs. ♦ Unless a local tax base is established fo r A C C , the Legislature will cut state funding. • A C C stands to lose $ 2 0 million, Virds o f its operating budget. • W ithout state funds, A C C will either be forced to close its doors o r to cut back operations and raise tuition. • A C C already charges the highest com m un ity college tuition in the state and further increases would price m any A ustinites out o f educational opportunities and vocational skills. ❖ It's just not fair that A ustin doesn't help support A C C . • A ustin is the only city in Texas th at does not provide a local tax base for its com m un ity college. T h e m ajority o f A C C ’s operating revenues come from the S tate. A u stin C om m unity C ollege boosts the local econom y. • Th rou gh its operatin g expenses, A C C pumps $ 2 0 million into th e local econ om y. • A C C will use the approxim ately $8 million raised in local taxes to ren ovate buildings, expand operations and secure p erm an en t facilities. These operations will add even m ore m oney to th e local econ om y. In order for A C C to con tinu e receiving state funds, A ustin voters must approve a local tax base for A C C . T b e money raised from local taxes will 1 used to improve educational facilities, develop new courses in response to com m unity needs and provide adequate space for a growing student population. Please help A C C continue its outstanding work in the com m unity by voting “Y E S ” on M arch 15. Say "YES to ACC” al ad p a id fo r b y C m ie m fo r A C C C o m m itte r , W ill D a v a , T re a s u re r. 6215 N L a m a r. A u s tin . Texas 78752 state & local Page 8/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13, 1986 By ROBERT BRUCE Dally Texan Staff Pipeline chief asked to discuss route Austinite convicted of injury to a child; 25-year term looms Alternative Route One Austin State Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, D- Austin, mailed a round-trip airline ticket to the Goodyear Tire and Rub­ ber Co.'s chief executive W ednes­ day and asked him to come to A us­ tin to discuss rerouting a proposed pipeline, the path of which would take it over the Edwards Aquifer. Goodyear ow ns All-American Pipeline Co., which w ants to con­ struct part of its 1,700-mile pipeline over the environm entally sensitive aquifer. "This huge, pressurized, hot-oil pipeline is threatening the w ater supply of over a million Texans," the letter to Goodyear chief Robert Mercer said. "Your pipeline will be almost 1,800 miles long. If you a d d ­ ed as little as 20 miles to your route, you could avoid contam inating our water forever." The Cen-Tex W ater Preservation Fund, a group of aquifer-area resi­ dents, paid for ticket. County and state officials have joined the group in fighting the pro­ posed route over the aquifer. the $660 time and money "We d o n 't enjoy fighting and spending this w ay," Barrientos said at a W ednes­ day conference. "1 think the main problem has been a lack of commu­ nication. "W e are always willing to talk to anyone," he said. "We certainly prefer to talk to the head honcho." s p o k e s m a n Bill G o o d y e a r Houston Edwards Aquifer Alternative Mexico Gulf of Mexico Proposed route for All-American Pipeline Co.’s crude -oil pipeline and suggested alternatives. Texan Graphics/Mark Greene Newkirke said he did not know how Mercer would respond, but added Mercer had been to Austin recently. Newkirke declined to say with whom Mercer met or what he discussed. Hays County Commissioner Dan Campos and Travis County Judge Mike Renfro were also at the press conference. Renfro said county law­ yers had obtained from All-Ameri­ can a m ap showing two alternate pipeline routes. "W e stand at the crossroad in our fight to protect our w ater supply from the All-American pipeline," Renfro said. "O ne road leads to a rational solution this serious problem, a solution which would both protect our water an d allow Goodyear to build its pipeline. to "The other road leads to a long and protracted legal battle, which we have every intention of waging until we have received a satisfactory judgm ent," he said. Barrientos said while the pipeline should be rerouted, opponents of the aquifer route do not oppose the pipeline's construction. "W e w ant Goodyear to make a lot of m oney," Barrientos said. "We w ant there to be a lot of jobs." Watson-Casey financial slip downplayed By DOWNY JACKSON Daily Texan Staff A representative of the project m anager for A ustin's M unicipal Office Com plex said W ednesday the notice of foreclosure issued to the com pany last week for a tardy m ortgage pay­ m ent did not signal major financial trouble. Watson-Casey Co. received a notice March 4 warning the developm ent com pany that First City Centre, a dow ntow n office building owned by Watson-Casey, would be foreclosed if the com pany did not make the m ortgage paym ent within 30 days. The notice was issued by the Teacher Retire­ m ent System of Texas, the holder of the mort­ gage on the building. Clark M anning, TRS chief investm ent officer, said Watson-Casey made paym ents for the delinquent m ortgage Monday — more than two weeks after the paym ent was due. Manning said the com pany also paid on Mon­ day the next quarter's mortgage, which will not be due for months. Alan Dodd, Watson-Casey spokesm an, said this was the first time W atson-Casey had been late with a m ortgage paym ent on First City C en­ tre or any other building the com pany owns. Dodd said Watson-Casey missed the mortgage paym ent because of cash-flow problems linked to a 14-month delay in final city approval for construction of the municipal office complex. Dodd said the com pany's financial problems would not affect its ability to continue work on the complex, which is the proposed location for a new city hall. "W e're real strong for the long term and strong on a short-term basis," Dodd said. W atson-Casey was chosen to develop the complex — which will include the city hall, a hotel, office space and a public plaza — in De­ cember 1984. An option agreem ent giving the company permission to start construction on the project still has not been signed by the council. Dodd said Watson-Casey has invested $1.8 million in the MOC but cannot receive any reve­ nue from the project until an option agreem ent is signed. Last sum m er, Watson-Casey laid off 44 workers — m ost of whom were working on the city hall project. Questions about W atson-Casey's financial sta­ tus have been raised recently. Councilmember George H um phrey said at a Jan. 29 council work session that he had asked the council subcom ­ mittee studying the MOC to request a financial statem ent from Watson-Casey. "In a joint venture, the first thing you ask for is a financial statem ent, and I have not been able to see a financial statem ent from Watson-Ca­ sey," H um phrey said W ednesday. "I think it is crazy to enter into a joint venture without a fi­ nancial statem ent." Mayor Pro Tern John Trevino said the subcom ­ mittee decided against H um phrey's proposal be­ cause "the information m ight get into the wrong h ands” — namely, to W atson-Casey's com peti­ tors, who might use it as an unfair advantage. By USA BAKER Daily Texan Staff An Austin m an was convicted late W ednesday of injury to a child and faces a m inimum 25-year prison sentence for striking and biting the face of a 2-year-old boy. A Travis C ounty jury deliberated almost three hours before finding Joe Reyes, 26, guilty of the third-de­ gree felony. Reyes was charged with striking his girlfriend's son, Ralph Barrera, in the face and biting the boy's face and shoulder during an Aug. 24, 1985, dispute. "This was a hard-fought one," said Terry Keel, assistant Travis County district attorney, after the guilty verdict was returned just af­ ter 7 p.m . Reyes has prior convictions on charges of aggravated assault, bur­ glary of a habitation and several m isdemeanors. Because he is classi­ fied as a habitual criminal, he faces at least a 25-year sentence. The sentencing phase of the trial is scheduled for Thursday m orning in the 331st District Court. During final argum ents, defense attorney Jesse W hittendon told the jury of seven men and five wom en that the boy's m other, 18-year-old Joanne Arriola, m ight have inflicted the bruises on the child during the dispute. W hittendon repeatedly at­ tacked Arriola's credibility by alleg­ ing she often mistreated her son. W hittendon had called several of Reyes' family members to testify Reyes cared for Barrera while Arrio­ la often refused to feed the child and spanked him for crying. Some family members testified Reyes fre­ quently bit the boy on the cheek, but was only "playing." "Joe bites Ralph — that's the way he plays with him ," W hittendon said. "Maybe that seems w eird.... Maybe he just got a little excited being around a little kid." Prosecutors argued Reyes' family m em bers lied under oath to keep him out of prison, and said the d e­ fense attacked Arriola's testimony as part of a "sm okescreen" to dis­ tract the jury from the child abuse issue. Assistant District Attorney Kent ‘If I am a lawyer for a hundred years, I will never see the lying and perjury that went on here. When you attempt to lie, aH you’re going to do is look like a fool. Those people were not fit to cross-examine be­ cause they didn’t have their stories straight.’ — Terry Keel, Travis County assistant district attorney Anschutz told the jury they were "subjected to one of the most in­ credible gangs of character assassins I think I've ever seen." "You heard a series of the d e­ fense's relatives telling the same tale ... of how the defendant, Joe Reyes, was a prince of a guy, plays w ith kids, although he plays with kids by biting them ... and how Joanne was an ogre," Anschutz said. Keel said the defense witnesses' testimony "w as the w orst pack of lies — it was a perjury conspiracy from the word go and it w asn't even a good one." "That was all the defense case was — an attack against the victim's m other," Keel said. "The only crime she ever committed in this case was going to the police departm ent and reporting child abuse." "If I am a lawyer for a hundred years, I will never see the lying and perjury that w ent on here," Keel said. "W hen you attem pt to lie, all you're going to do is look like a fool. Those people were not fit to cross- examine because they d id n 't have their stories straight." Reyes also has been indicted in the Oct. 26, 1985, shooting death of a Mexican citizen. Although the charge originally was filed as capital m urder, it was dow ngraded later to m urder. J Its the Today® Sponge. And unlike most contraceptives, it has its very own phone number. You can call our Today Tafldine at 800223-2329 (in California 800222-2329) 24 hours a day if you need advice, or any information about birth control. Or if you have any questions at all about The Sponge! Chances are, you already know the Today Sponge is small, disposable and very easy to use. But you may oe wondering how it works. Primarily, The Sponge works by rek Nonoxynol-9 (a safe ana effective spermicic continuously for 24 hours. It also helps block the passage of sperm to the uterus, and even traps and absorbs sperm. For a full 24 hours. I he s ponge is very etteenve—as high a 91%? in fact, no reversible method other Ú the Pill or IUD is mote effective. And few are easier to use. All you do is wet The Sponge thorough with with water and insert it.'feu never have to What s morejjou don t need a doctors scription for The Sponge. Its available j ir local drug store and at selected supermarkets. So tf you’re looking for an easy birth control method you can really trust, pick up the Today Sponge. Then if you still have any questions, just pick up the phone. ^ T u to r s French Salon y e a rs ex p erien ce in I h e m a jo r S a fo n s of? j o W j Special cut, sham, blowdry Cynthia & Henry $20 C a rle 4238 Bee Caves Rd. 3 2 8 -3 6 9 1 a z¡s & s m m s — The Student Association of the ’70s March 14 & 15 in the Texas Union Ballroom 5:30-8:00 Friday Registration/Reception Saturday 10:00-11:00 am Tomato Hubris and Arts and Sausages 11:15-12:00 am Arts and Sausages 2:15-3:00 pm 3:15-4:00 pm Administration UFO and Red Ryder Fall of Red Ryder Death of The Deadly Texan % ttu Women can expect an annual effective!»* rate oí 89-91% if they uxe the Toda» Sponge conatttently and accoidlnf to label matructiona. In clinical trial* « e lu a n t women who did not uae the Today Sponge cnnaietemly and properly the effective»»** waa 84-87%. Uae a* directed © 1986 VU C orp Xrday it a registered trademark and The Sponge ia a trademark of V U Corp Councilmembers to discuss fate of STNP law suit money m m a _ u The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13, 1986/Page 9 m ■ By DONNY JACKSON By DONNY JACKSON Daily Texan Staff I he democratic process will get a work­ out Thursday when the City Council holds four public hearings, including discussion of a proposed electric rate reduction using money from a lawsuit settlem ent. On Dec. 19, the council voted to accept a settlem ent in the city's South Texas Nuclear Project lawsuit against Brown & Root, Inc. Under the settlem ent, the city will receive $120 million, paid in quarterly installments of more than $4.25 million during the next seven years. A ustin's advisory Electric Utility Com ­ mission voted Feb. 4 to recommend the council use $10.8 million of the first year's settlem ent paym ent to give a 4.9 percent rate decrease to electric custom ers who use more than 500 kilowatt-hours. The city's share of the first year settlement totals $17 million. The remaining $6.3 million would be allo­ cated for an energy conservation program. The EUC's reasoning behind the mini­ mum use standard is that ratepayers who use more than 500 kilowatt-hours were hit with a 14.3 percent rate increase last year, while those w ho use less than that amount were given a 2.2 percent increase. EUC members have said the 14.3 percent rate hike was appropriate because the larg­ er users received an 11.6 percent decrease the year before. Thus, the net increase for these users has been 2 .7 percent since 1984. The EUC proposal also includes a 2.1 percent rate decrease for all ratepayers be­ cause of a drop in fuel costs. Under the recommendation, a study would be conducted to determine the best use for the remaining $103 million to be paid during the next six years. The council is limited to spending STN P settlement money within the Electric Utility Department, according to guidelines in the city's settlement of a 1983 rate dispute be­ fore the state Public Utility Commission. Contrary to the time-honored business theory that large volume means cheaper rates, Austin's electric rates are structured so that the less electricity a consumer uses, the lower the rate paid. The city's rate structure is designed to encourage conser­ vation. But many businesses and people with large houses believe the rate increases were unfair, so they are disputing the rates be­ fore the PUC. The PUC case has been put in limbo be­ cause of state District judge Joe Dibrell's ruling that the PUC cannot use the same standards and guidelines in judging the fairness of the rates of municipally owned utilities as are used in judging rates of investor-ow ned utilities. A ustin's electnc utility is municipally owned. Bob Kahn, an assistant city attorney rep­ resenting the city electric utility, said the city is unsure what standards will be used to judge the fairness of the electnc rates. "W e're trying to figure out how to write our briefs now because we don't know what standards will be applied to u s," Kahn said last week. The m ajor argument against the rate re­ duction is the effect it might have on the city lawsuit against Houston Lighting & Power, STN P project manager. Austin is suing HL&P, claiming mism an­ agem ent of the nuclear project. The trial is set for Travis County, but HL&P has re­ quested a change of venue hearing. During the Feb. 6 council m eeting, City A ttorney Paul Isham said if the council ap­ proved the rate decrease, Travis County cit­ izens might expect similar decreases from an HL&P settlem ent Such information could bias potential jurors who might vote believing the settlem ent would produce further rate decreases, he said If such bias exists, HL&P would have valuable evidence that could support m ov­ ing the trial from Travis County, Isham said. The council has asked City M anager Jorge Carrasco to prepare a report outlining the city's options for using the Brown & Root m oney Carrasco said the report would be ready at the beginning of the summer. F R A G R f l N C E S • G I F T S € T S • M f l K € U P T O N C R • C L C R N S C R S You Are Invited SfDAVlDfc COMMUNITY HOSPITAL 919 East 32nd Street Austin, Texas 78705 Lower deck IH35 at 32nd jFñjñ G fí fí N C G I F T S € T S • M f í K € U P T O N 6 R • C L € f í N S € f t S Beauty Rids to help protect your body and hair from the Sun Moisturizer Oil free tanning lotion SPF 4 Tanning Oil Sunscreen SPF 8 Sunblock SPF 15 Body Conditioning Stick u»/sunscreen Shampoo Hoir conditioner Both and shomer glee Triol size moisturizer & sun screen SPF 8 Retoll Value Our Price 7.00 4 .t0 7.00 6.50 7.00 7.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 4.C0 3.90 4 .t0 4.20 2.50 3.00 3.00 3.00 1. 75 .99 Ul« carry ñama brand products nuunvs 5 0 -75% o f f Coma in ond join our now hosiery dub. Mon-Sat 10:00 om-MO pm Sun 1.-00 pm-AKX) pm 255-5000 Uih+rm baovCy Is offordoblm G ift C ertificóte* fW oiloble Malls of America Oudot M ods of Pm arico I S S A F M I S t S Mc/vtsn 10 mb» N. aI Cam pus on M SS 3 > ID o r\ rr\ to O in rr\ —i m ZD m c "D —Io z m DO SPRING BREAK SALE! SAVE 15%-25%! 22.9 9 8.99 TROPICAL PRINT SHIRTS. A silky rayon shirt in hot new patterns and colors. S,M,L,XL. Reg. 30.00. SCREENED-PRINT T-SHIRTS. Your favorite summer colors. S.M.L.XL. Reg. 12.00. *KG, “ M E N ’S S T O R E ' CORDUROY SHORTS. Cool cotton- blend cord in the season’s newest colors. Sizes 28-40. Reg. 20.00. wmpnft KNIT SHIRTS. Assorted stripes in sizzling shades. S,M,L,XL Reg. 26.00. Imagine Imking inside the human K xJy. . . discovering the clearest, most detailed views of its every structure. . . and using these images to make medical diagnoses in ways that were never before possible. Until now. T he Central Texas Imaging Center, managed by St. David’s Community Hospital, gives todays doctors the sharpest pictures of the body ever available. The C enter uses magnetic resonance imaging to provide detailed internal body images— without the use of radiation— for safe, effec­ tive examinations. T h e staff at the Central Texas Imaging Center will demonstrate this advanced diagnostic methtxi at an open house on Saturday, March 15, from 11:00 a.m . to 2 :0 0 p.m . Refreshments will he served. Parking will he available immediately west of St. Davids Community Hospital. Magnetic' Resonance imaging utilizes a “super magnet" with a field strength many times m ore powerful than that of the Earth. D ue to this stn/ng magnetic field, guests wishing to see the dem on- stration will he asked to check credit cards and watches. Persims with pacemakers or aneuiysm clips should not enter the facility. € o < M . PI KAPPA ALPHA PRESENTS "BIG JOHN'S" PORTER PARTY! 