Texan profiles candidates Local, page 8 UT’s Ethridge survives cut Snorts, naop i ' i Dicks, Boys: like old times Arts, page 18 Th e Da i ly Texan Vol. LXXXIII, No. 140 (USPS 146-440) The student newspaper of the University of Texas at Austin Tuesday, April 24, 1984 25d condemns competitors By D A V ID N A T H E R D aily Texan S ta ff S tr e s s in g the “ new d e m o c r a c y ” t h e m e o f his c a m p a i g n . D e m o c r a ti c p r e sid e n tia l c a n d i d a t e G a r y Hurt aire d his v i e w s b e f o re a c a p a c ity c r o w d in the L y n d o n B. J o h n s o n a u d it o r i u m M o n d a y . A p p r o x i m a t e l y 8(X) p e o p le . m o s t l \ U n iv e r s ity stu d e n ts , heard the C o l o r a ­ d o s e n a t o r la u n c h an a g g r e s s i v e verbal a tta ck o n the “ failed p o l i c i e s ” ot the D e m o c r a ti c an d R e p u b li c a n p a rties m w h a t a p p e a r e d to be a m o v e d e s i g n e d to h e lp H a r t 's f lagg ing c a m p a i g n gain m o m e n t u m in tim e fo r the M a v 5 c a u ­ c u s e s in T e x a s . The three c a n d i d a t e s H a r t , f o r ­ m e r V ice P re sid e n t W a l t e r M ó n d a l e a nd the R e v . J e s s e J a c k s o n —- will be c o m p e t i n g f o r a 2 0 0 - m e m b e r d e le g a tio n to the D e m o c r a ti c national c o n ­ v e n tio n in Sa n F r a n c is c o in J u l \ T e x ­ as is s e c o n d o n l y to C a li f o r n i a as ihi largest r e m a in i n g d e le g a t e p rize . H a r t 's liste ne rs w e re r e c e p ti v e a nd the a p p la u d e d e n th u s ia s t i c a ll y w h e n • S tu dent group criticizes H art, ______________________ page 2 se n a to r b laste d P r e s i d e n t R e a g a n and his policies “ T h is e le c tio n p r e s e n t s us as D e m ­ oc rats with a m oral q u e s t i o n . " Hart said. “ N ot m e re ly w h e t h e r w e will win or lose, but w ha t will h a p p e n to ou r c o u n tr y if w e let R o n a ld R e a g a n he h a v e the p re sid e n c y a g a in w h e n will n e v e r a g a in h a v e to a n s w e r to the p e o p le . justices o f W e m u s t not allow h im to a p p o in t the next the S u p r e m e ( o u rt. Hart said “ W e m u st not p e r ­ mit R o n a ld R e a g a n the p o w e r to s u b ­ to vert civil scorn the n e ed y and to sell o u r e n v i r o n m e n t the h ig h e s t bidder. rights and e q u a l righ ts, the p o o r an d to “ A n d a b o v e all e ls e , w e m u s t not allow him to risk n u c l e a r w a r. or to s e n d t r o o p s to die u n n e c e s s a r ilv in a blind se a rc h to r the w r o n g e n e m y in the T h ird W o r ld Hart p ra is e d the sc ien tific r e so u r c e s av ailab le at the U n i v e r s i ty , s a v in g the ^2 e n d o w e d c h a ir s a d d e d to the U n i ­ versity s natural s c i e n c e s a n d e n g i ­ ne erin g c o lle g e s last w e e k at a c o s t o f SI m illion e ac h are “ a vital part o f the future “ I he se n a to r la m b a s t e d D e m o c r a ti c f r o n t-ru n n e r M ó n d a l e bv p o in tin g out that the f o rm e r vice p r e s i d e n t 's c a m ­ paign has been s u s ta in e d bv political a ctio n c o m m i t t e e fu n d s d e s p i te M ó n ­ d a l e ’s c la im that he w o u ld n e v e r a c ­ cept P A C m oney that if the p re sen t f r o n t - r u n n e r b e c a m e pre siden t. Hart said , “ d o e s a n y o n e doub t the c r u n c h , he w o u ld pick the interest g ro u p s o v e r the p e o ­ ple ot Texas o r O h i o o r C a li f o r n i a or C o l o r a d o ? ” in H art restated d i f f e r e n c e s b e tw e e n his and M ó n d a l e s p o l ic i e s , in clu d in g a d o m e s ti c c o n te n t bill that w o u l d r e ­ quire all f o re ig n a u to i m p o rt s to c o n ­ tain parts built in the U n ited S ta te s. M ó n d a le has c o m e ou t in f a v o r o f the bill, w hile Hart o p p o s e s it. “ A d o m e s ti c c o n te n t bill is j a s h o r t - t e r m g i m m i c k , c a m p a i g n B a n d -A id a n d a l o n g - t e r m d i s a s t e r . This e x e r c i s e in p r o t e c ­ Hart said tio n ism w o u ld d e stroy Five t u n e s as many jobs as it w o u l d save Hart a ls o a tt a c k e d R e a g a n s and sa v in g f o r e i g n p o lic ie s , M ó n d a l e s both c o u ld lead the U n ite d S ta te s into a w a r in C e n tr a l A m e r i c a The lesson o f V letn a m is s u r e ­ ly not that w e s h o u l d be t o u g h an d try stu pid. p e a c e be fore we try w a r H art said. “ W e m u s t J a c k s o n will m a k e a t w o - d a y s w in g th ro u g h T e x a s b e g in n i n g W e d n e s d a y , w h e n the civ il rights le a d e r will speak a r o u n d nn at the W a c o a irp o rt L a t ­ er that d a y , J a c k s o n will m o v e o n to D allas to a tte n d a f u n d - r a i s e r at the A na to le Hotel an d will sp e a k at tw o c h u rc h e s I h u r s d a y . J a c k s o n will be in H o u s ­ ton fo r a f u n d - r a i s e r to be h e ld from 6 :2 0 to X p m. at St A g n e s Bap tist C h u rc h Carrie Robertson, Daily Texan S taff Presidential candidate Gary Hart attacks tailed policies and warns against a second term for President Reagan during a cam pus speech M onday. Britain deports student amid Libyan threats —_____________ _ ______ r i 11 — I I n ited Press In tern a tio n a l P r / j r r I *-» L O N D O N — B ritain d e p o r t e d a L ib y a n s t u d e n t M o n d a y d e s p i te w a r n i n g s f ro m a n g r y c itiz e n s that the g o v e r n m e n t p la n to e x p e l the o c c u p a n t s of the b e s i e g e d L ib y a n em b a ss y w i t h o u t trial w o u l d m a k e B rita in a target t o r m o r e t e r r o r i s m . L ib y a th r e a te n e d “ r e v o lu t i o n a r y a c tio n a g a in st B rita in a n d an in ­ c r e a s e in su p p o rt for the o u t l a w e d Irish R e p u b l i c a n A r m y , w a g i n g a terro rist c a m p a i g n a g a in st the B r i t ­ ish p re s e n c e in N o r t h e rn Ireland. S c o t la n d ''i ard a n n o u n c e d B r i t ­ a i n ’s first d e p o r ta ti o n o f a L ib v a n 7/ Britain does not surren­ der the criminals it harbors ... (Libya) will take revolu­ tionary action against it. ’ — Tripoli's ruling Revolutionary Com m ittees s inc e the p o l ic e sie ge b e g a n at the s o -c alled L ib y a n “ P e o p l e ' s B u ­ reau last T uesday — a 2 6 - y e a r - o l d s t u d e n t, S a l e h I b r a h i m M a b r u k , a r ­ rested in L o n d o n S a t u r d a y . M a b r u k w a s d e p o r t e d to T r ip o l i , the L ib y a n c ap ital. c o n n e c ti o n w i t h ” P o lice said M a b r u k w a s a rre ste d “ in fatal sh o o tin g o f a British p o l i c e w o m a n o u ts id e the L ib y a n E m b a s s y A pril 17 d u r i n g a d e m o n s t r a t i o n a g a in st C o l. M o a m m a r K h a d a t y ’s r e g im e . the A s p o k e s m a n said M a b r u k ' s “ c o n ti n u e d p r e s e n c e in B rita in w as not c o n d u c i v e to the p u b lic g o o d ” but fu r th e r c o m m e n t on w h e t h e r he w a s a s u p p o r t e r o r o