6th ANNUAL FEATURING IT'S ALL DAY, ALL NIGHT XAVION IDENTITY CRISIS FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1986 (FREE A D M ISSIO N) 3 to 7 p.m. and 10 p.m. to 3 a.m $1 BEER $1.50 W INE COOLERS $5 GUYS $3 GALS ALL YOU CAN DRINKI TIKA House 24th & Leon ALL PORTERS ARE WELCOME TO BE OUR GUESTS A N D DRINK FREE Benefiting United Cerebral Palsy Page 10/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13, 1986 Programs aid Texas schools By JUDY JONES Daily Texan Staff Learning specialists in the Uni­ versity Division of C ontinuing Edu­ cation are developing new pro­ grams to help Texas schoolchildren and teachers in the classroom and to get parents more involved in their children's education. Kathryn Allen, director of the di­ vision's Extension Instruction and Materials Center, said the continu- ing-education division uses UT re­ sources to help address problem s and needs in the Austin com m uni­ ty The center's special-projects divi­ sion prepared w o rksh o p s that helped to prepare m ore than 90,000 educators for the Texas Examination of Current Adm inistrators and Teachers. As the TECAT project was pre­ pared, received the developers feedback from Texas school districts stating, "th e re w ere needs for other kinds of activities and programs and m aterials that we thought we could develop and p ro d u ce," Allen said. The first project to develop from the TECAT w orkshops was a series of TECAT review videotapes, pro­ duced by the special-projects divi­ sion with assistance from the Austin Independent School District. "W e think they have a broader u se ," Allen said. "W e understand that som e schools are already using them to help their students study punctuation and gram m ar and other writing skills." Allen said the center is planning the AISD. future projects with O ther projects will be started to as­ sist the Rio Grande Valley, she said. school districts in Shirley Crook, director of special projects for the center, said pro­ grams now in the planning stage cover diverse areas. The special- projects division will begin work with several school districts in the valley in June to train teachers to use a "defensive gram m ar," she said. system called "F o r them, it will be a wav of trying to teach the essential survival skills o f the English language prima­ rily to a population that has limited English proficiency," Crook said. Special projects also is working to set up advisory with AISD groups to deal with specific prob­ lems, Crook said. O ne of these will be working with a group of junior- high-school teachers who do not have discipline problems in their classroom s. "Junior high has been pretty well identified in a num ber of school districts as an area where classroom m anagem ent and disci­ pline are the greatest problem, and where the least has been done to solve any of the problem s," she said. "W e re going to be working with this group and identifying w hat has made the sucessful teach er," Crook said. "W hy do some teachers have no referrals (students sent to the principal's office), and others are sending 60 students down a w eek?" Crook said that in the AISD, three times as many discipline problem s junior high are reported schools as in all other schools com ­ bined. the in is In addition, special projects working with AISD in trying to set improve parent up programs support in both disciplinary and ac­ ademic areas, Crook said. to "W e'v e discovered a need that we had not really identified — that lots of parents would support classroom activities a great deal more if they felt more comfortable in doing s o ," Crook said. "W e're looking at tele­ vision as a m eans of approaching parents who aren't being much sup­ port in the classro o m ." Future projects will be targeted at increasing parent's understanding of the district's grading and evalua­ tion process, inspiring student self- discipline, and helping parents help their children progress in certain areas, such as writing skills. These programs may include short films or handouts to be given to parents, Crook said. Steady hands Associated Press A technician adjusts plates used in a continuous passive motion’ device at a plant in Elyria, Ohio. The plate allows for freedom of movement within the device, which provides continuous motion of leg and arm joints after ortho­ pedic surgery. UT professor studies sleep patterns By LAURA BEIL Daily T exa n Staff Some people plan for it to happen. O thers are suddenly overcome and lose control. It happens at home, in the library, in church. Even in class, in the middle of a lecture, som e people — yes — fall asleep. Galveston pulm onary physician Sam Kuna is finding out what happens w hen a person sleeps. As assistant professor of medicine at University of Texas Health Science C enter at Galveston, he studies patients from two sleep laboratories at the medical branch. The first laboratory opened in 1979, and the second opened last month. "N o one knows why you have to sleep ," Kuna said. "It is possible to prevent people from sleep­ ing for a certain am ount of tim e." In one sleep experim ent, a ringing bell awoke dogs each time they started to sleep. "A fter a while they couldn't keep them aw ake even w hen they rang the b e ll," Kuna said. "B u t still no one has figured out w hy you need sleep ." At the sleep laboratory, Kuna studies what he calls "destructive sleep p attern s." He said the most common destructive sleep pattern is sleep apnea, the main disorder studied in his laborato­ ry "Sleep apnea is a short period of time when people go to sleep, where even though they try to breathe, the throat is closed and breathing is impossible," Kuna said. "This may happen hun­ dreds of times during the course of the night. "Seven to ten are observed during a normal lab session," Kuna said. "M ost are observed to­ wards the beginning (of the session) when they are falling asleep." A period of sleep apnea ranges normally from 20 to 50 seconds when a person stops breathing. At the end of this pattern, a person goes into a light stage of sleep, Kuna said. "Y ou don't get the quality of sleep a person normally d o es." "If you don't get a good quality of sleep, then you don't feel refreshed," Kuna said. Symptoms of sleep apnea include a morning headache, subtle personality changes and con­ stant fatigue. Sleep apnea may be caused by obesity, which narrows the upper airway, or by the bone structure of a person's head and neck, a hereditary condition. "O ne of the questions we ask people when they come in is if they snore. If they don't snore, they don't have sleep ap n ea," Kuna said. Research technician James Smickley said pa­ tients are told what to expect before they go into the laboratory so they will have little trouble fall­ ing asleep. "W e try to make them understand what w e're doing beforehand," he said. "W e also tell them to try not getting as much sleep the night before they come into the lab, so they'll be a little tired. "Since we deal with patients with sleep apnea, sometimes the problem is keeping them awake long enough for us to attach the m onitors." Kuna also does studies on people with em ­ physema and on babies. He said sudden infant death syndrom e has been linked to sleep apnea. "This is a rapidly moving field, and within five years I think they'll be different treatments for these d isorders," Kuna said. iG w U . THE SEVENTH ANNUAL SILVER SPUR CHILI COOK OFF And Outdoor Concert 'o\r¡r)cj - KVET COUNTRY AM 1 3 0 0 GASI/Talbert Sanctioned Chili Cook-Off All Afternoon! MARCH 15,1986 Noon to MMnight at Dlsch Field (Directly South of City Coliseum) Tickets: Allen’s Boot Center (North A SouttiJ/Shepler’s/ Callahan’s/Nau’s Pharmacy/and all Silver Spurs iCOOAS OF AUSTINi >A( F C KASE101 CONTINUOUS CC ÍNTRY All Proceeds Go To The Austin Boy’s Club Ticket Price: $ 7.00 Advance $10.00 At Door No progress for Rozelle’s drug testing Associated Press R A N C H O MIRAGE, Calif. — Don Shula rem em bers back nearly a decade w hen he heard that R andy C row der, on e of th e leaders on his Miami D olphins, w as involved with drugs. "It w as a real su rp rise ," Shula "C ro w d er was said W ednesday one of the real solid citizens on o ur football team . A quiet guy and a sol­ id football player." N o NFL coach is surprised these days w hen he's told that on e of his players is on drugs, a topic that has dom inated discussions at the NFL m eetings here "I d o n 't think it's com pletely M ora, coach of Saints. any team can say said Jim clean," the New O rleans in T here w ere no new develo pm ents W ednesday league's drug the testing stalem ate in which C om m is­ sioner Pete Rozelle says he will im ­ pose random drug testing if he can't reach agreem ent w ith the NFL Play­ ers A ssociation. Rozelle briefed th e o w ners on his position and so did Jack D onlan, ex­ ecutive director of th e NFL M anage­ m ent C ouncil, w ho is also involved the negotiations w ith G ene in U pshaw , executive director of the union. D onlan later told rep o rters he be­ lieves Rozelle has th e po w er to im ­ pose his plan unilaterally with or w ithout union approval u n d e r a clause in the collective bargaining agreem ent that allows him to safe­ guard the integrity of the gam e. But Donlan ad ded "G ene an d 1 com m itted to co n tin ­ ue to talk. I think w e can w ork out an ag reem en t." M any coaches are quite sy m p a ­ involved with to players thetic drugs. "You think of y our team as your fam ily," says Shula. "If som ething h ap p en ed to one of y o u r kids you w ant to give them a chance not to ruin their careers and their lives " sports The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13, 1986/Page 11 Texas sweeps Emporia St. By MIKE HAMILTON Daily Texan Staff Baseball After losing to Texas, 5-3, Mon­ day, Emporia State stayed in town and pounded Concordia Lutheran, 21-0, Monday afternoon. Welcome back to reality, Hornets. The No. 1 Longhorns ran their record to 22-3 against Emporia State Wednesday night by sweeping a double-header, 12-0 and 8-0, before 1,000 at Disch-Falk Field. "They didn't throw any bums out there," Hornet Coach Dave Bing­ ham said. "I do know that we won't play anybody better this year." Texas outhit Emporia State, 19-7, winning its 12th and 13th consecu­ tive games. Emporia State, an NAIA school, fell to 9-5. "I thought it was a workmanlike performance," Texas Coach Cliff Gustafson said. "We didn't have the same inspired effort we had against Oklahoma and Arizona State, but it was our best perform­ ance of the year, overall. We didn't have mistakes in any areas." Jay Searcy had eight RBI in the double-header, including a grand slam to break open a scoreless tie in the nightcap. Searcy's fourth home run of the year was stopped by the top of a tree in the parking lot about 450 feet away. "I was wondering if it was me who hit that," said Searcy, who leads the Longhorns with 36 RBI. "I just had to stand there and watch. It was easily the hardest ball I've ever hit." Gustafson said the second game was anybody's to win until Searcy's fourth-inning home run. "That game was up for grabs until said. "That's then," Gustafson probably the farthest ball I've seen down the line here. Their pitcher (Mike Mcllhargy) was outstanding. They really have a fine team and we had to play our best to beat them." "That home run really deflated our kids," Bingham said. "I've been coming down here six years and this is the best hitting lineup they've had. I've never seen one hit that far in college." Searcy came up with the bases loaded again in the seventh, but could deliver "only" a two-run sin­ gle. "I was definitely thinking about another homer," the transfer third baseman from Oklahoma said. "I got a good cut at one, but after I got two strikes, I just had to put the ball in play. It's great hitting with peo­ ple on base so often." Kevin Gamer pitched the first five innings in the second game to raise his record to 3-0, After Gamer left the game with a blister, Wade Phil­ lips pitched three innings and John Morton pitched the ninth. The three gave up only two hits. Greg Swindell went the distance in the seven-inning opener, giving up five hits and striking out 10 in running his record to 4-0. "I didn't feel that strong out there tonight," Swindell said. "It got easi­ er after we put all those runs up, but I was pretty flat." "I wasn't going to use him to­ day," Gustafson said. "But he talked me into it last night. I'm pret­ ty easy to convince in that case, be­ cause I like to see him pitch. But I may use him only in relief this weekend to rest him for confer­ ence." Texas opens its Southwest Con­ ference schedule against Arkansas March 21-22 at Disch-Falk. Freshman catcher Brian Johnson started in center field in the first game and hit a 425-foot, three-run homer in the fifth to give Texas an 8-0 lead. "You're likely to see more of him playing in center," Gustafson said. "We sure could use his power." But even without Johnson, Texas had more than enough power to beat Emporia State. "Our starters threw about as well as they could," Bingham said. "They hit some good pitches. That's just a strong hitting lineup." Longhorn Kevin Gamer heads back to first base in Texas’ 12-0 victory. Judy Walgren/Daily Texan Staff ‘Candidate’ W illock endures losing campaigns By MIKE HAMILTON Daily Texan Staff Life is a considerably more enjoyable expe­ rience for Karl Willock now than it was two years ago. He had just suffered through his and Tex­ as' second consecutive 20-loss basketball sea­ son. Willock was also failing to fulfill fans' expectations, averaging 10.0 and 8.8 points in his first two seasons. "Things looked pretty bleak a couple of years ago," the 6-2V2, 175-pound senior guard said. "I came from a successful high school program and I wasn't used to getting beat by 30 points. I was used to winning by that much. It was tough getting used to." But those days are just a fading memory. Men’s Basketball Now, Willock is a basketball success. The Southwest Conference's Defensive Player of the Year's self-satisfaction and happiness show even when he does things as simple as answer the phone: "Hello — gubernatorial candidate Wil­ lock." Mark White shouldn't be shaking in his boots — not yet, anyway. Willock has some business to take care of. Like going home to Albuquerque, N.M., to play New Mexico in the first round of the National Invitational Tournament Thursday. The 18-11 Longhorns will face the 17-13 Lobos at 8:30 p.m. Austin time before an expected crowd of more than 18,000 at University Arena (Radio: KVET-AM 1300). "My family's not there anymore, but I'm still excited," Willock said. "I've called a bunch of friends and they're excited, too. Hopefully, there'll be a Karl Willock cheering section there." Willock was last cheered on at the Universi­ ty Arena, home of the 1983 Final Four, during the state high school tournament his senior year. He was Albuquerque's player of the year as he led Eldorado High to a state run- nerup finish. He averaged 19.1 points, 10.3 rebounds and 5.9 assists per game. "I've played a couple of games there and I used to shoot around there some," Willock said. "It's a great college basketball atm os­ phere. I'm looking forw ard to going back." N ew Mexico w as one of the schools that recruited Willock intensely. But Willock said his three finalists w ere Texas, W ashington an d M ichigan State. "N ew Mexico recruited m e hard early, but th e n sort of laid off," he said. "I th o u g h t they w ere losing interest in m e, but then they cam e on late. But I had already decided on Texas by then. I just liked th e econom ic cli­ m ate dow n h e re." Ironically, W illock's o th er tw o finalists are in the NCAA playoffs this year, w hile Texas just m issed. "I th o u g h t hard about M ichigan S tate," he See WBock, page 13 Budweiser FRIDAY,MARCH 14TH 3-7PM THE 4TH ANNUAL BETA BASH JOE KING CARRASCO & THE CROWNS WITH THIRD LANGUAGE $3.00 PRESALE $3.50 AT THE DOOR BEER WILL BE SOLD PROCEEDS BENEFITTING BIG BROTHERS-BIG SISTERS OF AUSTIN Page 12/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13,1986 Wilkins’ 35 leads Atlanta Associated Press EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Dominique Wilkins scored 12 of his 35 points in the second period Wednesday night and sparked the Atlanta Hawks to a 113-97 NBA victory over the New Jersey Nets for their seventh consecutive victory. Trailing 31-26 after the first peri­ od, Atlanta outscored the Nets 38- 16 to take a 64-47 halftime lead. Wilkins tallied eight of his 12 points in the decisive period on spectacular slam dunks. The Nets, who led by as much as 27-19 late in the first period, fell behind 36-35 when Wilkins hit a jump shot early in the second quarter to cap a 10-4 rally. New Jersey moved ahead again at 39-37 following a steal and layup by Kelvin Ransey, but At­ lanta, getting 10 points each from Wilkins and Randy Wittman, out- scored the Nets 27-8 over the last 6:14 of the first half to open a com­ manding lead. W ittman finished w ith 18 points and Kevin Willis added 14 for Atlanta, which has now won 11 of its last 12 games. Ransey led the Nets with 21 points. 76ers 105, Knicks 95 PHILADELPHIA — Moses Malone had 28 points and 15 re­ bounds as Philadelphia rolled to a victory over New York, which lost its fifth consecutive game. Charles Barkley added 17 points and Maurice Cheeks 15 and a season-high 14 assists for Philadelphia. James Bailey tied his season high with 25 points and Gerald Wilkins added 21 for New York. Philadelphia held a 59-46 lead at ha If time and scored the first five points of the third quarter. New York then ran off 12 straight points during a 17-2 spurt to close the gap to 66-63 on a layup by Darrell Walker with 6:17 to play in the period. New York has lost nine of its last 10 games and nine in a row on the road. Bullets 128, Cavaliers 114 RICHFIELD, Ohio — Jeff Malone scored 39 points, 12 of them third quarter, as Washington opened a 16-point lead on the way to a victory over Cleveland. the in The victory was Washington's third consecutive and seventh in the last 10 games. Cleveland lost for the eighth time in 11 games. Malone scored 19 points in the first half and teammate Charles Jones contributed 13 to help Washington take a 65-58 halftime lead. Malone and Cliff Robinson BuNet forward CNff Robinson blocks a Keith Lee elbow with his ear. Associated Press NBA to 95-79 entering then scored 12 each in the third quarter to push the Bullets' ad­ vantage the fourth period. Robinson finished with 21 points, Darren Daye had 16 and Jones and Gus Williams 15 each for the Bullets. Pistons 111, Pacers 101 PONTIAC, Mich. — Bill Laim- beer and Isiah Thomas scored 26 points each and Detroit held off Indiana's fourth-quarter rally for the victory. Earl Cureton scored on a dunk with 4:15 Left in the game and Thomas followed with a jump shot 13 seconds later, giving De­ troit a 97-90 lead. Indiana, which lost its fourth consecutive game, trailed 70-54 in the third quarter, but the Pacers outscored Detroit 11-3 to get to 93- 90 on a three-point play by rookie forward Bill Martin with 4:48 left in the game. Laimbeer, the NBA's leading rebounder, finished with 22 re­ bounds as Detroit won for the 12th time in its last 14 games. Kings 127, Mavs 120 (OT) DALLAS — Sacramento's Reg­ gie Theus hit six free throws and a basket in overtime to lift his team to a victory over Dallas, which had beaten them eight consecu­ tive times. Rolando Blackman's two free throws tied the game at 109 in regulation with 41 seconds left, and Eddie Johnson missed a short jumper to give Dallas a chance to run down the clock for the final shot. But Jay Vincent's jump shot hit the rim at the buzzer. Blackman had a game-high 46 points for Dallas, which was with­ out the services of leading scorer Mark Aguirre, who missed his second straight game with the flu. Suns 127, Bucks 126 (OT) MILWAUKEE — Walter Davis scored 12 of his 32 points in over­ time, including a game-winning jump shot from the key with sev­ en seconds left, boosting Phoenix over Milwaukee. THURSDAYS!! ENJOY THE BEST IN FOOD, MUSIC AND DRINKS TONIGHT! MOLSON & B o a r d w a lk CORONA $1.00 215 E. 6th BOARDWALK BEACH CLUB 479-8601 | IM Hm illUnniHtHIM HttlNIIIIIHUIM IIinM linillM I»llltllllHHINiltlltllllllllHllllltllllHIIIIM tM lllinilllllllllllllllllllltlilllllllHlllllllltllllHIIM IIM IIIM IIM ||iniH||||£ 9 p.m . till 12 p.m . AT ITS NOT JUST A GAME... IT'S AN ADVENTURE ! Free-throw shooting leads Providence past Boston U. Associated Press PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Provi­ dence sank 12 of 13 free throws in the last 3!/2 minutes and withstood a last-minute scoring binge by Jeff Timberlake to edge Boston Univer­ sity 72-69 in a first-round National In v itatio n T o u rn a m e n t gam e Wednesday night. Dave Kipfer sank both ends of a one-and-one with 3:30 left in the game to put the Friars ahead for good 60-59. It was the 12th lead change in a 9:43 span. Ernie Lewis, who led Providence with a career-high 18 points, and Matt Palazzi also converted one- and-ones to build the lead to 66-61. Then Timberlake led the Terriers back. He hit a jumper with 46 seconds to go and, after two free throws by Providence's Billy Donovan, con­ nected on a bank shot with 26 sec­ onds left, making the score 68-65. After Lewis missed a foul shot with nine seconds remaining Timberlake drove in for a layup with two sec­ onds to play, closing the lead to one point. The Friars, who won the NIT in NIT improved 1961 and 1963, their record to 16-13 with their first post­ season victory since the 1976 NIT. Boston University, which last won a postseason game in the 1959 NCAAs, ended its season at 21-10. McNeese St. 86, Dayton 75 LAKE CHARLES, La. — For­ wards Jerome Batiste and Kenny Jimerson combined for 45 points as McNeese State claimed its 21st con­ secutive homecourt victory with a triumph over Dayton. McNeese, the 21-10 Southland Conference runners-up, advances now to the second round at an unannounced site against an un­ specified opponent. led by D am on Goodwin's 31 points, finished its season at 17-13 and a 2-11 record on the road. D a y to n , Batiste, an honorable mention All-America, had 24 points and led the Cowboys with 12 rebounds. Jimerson scored 21 points and Mike Marshall had 15 for McNeese. Ronald Cox also had 10 points for McNeese, including a jumper with 15:03 left in the first half that gave the Cowboys a 10-8 lead they never, relinquished. SW Missouri 59, Pitt 52 SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Winston Garland scored 15 points and had eight steals to lead Southwest Miss­ ouri State to a victory over Pitts­ burgh. The Bears, now 23-7, held a 10-4 lead with about 15 minutes remain­ ing in the first half before the Panth­ ers ran off 10 consecutive points to take their biggest lead of the game at 14-10. The lead changed hands six times in the period before the Panthers, who were plagued by 27 turnovers, took a 29-28 edge into halftime. Southwest Missouri went ahead for good, 38-37, on a bucket by Gar­ land with about 14:40 remaining. The Bears assumed their biggest lead, 52-44, with 4:25 left and iced the victory by connecting on seven consecutive free throws in the final 28 seconds. Alford’s prolific scoring a mystery Associated Press BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Junior Steve Alford, a first-team All-Amer­ ican guard, is fourth on Indiana University's career-scoring list — much to the surprise of his coach. "He's not big, he's not strong, he's not quick and it's hard for me to imagine how a kid like that scores so many points," said Indiana Coach Bob Knight of the 6-2 Alford, who should end his career next sea­ son as his school's all-time scoring leader. "He can't post up, he can't really take it to the basket and he doesn't get rebound baskets. I think for a kid who only has a jump shot, he's as good a scorer as I've ever seen," Knight said. Alford has averaged 22.4 points this season in leading the 16th- ranked Hoosiers to a 21-7 mark. The Big Ten's second-leading scorer this season has a career total of 1,665 points. He needs 75 to catch Kent Benson for the third spot. The late Don Schlundt holds the Indiana record of 2,192 points. Knight, having led Indiana into the NCAAs for the 11th time in his 15 years with the Hoosiers, can watch Alford add to his totals start­ ing with Friday's game against Cleveland State at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, N.Y. His father, New Castle High School Coach Sam Alford, says de­ termination and the willingness to work are the reasons his son has been successful. "Everyone has always said all the things Steve can't do," the elder Al­ ford said. "He was supposed to be too small to play in the North Cen­ tral Conference (which is consid­ ered one of the toughest in Indiana) and he set a record by averaging 39 points a game his senior year. "He wasn't supposed to be able to play in the Big Ten," Alford con­ tinued. "Nobody thought he could make the Olympic team or compete with great players like that. Every­ body always talks about the things he isn't supposed to do. I don't pay attention to that anymore. He just seems to do anything he wants to." The Hoosiers and the 27-3 Vik­ ings are meeting for the first time. The winner will play either 25-5 St. Joseph's or 23-6 Richmond on Sun­ day. The Vikings are making their first NCAA appearance, while Indiana has won the tournament four times — twice under Knight. The Hoosiers are hitting .537 from the field this season, which is cur­ rently ahead of the school record of .530 set by the NCAA champion­ ship team of 1981. Cleveland State, which received an at-large invitation to the tourna­ ment because its championship in the Mid-Continent Conference does not carry an automatic NCAA bid with it, has a .528 shooting mark. The Vikings rank second nationally in scoring at 90.2 points per game, and lead the nation in scoring mar­ gin at 20.9. Coach Kevin Mackey's team has four players averaging in double fig­ ures. Forward Clinton Smith at 16.3, forward Clinton Ransey at 14.2, Eric Mudd, a 6-8 center, has a 12.4 average and leads the team in rebounds at 8.2. Guard Ken McFad- den averages 13.5 points and all five starters have connected on 50 per­ cent or better of their shots from the field. COLLEGE OF NATURAL SCIENCES STUDENT COUNCIL PRESENTS STUDENT/FACULTY MIXER FRIDAY, MARCH 14 4-6 P.M. TX. UNION GOVERNOR’S ROOM (3.116) FREE BEER, WINE, AND SNACKS (512)837-3334 RESERVE YOUR SPACE n o w ! MUST BE 18 OR OLDER TO PLAY £ * sports wire The Daily Texan/Thursday. March 1 3 .1986/Page 13 From staff and wire reports UT soccer team to hold tryouts The University of Texas men's soccer team will hold tryouts Thursday and Friday, 8 p.m. to 10 p.m ., at the Intramural Fields. All positions on the team are open. Texas is working toward the Southwest Conference tournament, which it will host April 11 and 12. The tournament will decide the 1985-86 champion of the conference. Six top teams in the league will participate Lamar coach says no to Houston HOUSTON — Lamar Coach Pat Foster, considered a likely replacement for Guy Lewis as the University of Houston's basketball coach, says he is not a candidate for the job. "A s I have said many times, I have no plans at this time to pursue any other job other than the one I have," Foster said Tuesday night. Foster is in his sixth year at Lamar and his record is 134-47. UH Athletic Director Tom Ford said he has contacted Pepperdine University Coach Jim Harrick about the Cougars' opening and has asked for permission to talk to Stanford's Tom Davis Ford also said Oklahoma's Billy Tubbs has been "in ­ directly" contacted by the Cougars about the position. Manges suing to keep furniture SAN ANTONIO — South Texas oilman-rancher Clin­ ton Manges has filed suit seeking to halt the scheduled auction of the San Antonio Gunslingers' office furni­ ture and football equipment. Manges and the Clinton Manges Oil & Refining Co filed suit Tuesday against the Bexar County sheriffs office seeking to halt the auction scheduled for Satur­ day. The items were seized after the United States Foot­ ball League Players Association won a lawsuit seeking payment on past-due paychecks for the Gunslingers. Manges' suit claims the desks, chairs, office equip­ ment, jerseys, helmets and other items belonged to Manges or the refining company and not to South Tex­ as Sports Inc., the Gunslingers' parent company. Willock Continued from page 11 said. "They had just won the na­ tional title and they showed a film that made you want to say 'Yeah, I'm going.' Coach (Jud) Heathcote camped out at my house. It's kind of funny. He wanted me to make a decision so he could tell Scott Skiles what to do. It's turned out pretty well for him, making All-America and all." Watching Skiles win Big Ten Play­ er of the Year and enduring fresh­ man and sophomore seasons of 6-22 and 7-21 is enough to give anybody second thoughts. But Willock said he could see things begin to turn around two years ago. "It was rough when things didn't get better after the second season," he said. "W e were never sure who was staying or who was going. But then John (Brownlee) said he was coming here and we got some other people and things changing. I could see a good season this year and darned if my forecast didn't come true." I could see Texas Coach Bob Weltlich is grateful Willock stuck through the tough times. "You always have a special feel­ ing for anybody who has endured," said Weltlich, whose first recruit at Texas was Willock. "The unfor­ tunate thing is, if we continue to have the success that we're having, people who come into the program will have very little understanding of what was involved in getting to this point." But Willock will never forget the sacrifices. The finance senior will graduate on time in May and knows that his basketball career will end with his next loss. He already h a s , definite designs on his future. "I don't plan on being poor." Maybe even rich enough to make a run at the governor's office. LONGHORN NOTES: Freshman forward John Sykes, who was sus­ pended for the SWC tournament for academic reasons, has been rein­ stated for the NIT . .. If Texas wins Thursday, it will play a second- round game Sunday or Monday. Where and whom the Longhorns play will be determined Friday. Double play ballet With Boston’s Ed Romero charging toward second, Detroit shortstop Max Soto took time to demonstrate the long-awaited World Series Shuffle.’ Not forgetting his real duties, Soto completed the double play, and, of course, his team lost the Wednesday exhibition game, 3-2. Associated Press Valentine tests Porter at 3rd base Associated Press POMPANO BEACH, Fla. — Tex­ as Rangers catcher Darrell Porter broke info professional baseball in 1970 as a strapping kid from Okla­ homa and was in the major leagues with Milwaukee just three years lat­ er. Injuries were the furthest thing from his mind. five series and The ensuing years brought four league three All-Star selections, championship World Series appearances. Then came the flip side. "I went through the first eight or nine years of my career and never had any injuries," Porter said. "Then, all of a sudden the injuries started sneaking up and biting me and it always seemed like it was at the wrong time." The 1985 season was a typical ex­ ample of Porter's untimely mishaps. Porter started the season as regu­ lar catcher for the St. Louis Cardi­ nals and he remained injury-free through the first game of the sea­ son. Porter suffered a broken big toe in the second game of the season and on June 2, he broke the index finger on his left hand, adding more recov­ ery time. Porter signed with the Rangers as a free agent in the off season and Manager Bobby Valentine saw him as a possible fill-in at third base and as well as a backup to starting catch­ er Don Slaught. But the third base experiment may have been nipped by another injury. "I chipped a bone on the tip of the thumb on my catching hand, other than that I'm really healthy," Porter said. It's all part of a pattern Porter would like to break. In 1984, Porter played in 112 games, although he suffered a bro­ ken collar bone and broken right thumb. He missed part of the 1983 season with a fractured finger on his right hand. Porter's most celebrated trip to the sidelines came in the spring of 1980 when he missed the start of the rehabilitation season undergoing from an alcohol and drug problem. "I'm content, although my suc­ cess in baseball has not been that great in recent years," Porter said. "I think God's in control of my life." Valentine's desire to get more left-handed hitting into the lineup led to the third base experiment. "I'll just work as hard as I can and let them decide," Porter said. "I've never played anything but catcher except for my freshman year in high school, I played the outfield." 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1.30 O p e n 1 1: 0 0 a m M o n - S a t O p e n S u n 3 : 0 0 p m H a p p y H o u r M o n - F r i 5-7 B e A c B c ttl H H o n the Beach The Islands Sertonvear Highland Mall 453-0216 Economical (e*ko*nah*mi*kal) (|. 1. not wasting time or money 2. thrifty 3. Kmko’s kinko's Crest copies crest people 2913 Medical Arte 476-3242 3200 C l» -.* * * 474-4454 arts & entertainment Page 14/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13,1986 Music awards to be hot, weird ‘Chronicle’ poll to reveal how Austin rates local performers By JOE BELK Daily Texan Staff and Dino Lee. Now don't take this wrong. I think the mayor is doing a wonder­ ful job in office, and I'm especially pleased with the way he's unusual­ ly responsive and accessible. He gets into this group on the merit of his television commercials, the best of which featured him seated next to a man dressed in a turkey suit playing the clarinet. Then, with a com pletely face, he straig h t said, "Hi, I'm Frank Cooksey and this is my buddy Tyrone." The other member who's in the group, basically because his name happened to be on the advertise­ ment, is KLBJ-FM disc jockey Jody Denberg. As always, Jody wins my pick for best DJ, and he's included only for committing the mortal sin of playing a birthday salute to Gen­ tle Giant, the worst "progressive" band of the '70s except for E.L.P. Now we get to the true freaks. First, Vic Jacobs, who did manage to take the personality with him when he was fired from Channel 36. Their new news team (with the exception of rem arkably prophetic Bob DeMers, who once accurately pre­ dicted that the sun would go down) could easily be replaced by mongrel dogs. As for Vic, it remains to be seen if going from News 36 to the White Trash Revue was a wise ca­ reer move. Which brings us to Dino, the freak's freak. Everything about this winner of Best Band with Vegas As­ pirations is bizarre, but it should suffice to say that the one time I saw his weird act, Dino wrestled an in­ flatable sex doll in a pit of blood. With the best combination of bands and local celebrities to appear on an Austin stage in who knows how long, this promises to be more fun than anyone deserves on a Thursday. Austin Chronicle Music Awards, at 8:45 p.m. Thursday at the Austin Opera House, 200 Academy Drive. Tickets are $6.50 in advance, $8.00 at the door. Photo by Martha Grenen True Betovers are considered strong favorites for best band this year. M USIC ly released on the best Texas single of '84 (best in my book, No. 3 in the poll), the other three are welcome additions. I only wish he would record I Am Her Hero, She Is My Heroine, a beautifully lyrical song he played for a colleague during an interview last spring. As for the Texas single category, there's nothing league with in Roky's Don't Slander Me/Starry Eyes or Zeitgeist's Freight Train Rain/Electra from 1984. My choice probably goes to the Leroi Brothers' Elvis in the Army. Actually, I'd vote for anything that would keep the Keith Forsey-produced, Charlie Sex­ ton single from winning. (I say that secure in the knowledge that Alive and Kicking isn't a Texas single.) The "band of the year" award goes almost uncontestedly to the in True Believers. drawing national attention to Aus­ tin music, they're one of the few bands with the talent and the ap­ Instrumental last year, peal to become a nationwide com­ mercial success. Although less de­ they were veloped slighted by being chosen only 13th in this category, and misunderstood by somehow being chosen fourth in the best-country-band category. Ste­ vie Ray Vaughan will probably be chosen best musician of the year again, and since the only other indi­ vidual artist I can think of who stands out is Daniel Johnston, I w on't argue with success. Regardless of who wins what, this is going to be an incredible show. The lineup of Joe Ely, Joe "King" Carrasco, the True Believers with Roky Erickson, Angela Strehli, and others is the most dynamic combination of stars to play in one place in memory. But perhaps even more interest­ ing than the performers, are the presenters, the most illustrious of whom I refer to as the Four Freaks of Austin. This is what flashed in my mind when I saw on the list of presenters the names of such di­ verse local personalities as Frank Cooksey, Jody Denberg, Vic Jacobs ‘Crossroads’: a bluesmen’s journey where fine acting outshines directing Thunder roars, guitar ravishes in live showing M USIC By JOE BELK Daily Texan Staff Johnny Thunders' buzz-saw guitar cut through the music of the New York Dolls, the band that de­ fined the New York scene before the advent of CBGB's and its stable of stars such as the Ra­ mones, Patti Smith, Television, Richard Hell, Blondie, and the Talking Heads. The Dolls' unbri­ dled energy and speed-freak tem­ largely by po, distinguished Thunders, placed the in company of the Velvet Under­ g round, and Creedence Clearwater Revival — the greatest and most influential American bands. Their fury, which was handed down to the CBGB bands, found its way to England via Malcolm McLaren, who managed the Dolls (in their last days) before helping to create the Sex Pistols. the R am ones, them Because of a "personality crisis" between Thunders and lead singer David Johansen, the band broke Rowdy guitarist Johnny Thunders up around 1974, but not before releasing two of the strongest al­ bums of all time, New York Dolls (1973) and (especially) New York Dolls in "Too Much Too Soon" (1974), the title of the latter de­ scribing their short life perfectly. And although Johansen has had a fine solo career, the best of Thund­ ers' Dolls-oriented output So Alone (1978) and L.A.M.F. (1977), out does anything David Jo has managed to come up with. In addition to Que Será Será, Thunders has a single out with songwriting pal Patti Palladin, a cover of Crawfísh (an Elvis Presley song from the film Kid Creole). The 12-inch features a "bayou mix" club version, which is bound to be interesting. This man is amazing with an electric guitar; all he needs is three chords and his fabulous song cata­ log up his sleeve to sound great. And since he started with a band that first made its reputation live in the toughest city in the world, a band that rocked unrelentlessly when rocking wasn't cool, a band that made its mark on every subse­ quent band who cared about rock 'n' roll, he ought to be incredible live. If he's ever been to Austin be­ fore, it was a long time ago, as he hasn't embarked on a major U.S. tour like this in over a decade. There's also no telling when he'll be here again. This show is at the Continental Club, and since that club brings out the best in a home­ town band, it should do wonders for a legendary out-of-towner. Plus, advance tickets are only sev­ en bucks, which is a hell of a bar­ gain to see a New York Doll. Johnny Thunders, Saturday night at the Continental Club, 1315 S. Congress Ave. Opening die show are die True Believers. Tickets are $7.50. Play portrays refugee’s flight THEATER Guatemala, a nation roughly die size of Tennessee, similar to New Jersey in population, has some big problems. Besides a history of fi­ nancial woes, the Central Ameri­ can state has been one of the most oppressive in all of Latin America. Not surprisingly, die country is also one of Latin America's great­ est producers of refugees. Crossing The Border, a new play written by UT Latin American Affairs student Donna Gehrke, chronicles the tribulations of a two U.S. citizens as they cross paths with a Guatemalan refugee. Pre­ sented free at the University's Lab the Border Theatre, Crossing should prove int resting to any­ one concerned with political and economic oppresion in the south. The Friday and Saturday perfor­ mances are at 8 p.m.; the Sunday show is at 2 p.m. — Richard Dyer Corc uo — I Although 1985 was a bleak year for music, Texas probably did as much to help things out as any state but Minnesota. And tonight at the annual Austin Chronicle Music Awards, the results of what Chroni­ cle readers think are the best local bands, albums, and other music miscellany will be announced. The popularity of Texas LPs in 1985, if plotted on a graph, would probably result in a bell-shaped curve with Zeitgeist's Translate Slowly at the top end and Christo­ pher Cross' Every Turn of the World at the bodom. Actually, that's being a little unfair to the masses in the middle, but I suspect the slant is toward Zeitgeist. The other thing to consider is the Stevie Ray Vaughan Factor with his undy­ ing local loyalty and support. However, the only Texas album of last year I consider marginally su­ perior to Stevie Ray's, Joe King Car­ rasco's Bordertown, mysteriously placed 11th, which brings up the in­ herent problem in these awards: many bands get their entourages out to vote. Any readers' poll is by definition a popularity contest, and I won't complain, especially since the main challengers for this year's No. 1 spot should be between two of the more deserving records, Translate Slowly (w h ich g e ts my vote) an d Vaughan's 1985-release Soul to Soul. The only other record I hope makes the list, is Willie Nelson and Hank Snow's Brand on My Heart, arguably the best country album of the year. The EP category isn't so clear cut. While Zeitgeist missed my national Top 10 by two places, four Texas EPs made my EP top 10: Roky Erick­ son's Clear Night for Love, Poison 13's First You Dream ... Then You Die, the Butthole Surfers' Cream Com, and IMore Texas Instru­ ments!. But Roky is the definite standout here. Even though the best two songs on it were previous- By NICK DAUSTER Daily Texan Staff Crossroads, Walter Hill's latest film, is another story about unlikely friendship on the road, but the sub­ ject matter — the