p ­ p o n e n t o t K h a d a f y o r w a s direct!v lin ke d to the s h o o tin g . r e fu s e d At in St the L ib y a n e m b a s s y J a m e s ' s S q u a r e , “ the ste a d f a st rev u n d e r c o lo n ia l . o lu tio n a ry fo r c e Greenpeace criticizes EPA report L'nited Press In tern a tio n a l W A S H I N G T O N incineratio n^ s hi p s P l a n s to b urn s o m e of the m o s t toxic w a s t e s k n o w n to m a n o n the G ulf ot M e x i c o sh o u l d be sc r u t in i z e d until the e n v i r o n m e n t a l risk is b e tte r u n d e r s t o o d , r e p o rt u rg e d M o n d a y an E P A in T he re p o rt p r o p o s e s f o u r re s e a rc h v o y a g e s into the gulf o v e r a o n e - y e a r p e r io d to a s s e s s th e ir risk. I n c in e r a ­ tion v e s s e ls w o u l d b u rn a to ta l of 3 .3 m il l io n g a ll o n s o f highly to x ic c h e m i ­ cals w h i c h w o u l d i n c lu d e PC Bs an d D D 1 in that lim ite d p r o g r a m . T h e r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s to t o p E n v i ­ r o n m e n t a l P r o te c tio n A g e n c y o f fic ia ls urg e that the g o v e r n m e n t b a c k o f f an d e v a l u a t e the fu ll-s c a le o c e a n i n c i n e r a ­ tio n p r o p o s a l that has g e n e r a t e d e n o r ­ m o u s p u b l ic o p p o s i t io n in G u l f C o a s t states an d h a s e v e n b e e n d e n o u n c e d J a c q u e s by C o u s t e a u . o c e a n o g r a p h e r f a m e d “ E P A m u s t b u ild a g r e a t e r level of pu b lic c o n f i d e n c e that the a g en c y is ta k in g a r i g o r o u s , c a r e f u l l y r e a s o n e d a p p r o a c h in e v a l u a t i n g the d i s p o s a l of liq uid h a z a r d o u s w a s t e s . " sa id S te v e n S c h a t z o w . E P A d i r e c to r o f w a t e r r e g ­ u la tio n s an d a u th o r ot the r e p o rt. c r i t i c i s m i m m e d i a t e S c h a t z o w s s u g g e s t i o n s t o r the i n ­ h o w e v e r , i n c i n e r a t io n , te r m e d i a te d r e w f r o m G r e e n p e a c e , an in te r n a t i o n a l e n v i r o n ­ m e n ta l g r o u p th at fo c u s e s o n p r o t e c t ­ g r o u p ing v o w e d to c h a l l e n g e th e p l a n t h r o u g h the E P A h e a r i n g p r o c e s s . r e s o u r c e s . T h e o c e a n “ T h e tes tin g they n e e d to c o n d u c t d o e s n o t r e q u ire b u r n i n g 3 . 3 m illio n g a ll o n s o f to x ic c h e m i c a l s . " c h a r g e d Jo n H i n c k . to x ic s p r o je c t d i r e c t o r tor G r e e n p e a c e . “ T h e y are p r o c e e d i n g with this e v e n th o u g h th e y d o n ' t know the fate of the b u r n e d m a t e r i a l s . ” U n d e r S c h a tz o w \s r e c o m m e n d a ­ tion, firm s o p e r a t in g the i n c in e ra tio n sh ip s V u l c a n u s II w o u l d r e c e iv e special r e s e a r c h p e r m i t s a ll o w i n g th e m to b urn less t h a n 5 p e r ­ c en t o f the a m o u n t FLPA o rig in a lly p r o p o s e d last O c t o b e r . I a n d V u l c a n u s T h e p e r m i t s a ls o w o u l d b a n any b u r n i n g o f d i o x i n - c o n t a m i n a t e d s u b ­ s ta n ce s. T h e b u r n i n g w o u l d be d o n e a b o u t the T e x a s - L o u i s i a n a 2(X) m il e s o f f c o a s t. L ast fall, th e L P A t e n t a ti v e l y p r o ­ p o s e d b u r n i n g 7 9 . 