roots of American music — and the style Hill brings to the project almost redeem it. Eu­ gene Martone (Ralph Macchio) is a prodigy of classical guitar with a passion for the blues. So when he discovers that one of the great bluesmen, Blind Dog Fulton (Joe Seneca), is trapped in a local nurs­ ing home, Eugene springs the old man and they begin a journey of convenience back to Fulton's Mis­ sissippi home. Eugene is in search of the song that will make him fa­ mous, the old man trying to ex­ orcise his personal demons. There is a legend behind this sto­ ry. Fulton is really Willie Brown, the friend of blues martyr Robert John­ son, whose innovative music took the country blues to their lyrical lim­ its before he died under mysterious circumstances. Actually, the real Willie Brown was Johnson's prede­ cessor, not his follower; in fact, Brown and Son House would not let the younger man play with him. But Johnson eventually developed a tal­ ent so powerful that people used to say he had made a pact with the devil. This is unusual territory for a movie, but director Walter Hill car­ ries it off quite well. Johnson's life is in flashbacks, lovingly recreated and the changed Mississippi that Willie finds on his return is both spooky and hard enough to support the film's moods. Part of the credit to Ry Cooder, who should go proves once again, that he is a peer­ less creator of film scores with a base traditional music of all kinds. As a director, Hill has great problems dealing with the larger concepts, but his sense of detail and of place are formidable. in The plot is actually quite familiar. American literature and film are full of odd male couples on the road who learn to get along despite their obvious differences. Frequently enough, the message is racial: think back to Huckleberry Finn, or direc­ tor Hill's most successful movie, 48 Hours, in which another pair — the funny, street-smart Mack man and the earnest white — learn, after the requisite number of misunderstand­ ings, to trust and like each other. However new the terms in which any film is cast, it ultimately rests on the credibility of the principals. Macchio proves that his success in The Karate Kid was not a fluke; his 1 Ralph Macchio atara in Crossroads at a young guitarist travelng the country in search of a fabled blues song. FILM Eugene credibly manages to balance ambition with charm; fear with bra­ vado. And he actually looks as though he is playing the guitar. Jami Gertz, as the runaway Eugene and Willie meet in an abandoned house, does well in a role which has too much romantic interest and too little character. The supporting cast reminds, once again, of the depth of talent among black actors in this country. But the picture rests on Seneca's performance as Willie. It is a charac­ ter of ancient lineage, the crusty, witty, ultimately tender old man, who must deal with his own mortal­ ity and educate a youngster at the same time. But Seneca is flawless, bringing all the requisite qualities to his portrayal of Willie in a mar­ velously understated performance. Seneca is more eloquent with his eyes than most actors are with their entire bodies. Walter Hill is perhaps America's oddest director. His movies have an enormous innovative energy, but they are frequently inhibited by his inability to free himself of the crutch of genre film making. He does all the little things right — setting, cast­ ing, shooting — but his scripts often misfire in the oddest places. South­ ern Comfort, for example, with die help of a Cooder score, captured a sense of dread in the Louisiana bay­ ous, but the persecuting Cajuns, while they looked and sounded like Cajuns, ultimately failed as human characters. Streets of Fire had the same problem, rather effectively creating an atmosphere of gang warfare on big dty streets, but ne­ glecting to present any likable char­ acters. That defect, the mastery of little things and failure with the big ones, makes Crossroads much less of a movie than it could have been. And as if to advertise the presence of Macchio, the end of the movie turns out to be an electric guitar contest which is both too loud and long. It is a false step which curiously de­ flates what should have been a thor­ oughly enjoyable, interesting mov­ ie. Crossroads, directed by Walter Hill, starring Ralph Maccio and Joe Saneca, opening Friday at a theatre near you. 9 Songs rock, Spring shops, Seeds to tour By KATHY MCTEE Daily Texan Staff ■ It's a ways into the semester now, I know, but this marks the beginning of a weekly music col­ umn in entertainment. I'm not the first, but humbly follow in the footsteps of many others who have graced (and defaced) these pages in the past. Like them, I'll be concentrating on the oh-so- newsworthy Austin music scene — ideally, with emphasis on "m u­ sic" and not on "scene." Yeah, yeah, sure. I V Bogus Spicoli 9 Songs, a relatively new band around town, plays Saturday night at The Beach Cabaret at 2911 San Jacinto Blvd. 9 Songs is Cole Hanson on guitar, Darren Hess on drums, and bassist Jimmy Dolui- sio. 9 Songs used to be the guys' other band — Hanson and Hess played with Alamo Choir, and Do- luisio survived the Doctors' Mob experience. The trio now plays wonderful guitar-based pop songs — yeah, okay, sometimes they sound kinda like R.E.M., but what guitar-based pop band doesn't once in a while? Most importantly, these guys are great musicians, even if they do tune on stage once in awhile. Doluisio's playing, in particular, has been underrated in the past — as anyone who's seen the Mob recently already knows. The 9 Songs (or Bogus Spicoli, as they were almost called and will probably still answer to) know at least 10 songs, and are second on Saturday's bill. Chlorine opens the extravagan­ za — back after a few months' re­ turn to the garage, the word is that they're improving with every show. (Look for a feature on them in these pages soon.) Los Instru­ mentos de Tejas headline — I can't talk about them too much, except to say that they've just finished recording an LP worth of songs, and with a nice bunch of good press raked in about their EP, they're currently label-shopping. Dancey pop tunes Black Spring's also looking around for a label, and, glory be! also will play in the middle of a bill Saturday night, at the Ark Coop, 2000 Pearl St. Black Spring's tape amazingly does justice to its intri­ cate sound, which is both classical­ ly familiar pop given an unusually original twist. I'm not talking skin­ ny ties and MTV covers here, but catchy pop melodies overlaid with Mark Kenyon's guitar meander- ings and Mellissa Cobb's forcefully emotional vocals. The songs are good, too, and they're nice folks. See 'em now. Opening this Ark party deluxe is Airhead, followed by Liquid Mice, of cool op-art flier fame. Then Black Spring, then the True Believers, who are leaving town soon, according to some posters I've seen. (Gosh, what'll we all ever do then?) WHd Seeds invade L.A. The Wild Seeds — Michael Hall on rhythm guitar and vocals, Bo Solomon on lead guitar and vo­ cals, drummer Joey Shuffield, and bassist Steve McCracken — head for the Left Coast next weekend, where they're booked at Club Lin­ gerie and at the Anti-Club, with more dates probably to come. They're also (is this getting repeti­ tious or what?) lookin' for a record company — according lead Seed Michael Hall, they've talked to Wrestler, but things are still un­ confirmed. This weekend, they'll be in Houston and Baton Rouge with Doctors' Mob — if you're a hard-core seedling or mob-maniac, pack a cooler and hit the road. to Saturday's not the only happen­ ing night of the week, though — Thursday, my favorite beer com­ mercial (except Coors Extra Gold, of course), The Del Fuegos, play at The Back Room, 2015 E. Riverside Drive. After that, or after the awards show, or if you're just driving around aimlessly looking for something trendy to do, the ever-popular Go Dog Go and New Mix will play from midnight to 4 a.m. at the Continental Club, 1315 S. Congress Ave. Friday night at the Beach Cabaret, Nashville's White Animals bring their "rock music that's driving and kinda drony, borderline hard-core but; not" to town. It sounds worth in­ vestigating — and there's always lots of Guiness on tap available re-; gardless. -é - Lunch to bring bluesmen The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13, 1986/Page 15 seamless, dream like quality to its progression. A hedge and gate are slid onto the empty stage to begin the show. A scene becomes a scene change, which becomes the next scene. W e are experiencing theater. W e are not given realistic drama so much as a story, an alle­ gorical portrayal of the issues. Bingo is dense. Occasionally staging and accents obscure dia­ logue, but my attention did not wander until the final scene, in which there was some confusion as to the purpose of a downstage circle of light. The actors seemed obliged to use this spot sim ply be­ cause it was there. Because of poor writing leading to a strained, his­ trionic delivery, Judith Shake­ speare's (Philippa New son) tirade behind a locked door made me more aware of acting than the sto­ ry. But I almost felt a chill up my spine at her anguished cry over her dead father, as the lights faded to black. I wanted to believe it was for him, but I knew it was because he left her out of his w ill — a strange feeling. These scenes of money and death provided an enjoyable the­ atrical experience. Bingo w ill p la y Thursday through Saturday at 8 p.m ., in the Theatre Room o f the W in sh ip Dram a B u ild in g . For inform ation, ca ll 471-1444. — Roger f In ri 'A "A If ! ’ — (Vnr SisWel The Official Story : 7:30,9:45 7 H Í H r i h I N T t R N A T I O N A I T O I J R N Í J Of ANIMATION (54©r« $2.75) 7:15,9:30a LITTLE PEOPLE a film by Ja n Kraw itz & T. O tt By BIG BILL CURRA Daily Texan Staff John Hammond and Jorma Kau- konen both look marvelous The guitarists seem to have thrived on their 45 cumulative years of per­ forming in subdued limelight, the way any working man who enjoys his intangible, non-material ways. labor prospers in From the beginning, John Ham ­ mond was inspired by the solo acoustic blues style originating with the Mississippi Delta bluesmen of the '30s. After an acclaimed per­ formance at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival precipitated a contract with Vanguard Records, Hammond be­ gan working with a combo in the Chicago blues style, borrowing ma­ terial from M uddy Waters, Howling W olf and Sonny Boy William son. During his foray in the ensemble format, Hammond, true to his heri­ tage, showcased talented by yet un­ known artists including Stevie Win- wood, Duane Allm an and Jim i Hendrix. m a n n B A R G A I N P R I C E A ’W nn Al I *»M( IW HI I (IM1 M M 9 4 VV . l r '.AflHlllAf A .IINDAy I !l< I '.MOV. ONI! MON 1MHIII Ml 89? 2775 J lnPinkPG -1 3 140,7:00,9:00 H o im PG-13 5:30,7:30,9:30 W ildcats PG-13 5:15,7:30,9:30 CINIMA *WesT 2130 5 C o n q f » n » Ope- i • * **. • 442 5 ’ 19¿ Sexual Oddessy(x) plus Pleasure CHanne^o,•o, VHS-* S A L E S *-° Rental I In Ham m ond's estimation "there isn't much you can do with the blues. If you change it, it isn't blues anym ore Too little and it becomes a ballad, too much and il becomes R& B It's an Am erican classical art form and I want to do right by it." Som ewhat less of a purist than Ham m ond, Jorma Kaukonen has also been known to borrow Delta blues classics The son of a foreign s e rv ic e e m p lo y e e , K a u k o n e n formed his first band with bassist Jack Casady w hile still a high-sc hool student in W ashington, D C He temporarily abandoned his pre finger ferred style of playing picking acoustic blues during his participation in the San Francisco- based Jefferson Airplane. Predomi nantly an electric-psychedelic phe nomenon, the Airplane crested the w ave of the sixties and splintered into tw o bands, Jefferson Starship iOGeneral Cinema BARGAIN MATINEES- EVERYDAY AIL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM 12 75 HIGHLAND MALL Tne color H IG H L A N D M A L L B L V D « 5 1 - 7 3 2 6 P u rp le M Sot 100 400 7 OtT 1000 400 7 001000 Sun Ihutt 100400600 Brazil r Fft Sot 2 10 4 50 7 30 10 10 Sun Thun 2104 508 15 CAPITAL PLAZA I -35 a t C A M i B O N B O . 4 5 2 - 7 6 4 6 House * 1 0 5 3 1 5 5 2 5 7 3 5 9 4 5 Highlander « 12 50 305 5 20 7 35 10-00 Out of Africa 0*1 215 515 815 and Hot Tuna. As frontman for Hot Tuna, K a u ­ konen was able to p ’rform material tailored to his preferred style. Their debut album was recorded in 1971 in an intimate W est coast night club with ( asadv playing bass and W ill Scarlet on harmonica More recently, Kaukonen has been dividing his time between solo performances and teaching a mas­ ter's course in finger style guitar at the N e w School in N e w York H is touring with john H am m ond pro­ vides one with a rare opportunity to see accom plished bluesm en at w o rk . John Hammond and Jorm a K au­ konen w ill perform on Frid ay at Liberty Lunch, 405 W . 2nd St, A d ­ vance tickets are $7 /• H W hllr Chariot Web e s Ihisriassir lair of Itir ndsbip involves Wilbur fhi pigandolr ourv ( harlrxte, the t xiiaordinaiv spirfr-r March 14. 6 p.m. March 15-16, 2 and 4 p.m. B Idcn Pawie Ibeatn Tickets: $4 Í i< kcts availaMr ai the PA( Rvvm ( cnirr. and all 1 1IM I’kketCenters ( h,itg* a I ii ket 177-MfMi. Intorma- iioii 471-1 i l l -—Department of DRAMA / A U S T I N ! C l A D U LT V ID C O ^ I College of fine Ads The UniYfrsiiy of te ios o’ Aus*" O P E N ■ U 24 HOURS a 621 THOMPSON O FF 183 1 MIL F SO. of MOMTOPOLI8 Phone 385-5328 SLUM BER P Á R T Y I iw J— B y B awd o p e u iu f t B h a O W kyaon A Jaw fti Booth mm* T N u P w e i h h i N N k Thursday Night C ountry Palace 500 Tricycle Races Two Bit Beer Nite Contests and Prize? $1.75 Longnecks Music By: Texas Highriders C o v e r $4.00 16511 Bratton Lane 255-9622 THE STORY OF A REBEL AND HIS BIKE. ■ Year ■ o f the Dragon Todayet2ft740pm 2.00U.T. Union Theatre 2.50 Non U.T. PEE-WEi HERMAN P n -w u 's RIG A p v i v t v R* Today nt 4:45 A 7:35 pm Union Theatre U - .*>-? 2.50 Non U.T " H s a r t t f B e a t " 2.00 U.T. IK Today at 8:50 Hogg Aud. 2.00 U.T. 2 J O N on U.T. B u rt Lancaster in Criss Cross Today at 5 4 7:00 pm Hogg Aud. 2.00 U.T. 2 J O Non U.T. Drama steeped in tragicomedy THEATER By BLAKE HANSON Daily Texan Staff The subtitle of Edward Bond's Bingo, Scenes o f M oney and Death, would seem to portend a humorless evening of gloom and doom. Fortunately this is not the case. The Department of Drama's current production is intense, but far from humorless. The play is well staged and involving. Even if the subject matter is gloomy, this production is ultim ately enjoyable. The protagonist of Bingo is none other than W illiam Shakespeare. The play, however, is less about Shakespeare's life and more about the relationship of the artist to so­ ciety, and the conflict between human values and money. Bond mixes fact and fiction as he specu­ lates on the events leading up to and Shakespeare's death. Bingo is an allegorical rep­ resentation of the contradictions we face in trying to balance affairs of the heart with affairs of the pocketbook. (The title refers to the closing of a number of theaters in England that have been reopened as bingo parlors.) in clud ing Bond's Shakespeare has fled to his garden in the country to escape the cruelty and injustice of the world. He has prospered financial­ ly from his artistic success, but is disenchanted. He has lost the de­ sire to write. He ponders the meaning of life. But even as he to remain withdraws, desiring pure and unsullied by the world, he is com prom ised by his finances, by his role as fam ily pro­ vider. Seeking “ security'' for his in­ vestments, Shakespeare passively sides with landowners who wish to remove tenant farmers from their land. The change w ill severe­ ly effect the economy of the town. A “ corrupt seer," crippled by an impending sense jof moral failure, Shakespeare cannot reconcile his beliefs and actions. He chooses suicide as the only sane solution to his dilemma. Director Lee Abraham avoids, for the most part, a histrionic treat­ ment of the “ money as death" theme. His direction brings out the humor and life of the play as a potent contrast to the gloom of the subject. Joey Hartdegen is very funny as the brain-damaged Old Man with the mind of a child and the needs of a man. John Catanzaro's strong characterization of a drunken Ben Jonson is also very amusing. Jack Rogers appears to be at home in the role of W illiam Shakespeare, giving a relaxed, confident per­ formance. The play, as directed, has a T O N IG H T Cap/ Presents: BUI Oliver with Steve Parkees mo rover Friday Butch Hanock and Maree Lacouture Saturday Pre-St. Patrick’s Party The Lounge Lizards “Robert Frost: Fire and Ice” “Robert Frost Lives A g a in ... in the Magnificent, Witty, Heartwarming Arthur Peterson.” Joyce Hauser — WNBC-RADIO Starring Arthur Peterson (The ‘M ajor’ on TV’s SOAP) March 1 9 ,1 9 8 6 8 pm, Hogg Auditorium $ 8 .5 0 UT ID /$10 public Co-sponsored by the Texas Union Arts & Humanities and Cultural Entertainm ent Committees P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S L I N C O L N 3 A R B O R 4 10000 R E S E A R C H * 346-6937 I d 1 2 :2 0 - 2 :4 5 - 5 :1 0 - 7 :3 5 - 1 0 :0 0 [ [S] 12:10-2:30-5:00-7:30-10:00 m mi e n e r a R fiiP I H X fxiooun irtuo DOW IN B 'N AND OUT I H X E V E R L Y H IL L S aooaMrwrmut [R] 12:15-2:35-4:55-7:15-9:40 itfiiln n in k il ly III IIIIIE HIDOl»» «TIRIO i * | X 1 5 - 3 :2 5 - 5 :3 5 - 7 :4 5 - 1 0 :1 5 m d 1= V I L L A G E 4 2700 ANDERSON • 4514352 u R A N □0 ■»»» ODD JOBS 12:30-3:40-7:00-10:10 i£L 1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 NAKED CAGE d | 1:15-3:30-5:30-7:45-9:50 TheThii’Tii llllUMTIfllL THX onootBv stereo H K M I A N n E R I H X □OOOLIVITMM [R] 12:00-2:35-4:45-7:15-9:30 DOWN AND OUT | H X IN BEVERLY HILLS (R) 12:15-2:45-5:10-10:15 - N O M A D S 1:00-3:10-5:15-7:20-9: S O U T H P A R K 3 447 2260 1921 t B£N WHITÍ • T tM M O U T THX O f A f r jc a 12:00- 3:30-7:00-10:15 E g l WOODY ALLEN'S HANNAH AND I ILK SISTERS THeC 0 L 0 R P U R P L E 12:40-3:00-5:20-7:35-9:55 12:30-4.00-7:20-10:30 1X1 R I V E R S I D E 2 441 5669 1930 R fV E R S ID i • L A K E H I L L S 4 • 444-0552 2428 K N WHITE ® QUICKSILVER 5:50-7:55-10:00 * « • — ALL FEATURES *2.50—— N A K E D C A G E Reduced prices for features starting at or before 6:00 p.m. weekdays and the first feature only on weekends at all Presidio theatres. IfPGHLANITER I [R] 12:00-2:20-5:10-7:40-10:00 cd '«»«• ODD JOBS 1:30-3:40-5:55-8:05-10:15 DOWN AND OUT IN B E V E R L Y H IL LS m . LR] 12:15-2:30-540-7:25-9:40 N O M A D S SHOWTIMES ARE FOR TODAY ONLY 12:30-2:45-4:50-7:05-0:20 Acclaimed documentary on dwarfs, in closing in on their world it offers an unusual, often disturbing view o f our own With short: Styx Jester Aud. 7 & 9pm 2 .0 0 U.T./8.80 N o t U .T . BINGO j part of UT Drama Department’s provocative Theatre Room Season! Edw ard Bond’s speculative account of Shakespeare’s fin al days erupts w ith blistering intensity F e b 27-March 1, 6-8, and 13-15 Theatre Room 23rd and San Jacinto Tickets: $6 U T ID and Senior Citizens: $5 Tickets availab le at the P A C , E rw in C enter, and a ll U T T M TicketCenters. Charge-a-Ticket, 477-6060 Inform ation, 471-1444 D epartm ent of DRAMA College o* f' r z n m c T H E A T R E S I TU-UTI SHOWS * MATMKS A ll SHOWS U F0 U A M T A M E R I C A N A MURPHY'S ROMANCE (99-13) (StSOto LM) N O R T H C R O S S 6 4S4 S14 NOfiTHC « n s s MA. A N O íBSON 4 B ONf T HANNAN A HER SISTERS (99-13) (>ieo-*eo*tue>-7lje-*4s «HoewwowmoK—mt HANNAH A HER SISTIRS (99-13) (toe SiOira t»je»-7i3e-4i46 IHONBNtONRBOICRBINH AURORA ENCOUNTER BS (I* 19««XJ0h ^i30 F/X m (1 >46 4Mi.«tW)-7ilMiM FtETTY IN FINK (99-13) Nieoscm I (i iAQ-»«aa»9t jo>-y>46-eos A Q U A R I U S 4 AURORA mCOUNTB «.«aeoim-yoo I dttAedXJU-yme i HOUSE Ui FRAY FOR DEATH m A D V A N C E T IC K E T S M AY B E P U R C H A S E D AT A N Y T IM E D U R IN G T H E B U S I N E S S DAY AT T H E A R B O R C IN E M A F O U R AN D L IN C O L N T H E A T R E 3 SEE RIVERSIDE AD FOR SPECIAL PRICES ADULTS CHILDREN - $2 75 REDUCED PRICE - $2 75 ROCKY IV h ■ ■ 7 WHITE M O I ITS (99-13) S O U T H W O O D 2 Featuring: Black Student Development Seminar "Becoming a Professional: Charting a New Direction to Success" Saturday, March 15 9:30 am-5 pm Texas Union acqiMHinu and Floyd Dickens, author of "The Black Manager: Making it in the Corporate World" and George Price, editor of MBM (Modem Black Man) Cosponsored by the Texas Union Afro-Ameritan Culture Committee and the Dean of Students Office Visa/M astercard Accepted For Word ads call 471-5244/For Display ads call 471-186 5/8 a.m .-4:30 p.m. M onday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Ave. Visa/M astercard Accepted fiedl advertising Page 16/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13.1986 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING I Consecutive Day Ratos 15 word minimum Eoch word 1 time Each word 3 times Eoch word 5 tim « Eoch word 10 times Eoch word 15 limes Eoch word 20 hum 1 col x 1 inch 1 time $ 28 $ 774 $ 1.17 $ 1.90 $ 2 2 9 5 $ 2 48 $ 6 85 $1 00 charge to change copy First two words may be all copital letters. 25c for eoch additional word in capital letters Mostercord and Visa accepted DEADLINE SCHEDULE Friday 11am Monday Texan Monday 11am Tuesday Texon Wednesday Texan Tuesday 11am Thursday Texon Wednesday 11am Fnday Texon Thursday 11am In the event a t errors made In an advertisement, notice must be given by 11 a.m. Its# first day, as Its# publishers a re re­ sponsible tor only ONI Incor­ rect Insertion. All claims lor ad­ justments should be m ade not later than 30 days after publi­ cation. Pro-paM kilts receive credit sMp H requested a t time of cancella­ tion, and If amount exceeds $3.00. SNp must be presented for a reorder wtlhln 90 days to be valid. Credit slips cue non- transferable. CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Autos 2 0 — S po rts-Fo reig n A utos 3 0 — Trucks-V ans 4 0 — Vehicles to Trade 50 — S ervice-R ep air 4 0 — Farts-A ccessories 70 — M otorcycles 9 0 — V e h k te Leasing 100 — V ehicles W anted REAL ESTATE SALES 1 1 0 -S e rv ic e s 1 2 0 - Houses 130 — C ondos-Tow n houses 1 4 0 — M o b ile Hom es-Lots 150 — A creage-Lots 1 0 0 — D upiexes- A partm ents 170 — W anted 180 — Loans MERCHANDISE 1 9 0 -A p p lia n c e s 2 00 — F u rn itu re-H o u seh o ld 2 1 0 — S tereo-T V 2 20 — Com pwters- Iq ulpm ent 2 3 0 — Photo-C am aras 2 40 — boats 250 — M usical Instrum ents 2 60 — H obbles 2 7 0 — M ach in ery- equipm ent 2 00 — Sporftng-C am ping equipm ent 2 9 0 — Fu rn itu re-A p p lian ce 300 — O arage-R um m age Sales 310 — Trade 320 — W anted to Buy o r Rent MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 — Pats 3 4 0 — Misc. RENTAL 350 — R en tal Services 360 — Fum . A pts. 3 7 0 - U n f . A pts. 3 0 0 — Fum . D uplexes 390 — U nf. (X jp iexss 4 0 0 — C ondos-Tow nhouses 4 1 0 — Fum . Houses 4 20 — U n f. Houses 425 — Rooms 4 30 — R oom -B oard 4 35 — C o-ops 4 50 — M o b ile Hom es-Lots 4 60 — Ruslness R entals 470 — Resorts 490 — W anted to R ent-Lease 500 — Misc. ANNOUNCEMENTS 5 1 0 — entertain m en t-T ickets 5 2 0 — Personals 530 — T ra ve l- Tronsportotion 540 — Lost A Found 550 — Licensed Child C ara 560 — Public Notice 570 — M usic-M usklans EDUCATIONAL 500 — M usical Instruction 5 9 0 — Tutoring 600 — Instruction W anted 610 — Misc. Instruction SERVICES 620 — Legal Services 630 — C om puter Services 6 40 — Exterm inators 6 50 — M o vin g -H au lin g 6 60 — Storage 6 70 — P ainting SERVICES 660 — O ffice 7 00 — F u rn itu re R epair 7 10 — A pplia n ce Rep a ir 7 2 0 - S tereo- TV R epair 7 30 — H om e R ep air 7 40 — Rlcycle R ep air 750 — Typing 7 60 — Misc. Services EMPLOYMENT 7 70 — Em ploym ent A gencies 7 0 0 — Em ploym ent Services 7 9 0 — P e rt Hme 6 0 0 — O ene ra l H elp W anted S I 0 - O ffice-C lerical ■20 — AccounHng- O ookkeeplng •3 0 — A d m in istrative- 640 — Sales | 650 — R etail Technical 8 70 — M edical 0 00 — Professional 890 — C lubs-R estau ran ts 900 — Domes tk -H o use h o ld 9 1 0 — Positions W anted 9 20 — W ork W anted BUSINESS 9 30 — Business O p portun ities 9 40 — O p portun ities W anted TSP Building, Room 3.200 2500 Whrtñ Monday through Friday 8am-4:30pm 471-5244 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos 20 — Sports-Foreign 30 — Trucks-Vans MAZDA '82 B3200 truck, tangbed, buck- *t leah, AM/FM/cossette, AC, dent but great condition, 30,000 mil*», $4000 472-8526 3-14_____________ imall 1985 CJ7 Jeep, whit* on white lo ft top with doon 441-7854. Keep tryingl 3-17 50 — Service-fl tpalr HOUSE CALLS mad* to bid on ANY car/ truck running or junk. CALL 243-2720. 3-14______________________________ 60 — Parts- Accessories RE C O N D ITIO N ED BATTERIES $16.95,Tire» $13, Rah $4, hubcaps rim». 2800 E. 2nd 477-0499 Tell friend»l 3- 14B______________________________ 70 — Motorcycles HONDA NIGHTHAWK. 1982, 4 5 0 ,10K, extrem ely w e ll-m a in ta in e d m il*». Beautiful condition. $900. Evening»/ weekend», 929-3315. 3-14____________ FOR SALE 1985 Hondo Spree, great condition, $375. Call 477-7059. 3-13 360 — Furn. Apts. 1985 CADIUAC Fleetwood, FWD, 15.000 miles, every available option, excellent condition, coll 473-2244 4-2 1976 PACER AT. AC, AM /FM radio, good tires, $800 or best offer Call: 441- 2037. 3-14C_______________________ 1982 VW Scirroco Gold, tan cloth interi­ or, 5spd, AC, 48,000 miles, extra nice, $5100, 442-6464 3-18C 1929 MERCEDES, SSK Replico. 800 miles on '85 engine. Immoculote. $7000/ best offer 345-5354. 3-19B 1980 MUSTANG Ghia 4-speed, very good condition, dependable $2950, 444 130 774?, 480 8300 837 328? 3 1983 EXP -with 35,000 miles. Excellent condition $5200 David, 389-0700 til 5pm After 6pm 295-2237 3-130 1976 MUSTANG II Mechanically sound- no A/C, $1100 463-9754, 447-6044 after 5. 3-14 1983 FORD white Mustang GT. Loaded. T tops. 4-speed $7,000 327-2545, after 5pm. 3-14D 1985 CAMARO V6 hatchback, 5spd, standard, AC, AM /FM rodio, 11,500 miles, 36 month warranty. $8395. Call 837-4552 after 5pm 3-14 MUST SELL '74 Grand Torino, 2-door, AC, very relioble. $600 472-5868 3-17 1984 MUSTANG GT, T-tops, 302 engine, 5spd, AC, loaded, show room condition, 24.000 miles, sell for wholesale, $7300, retail $8525, 8-4 444-5555, ask for Larry, after 6/weekends 1-863-6570 or 1 863-5386. 3-17C__________________ 1982 BUICK Rnnera fulty-loaded, 1 owner, $8500, call Jaye at 452-0623, o. 345 7573 3-IBC _ _ _ _ _ _ 1984 CAVALIER. Red and silver fulfy loaded sporty model 5spd manual. 15.000 miles. 454-0760 3-17_________ 1984 BUICK Riviera, 1 owner, well taken care of. $9950 Call Laune at 331- 0149 3-18C ________________ 1980 SUNBIRD, AM /FM stereo cassette, automatic, must sell, $980. 454-5427. 3-14______________________________ 79/G R AN Pnx-white, H./blue doth/ inter , auto. AC, AM /FM cass Alpine, S70f*Vhest offer Call 443-7532 3-18 G D W Investments Inc. '8 4 Honda CRX 1.5 — $ 6 7 5 0 '8 4 M azda 6 2 6 LX — $ 8 3 5 0 '8 4 Audi 500 0s — $ 9 7 5 0 '8 5 Isuzu Trooper II, Loaded and W arran ty — $ 9 6 5 0 AND MORE, MORE, MORE 2305 W Anderson Ln at Burnet Rd. Phone 459-6059 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 1973 PORSCHE 914 2 0 liter, white/black mtenor, 5spd, AC, cassette, 60,000 miles, rest free, extra nice. $4695. Call: 442 6464 3-18C FOR SALE: incredible Euro-red 1982 radiáis, gold BMW 633 CSI Wide mags, foglights, loaded Beautiful. Priced to sell. $20,000 467-8340 3-14 '81 MAZDA 626, 4dr, blue, automatic, very low miles, air, cassette Mint condi­ tion $4650 835-7097. 3-14D________ '79 MGB Roadster, brown, 27,000m., original owner, good condition, $3995. 346-5422 after 6pm. 3-17 PRICED TO SELL! Great car for student. Reliable 1977 Hondo Civic, AM/FM cassette. $800 negotiable 440-8420 3- 14 1977 PORSCHE 924 silver/block interior, 4spd, sunroof, AC, runs and drives good, $5400 442-6464 3-18C 1975 TOYOTA Corolla Deluxe, blue, 4spd, AC, AM /FM cassette, Pirelli-tires, well-maintained, runs great. $1250. 339- 1969. 3-19 81 CONVERTIBLE Rabbit, great condi hon, 50,000, $6200 neg Call 477- 6066 Samer after 7pm. 3-19 VW RABBIT 1977, 4-speed, runs great, good for student. $800, 495-9586 3-13 1980 BMW 320i, light blue/camel, 5speed, A M /F M /casseffe , alloys, $6500 or best offer 327- sunroof 6467 after 5pm. 3-21 1971 VOLVO 145E, wogon, white, 4- speed, runs well, $500 472-2051 3-14 MGB UT orange convertible, wire wheels, with mitten, 1970, $1950, 1-625- 1704, after 5:30pm. New Braunfels. 3- 14 1976 MGB, great condition, new interior, upholstery, top, and wheels. Must sacri­ fice at $2500 negotiable, 473-2505 or 473 2621, evenings, 453-8232 3-17 3-14D 1972 VOLVO wagon, runs well, engine rebuilt, AC and stereo, must sell, $1400 or best offer. Mike, 476-6808. 3-14 130 — C ondos-Townhouses D o you need an apartm ent? DALLAS HOUSTON BRANDYWINE WLSflK X X X X X X CALL NOW FOR LOWER RATES 2 blks north o f U .T ., 1-1 A pts. Ready for imm ediate occupancy, Sow pre-leasing for Su m m er and Fall. Call Phil, 4 8 0 -9 3 5 8 Keep trying! Autos 1958 Porsche 356 Good condition, $3000. firm. 479-0797, or after 5pm. 479-0848 3-18J >. Novv, MUST SELL 1981 Audi 5000 SD Nc graded very slick, extremely clean, stereo, other options, priced to sell $6900. 499-0205,473-3421 Jock. 3- 18C_______________ , upgroi 1981 SUBARU GL, 33/27 mpg 5-speed, AC. AM/FM/casjette, excellent engine arid body condition, $3500. 836-6645 3-21______________________________ LEAVING COUNTRY, must seH recondi­ tioned '78 VW Rabbit. Excellent shape, call 477-3534 or 474-8638. $2000 3- 14 '81 VW Rabbit. Silver/red interior, 5spd, AC, stereo cassette, $2800. Sergio, 1 499-8436 evenings. Neg. 3-18 1980 HONDA Prelude 5-sp**d, AM/FM cassette, sunroof, $3495. Call 892- 2035 3-18 ___________________ '83 PORSCHE 944, loaded, dean, rebuilt engine, block with fabric interior. Call 834-1555 for details. 3-18____________ 1976 TOYOTA Corolla w ogon-dork brown with tan intenor, 5spd, AC, looks and runs good. $1450. 442-6464. 3-18C 1984 RED Mustang convertible LX. 13,000 miles. Like new. 18mo warranty $9950. Coll 476-6711, ext. 123. 3-18B 1982 MAZDA RX7 White/brown 5 speed, sunroof, AC, AM/FM cassette Excellent condition Must sell 476-8845 ___________________________ 4 2 1975 CÉLICA. Runs great $800 Coll 462 2315 3-14 1982 MERCURY LN7 - AT, PS, PB, AC, AM/FM, stereo, good mileage, excellent condition, $2700 Call Shannon at (512) 837-1073 days, (512) 459-1513 even­ ings/weekends. 3-19C CALL 471-5244 TO PLA CI A CLASSIFIED AD 360 — Furn. Apts. CLOSEST TO CAMPUS RIO NUECES • Tired of driving to class7 Walk • One block from campus, • 2 Shuttle Slops • Free Parking with Permit • All Units Furnished 6 e Security Service ♦ • Balcony with Storage 1-Bedroom T • Special Group Rales 6 ▼ Summer Rates ♦ $ 3 1 5 * 474-0971 474-1004 130 — Condos- Townhouses TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION RIAL 1STAT1 SALIS MERCHANDISE MERCHANDISE 70 — Motorcycles 70 — Motorcycles 130 — Condos - Ben's Custom MOTORCYCLE PAINTING s locquer S Flam*» e Enamel s Pinttrip* s Imron • Murals s Condy Colors • F¡b*rgkm Repair 282-9945 3-21 1982 HONDA Ascot, FT500, new *n- gm*, red, M ediant condition, $1050 with helmet. 474-0779. 3-14 SUZUKI 250GT, runs good, < 2 ttrake, $200 obo, 469 9577 3-19 1983 YAMAHA V x * irogo 500 - excellent condRion. $1050 259-1499 3-198 ?59 1499 3-19B m m „ 80 — Bicycles WHITESIDE MOTORS CLEAN USED MOTORCYCLES OVER 50 IN STOCK BUY-SELL TRADE FOR CARS 5715 BURNET RD. 458-5631 (Free lank of ga< with this ad) 3-26> VF-1100C MAGNA Rag $4050, Sola $3595. Sava $455 VF-500C MAGNA Raa $2450, tala $1898, Sava $552 Similar Savings on 85's AUSTIN HONDA 1901 East 1st 10 blocks oast o f 135 on East 1st 476-7547 _____________________________ 4-188 7 2 HO NDA motarcyda, 750cc, 4-cyfin- dor, OHC, inspected, dependable, $500 cash, sacrifice, 447-5774, leave message. 3-13 1982 KAWASAKI LTD 440, 6000 miles. Belt drive. Good condition. Drag bars. Helmut. $700 or ony offer, 441-5738. 3- 13 1983 KAWASAKI 550 LTD shaft drive, good condition, must sell $1500. 928- 1918. 3-14 HONDA PASSPORT 1982, excellent condition, $450. CaD 474-0746.3-14 '78 SUZUKI GS550E. Good condition, needs tags and inspection, needs paint and seat. $500. Panel, 445-5104. 3-14 1984 YAMAHA 80cc scooter with hel­ met, windsheRd, basket and two mirrors. 1600 actual miles. 447-3830.3-14 '82 HONDA M85, excellent condition Helmet included. $500. Sergio 499- 8438 evenings.Neg.3-18 ithowk 450. Perfect '82 FIONDA m condition, 3200 miles, gorage kept, with helmet, full rain suit and accessories $950. 459-9490. 3-18_______________ 1977 SUZUKI GT 750,11,000 miles, very good condition. $850, 472-8883, after 6pm. 3-14 1982 HONDA CM450E, bought new 1984. Used summer 1984 only. 6000 miles, crash bar, backrest, cover helmet. $990, Julio 385-0093. 3-14__________ '84 HONDA Aero 50 scooter, $350 firm, 327-0098 Margaret. 3-18 10IMRCrClf11NfrUP$f$ > OR ft Adjust Brakat. Goars, and AR Rearing» ON Chain, True \Mieet». Tighten Spokes, Patch Tube, Re­ tape Free P/U 6 De Rvety. Or M e Can Be Done At Your Home WhRe You Watt MRnv M l P i To Total Restoro- Hon A Pointing 477-8499 — Days, tuenlnqi 4 *C #S ALMOST BRAND new Cierra bicycle, 12 speed, quick release front tire, must sell, $165.462-9473 3-13_______________ SCHWINN WORLD Sport Rides w*R and hen extra frame. features. 23" Asking $75 CoM 477-4605. 3-14 BRIDGESTONE 400, 23', mint condition with extras. $200. 836-6109. 3-17 BICYCLE MIYATA sport tour, new wheels and fires O') Asking $160. Buddy 495- 2982 West Jester 3-18 WEAL ESTATE SALIS 130 — Condos - Townhouses GOING TOUT THIS SUMMER OR FALL? need a place to live four blocks from campus? 785 sq. ft. 2BR condo. No money down, first year payments $750/month. Tax advantages for jx irents. Call owner 345-9435. ZILKER Large 1-lVi w ith fireplace, carport, pool, jacuzzi & clubhouse. Large decks, beautiful view o f capítol, w alk to the (>ark, on shuttle route. Call Susan 4 7 7 -5 8 2 7 . SCHNEID­ ER/KING REALTY. LAVISH LIVING, west campus atmos­ phere. Roommate reody, 2-2, comfort ERA McIntyre Associates, designed. 327-9202.3-18____________________ IN THE heart of Travis 1, loft, study, chamé McIntyre Associates. rvr Heiahtsl Darting 1- inaiy decorated. ERA t. 327-9202. 3-18 2-1 on shuttle. M irrored fireploce, security system, large trees. ERA McIntyre Asso­ ciates. 327-9202. 3-18 Townhouses GREAT PRICE! Condo by owner. 4 blocks from UT. 2BR 2 BA, mony omenifie». Pool, jocuzzi, security system Furniture negotiable. G al 472-3613. 3-21 10% OWNER carry, 1-1 condo, $1)000 10% OWNER cony, 1-1 condo, $11000 down, Non Qualifying, backed up to woods, convenient/ affordable Carol Ann 327-9310/263-5750. Stonberry and Associates. 4-9________________ WEST CAMPUS 2-2 condo for sal* by owner. 1 block from UT. Many amenities, ceiling fans, balcony, fuRy fur nished, etc. CaR 477-7488 4-4 CHARM OF old Austin! Luxurious 2-1, breathtaking Capitol, city view. Near UT. ERA McIntyre Associates, 327- 9202. 3-18 150 — Acreage-Lots LAKE TRAVIS lots for sole Owner fi nanced. Low down, law payments. 441- 3056, 693-2040 3-13 MERCHANDISE 220 — Computurs- Equipmant 300 — G aroge- Rummage Sales APPLE 300/1200 modem with Mac cable $200 CaH after 5 30pm 834-8102 3- 17_______________________________ TERMINAL AN D cable Accesses most UT computer systems. Green screen ond detachable keyboard. $275 385-3385 3-18____________________________ _ APPLE 11* 128K- 2 disc drives, Hayes mi­ cro-modem, monitor 11, joystick, tons of software ond manuel». $1200. 443- 5166.3-188_______________________ room RE DECORATING SALE 5e to $500 Lrv ing furniture, China cabinet, household items. March 15 thru March 16 700am -700pm 11400 Charolias Cove. 3-14C_______________________ 330 — Pets FERRET FOR sale Bwks old, descented ond spayed with cage, must sell. $65 or best offer 451-1727 ofter 6pm 3-18 MUST SELL TRS80 Radio Shock Comput- *c 64K. $750 Coll 462 2135 3-14 340 — Misc. E.E. 345K - TRS-80 color computer, tope recorder, Edilatm, everything you need. $115, caH today, 478-9028. 3-19 LIKE N E W A pple HE computer, A p ­ ple Disk II, Apple II monitor, A(>ple II mouse, A p p le II E80 column text, RX80 Epson printer, tw o joysticks, assorted disks, complete manuals. N e w three piece desk by O'Sulli­ van (top o f the lihe). A ll fo r $ 2 0 0 0 o r best offer. Jolene, 328-1387 CENTIPEDE Game ma­ chine! Perfect condition. Very few plays. Recondi­ tioned like new. Make of­ fer. 451-8978 day; 4 7 2 - 6165 night. 3-19 3 148 COLLECTOR'S ITEM Swatch Clear plas tic. Rore, $260 Coll 477-6825 3-13J DRAWING TABLE, large alt wood, stur­ dy, $65. Electro typewriter, SCM elite, excellent condition, $60 474-9474. 3- _ 18 CONTINENTAL UNDERWRITERS Insur­ ance, competitive low down, monthly rates, open Sot 5448 Burnet Rd 78756 459-2277. 4-16__________ rates, 200 — Furniture- Household 2 4 0 — Boats CASH FOR estates and used furniture. CaR 258-5479. 4-1__________________ We Buy and Sell Used Furniture ond Antiques Trash & Treasures 11712 N. Lomor 832-1007 258-3729 3-20 SOFA BED. Great condition, earth ton* and wood. Really great deal. $150. CoM 331-7669.3-14____________________ COMMODORE COMPUTER. Printer, dual drive, plus more and Minolta 201 copier, takes roll paper. 443-9156. 3- 14C____________________________ THREE BOOKCASES, 6'x2’/5x11 in. deep unstained ponderoso pin*. $40 each. 3 for $110, 474-9474. 3-14_____________ QUEEN-SIZED fouton with cover and pad Hk# new $80. 454-6902 eves, leave messoge. Shyoma. 3-17_________ 3-21 QUALITY FURNITURE Beige sofa, $100 Birch table, $75. Aquariums & fish, $40. W eight sets, $30. 1. 458-6777. 3-17 CUSTOM GLASS »oilboard», 8'6" $380, V $500, 40 sq. fost Gastro Sail $65. __ 926-1834.3-20 MISTRAL MAUI soil board Footstraps, re­ tractable dag gerboard, new 6.3 Regatta soil. $500 478-6478. 3 13 MISTRAL KAILUA sailboard 5.8 Neil Pryd* soil. Good condition. $350 478- 6478. 3-13________________________ 250 — Musical Instruments 1967 ESI 20 hollowbody Gibson guitar Great condition, $300. Spectre 125 am­ plifier, great buy, $250. Longe ski boots size 9/10, $75. 451-7055, after 6pm. 3- 14__________________________ _ STUDENT LINE Conn alto laxophone, good condition, great for the beginner or intermediate band student $500 834-2431.3-17____________________ LOVESEAT AN D chair, good condition, $70. Shaun 451-3310. 3-17___________ TWO HAND crocheted UT afghans in burnt orange and whit*. #100 each, Deborah, 243-1920. Must seel 3-18 7-PIECE Ludwig drum set, Zildjian cym­ bals. Concert toms. $500.346-2833. 3- 17_______________________________ ALTO SAX, excellent condition, $250 836-5652 3-18J____________________ 210 — St«reo-TV 3-14 ALMOST NEW 30watt stereo system 9 month warranty. $225/8.0. 389-1662. 3-1 3______________________________ KORG SYNTHESIZER- $400, 5 octaves electric piano-$150. Late evenings. 495-5214.3-19____________________ 270 — Machinery* Equipment RENTAL 350 — Rental Services duplexes, HOMERUN APARTMENT^ houses, never o fee. Also roommate re- ferrols 474-7775 3-19______________ g i l l l l l l l l l l l t i l l l l l l l t l l l l l t l M l l l l l l l l t lllt lM lllllt llB lllt t g i t o e o t t i j m o a u o R i u o o t i ! ttuBQflxr M u v u D V e FREE I F F 480-9443 I I Im m ediate O ccupancy ? ♦ & P re-Leasing i 5 I; f h r S u m m er ñ i t i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t i M i i i i i i i i t i i M i i n i t t i i i t i i : 360 — Furn. Apts. WEST AUSTIN. Lorge furnished efficiently near shuttle. $310 plu» E 1115 W 10th. 476-7145 anytime 4-3 WALK TO campus. Lorge efficiency. Shuttle and city bu». Mauno Kai, 472- 2147. 3-14________________________ 19" COLOR TV $100. Louis 452-0572 4-1 4______________________________ COLOR TV. Great condition. $60. 462- 9436, Darcy. 3-17__________________ PIONEER 7500 amplifier, 35 watts, $125. Onkyo toner, $75. Both excellent condition. Coll Andy, 346-2869. 3-19 220 — Computers- Equipment DUMB' TERMINAL with coble, $400 458-4899, after 7pm. 3-13 SMITH CORONA electric typewriter for sale. Excellent condition, memory cor­ rect, preset tabs, easy to use. Asking $225 CaH Cathy 482-0208, please leave message. 3-13 GE MICRO cassette recorder with adapt­ er and four blank cassettes. Used only twice. $35,476-3619 3-17___________ HYDE PARK one bedroom, furnished gos/water paid, near IF shuttle, pool, $335/mo 44)2 Ave A. 451-3180 3-21 280 — Sporting- Camping Equip. SCUBA EQUIPMENT BCD, backpack, regulator with depth and pressure gauge, weight belt, knife. $180. After 5pm, 389-0783. 3-14_______________ MEN'S SKI boots. Lange, advanced rec­ reational; racing flo pack. Fib shoe sizes 9-10 $60. 453-1172 after 5pm. 3-17 cut snow skis, FISCHER SOFT-lite racing cut snow skis, Tyrolia bindings, $350. Dynafit S-comp booh, $200. Never used. 443-6017 3- 18B LOVELY VIEW of Pease Pork Lorge fur­ nished efficiency, carpet, drapes ond all appliances Laundry, pool, on site mana­ ger Water paid. $300. Coll PMP, 458- 4155 or 476-8590 3-21 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * I + LEASING { SUMMER A FALL J $ L a rg e 3 M r m / 2 B th . L a r g a # $ 1 B d rm a ls o . Few steps from 9 9 shuttle, furnishings, quiet and secure 9 9 9 with pool and patio. VIP APTS. ♦ ♦ 33rd and Speedway 9 ♦ v Appointment only, call 9 9 f 47 8 -0 3 8 3 * * * * * ♦ * * * * « • * * ♦ ♦ ( RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. BEST SUMMER RATES Shuttle at Front Door Century Square, All S i z e s ...................478-9775 Century Plaza, All S i z e s ....................... 