7 m il l io n g a ll o n s o f w a s t e s o n a b o u t I (K) v o y a g e s o f the V u l c a n u s sh ip s. T h e y are o w n e d by C h e m i c a l W a s t e M a n a g e m e n t o f O a k B r o o k , III., a n d its s u b s id i a r y . O c e a n C o m b u s t i o n S e r v i c e o f R o t t e r d a m , the N e t h e r l a n d s . In a r e c o m m e n d a t i o n that c o u l d f u r­ th e r p o s t p o n e the r e s e a r c h v o y a g e s , S c h a t z o w sa id the p e r m i t s " s h o u l d be d e l a y e d until the state o f A l a b a m a d e ­ is “ c o n s i s t e n t t e r m i n e s w ith its c o a s ta l z o n e m a n a g e m e n t p r o ­ g r a m . ” the b u r n i n g i rated Press International J u l i a M i l e s (I), w ife of t h e B r i t i s h a m b a s s a d o r to L i b y a , a n d h e r so n p r e p a r e to le a v e T r i p o l i M o n d a y a n d r e t u r n t o E n g l a n d . p o lic e s i e g e ” sent a m e s s a g e to K h adafy say ing they w e r e ready to die for their c a u s e , the 1 ibvan n e w s a g e n c y J A N A said. O c c u p a n t s of the b u i ld in g re p o rte r s , h o w e v e r , told they L o n d o n w o u ld the Sund a y d e a d l i n e set by the British g o v e r n m e n t. the b u ild in g bv lea v e T rip o li's g o v e r n i n g R e v o l u t i o n ­ ary C o m m i t t e e s a c c u s e d B ritain o f p r o te c tin g I ibvan “ c r i m i n a l s ” w h o they c la i m e d a tta c k e d the L o n d o n e m b a s s y A pril 17 a n d said: “ It Britain d o e s not s u r r e n d e r the c rim - ( L ib y a ) will lake inals it h a r b o rs , re v olu tionary a c tio n a g a in st it “ It a ls o t h r e a te n e d a ste p up in a id to the IR \ b u re a u B ritain c la i m s at least o n e ot the e s t im a te d 3 0 to 5 0 p e o p le insid e the J a m e s ' s L ib y a n S q u a re fired the m a c h i n e g u n burst o n April 17 that killed a polic e w o m a n and w o u n d e d I I d e m o n s t r a ­ tors o p p o s e d to K h a d afy s r e g im e o n St. In a n n o u n c i n g the b r e a k i n g o f re ­ lations w ith L ib v a S u n d a y . Britain said the L ib y a n s in sid e t h e e m b a s s \ w o u ld be e x p e l l e d fr o m B rita in it w o u l d probably t h o u g h e v en m e a n the killer o t p o l i c e w o m a n 5 v o n n e F le tc h e r w o u l d g o tree If p e o p le c o m m i t c ap ital c r im e s they s h o u ld be d e a lt with to r mur d e r and not re tu rn e d to the: c o u n try as has b e e n s u g g e s t e d tin th s i n v a ­ sion, «-aid ('h i e ! S u p e r i n te n d e n t Jo h n K e y t e , he ad o f the F o lk a Sc p e r in te n d e n ts A s so c ia tio n A lea d in g m e m b e r of Par ¡am ent. E ld o n G r i f f i th s , said in a tele v is io n interview that the d e c i s i o n to let the killer ' is a m is ta k e and we snail live to re g re t it leave Br tain N e w s re po rw said r a n k - a n d - f i le s e e th i n g w ith po lice o f fic e rs w e r e a n g e r o v e r the d e c i s i o n to let the* s iler g o British p a p e r s g r e e t e d the n e w s with h u g e h e a d l i n e s s a y i n g Y v o n n e ' s K iller G e t s \ w j \ w ith M u r d e r In Tripoli. British d i p l o m a t s w e re th e ir b e lo n g i n g s a n d de p a c k i n g str o y in g se n sitiv e p a p e r s in p r e p a r a ­ tion to r c lo s in g the e m b a s s y Group challenges refusal of aid to students U nited Press In tern a tio n a l U nited Press In tern a tio n a l to ld W A S H I N G T O N — T h e g o v e r n ­ the U . S . S u p r e m e C o u rt m en t M o n d a y r e g u la ti o n s d e n y i n g student aid to y o u n g m e n w h o h a v e not r e g i s ­ tered f o r the d ra ft is not i n