452-4366 V .I.P . Apts, 1 and 3 B d r m ................... 476-0363 Granada, All Sizes.....................................453-8652 Century, Eff. and 1 B d r m ...................499-8136 Walking Distance to Campus Excellent Management Lots of New Furniture J Casbah Apartments * 2200 San O ab rM * * • Large 2 tod 2 Bath e 2Bed,1(alh • 2 Separóle Enfries eFumkhed ^ e Microwave j. • Intercom * * * * ^ + -fc • EndotedPaNowRhbar-b-quepR 4 * jL Rent starling Iron] $495, m negotiable J 473-8553 «444-2750? T Á Hyde Park Apts. MOVE IN TODAY! • Efif. Furn. $320-$330 • 1 BR Furn. $335-$365 • 2 BR Fum. $465 • City Tennis Courts & Pool • Shuttle at Front Door 4413 Speedw ay 4 5 8 -2 0 9 6 (C o n tin e n ta l tó NOW LEASING MOVE IN TODAY FANTASTIC STUDENT SPECIAL “Large” 2 Bedroom Furnished $500 • Wafer !r Gas Paid • • Shuttfe at Comer e Nice Pool • 910 E. 40th 452-4639 VILLA SOLANO APTS. MOVE IN TODAY • 1 BR Fum. $390 • 2 BR Fum. $500 • Shuttle at Comer • Intramural Fields across Street 6 0 0 W . 5 1 at MOVE IN TODAY! • Efficiency $350 • 1 BR Furn. $390-$410 • 2 BR Fum. $530-$550 • Large Pool and Patio • Luxury Club Room • 2 Shuttles Routes 2 2 0 7 Leen A p t s . MOVE IN TODAYI • 1 BR Furn. $400 • 2 BR Furn. $570 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool & Patio 2207 Leon 478-1781 Circle Villa Apts. Move In Today! 2 B d rm /2 B A $490 1 B d m /1 BA $350-$390 FURNISHED! 2323 Town Like Orele 444-7880 Davis and Assoc. Management Co. 4 5 1 -6 6 8 2 ll 442-1991 Tanglewood North Apartments NOW LEASING MOVE IN TODAY! W e Pay All Your A/C an d H eating 1 Bedroom Furn. $410-$425 2 Bedroom Furn. $560-$575 1020 K. 45th 452-0060 Tt/éílow- Oteed AfrcvUmeMfo MOVE IN TODAY! Unfurnished and Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom Furnished $395-$405 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Fum. $595 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Fum. $ 5 3 9 4 5 4 5 • 2 Pools # Balconies • View Apts. • Shuttle Stop 1 9 1 1 W lllo w c re e k Davis & Assoc. Management Co. JL Aspenwood Apartments M O VE IN TODAY! • 1 BR Furnished $380 • 2 BR Furnished $500 • Water 8c Gas Paid Shuttle Bus at Front Door! Intramural Fields Across Street Professionally M anaged by Davis and Assoc. 14 5 3 9 G u a d a lu p e 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 , GREAT SUMMER RATES ’- i El Campo 3 0 5 W 39th Street F u rn is h e d U n fu rn is h e d LaPaz 401 W 39th St K irm s h t’d U n fu rn is h e d El Dorado 3 5 0 1 Speedw ay Furnished 1 Bdrm. 1 Ba 2 Bdrm. 1 Ba 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba Unfurnished Unf. $ 2 7 5 -1 2 8 5 + E. Fum. $ 2 9 5 -$ 3 0 5 + E Unf. $37 0 + E Fum. $ 3 9 0 + E $425 + E Also easy access to shuttle. 472-4893 A 452-8537 Professionally m anaged b y Johnston Properties, Inc Tanglewood Westside Apartments NOW LEASING MOVE IN TODAY 1 Bedroom Furnished $350-$390 2 Bedroom Furnished $540-$570 Gas & W ater PAID Shuttle bus is at your front door 1403 Norwalk Ln. 472-9614 Professionally managed by Davis & Assoc. A Luxury Condominium With Everything. Including 103 Years Of History. Twenty-six exclusive condominum residences with a prestigious west campus address, heated pool, whirlpool spa and monitored security sys­ tems. Featuring fireplace hearths which have been painstakingly crafted using bricks from The University of Texas' first Main Building. In the new Old Main Condominiums, no detail has been overlooked. We've even built-in a "past" on which you can build a future. O L D M A I N «17 W. 25th Austin, Texas 7X7(15 (512) 472-8605 Available August 15,1985. Professionally Managed by Davis & Assoc. 444-0010 444-0014 RENTAL R IN T A l RENTAL Ü N T A I RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 1 3 ,1986/Page 17 360— Bum. Apts. 370— Uwf. Apts. 370— Uwf. Apia. 370— Unf. Apt*. 370 — Unf. Apts. 390- U n f . Duplexes 400— Condoe- 420 — Unf. House* 360 — Fum. Apts. M O V E I N 5875. NEWLY REMODELED microwave, 24-hr. security N IC E Q U « T one complex n e o r H 3706. 3-18C H apt. in « n a l M a l. C o l 453 360 — Fum. Apts. 108 Place Furnished Efficiencies reody for immediate occupancy • dishwashers/disposals • swimming pool • patio/lounge/BBQ grid e individual storage e bookshelves e M block to IF shuttle e laundry facilities e resident manager fum. ef„ $325 + E. 452-1419, if no arower, 453-2771 108 W. 45th St. 3-14A "REDUCED** ALL BILLS PAID 1 BR $349.00 476-8915 2408 Leon __________________________ 3-21 ONE BLOCK FROM UT 2-2, nicely furnished. All bids paid. $595.00. 476-5631 or 469-9342 Stan 4-23 WALK TO CAMPUS AVALONEAPTS. 32nd at IH-35 Efficiency $295 1BR $325 2 BR IA $485 Extra race, extra large with walk-in closets. Quiet, homey complex. On­ site laundry. Furnished or unfurnished. 476-9199 3-13 Efficiency - $305 + E WoN-momtoinsd opts, in Hyde Park, close to IF shuffle, kitchen has lots of cobinatt and counter space, bar, large BR with walk-in closet; most opts, overlook pod, 4200 Ave. A. 451-6966, 451-6533, Central Prop­ erties, Inc 4-16A $285 + E. W e are looking for quiet consci­ entious, non-smoking students interested in a large efficiency in Hyde Park. CA/CH, Laundry. N o Pets. 458-2488. HYDE PARK AREA 1 bedroom, approximately 675 SqFt. O n shuffle ond city bus, carpet, crapes, íes, poet, laundry, assign e d pork- ing. Um Utikties fo r coo kin g a nd heating free. $100 deposit. Spanish Oaks Apt., 45th & Duval i, cdl $345. For more informe 458-5743; 447-9845 __ 4 -2 2A EFFICIENCIES. FURNISH ED, gat and wa­ ter paid, on IF shuttle. $310. 3 02 E. 34th, 469-0071. 3-14_________________ EFFICIENCIES. SU M M ER RATES. O nly 3 left, for serious underarads or grads, quiet. 5 blocks west of campus. $259- $259- m o, Neum an Managem ent. 453-4500, 2 55-1564.3-20C Alpine forest A p t s . • •295(Furnished or Unfurnished) e Newly Remodeled Efficiency e Large room with large bath and cloeet e A/C A Appliances e Shuttle to UT Campus B Laundry Room k Lots of Parking IS S 8 Á T C .A 419-671 m i n i M l M i M l M i M l M l I VILLA ARCOS Mown In Today Bargain Price For One Bedroom Furnished RENT REDUCED NOW TO OUR SUMMER RATE $330 o On Shuttle • Nice Pool/Patio • Laundry Facilities • Walking Distance to Campus • Plenty of Parking 3 3 0 1 S p e e d w a y 476-1619 CaH Aeytiaset One Bedroom - $335 N ice ly furnished apartm ent in H yde Park. Convenient to IF shuffle and city bus line. Paneled living room with budl-in b o o kcase. L arge bedroom w ith w dk-rn closet. 4 3 0 7 A ve. A . 459-1571, 4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 . C entral Proper­ ties, Inc. ______________________________ 4-16A A ll M IL S paid. N eor campus, on shuffle Furnished efBrienries and H R 's in sm al quiet complex. $295-$430. 451-8532, 4 4 2 -4 0 7 6 .4-4J_____________________ MffiST CAM PU S. Furnished efficiency, $ 1 2 5 d e p o sit, new $ 300/m e ., s r f c j a : C a l 478-1350.3-21 910 W 26 St # W A R W IC K APARTMENT, 2 90 7 W est A ve, 18R aporffnent, faBy furnished, dhhwesher; garbage disposal, ceding fans in bedroom and living room. Pool. loundrymm, garden landscape; distance from UT. Cad 4 7 4 -TB^^w 4 4 4 -2 7 5 0 .3-14A 7 4-74 2 6 or ^ ^ H É S Í B Í Í 2 SLO C KS UT, 1-1, C A /C H ,__________ carpeted, large windows, covered park­ ing, laundry, pleasant environment 474- 5929. 3-13 AFFO RDABLE 2-1, duffle off Riverside, pool, fceeHBO, rental/share with pres­ ent tenant. 4 8 0 -0 5 2 3 .3 -2 0 EFFICIENCY FU RNISH ED Surrounded fay trees. $270, sm al complex an *h*44e, aB appfconces, avadafaie April, 4 7 8 -9 7 6 7 ,4 5 3 -6 6 7 3 .3 -2 0 2-1, CA/CH, N R shuttle across the street, $ 3 7 5 + $ 2 0 0 deposit, ga s + water ...............> 3/26/86. 2225-1 Elmore S Í 441-3392 (leave message). 3-21 D O W N T O W N W EST 1211 W 8lh St, dxdBe bus, wmer/gas/cabie paid. G ood condMfon. Efficiency, $260. 477-5012, after 5pm. 4-11 N O RTH O F UT, on shuffle or woBbou dis­ tance, eflirienciei, $295. 18R $295- 320. 477-2214, 452-4516, 453-8812. 4-14 G REAT O A K -o n e block law school, large dean 2-2. Ceding fans, CA/CH, p od . Laundry. 2 9 0 0 Swisher 477-3388, 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 .4 -2 9 _____________________ FU RN ISH ED efficiency, 6 d o cks to cam­ pus, ceding fon, pedio, uncd and quret complex, nice conddiorv $ 2 9 5 + E., $100 off 1st month. 454-0167 4-14 FA M ILY SPECIAL 3-2 house includes TV cable, two watarbedt, $450. Adjacent daycare, p od , gym. 926-9228. 3-14 UPSTAIRS EFFICIENCY, carpeted, ceding fan, near Law School, large storage, V* uiitiies, lease $ 2 9 8 .9 2 6 -7 2 4 3 .4 -3 0 Q U IET RESPO N SIBLE female sought for two rooms/both, furnished, in west cam­ pus house. Fireplace, porch. Share bich­ en. $ 30 0 A8P. 454-4960, 476-3924. 3-17________________________________ 3 4 0 8 SPEEDW AY. Immedfota move-ins available O n shuffle route. Cute fur­ nished efficiencies. $240/m onth Cad Equity 4 52 -9357.4-16 ________________ 370— Unf. Apts. . 4-1 18R $ 27 5 plus E. 304 E. 33rd (near Speedway and 33). See # 16 or cd l 479-6331 4 -2 A G A R A G E APARTM ENT. 29th and Guo- dafape. $ 3 3 0 + E. H ow ol Properties. 4 7 7 -9 9 2 5 .4 -2 4 _____________________ ALL BILLS paid, quiet complex, near shopping busos, and downtown, pool, covered parking, $500.482-0611 360— Fum. Apts. TIMBERWOO! APARTMENTS T O D A Y ! • Large Eff. $390 ’• Finest Location in UT Area b Shuttle or Walk to Campus » Fireplace BETTER HURRY! 20th 6 San Gabriel 499-8712 — TH E 305 APTS. M O V E I N T O D A Y ! • "Large" Efficiencies • $345 + E • Small Friendly Complex • Near Shuttle Corner Move In Today! 459-4977 Davis & Associates GARDEN GATE APARTMENTS COCO NOW L E A SIN G MOVE IN TODAY A s/ ss/ s/ sr o ' « 4 * L uxury 1BR F u rn ished 2222 Rio Grande 476-4992 CHEZLASU i APARTMENTS *1 BR Fum. 1 BR Fum. 2 BR Fum. $440 ABF $415 + E $560 ABF MOVE M TODAY! • Nice Pools • Walk to Campus • Across the Street from Tennis Courts O ffice O pen D aily M oi .-Set. 8 a.».-5:30 p.ai 4 7 7 *3 6 1 9 i s e 2 W . 2 4 t h S t . STUDIO APARTMENTS CEILING FANS, M IN I BUNDS, $ 2 9 5 .0 0 / FIR EPLA C ES. MONTH. 478-7963. HYDE PARK 12 Oaks Ap ortmenb . On# bedroom, ceftng fan, pool, laundry room. $310.00 + E. 452-7454 $100.00 DISCOUNT 3-13 4-3 FREE RENT •Spacious 1 ond 2 ledroom Apertmenb. Convenient to IH 35, 2 9 0 and 183 A bo an CR Shuffle. Sedud e d W D Hookups. Fireptocs, Covered Parking C a l Todoy For M ove in SpectaL C algary Squore Aportmente— 1604 W heies. Lone. 452 490 7 or 8 354)303. TEXAS PROPERTIES SPECIALS! Move in — $50 deposit. 1st months rent free. New residence only. O n shuttle. Near Capital Plaza. W e pay gas, cooking, heating. 1-1'», 2-1,'s 2-lVi's, 2-2's. 452*3202. ON TOWN LAKE W e i help pay your 1st month's rent on any of our effic, 1, 2, or 3 bedroom opts. Fricas bom $310 to $ 4 9 5 and we pay yo t ond woRrt. Rtion by fw IcAt of w dk in ih t pork. W r 'n oonvm m nt In tm ty* ihtngt Sodhafiott Apfe, 3 0 0 E. WeGn idt. 444-3337 4-4J "REDUCED** ALL BILLS PAID 1 BR $349.00 NEWLY REAAODELED mscrowove, 24-hr. security 476-8915 2408 Leon ________________________________3^21 UNBELIEVABLE SPECIAL RATES Quiet, comfortable community near ZAer Pork with many omenities. O f­ fering sp us effiriencies at $270, 1/1's at $310, 2/Vt at $370, for a short timo onlyf 1500 South Lomar or CaH Sandra or Tom 447-5980. 4-9A TWO WEEKS FREE RENT One bedroom, p o o l foundry room, quilo, dean, neor shuffle, $305/mo. 6 month lease, $200 deposit. South Cliff Apts, 2001 S. 435. 445-0551 4-16J Large efficiencies, furnished and un­ furnished, built-in kitchens, walk-in dosete, some with microwaves and ceiling fans Laundry facilities and pooh, dose to bus fines. Suitable for singles or couples. $280 and up 453-5737. CAPITAL PLAZA VILLA A l uKKes patdi I ledroom from $355. 2 bedroom from $475. Convenient to drop­ ping 2 laundries 8 pool SeawSMy groomed londKopiwg 8 quiet adult atmosphere. Oi- recRy on dtulBe. 5700 CAM ERON ROAD 454-7007 2 MONTHS FREE RENT StzzBng Vocation Special. Let us pay for your vocation. Spacious 1,2 ft 4 bedroom apartments, large doeets, coifing fans, 2 pools and laundry facil­ ities. Start o 1 yeor lease now and take a vacation with July and August rant hoe. 444-4485. This offer for limitad time ontyf 3-VU Vi Month Free Rent Summer Special Near UT and downtown. Large effi­ ciency. View of Pease Park pool, «un­ dock laundry. Viewpoint. 2518 Leon - PMP, Inc, 458-4155 or Manager, 476-8590. 4-18A NO SECURITY DEPOSIT bnmedkile occupancy naor IF sfxfftle; sm al quiet complex with pool, lorge efficiency and 18R. $300-325 + E. 451-9007 or 442-4076. 4-11J ONE BEDROOM with a vaulted ceding, across from shuttle. Near OÍtorf and 135, smaH complex, $310 -t- E. 441-8365 or 442-4076. 4 -n j SMALL COMPLEX 4306 Ave. A LARGE redecorted 28R apt in Hyde Park. C o v e re d p a rk in g , b u ilt-in bootoheivos, and dedo. G as cooking heating and hat w ater paid $ 4 8 0 + E. 2 weeks free. Avail, now. C o l monogor. Efaafaeth, 4 5 8 -9 8 0 9 ,8 3 7 -7 8 8 0 4 ]gA UT AREA, rporious efficiency in imaN no pets, gas and water paid. $275. V ata Properties, j-------------------- , 472-3453. 3-14A U.T. O N E Block Remode bd efficiencies, 1 and 2 Bedrooms. A4any Extras) Hurry) Habitat Hunters. 4 82 -8 6 5 1.3-20 NEW LY REM O O ELED effirionries, 1 and 2 bedroom, some with firepiocas and dtyBghts—convenient north central loca­ tion neor rhutae $ 2 9 5 -$ 4 5 5 + E $100 off 1st month's rent. 451-4561, 442- 4076. 4-4J B RO W N ST O N E PARK Aph. is now b a s­ ing effirionries, 1 and 2 bodroom s~$5 to $ 46 5 + E G as and water paid. First slop on IF shuffle $100 off 1st month's rent. 4 54 -3 4 9 6,44 2 -4 07 6 . 4-4J N EAR IF shuffle Nice 18R apartment in « n a l complex. G as and water paid. Pool. $ 3 2 0 + E. 453-7514, 4 4 2 -4 0 7 6 4-4J_______________________________ TARRYTOW N. LARGE, doon, quiet, shut Be, pool, laundry, reasonable. 1-1 ond 2- 2. 2 60 6 EnBeia Rd. M anager # 4 , 476- 1861,474-1100.4-7___________________ 1-1 APARTM ENT in shady, sm al complex. Gos/Hect W indow units. $345/m o. C o l 474-6330. Monday through Friday, 8am-5pm. 3-18C W EST O F campus, W . 22nd St. O ne bed­ room, Dving room, study and large kitch­ en. AM utBÜot paid except A/C. W indow unit. N o pels. $ 3 9 0 + dp#. Cat 397- 2 5 7 6 .3-18A 1-1 EFFICIEN CY for mature, responsible student, on city bus lines. $195/mo. 459- 0247, R onda 4-10 411 EAST 30lh. UT wafld Cute behind Posse, new appliances deposit, $ 3 2 5 baso. 452-1236. 3 -2 7A efficiency s. $25 0 4-16J $200 MOVE-IN First month freo rent. 1BR — $315, 2BR — $365, nice, newly pointed apartments. Neor CR shuttle, Capital PIcbo. 1200 E. 52nd (on# block oast of Comoran Rd.) 480-9191, 453- 6083. 3-14 3-14 FREE rent for 1 month. Efficiencies ovoíabie offering: large Roorplan, lots of storage, heat and hot water paid, d o se to UT and shuttle bus routes. Quite smaH community. From $299 per month. CaH 835-4130 for appointment. The Retreat, 4400 Ave­ nue A $75 DEPOSITI Per person is all it takes to m ove into our la rge 1 bedroom apartam ento lo ­ cated m smcdL quiet com plex. R ale s begin at $ 2 9 0 plus E. C onve nient to sfxdHe, city bus, shopping. O ffice rs, M -F , 9 am - 2 pm a n d Satur­ day, 10 om - 2 pm. 4 41 -8 4 1 3 3-14J 370 — Unf. Apts. MOVE IN FOR DEPOSIT ONLY rporious 18R and 2IR apartments, con­ venient to IH35, 290 and 183 on CR dndffe, secluded , W D hookups, Bre- pfoees, covered parking C o l today, Cal­ gary Square Apis, 1604 W Ii é s Lane, 452-4907. 3-31 142 BEDROOM — $345-$375 Located in central Austin. Close to City and shuttle bus lines and shopping centers, pool. G as cooking/healing paid. N o pels. 1501 West North Loop. 452- 0937, 451-6533, Central Prop­ erties, Inc. 4 -2 3A 1 BEDROOM-$ $ 8 5 “ Central location. Large apart­ ment with hollywood bath, loti of doieti, >nty of kikchen counter space and large pantry. W ater/gas paid. 115 West Koe­ nig Lane. 459-8077,451-6533, Central Properties, Inc. _____________________ 4 -2 3A 99 M oves You Into a 1-1 149 M oves You Into a 2-1 pkxoppfaafeon fee charged only if you •ease—pays deposit rent «rough April 15 F w Ü rS o d ium ond Shuffle Mjendise-spooouKcorpsled centro! oír and hecAng waft in dosoh, two pooh, and fwa laundry rooms, fcwrodkde oceupemy, rnmsdwb slsdririty turnon Watsr and Gasjcoolbng healing ond Sot x e b jp a d O ce Hours: M -F 9-6 Sat. 10-4 Sun. 12-4 Autumn Ridge Apartments 1220 E. 38Y2,459-1361 3-21D UNIQUE Moke yourself at homel Quiet neigh- borty atmosphere, large comfortable apartment homes. Some with mi­ crowaves ond ceiling fora. Before you make a move let me show you Nor­ wood. 451-1917, Norw ood Apart­ ments, 5606 North Lamar. 3-14D MICROWAVE, VCR FREE RENT* It's stM Cfu istmos at Norw ood, come by ond see whot you w 4 get with your new home. The Norwood Apartment Home* 5606 f i Lamar 451-1917 ‘Limited Time, New Residente Only 3-14D SPRINGTIM E SPECIAL Family environment, (2) courtyards: poobide with heated spa ft recreation room; quiet side with picnic area, bike parking and voNeybaN. Entire com­ plex security and clothing optional. Apartment sire ond housebroken pate allowed with $150 pet deposit. 2 Bdtms $350,1 Bdrms from $295. N o just rtosonablt nut. 476- RENT SPECIAL Extra large 1 bedroom apart­ ment, 725 sq. ft., only $298 wHh 6 or 12 month lease. G as heat­ ing and wafer paid. Pool, laun­ dry facilities and auiot, central courtyard. Perfect tor students. Near UT shuttle, city bus, and shopping. Rent reduction limited time onlyl 459-9974 3-14 ROSEDALE DUPLEX UT-DOWNTOWN 1 bedroom, $365. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2 kitchens, 3 story, references. HPO Real Estate 467-7212 ______________________________ 3-19A O N E M O N T H free rent, great location for UT area, stadto efficiency. $350. C o l 4 5 2 2 8 1 6 o r 4 80-2816.4 -2 A _________ W A LK TO campus, large efficiency with hardw ood floors, lots of windows. G as and water paid. $250. Vista Properties, 4 7 2 -3 4 5 3 .3-14A f 370— Unf. Apts. lu n illa T restles Apartment* 1 ! 1 m d 2 B e d ro o m s an Shuttle Sue Soule C A L L T O D A Y 45 3 # 9 6 * 1 0 7 1 O s y t o n L — s GIVEAWAY • 1 and 2 Bed­ room Apts. Available Now! • FREE Gas and • On Shuttle Route lttO toydCrs* 444-7516 THE ARBOR Large Pool and Sundeck Spacious Walk-In Closets Close to Central Campus Shuttle STUDENT SPECIALS 10% Discount - Start at $325 Short term summer leases. SAGEBRUSH w 478-0992 ^ Break Away From The Ordinary Enjoy Condo Luxury At Affordable Prices. Spring. There’s no better time to leave behind the mundane and begin to enjoy the place you call home. Like the large swimming pool, hot tub, and tanning decks. Spacious floor- plans with newly renovated interiors. Loads of bookcases, «U closets, and cabine locations that are c popular restaurants, shuttle bus. pack? Call us today f o r c H M ^ \ ! - ^ Isn't it time yotN |||||^ ^ H ^ N > a rt from the ,... ¿D t u t o lQ / illa Apartments in Hyde Park 4305 Duval Austin, Texas 78751 451-2343 , Apartments in West Campus 2810 Salado Austin, Texas 78705 472-3816 =hS ® mptPrnnmamm From the collection of H utkin Properties N EAR H IG H LA N D m ol -dean. quwt. ¡ f R M H r . gos. cable poxf $ 3 9 5 505 R e ty-4 5 4-66 5 8. 9 ?8 HYDE PARK. 1-1, A C ceitna Ian, carpel, 451- said 1 3 9 5 8122. W sri W oHd Real Extols 3 -20 0894. 3 -2 0 0 DIRECTLY A C R O SS from UT, 1-1, Dying room, lusdten, hordw ood Boors, AC, $435, A SP CoS 3 2 7 7929 If no answer, 3-14 LARGE 1-2 bedroom apartments near IH- 35, 1-83, 290, crty and UT busos. Pool. From $ 2 9 V m o , 4 5 2 7499 3-21 ENFIELD--PEASE Park, spacious 2-1, also 1-1, CA/CH, jogging trail, shufflo, park­ ing. 4 7 2 -2 7 7 9 -le o vo messoge 3-17 HYDE PARK -on UT shuttle 18R ISA, $325/m o 467-0117, leave message. 3- W EST 26th New ly-decorated efficiency Crispí Separate, M bichen. Die bam. Pool and laundry. Q uiet com er location $265. References pis óse. Pels no. Jack Jennings. 4 74 -6 8 9 7 Consolidated 3 -20 $ 3 0 0 - - month month complex north. Pool. 339-6961.4-16 free or $315--one free. O ne bedrooms. Sm al U N FU R N ISH ED BED RO O M , bichen effi- aency, UT oreo. ABP, $295, S36-1B02, 4 5 3 -0 6 3 8 ,3 4 5 -6 7 0 7 .4-2A___________ 3 BED RO O M . Pnvale, w e * Austin, G rande C o l 474-5161 3 13 CLARKSVILLE C O N D O 2 2 Beautiful parquet with newty carp eted bedroom s and baths. W /D pro vided. AM appli­ sunfi^d. $ 7 50/mo ances M ory, 4 9 5 -9 7 9 7 .3 -1 4 A _____________ Ex ceMent BE THE FIRST Start pee leasing now Summar ond foM, one ond taro boaroom condos. C A M P U S A K A . Aportmord Findaa 458-1213 3-14A LETS M A K E A DEAL! 1-1 condo w /al ap- phoncos Compus area, mmi-blmds, po­ lio, only $395. Apartm eni Fmdars, 4 5 8 1213 3-14A 3511 RED Rwer, 1250 sq. fr, 2-1, CA H, hordw ood Boors. $ 6 5 0 anth. $45 0 -4------- ^ ft n 'ii A i l i t ] ffinMODN N M N K P V y 831- ONXNtt. 8 9 0 7 4-4___________________________ -A W EST A U ST IN 3-2 duplex lor Itie db- criminaBng. Everything new. Fireptaee. i garage. 3 00 6 M ay -8811 or « Ü Ü M 4 7 2 -6 2 0 6 4- Grate 4 77 W A LK TO UT CA/CH, Nueces, caS Shaw n 472-52 2100 3 19 390 — Unf. Duplexes 2-1, high efficiency CA /C H , appli­ ances, fireplace, utility room, W /D connections, new carpet, fresh paint, carport, outside storage, fenced yard. Excellent condition. 32028 Jock C o o k near M an o r and Northeast Or. $395/m o. 346- 2751,892-4100, Tiro JERRICK SOUTH TW O W EEKS FREE RENT. One Bit's and 2 BR's $285-$350 hordwood floors centrally located 2606 Wilson Street 443-8366 3-17 1701 Burton Drive. 2-1 Vi Du­ large plex. Fireplace. Two sundecks. G a s appliances. W osher, Dryer. Ceiling fans. All appliances. O n two shuttle routes. $585.447-8303. 3-25 ACROSS FROM LAW SCHOOL Right o cross from Low School, 2-1 e x­ tra room y. $ 7 5 0 .0 0 ONE BLOCK TOUT 1-1 h a rd w ood B o o n , $ 3 8 5 .0 0 BRAITHWAITE PROPERTIES . 441-8379 __________ 3-13 M A R C H FREEI 2-2, mcely decorated. Ex- cs la nt condition and location. Ct ~ fans, mini-blinds, carpet, yard. AM onces. $ 4 5 0 Cod 476-2101, 477-85 3-14 _____________________ HYDE PARK, remodeled 2 bedroom du­ plex, carport, yard maintained, no pets, $525, 207 É. 43rd, 4 58 -9 9 8 6 or 463- 2012 ext. 86 (Dcrve). 3-14A____________ 2BR, CACH, carpeted, corport, 4 7 0 5 A CasweN, 2 blocks, UT shuffle N o pats $ 3 5 0 4 6 4 4 .3-17A 4 53-3843; 928 -3 8 2 9 282- LARGE 2-1 dupiax for rent. Units ova4- a b b M a y 1 and M a y 31 O n# block from campus on west 21st. Summer - $550, FaN - $700, 4 78 -0 8 8 5 or leave m essoge ot 4 76 -8 3 5 3 Tim. 3-19______ TRI-PLEX IN established neighborhood in UT area neor IH 35. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, »360/m o„ 478-1631 4-1C____________ 7 40 3 G U ADALU PE-18R, new carpet/ paint. O n bus route. 5375/m o. $ 20 0 deposit. 244-1474, 8 3 7 -0 9 5 0 3-21A 1 M O N T H free-duplex: 1-1 near High­ land M ad ond UT shuffle Folio. Yard maintained. N o peri. $310. 258-5831. 3- 2 8A B R A N D N E W 2-1 large yard, pets OK. patio, ceding fans (hroughosd, new ap- phooces $ 6 5 0 A B F 4 5 0 0 2 9 5 3-18 CUTE 1-1 in Hyde Fork. 4010 A ve C # C , $375. C o l 4 80 -0 0 9 7 3-14A T W O BLO C KS from UT 1-1, natural rock waRs. Bargain rent. C o l 476-4851 or 4 78 -6 5 1 0.4-2C______________________ 3-20 2-1, AC, refrigerador, covered parking do se to campus, ovod. now $475/mo O e o r Rock Freperlies. 335-1151 4-2A 2-1, AC, refrigerador, covered parking, d ose to campus, ovodobte now, $475/ mo. d o o r Rack Froperties, 335-1151. 3- 400 — Condos* Townhouses Mow Fro-ieading The Palladian Condominiums These 2-2 units have W/D, microwave, mdrviduol security syriems, mim btmds, ceding fans and more. Foot and (ocuzzi on site and are withe, waRung distance to campus. Must see to appreciate how large these units are. C o* 4 80 -0 0 9 7 or 2 7 6 -3 8 8 7 _______________________ 3-17 WALK TOUT CAMPUS Gaorgtan Condominiums. 28R 1BA, only 4 blocks from campus. Amendies: microwave, frig, W /D units, ceiling fan, covered parking. Available now, $575/mo. F ci — $69V m o C o l 84 at Heagerty Co. Realtors, 343-0270, 343-1900. 3-13 V? MONTH FREE Two "waft to compus" apartments. 3000 Gixidalupe, 1/1, $350. 621 E. 31st efficiency/one, $275. F .S A -H o rm o n Pearson 472-6201 NO RTH A U ST IN Brandywine condomini­ um, 2-2, microwave, refrigerator, W D, other extras, landscaped. $650, John af- ter 5pm, 244-7160. 4-11_______________ C R IO X C O N D O Lorge 1-1, W/D, mi­ crowave, pool, jocuzzi, fp, cp, security. Summer 1986. CaS Judy 4 7 7 -2 2 3 3 or 478-5651 3-2 0_____________________ 1 bedroom, 1 bath townhome, dose to shuffle. P ool tecurity. $475. Available June 1. C o l M ark offer 6pm, 3 85 -6 7 6 6 4-1 2-2 W ITH wosher/drye fenced bock yard, dose to U T , tween Cam eron 4 Bethmo n $600. 450- 1985 3-18______________________ __ RU N D8ERG IH 35 1104 V Aoge Green, 38# large kddien, vauttod ceding, ce4- mg fans, screened porch, taro-car oa­ rage, fenced yard. $590/month, 339- 6931 3-14___________________________ 2-1 H A R D W O O D Boors, nun, binds, me* yard, low uSM as, 500 3 Sheah vood. $ 6 0 0 N o « nohars 3-14 A VAN ABLE N O W One bedroom house Very good conddion Fenced yard, screened porch, IE shuttle $375. 458- 794 9 3 19__________________________ SOUTH AUSTIN, neor S*. 1-1, 2-1, pnvo- cy $275/xx, $ 32 5 /xx, 6m o $150/xx deposit 4 4 8 303 4 4-2 lease, UT H O U S F ~ -S buid-ms Remodeled, 2-1 $ 6 5 0 304 W 41 H am son Pearson 472 6201 4 2A 425—• Rooms R O O M S EOR boys with adjoining bedh, 3 blocks compus $230/mo A B F HoweB 4 7 7 9 92 5 3-17 C LEA N R O O M , pnvota entronce/kitchen M en share bath Q u iet, mature mdrndu- d N o pets 474-1212 4-8_____________ PRIVATE FU RN ISH ED D O R M R O O M S N EA R UT-kitchen privileges—b lk p a d - A C C d l 4 77 1529 Men/women 3-19 FREE R O O M for housekeeper, N W H Ss liberal one-person residence Q uiet, female wdh car 451-8728 ext 7 00 3- J200ÁBP SHARE A BATH $255 ABP PRIVATE BATH & ENTRANCE 2800 W HITIS 472-4205, D A N 3-14 430 — Room -Boord ungle ro N O W LARGE room/board Great graduate co-op--Eastw oods Fork. Rant/ Doord/utilities/Cablevision/ - $ 37 5 p/ Evenings, mofdh Days, 1-396-3893 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 3-13_____________________ 435 — Co-ops G R A D N O N SM O K E R Morch, Summer in com fortable house. O w n dose 9 people 472- room 5 6 4 6 ,4 7 4 -2 0 0 2 4-8________________ N O W LARGE uñate room/boord Great graduate co-op--Eastw oods Pork. Rent/ board/ utilrties/Cobievision/ $ 37 5 p/ month Days, 1-396-3893 Everangs, 4 7 2 -5 6 4 6 3-13_____________________ RO YAL C O O P has voconcies for women and men, quie* neighborh ood, good food Come «mx 1805 Peari St 4 7 8 0 8 8 0 E S m t T i ^ ^ ^ ■ O F I N I N O S taeloome to the M i C o-op tcx the Springy Frtendty sett-govemtng. in­ to ternational oommunffy ctoee cam pus Fool wnctack. aneetatag •enrice computar tóel e s A/C f ixv educxMoncy acavmet. ce meaff. ARF Com e by tor a tour U — R e e l 4 96 6 67 8 t $394 . * T oos C o -o p * looking for great housing? Taos it a * * fnendty coed community ocross from» * campus AC, 19 great meats a w eek¿ * wndeck. fun eaucalional program e . ond security Tours avaBabta onytawe * > * come by ond apply) * Sp rin g Rotes Single: $ 4 1 9 / lH O . ‘ Doufate $ 2 9 S / fH O .» 2612 O u a d a l e g M 440 — Roommates D O YOU need o roommate? C d l Room- male brokers, Inc 910 W M LK #201 4 7 8 -5 0 9 6 3-21______________________ GRADUATE N O N SM O K E R , funxshed 48R 28A house. CR shuffle, $285/m o + Vs b4s. Dowd, G ory 4 5 9 7199, 474- 8 56 4 3-21__________________________ W A N T ED FEM ALE (pref groduata »Xi- dent) to share 3BR house, near CR dxA- lie Fnvota both, wosher. nice neighbor hood. A l utilities paid $ 30 0 Cat Donna 451-0135, evenings. 3-14 M /F R O O M M A T E S shore 38 R town­ house «nth groduata students. Clean, neat $ 2 4 0 A 8 P 4 4 1 -8 0 2 3 3-13 N O W LA R G E i room /boord G reat groduata co-op— Eastw oods P ork Rent/ board/utitrhes/CobtaviSiOn/ - $ 3 7 5 p/ month. Days, 1 -3 9 6 -3 8 9 3 Evenings, 4 7 2 - 5 6 4 6 3-13________________________ M ID - M A R C H m ove? Secutar Humanal, decent, responsible, liberal parson to share 3 BR House neor 4 5 lh a nd M o p o c $ 2 0 0 plus V) utilities. C d l Jay 4 5 4 - 2441 3-14_____________________________ L IV IN G A R R A N G E M E N T for corooan- tious non-sm oking person. Private b ed ­ room ond bath CA/CH, poot, fom ahed 2-2 O n e block low ichoo) $ 3 0 0 4 7 2 - 2 097, 4 7 7 3 3 8 8 4 -2 9 $ 1 7 5 -PLU S 1/2bdts Shore 2 -2 funxshod mobde home «nth femoie groduata stu- dent, 4 4 7 - 5 0 7 2 or 478-1631(mtg). 3-19 18R IN 28R house W a 6 campus. $1 7 5 A B P Prefer Sporvsh speaker or C S mo- ior b*X not ptciry 4 7 8 - 8 3 5 4 C ork y 3-18 W A L K T O tow school Large room pri­ vóte bath G o rg e o u s home) Private en­ trance 4 7 7 -4 4 4 1 N on sm ok ers please. 3-18___________________________________ IF SH UTTLE-cute house, ntce gu m need 2 more roommes. G o o d place) Cheap! 47 7-4441. Tom. 3-18 CLARK5VTL1F— T 2 yr. ¿GTPr¿? (M) looking for M/F Grod/Facul- fy to share terrific old 2/1 house. Recently renovated, huge kitch­ en, yard, Beulahland porch, lots of privacy. $ 3 5 0 + utilities. Avail, immed Gall 4 7 3 -2 0 2 3 day*, 48 2 -8 7 3 4 eves. _________________ 3-12 CALL 471-5244 TO SLACK A CLASSIFIED AD 400 — Condos- Townhouses I C A M 6 6 * I f o r u a h ^ ^ ^ ^ L ^ f w T w m w r - HHHHonnkhon 3 0 7 W . N L L K . B lv d . W e have over 8 0 IwxuriosH f l W est Com ps» condo* a v a i­ la b le now to pre -leaM for lliummer and fa i of 1986. For 9 inform ation coM___________ 1 * * * * * * * * * * * * 4 Mem I mmeimgt + Condos 5 S4S9 Leee 1 - l . U . U ^ T ♦ AweBebte eow far'óñapancy. ^ Uatana office eoit 110. Á Ooee 11-4 ose dedy or c o i w z . 327-4980 or 474 7628 ¿ T ^ 4-17J Fireplace/Swimming A VAHA8LE N O W Two blocks from Co­ op, sfKrioncy in sm al, quiat complex, mcely hrmahed, W /D, $400/mo , 453- 0 73 8 4-8 FOR LEASE-2BR/2BA condos-W est compus, aB omen dies, untarnished, 9 or 12 mo. lease. 2 30 0 Leon C d l Ranea, 3 2S-1550 or 4 74 -7 0 9 2 (wknds). 4-1A W ALK TO campus. Luxury W ast Campus condominium, security, hat tub, ovaI. to# C d l 476-1612 3 -id _______________ 3-2 $545, 2-lV>: $495, 2 1 $44 5 Lorgo, M O D E R N , firaploce. pool, sauna. N eor W ffiom Cannon and IH- 3 5.34 6 -4 3 92 4-16__________________ CRO IX C O N D O 1 BR, tamishad, W D, ice maker, nxcrowtnre, ceding fan, secondy, summer/fai, $675, f713) 626-8193, (713| 9 63 -8 7 0 0 3-17 AVAILABLE N O W -1 bedroom condo Shuttle, a p p lia n c e s, m icrow ave , overtook» p o d and hat tub. R a d Es- talers 8 3 5 -4 5 0 0 .3-19C_______________ 410— Fum. Houses HYDE PARK 18R house, 4414-A Speed way, w ood Boon, on stxdSe line, no pels, avail. 3-1, Ioom through 8/86. $42 5 • bdk 459-0017 4-3________________ THREE H O M E S avodabie University neighborhood (Hyde Fork) Furnished/ or unfurrashed, $ 42 5 -4 7 5 New carpet, or hardw oods, opptoncos, 4 53 -4 9 9 0 3- 17__________________________________ 420 — Unf. Houses ALLEND ALE C LEA N 3-2-2, fenced, W/ D, refrigerador, $900, W H Y RENT? Ldffe down, you five in house and make pay­ ments for partid ownership 328-1812 3-1 4________________________________ HYDE PARK, 4311 Ave C. 2-1 hordwood Boon, recently kitchen apptances. Fenced yard $650 + biRs. By appointment only 459-0017 4- 4_________________________________ remodeled, CA/CH, 2 BED R O O M S, fenced, appliances, ced- fans, shuffle. $550/m onth 530 9 Du- a 453 -7 8 3 2 3-20A ________________ TO SH ARE—3-2, restored Victooon, ap­ pliances, shuffle, beariiful 5 30 6 Evons 4 53 -7 8 3 2 *467-0149 3-20A Newfll 2-slory, 5-3, Kardwood floor», rrwerowava, W /D connec­ tions, 6 blocks to UT. 3208 Hampton, 472-7362 or 452- 3031. 4-10J STONEY OLDIE Large comfortable 3-1, separate dining, firepioce, ocross 26th St. from UT low school. $600. 2900 Hampton. 454-7619, 837-7458. Prime Properties 4-3 UNIVERSITY AREA Large 2-1, hardwood floors, re­ modeled. Pels okay. $725/mo. Drive by 900 W. 30th or call 472-2922. Story, Hardw oods, C eding Foro, O n Stafftle. Habitat Hunters, 4 8 2-86 51 . 3 - 2 0 _______________________________________ V ER Y BEAU TIFU L 1 8 8 0 » Victorian house. Adjocent to park, 1 b it east of UT, Sw edish background. 38 R 2 B A 4 7 7 - 2331 $ 7 9 5 1 0 0 0 E 14th. 3-21A A V A IL A B L E n ow 1,2,3 BR houses for rant. 4 5 2 - 5 9 7 9 (2 4 hours). 4 -9 _________ FO R RENT, charm ing older home, one block from law sc h o o l freshly pointed m ade a n d out, 2-1, fveptoce, o ak Boors, cedin g fon, fenced yard, garage, 2915 Beonno, $ 7 0 0 / m o , 4 7 7 - 9 3 7 6 . 3-14 THREE H O M E S priced below market (non-smokers discount $ 4 2 5 -4 7 5 ). N e w carpet, appkances, university neighbor­ hood. 4 5 3 -4 9 9 0 -o v m e r. 3-17 C A P IT O L PLAZA, kvety, spacious 3-2 C A/CH, carport, doon, appkances, car­ peted, fenced, trees, shuffle $ 5 9 5 47 4 - 5 9 2 9 3-17____________________________ BIKE T O UT 2-1, h a rd w o o d Boors, cedin g f a r o fenced, garage. C on ve nient RR/ downtown. 477-8110, evemngs 3-17 C O U N T R Y H O M E - 1 4 mdes east, large older 3-1, porches, fence, C A/CH. w o o d burning healer $ 5 0 0 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 , 47 8 - 5 7 3 9 4 -2 9 400 — Condos- Townhouse* IWOODLANDS 0ND0MMÍMS On Two Shuttle R outes Large One Bedrooms and Two Bedrooms Starting at $340 • Fireplaces • Patios with Storage • Kitchens All Electric • Assigned Parting • Pool • Jacuzzi CJL&eeveó K e n t CsloU (Oltorf Burkaon Road Ana) 4434451 4474303 H Y D E P A R K - L o r g . Rem odeled 3 2 Two femóle 477-8110, evenmgs. 3-T7 4-11J H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D im m edataty O w n room in g u e t 2-1 with graduate THE PRESTIGIOUS OLD MAIN AST. THOMAS .«»w one year beginning June 1 an d •• trtle aro teffiy tumtehed an d Include aB amenffiee. 2 S a d P O O M fr l S o * » $ 1 * S D 2 S d d P o a w v a S a S i $ 1 4 * 0 Phone 472-8605 or come by 807 W. 25lh JUST COMPLETED!! CLOSE TO CJLMPUS/SHUTTLE BUS M O V 8 - I N S H C I A L S M i M M T T I L E N D O f P E t f T M O N T H • Somester Leases • 20% Summer discount • 5% Student discount • Starting at $375.00/montti • 562 to 906 Square Feet • large WoBt-m Closets • Laundry Room • Jacuzzi Spa SANDSTONE APTS. 2408 Manor Rd. 478-0955 c® / Jlm igo “LET’S MAKE A DEAL” on one of our newty remod­ eled one and two bedroom apartments and townhouse units. Nice neighborhood near major shopping areas and dty park. • Large enough for roommates • Pool • Gym/Sauna • Recreation Room • On RR/IF Shuttles 4505 Duval 454-4799 4-TU S S S Í f t t r í í S ’S S : M N T A L 370-U n » .Apts. pDonces, A/C, in quiet beautiful setting, 32nd and Eastwoods Park. $400. 477- 8172, 3-14 370— Unf. Apts. m t . T BUNONfWH ONEMONTHFtEE Spacious 1 Bdrm; G roat 2 Bdrm/2 Ba. groat room mate plan. O n shuttle bus route and within w alking distance to grocery store and entertainment. Com e Visit Us Today! TOWN LAKE C H C LE m u m M t b m U k i C k e m VILLA ORLEANS ARTS. 2 0 6 W . S B t k EL CID ARTS. 3704 Speedw ay e Great location • On Shuttle • Ceiling Fans • Pooleide Units One Neath FIC E Beat WMb te e IS Neath Leeeet SBaneil le.$S2S4$45Aat 1 Bfbm/1 Be. ISSS4S4S -f E WE’LL MOVE YOU IN! V> Off 2nd Month's Rent with 6 Month Is o m 1, 2. 3 ft 4 Bedroom wtth Fireplace, Poot Hot Tub, Water and Gas Paid. On CR Shuttle ÑONGATE APTS. 454-2636 3-28 TELEPHONE SALES-only experienced need apply. References necessary. Per­ manent position. 288-3751, 8am-6pm, Mon.-Sat. 3-17B 870 — Medical Legislative budget cut to threaten caucuses RECEPTIO N IST/TRANSCRIPTIO NIST part-time, dependable, motivated individual, word processing, dental ex­ perience required. 443-5704. 3-14C By KATHY JONES Daily Texan Staff Page 18/The Daily Texan/Thursday, March 13,1986 RKNTAL KDUCATIONAL SKRVICKS s m v ic is S IR V IC IS KM PLO YM INT 460 — Business S90— Tutoring 750— Typing 750 — Typing 760 — Misc. Ssrvlcss ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE ■PRINTING, BINDING 5 Z IV L K V JOB W IN N IN G RESUMES We Do It Alii Expert Services Included Layout e Typing Printing W hile You W oit e Job Resumes/Letters/Applications e Mailing Campaigns e SF Forms 17Vs e Military Conversions e Business Proposals & Reports e Free Interview/Lifetime Updating W , 1958 — NaXomwi* C«n*ml 1300 Guodoiup» #103 499 8802 44.16344 Sou*. 2219 W Ban Wfca» # f 836 94 7/ Nor#, 9513 Burrwl *2 0 3 f 490 — Wanted to Rsnt t GUARANTEED Lm n SWkLL TWO-room offica Wast UT com pus. $225 A BP HowaM Pi opa» Has, 477- 9925.4-16___________________________ 470 — Resorts PORT ARANSAS 3BÜ/3BA Kous# w*fi sundaci, hot tub ovo4obta, daposit ra- quirad. 327-8527, M n Murray. 3-19 SPRING BREAK datura 2 badraom con­ do. Hot tub, pool, mono. Naor Coppar, Brockanrtdga, Kaystona. 303-420-1713. 3-U_________________________________ fU U T FURNISHED condo with kitchan. Indoor swimming, Accomodates 8 sauna, o< . Oota lo Sin Apocha. Col 346-3304 for spring break. Rasarvo- hom. 3-14 SOUTH PADRE condo, lovaty Gulf sida, 28*. 2BA, March 15 22 and Juna 7-14. 388-3877 3-17 TWO BEDROOM apt. or condo lo sub­ íaos* during summer PhD studant. 445- 6081 3-19__________________________ A N N O U N CIM K N TS 530 — Travel. Transportation SPRING BREAK on Ih# beoch rst South Padre bland, Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale. Fort Walton Beoch or Mus­ tang Island/Port Aransas from only $89; and skmng at Steamboat or Voil from only $8611 only $861Deluxe lodging, parties, aoo- die bags, more....Hurry, cad Suncnase Tours for more information and reserva hons to» free 1-800-321-5911 TODAYI Whan your Spring Break counts , count on Sunchase. 3-17 _ _ SKI BRECKENRIDGE and Summit County Room and boord at our youthful home. $60/doy for 2 persons. 575/day for 4 persons. Cod 303-453-4904 Now! 3-21 ACAPULCO SPRIN G Brook for two 23- 30 air fare room at fiva star Acapulco Pknio. $900 bast offer by Fri. Mic, 441- 0040 Michelle. 397-3043. 3 14 3 AMERICAN Air tickets, good for US, Canoda, Hawaii, Caribbean, Mexico. $440 each. Travel dales April-May 1986, Lin (713) 951-5965 before March 15 3-14 540 — Lost A Found FOUND: MUSIC composition by R. Bab­ cock on East Mod, on Mar. 3. 440-7011 or 454 9980 3-13___________________ LOST. LADIES gold nugget bracelet. Please cod 469-0772 Reword 3-19 FOUND: Young, euphoric golden coctr- ersponiel, black codor, no togs 24th area. Coll 478-0283 for details 3-17 560 — Public Notice ANSW ERS FOR today's problems. 24 hour Bible message. Cad 331-9863.3-14 100 OVERM^IGHT people needed to try new weight reduction program. No ex­ ercise required--guaranteed 454-6141. 3-17 STUDENT LOAN $25,000 maximum, 8 % simple interest, 10 year repay. No credit check, no age limit. Benefit of in­ surance plan. No income limit, 12% Mr Hoyes, 477-1915 4-1__________________ LOSE W EIGHT now, ask me how Per­ sonal coaching, 100% guaranteed 339 6298 3-13 VISA CREDIT CARDS W A N T A V ISA CREDIT CARD A N D BEEN REJECTED? W e Can Help (Savings Account & Fees Required) Free Details — Phone or Write C.R. Pringle. 1401 E Rundberg, #331-T, Aus­ tin. Tx. 78753 (512) 837-3599 570 — Music- Musicians NO N-W ORKING band seeks vocalist and keyboardist wonting to work on songwriting and becoming integral port of original band After 7pm Philip 478- 8630, Jeff 8. 453-1938.3-17 EDUCATIONAL 580 — Musical Instruction QUALIFIED EXPERIENCED music educo tor and performer is offering PRIVATE VOICE. PIANO, and MUSIC THEORY lessons in individual instruction. 328- 2822. 3-26__________________________ GUITAR LESSONS R and 8, rock. |ozz, country, your choice of material 8 years teaching experience, reasonable rotes. Andy. 452-6181 4-4__________________ INTERNATIONAL PIANIST teaches peo­ ple who want to loom how to play the prono A l level». Cod 454-0540 4-16 590 — Tutoring ECONOMICS TUTORING Experienced Instructors Micro-Macro $15 per hour - individual $10 per hour - group o f 2-5 $8 per hour - o ver 5 477-7790/452-6561 ___________________ • Expert Tutoring M r rst Is AH l o v e r , lo t g M Tutor S o lr v Ik h i • EXAM PREP r ,P F i S A I M C A T G M A T FREE FREE ’ h o u r tu to rin g w 5 T uto rin g w ith in 30 hr days FREE 1 h o u r tu to rin g w 10 T u to rin g w ith in 30 hr days H O U R S O P E N M Tb Frl Sal Sun 7am 12mld 7am 5pm 10am 3 pm 5pm 12mld 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 813 W 24th St Tri-Towers Fre« P a rk in g H o u se of |% \ T U T O R S l W “G o One on One with a Winner” MATH TUTOR 504 W . 24th St. O ffice 477-7003 Over 10 vp tm of pro­ s e r v ir e fe s s io n a l h e lp in g s tu d e n ts »»•** THE UKADK S t r u g g lin g ? ? Fru s trated on teats?? ( all or come by for ap­ pointment. hunt c o m p ENCMN S C * * M301 302 M303F w T ER M S EM306 CS304PF M403K I EM311 EM306S CS206 STA309 EM314 M316* I CS315 EM319 CS410 M306G M407 EE316 CS410 EE411 M808AB CS328 CS336 EE318 M606EAB EE212 CS345 M318* M427K1 EE 323 CS352 ENGLISH CS372 M3 n CHEM ISTRY ENG603 PHYSICS C HEM301 302 ENG 30 7 PH Y301 PHV302KL CHEM610AB ENG.308 PHV303KL CHEM618AB ENG310 PHY327KL 8 U S M E S S ASTR0N DATA PR O ACC311312 AST301 ACC326 327 AST302 DP A310 AST303 DPA333 * ACC364 AST307 ECO F R B lC H ECO302 G ERM AN E C 0303 ECO320K1 SPA N B H EC0324 O onl pul IM i off untfl tha night before an asam It s loo tale then • 1 m ock «o UT •Fraa Partdng • Vary rmaaonabla •Lota o l padanct *tn a I you can FIN354 FIN357 2707 HEdiPHILL PARK At 27th & Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 • PAPERS t RESUMES t WORD PROCESSING In by 11 Ouf by 7 O pen'til Midnight House of f t t TUTORSlW 4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6 We Never Stop! PC STATION----- W ord Processing RESUMES $10 Additional Discount thru Morcri Typing 469-5632 23 DOBIE MALL Donna’» Typing ft [Word Procaaafng STUDENT PAPERS RESUM ES G 50 c: f rev Gram m ar and Spatting Check 746-B W . Stassn ey Ln. 462-1111 Mon-Thurs 9-9 Fri 9-6 JWgHNOS 12-6 4-23 Atao high achoot couraaa in tha aboao aubjacta and SAT á O R E Raviam Next door to Mad Doq & Beans Sluebonnet Ptato Campus ■ ■ ■ ■ e f «/ J iu c y J TUTORING SERVICE i t a l i c s • w o e o p t o c is s t N o STARTING AT $160/PG • LfTTH-eUALfTYPMNTMO from your dbk M C p o g a • THtSt&tXSSfRTATfONt «sumas drcRt copies to (Inal product dbk storage, vortabto typastyles • OVRMONT/WRKKND/ SAMI DAY N nonaN nd Service CALL 459-1120 SPANISH TUTOR AH N .N . N4 1 7 N o r t h L a m a r ginnyfc THESES, DISSERTATIONS & P.R.'S 'A i '.;n i rant* ■* ■ «»u r tv pint; wi l l rTiunt a r . i - i . t v " h ( n >1 n a j u i r t ’ f T T c n t v . lo ftb a h in d . a a m b i t i o u s a n d X d o n 't w a n t to b # J * X r X c a lim a : ^ A ta a m d o r jf 4 7 9 -O S I9 X (hmvmmmaago) ^ ■* +++ 1+++ + 1 + + + INSTANT CASH IANDIONUS N re v i Tom can I denote tetes tai e 7 4vy peaked — ter die let denedon receive (10, ter die 2nd donadan In Mae vaane week recatee 12. I oddi ddc aad yevR recatee e (2 beanie on vEsÉO 4Msw ^ssEt wéoowO vedd MawtnecpMl el Aindw btan Orecdwn k d ^ ^ ^ H I am mb for tero (29 «74-7901. Cad m m Oen, PH. 9-S AutMn H o m m Cantor B cnvoF AUSTIN INTERNSHIPS URBAN PARK RANGER ,4 i ~ N o r t h l a m a r 790— Port Tim* ginnys So pho m or* or highor d a n d n o a t art a o e w fto d c o M q i or unftowRy . TYPING WORD PROCESSING Southwest Services 4 5 3 - 0 3 2 3 4311 Avenue F ■ ■ Pickup/Delivery e H COLLEGE AID 3)1-5500 FREE Pick-Up & Delivery Open 24 Hours 3701 S fM te d w a y ] SPEEDWAY \ t I TYPING 8 O'NSght/SuporRush r> IF Shuftto Parking J 472-4039 f ; I (alee, Ty pe w riter' Rental) MILLIE'S TYPING SERVICE Word Processing- (1.651 IBM bintm9-$ .25 page 15 ysar$ ex p e rie n ce Dissertations Theses PR s. Term, Technical, Resumes, C o v e r Letters Tree spelling check Free pick up/delivery Rush w o rk ac c e p te d 7 d ays a w ee k Satisfaction g u ara n te ed 2884678 IS A Dissertations Tliosos ★ Report Low Prices, Free Drafts L in d a C h a a k W ord P r a m i l n i S e r v ic e s 192- 8 7 5 V ER A TEE’S W ord Processing Public Notary 20 Y ears Leg al Ex p erien ce • Term Papers • Law Briefs • Theses • D issertations • Cover Letters • R esum es 512*/2 E. 38'/j S t. (oft Duval) 454-1532 • 7 days a week TYPING AND word processing. $1.50/ pg. Monthly occounts $8 50/hr Coll Candace 451-4885. 4-14 PROFESSIONAL TYPING, IBM Selectric, overnight service. $l/poge most items campus pickup/delivery 244-0213. Jan- ie. 3-17 ______________ LETTER PERFECT. Papers, resumes, law briefs, rush service. Theses, dissertations, technical presentations. 2111 Rio Grande 474-2749 3-20 Sure, we type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grades? 472-3210 472-7677 YOUR DEADLINES met, my pnces foir. Word processing for low and graduate stodents. Expert style, usage, and spelling assistance. 339-8178.3-17_____________ TYPING PROFESSIONALLY done on Ap pie Ik. No job too large or too small. C ol Undo, 837-0557, after 5, 835- 9641.4-2 TYPING, STARTING $1.25/page Rush jobs accepted. 928-4930 until 8pm. 4-2 HOME TYPIST-experienced, accurate, fast turnaround. Close to campus $1.25/ page speciaH 472-4066 keep trying. 3- 31 PROFESSIONAL W O RD PROCESSING Fast, rekoble, and accurate Specialize in rush orders. WiM deliver. $1.50/page. Mary, 836-7474.3-31 M BA 0 • RESUMES 2707 Hemphill Park Just N o rth ol 2 7th a* G u a d a lu p e 472-3210 472-7677 PRO FESSIONAL TYPIST Theses, disserta­ tion^ professional reports, legal. Gradu­ ate school quality from $125 Barbara TuEos. 453-5124.4-8__________________ PROFESSIONAL QUALITY word pro­ cessing, theses, term papers, dtasertohons, resumes. IBM PC, letter qualify printer. Neor campus, 4781-5485. 4-14_________________________________ PRO FESSIONAL TYPING Research pa­ pers, these», dissertations, resumes. Fast, a ccurate, reasonable. Correcting Seiec- tric Overnight avoiloble. 441 1893 4-9 FRO FESSIO N A L/lEG A l typist. Brieft, papers, a l styiev Rush jabs wel- Cynlhta 445-6937, evenings/ 4-10 W e are a hom e office life insurance company seeking bnght, highly motivated individuals to perform a variety of clerical duties These indi­ viduals w ill be working a part-time second shift Hours w ill Sunday- Thursday 5:30 pm-9:30 pm. Duties w ill include filing, assembling insur- ance packed, typing and a variety of office/clerical (unctions The tuccessful candidates ml be high school graduates or equivalent and be dependable and hardworking cm tacf the OtSce ot Studtmi Fimaodal Aid, toom American Founders Life M r . AUSTIN, TEXAS f f O M 4 f f t p b p r $ O utgotng m dtetduad w ho *n- )o y wottdng wNh tt pubBc a n d h a vo g o o d com m unlco- BonN dRt W O RD PRO CESSING $1.5 1 HE ATHEADQ UARTERS OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY 3-31 W.LYNN ft I0TH • RIO GRANDE 8 24TH • SAN JACINTO S OUVAL PEPSI PRODUCTS BUDWEISER BEER R»g. & Light 1 2 P k . 12 Oz. Cans BLUE BELL All Flavors 1/2 Gallon Sava Up To 90ft 0 9 9 ■ 6 Pk./12 Oz. Cans REGISTER F O R A P R IC E S EFFECTIVE THRU S / 16/ M QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED [SWATCH W ATCH! ■ r 'v 'v w u M IN I! > MART 1 FOOD STORES T h e D a ily T exa rtA Th u rsd a y, M a rc h 13, 1986/ P a g e 19 the Fine Arts Building 2 204. Speaker: Vishakha Desai. The D epartm ent of English will present a seminar with poet Charles Wright at 3:30 p.m . Thursday in the Harry Ransom C enter 3 206 The U nderw ater Society (Scuba ( lub) will show N ever Say N ever Again at 7 30 p.m . Thursday in the Texas Union Building Stahrles Room. The Jewish Studies Program will present a sym posium com m em orating the 850th anniversary of M aimonides at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Art Building auditorium . Professors, rabbis and other officials will speak. sponsor a The Women's Studies Research Seminars will lecture, "Powerful Women in Roman Litera­ ture: The Lady as Patron," at 3:30 p m. in the Student Services Building 4 104 Professor Barbara Gold. Speaker MR BX-PRESIPBNT-FOR- UFB, ALMOST &EW0NB MAS SHOCXEP BY HOOU \==p QUICKLY YOUR RE&MB sbbm ep to collapse.. MBPS YOU YOUR- seusuR P R isev AT HOW FAST THINGS CAMB UNRAYBLLEP7 \ NOT AT ALL . I KNEW THEAEU&E suwepsiyes IN HAITI. JUST LAST JULY, HUB HAP A PEMOCRAUC RBEBRENPUM ON MY RULE. THB VOTE FOR MB M S 4,500,000 T 02. ^ SO YOU HAP AN INKLING. \ ALL IT TAKES IS A CJOUPLB OF RAP APPLES. ampus Texas Union Building Eastwoods Room. Speaker: Bruce Rigdon, chair­ m an of the National Council of C h u rc h e s C o m m itte e on U .S ./ U.S.S.R. Relations. The Ski Club w ill meet for happy hour at 7 p.m . Thursday at Aleta's Fajitas. Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc. will present "Ladies N ight O u t," a male dancers show, at 8 p.m. Thurs­ day at Phases Night Club. Those who need transportation should meet at 7:15 p.m . at the Speedway entrance in front of Beauford H. Jester Center. The Women's Studies Research Seminars will present "Laughing at Leviticus: Djuna Barnes' N ightw ood as W omen's Circus Epic" at 3:30 p.m . Thursday in the staff lounge of the Student Services Building. Speaker: Jane Marcus, associate professor of English. Bellwether w ill hold an executive meeting at 6 p.m . and a general m eet­ ing at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Batts Hall 307. The Christian Science Organization will meet at 6:30 p.m . Thursday in Batts Hall 104. All are welcome. The Gay and Lesbian Students' As­ sociation will show a comedy film at 8 p.m . Thursday in the Texas Union Building 3.128. The Catholic Students Association will show a film and present a discus­ sion of sum m er volunteer opportuni­ ties with Glenmary Home Missioners at 6:30 p.m . Thursday in the Universi­ ty Catholic Center. Speaker: Brother Joe Steen. The Ex-Students' Association is of­ fering a special program for UT stu­ dents interning in W ashington, D.C., this summer. For details, call 476-6271 or 476-6815. Nordic Finds w ill sponsor a panel discussion on traveling in N orthern Europe at 7 p.m . Thursday in Batts Hall 201. Speakers: a travel agent and native Scandinavian students. The American Society of Mechani­ cal Engineers will meet at 5 p.m . Thursday in the Engineering Teaching C enter n 2.114. Speaker: Dave Eller- beck of Tracor Aerospace on industrial engineering. Cercle Francais w ill meet at 5 p.m. Thursday in the Old Music Building lounge. The Royal Order of Pythons will sponsor International Llama Appreci­ ation Day at 7 p.m . Thursday in Welch Hall 2.302. All are invited to celebrate the plucky little animal. The International Business Associ­ ation will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Building East­ w oods Room. Elizabeth Gregogry of the Office of Admissions will discuss study-abroad programs. The Texas Student Education Asso­ ciation will meet at 7 p.m . Thursday in the University Teaching Center 3.102. T-shirts are in and cost $8.50. Agenda: report on the TSEA state con­ vention. Vecinos and the LBJ School of Pub­ lic Affairs will present a conference, "U.S. Foreign Policy and Local Cor­ ruption," from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday in the Sid Richardson Hall Bass Lec­ ture Hall. For more information, call 467-7527. The Catholic Students Association will present a seminar on Catholics, politics and moral issues at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the University Catholic Center, 2010 University Ave. MISTIC w ill meet for a sip-n-chat at 5 p.m . Friday at the Texas Union Building Tavern. The Society of Organizational Communication Students will hold a m em bership meeting at 7 p.m . Thurs­ day in the lobby of the Jesse H. Jones Communication Center. The Liberal Arts Council will pres­ ent study-abroad information with a slide show and question-and-answ er period at 12:30 p.m . Thursday in the Texas Union Building Stahrles Room Speaker: Ulla Bruun de Neergaard, lecturer in Germanic languages UAHC, Reform Jewish Students at the University, will sponsor a p i//a and movie night at 7 p.m. Thursday at the UAHC College Activities Office at 701 W. 22nd St. Gamma Delta Epsilon will decorate eggs with senior citizens in Del Valle from noon to 3 p.m . Thursday at the South Rural Comm unity Center, 3518 FM 973 South. Thursday is the last day to turn in nomination forms for the Texas Excel­ lence Teaching Awards. Students can turn in the forms to their college coun cil offices. The Central America Peace Initia­ tive will sponsor an anti-contra letter- writing convention at 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m . Thursday on the West Mall. Pa­ per and postage provided. The Central America Peace Initia­ tive will hold a fund-raiser at 9 p.m. Thursday at the Texas Union Building Cactus Cafe. Bill Oliver and Steve Parkess will sing. The Central America Peace Initia­ tive will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Calhoun Hall 21. Agenda: Central America Week. Center for Asian Studies will pres­ ent a seminar on "C ontem porary Chi­ nese Theater: Reflections of a Visitor" at 12:30 p.m . Thursday at the Texas Union Building 4.224. Speaker: Kath­ leen Conlin, associate professor of drama. The Center for Asian Studies will present a lecture, "Symbols of Power and Pleasure: Courtly Painting for In­ dia's Rulers," at 11 a.m. Thursday in Peanuts© I t was a dark and stormy night. U 3 •c & V G 0 0 f i 3 < LU O 3 CL f - >- CL CL < CD > CD Suddenly, a shot rang o u t ! * Then another! And another! And then some more. by Charles M. Schulz Shot5,that is. r ■ BLOOM COUNTY by B erke B reathed 70 H ig h Tem p eratu res Associated Press NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST UNTIL 7 A.M. FRIDAY Expect more sunny and warm weather for Austin Thursday, with a high in the upper 70s and winds from the west at 15 mph. Look for an overnight low in the lower 50s. The National Weather Service forecasts showers for parts of Washington, Oregon, California, Montana, Wyoming and Colora­ do. Rain is also predicted in a band from Wisconsin south to Alabama and Florida. Flurries are expected in the Midwest and Maine. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE H e w m a m / ’S l u g g e r s ' h a v e 3 You G o t om / o u r t e a m ^ ™ ^ \ J ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED — B.C. BY JOHNNY HART wow, i aiever h e a rd c f a teaia with 9 s u je e e fc s / Me m q th e r 1 ] r thought you ^ SAV'GUUG&tfDs! 1 Squelch 6 Eschar 10 Slice 14 Iterate 15 Hind end 16 Narrative 17 Came to — 18 Rhythm style 20 Up-to-date 21 Valúate 23 Old garment 24 Profound 25 — Row 26 Newcomer to society 30 Coagulable body fluid 34 Turkish inn 35 Grain spikes 37 Age 38 Suffrage 39 “I ----- Rhapsody” 41 Lined up 42 Banqueted 43 Medians 44 Try hard 46 Marsh plant 48 Admired 50 Towel word 52 Knows 53 Recess 56 Gets around 57 Vitality 60 Venison 62 Romance language: pref. 64 Harborage 65 Bit of land 66 The Hunter 67 Watering places 68 Cut 69 Silly one DOWN 1 Jam-pack 2 C j «no city 3 Kind of car 4 — Salvador 5 Combine with water 6 NY island 7 — au lait 8 Demeanor 9 City area 10 Robust 11 Workshops 12 Wings 13 Bowed 19 Entwines 22 — Christie 24 Definite 25 Braise 26 Opera stars 27 Ham it up 28 Restrained 29 Bedevil 31 Excellency 32 Corroborate 33 Hemmed and 36 Grated 40 Offends 41 Electrical discharges 43 Complaint 45 Strain 47 Specters 49 Ice-show performer 51 Forgive 53 Power units 54 Circuit 55 Gazelle 56 Celebration 57 Agony 58 — College, N.C. 59 Young animal 61 Compass pt. 63 T of TNT 4 ^ ( «• Hews America Synecce IM Eyebeam 0K- IN THIS SCENE, YOU'VE SPENT ALL MORNING WORKING HARD TO BE THE BEST DARN DESK. JOCKEY , THERE EVER WAS. ^ 313 4 & ¿ - by Sam Hurt HOW DOES THIS V HOLD IT, PROP F W 4 COME OUT? IS THE) THIS GUY'S A NATURAL - GUY GOING TO / BE O K ? / HE DOES HIS CXJN SW EATING! \ a /C \ ENTER YOUR CHARMING BUT BUSINESSLIKE CO WORKER. YOU WANT TO SPY "HI'; BUT YOU KNOW SHE'LL BE REPULSED BY THE OBSCENELY BIOLOGICAL FLOW OF PERSPIRATION STREAMING FROM YOUR ARMPITS, -HEY, WHAT'S THE M ATTER? J v Í ' \ SQUINK. S»UINK Burnt Orange Blues WHA.T A c e Y ou R E A D ­ ING. *? S T E /m B c-CX,. C a n n e r y Ro w ,. a R A .T H EE L NJOST¿XLG>- ic v i s i o n ] o F Th e DE FT^ESSION-- by Van Garrett W h a t D o YoU C , £ £ 2- ' THI MK ENGr H o w DO U S M M A J o e s you K m o \ a . a l l . D o A F T E C - T h a t 2\ c ^ a o o a t c ? A T t M E o p N E I G . H - S>OKUV fc O O U M C S S , s u k c . . b u t S t e i n ­ b e c k P A .IL .C j T O PLEAI-UV DION/MAT - IZ£L 1 H E F\Ur4 IS *14-0,4* T U a U t e * 4 r * TOCid" vocal N’UMdval'.tu. NJowT u i t *11 k*oui \\)¿c Hwit, w e cV.Ure* ? A ro un d C am pus is a daily col­ um n listin g U niversity-related ac­ tiv ities spo n so red by academ ic d e­ p artm en ts, stu d e n t services an d registered stu d e n t o rganizatio ns. To a p p e a r in th e A round C am pus co lu m n , organ izatio n s m ust be reg­ istered w ith th e O ffice of S tu d en t A ctivities. A n n o u n cem en ts m u st be su b m itte d on the correct form by 11 a.m . th e day before p u b licatio n to T he D a ily Texan office. No excep­ tio n s w ill be m ade. The LBj School of Public Affairs will present a brown-bag luncheon at 12:15 p.m. Thursday in the student lounge at Sid Richardson Hall. Speak­ er: Lawrence ( ranberg, former physi­ cist at the I os Alamos Nuclear Facili­ ty, on Texas, the Capital of Hunger in America?" Arm adillo Folk Dancers will pres­ ent free folk dancing for beginners at in Anna Hiss 7:3(1 p.m. Thursday Gym 136. The D epartm ent of Linguistics will present a colloquium at 10 a.m. Friday in the University Teaching Center 1.130. Topics: "Phonological and Mor­ phological Distinctiveness of Hand Configuration in American Sign Lan­ guage" and "Reduplication and the Cycle in Indonesian." The Baptist Student Union will present a free aerobics class at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at the Baptist Student Center, 2204 San Antonio St. The Baptist Student Union will present an intermediate-level conver­ sational English class at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at the Baptist Student Cen­ ter, 2204 San Antonio St. Haram bee will present a M en's Day Program at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Baptist Student Center, 2204 San Antonio St. The Baptist Student Union will present a Bible study for international students at 2:30 p.m. Thursday at the Baptist Student Center, 2204 San An­ tonio St. Contact John Curtist at 474- 1429. The University Young Democrats will hold an executive committee meeting at 6 p.m. Thursday in Welch Hall 2.308. The U niversity Young Democrats will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Welch Hall 2.308. The D epartm ent of Drama will present a new play, Crossing the Bor­ der, by Donna Gehrke, at 8 p.m. Fri­ day and Saturday and at 2 p.m. Sun­ day in the Lab Theater. Free. U niversity U nitarians will meet for dinner at China Inn, 2809 San Jacinto Blvd., at 7 p.m. Thursday. The Office of Student Financial Aid will present a seminar at noon Thursday in the Texas Union Building Sinclair Suite. Topic: "Family Contri­ bution: What Is It?” Overeaters Anonym ous will meet at noon Thursday in the University Catholic Center. The Student Health Center will present a "M ethods of Contracep­ tion" class at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the Student Health Center 448. Call 471-4955, Ext. 242, to register. T he Student Health Center will present a "M ethods of Contracep­ tion" class at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Moore-Hill Hall television room. Phi Beta Chi will hold a speaker meeting at 6:30 p.m . Thursday in the G raduate School of Business 2.126. The Sibley Family Lectureship in Prehistoric Art will sponsor a lecture, "The Religion of the Paleolithic and Neolithic," at 4 p.m. Friday in the Art Building 1.110. Speaker: Marija Gim- butas. The D epartm ent of Music will present the UT Jazz Ensemble at 8 p.m. Thursday in Bates Recital Hall. The group wilí perform pieces by Rick Lawn, Chick Corea, Thad Jones and others. The Institute of Latin American Studies Students Association will present a conference on Latin America from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Friday and from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday in the Joe C. Thom pson Conference Center 3.120 and 3.122. Students from out of state will present papers. UT Students for the Exploration and Development of Space will show NASA films at 5 p.m. Thursday in W.R. Woolrich Hall 214. All students are welcome. - The M uslim Students Association vyill present the Austin Mosque First Fair from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m . Saturday at 1906 Nueces St. There will be lec­ tures, food, books, an Islamic market and audio and video tapes. . The UT Cycling Club will meet at 8 g m . Thursday in Gregory Gym B-3. * "The Church in the Soviet U nion," a presentation of the United Campus Ministry of Austin Student Council, will be held at noon Monday in the these ;rom 3 p.m . Tuesday to 3 p.m . dnesday, the University Police partment reported inci- its: driving w h ile intoxicated: A UT d e n t w as sto p p ed at 2:06 a.m . d n e sd a y in th e 100 block of 21st eet for traffic violations. The stu- it w as arrested on a charge of ving w hile intoxicated and w as e n to th e Travis C ounty sheriff's ice. ndecent exposure: A UT stu d en t »orted at 5:22 p.m . T uesday th at a n exposed him self to her w hile ; w as in a stu d y room in the Per- C astaneda Library at 5:17 p.m . esday. The m an is described as 5 11J() a n d ab out 180 p o u n d s. A ^ J m m F ° ° DS> • DRILIGS ^ We Give You Our Best Everyday/ “I beat my customers like my own family.” “Customer service is high on my list of priorities. If you need a special cut or the best way to cook a roast, just a s k . . .that’s what we’re here for! Plus right now we’re having a great Steakhouse Beef Sale. Don’t miss it!” \' (jL /jl/A A -í ¿ / CHARMIN Bathroom Tissue 4 Roll Package Coke, Diet Coke, Tab or Sprite Q O * 2 Liter Bottle Mr \m 179 12 Oz. Cans, 6-Pack A Look For Our Red Star Values Throughout The Store! PRICES .GOOD THU.-WED., MAR. 13-19 AT ALL AUSTIN CITY STORES AND ROUND ROCK ONLY. You Gel What You Want At H-E-B LIMIT RIGHTS RESERVED.