te n d e d to c a tc h w r o n g d o e r s but to r e m i n d y o u n g m en to register. it But o p p o n e n t s o f the rule told the j u s t ic e s ille gally p u n i s h e s y o u n g m e n w h o fail to r e g is te r a n d vio la tes the Fifth A m e n d m e n t by c o m p e l l i n g t h e m ­ n o n -r e g i s tr a n ts selv es by m a k i n g that s t a te m e n t s c o u ld be u s e d to p r o s e c u t e t h e m . i n c r i m in a te to The M i n n e s o t a P u b lic Intere st R e ­ searc h (Troup is c h a l l e n g i n g the aid re g u la tio n o n b e h a l f o f six stu d e n ts w h o h a v e no t re g is te r e d f o r the draft a n d n e e d fe d era l a id to c o n t i n u e their e d u c a ti o n . A fe dera l j u d g e stru c k d o w n the re g u la ti o n , s a v i n g that m a k i n g stu d e n t n n o n s u p o n a g a in st r i y n t m o o n t c o n ti n g e n t . u i H aid re g is tra tio n v io la te s the Fifth A m e n d m e n t p r o t e c ­ tio n and a m o u n t s to a " b i l l o f a t t a i n d e r " illegal, c r im e s w ith o u t a judicial trial le g isla tiv e p u n i s h m e n t s e l f -in c r im i n a t i o n to r I he j u d g e issu e d an in ju n c tio n a g ain st the re g u la tio n but the g o v e r n from the S u p r e m e m e n t w o n a stay C o u r t a ll o w i n g it to i m p o s e the aid rule w h i l e the high c o u r t c o n s i d e r s the case. U . S . S o l i c i t o r G e n e r a l Rex 1 e e told the j u s t ic e s the rule is not i n te n d e d to is “ a pu n ish w r o n g d o e r s b u t. in stea d in a d v e r r e m i n d e r " tantly fail to register. to stu d e n ts w h o “ It is an in c e n tiv e to r e g i s t e r , ” he said W il l ia m K e p p e l . a r g u in g the s t u d e n ts , sa id the re g u la ti o n s “ substi tute a p r e s u m p ti o n o f g uilt f o r a p r e s u m p ti o n o f i n n o c e n c e . ” H e c a lle d for _________ ___ • . th e m “ an a ffro n t to the d i g n a y of citi zens He a tt a c k e d the r e g u la ti o n s o n c o n stitu tionally c o n s e rv a t iv e g r o u n d s , ar g u in g they w e re an e x a m p l e of the in cre asingly p e r v a s i v e reach ot gov that c o u ld result in d e m a n d ­ e m m e n t ing "citizens tii s w e a r o r certify that they h a v e not c o m m i t t e d anv c r i m e s ' to r e c e iv e any e c o n o m i c b e n efit from the g o v e r n m e n t if C h i e f J u s tic e W a r r e n B u r g e r ask ed K e p p e l the r e g u la ti o n s w e r e not a n a l o g o u s to o t h e r law s u nde r w h ic h p e op le w h o tail to repay stude n t loans c an be d e n ie d federal e c o n o m i c b e n e ­ fits I he r e p a y m e n t of the l o a n , ” K e p ­ pel r e s p o n d e d , "’is n o t a c r im e . T h e fa ilure to r e g is te r is a c r i m e , p u nish able by a fine a n d up to five vears in j a i l . ” t To d a te , h o w e v e r , the Ju stic e De part m en t has b r o u g h t onlv 16 i n d ic t­ m e n ts t or non re g is tra tio n Lee n o t e d that late r e g is tr a n ts be c o m e e lig ib le lor aid as so o n as thev that they h a v e re g is te re d and certify that the g o v e r n rp e n t d o e s not prose cute late re g is tra n ts But K e p p el said that stu d e n ts w h o re g is tra tio n co m p ly w ith belatedly law s to r e c e iv e aid are not g ra n te d i m ­ munity and c o u ld be p ro s e c u t e d in the future “ The g o v e r n m e n t w o u l d a lw a y s h a v e that c lu b h a n g in g o v e r t h e m . " he sa id tor c r im in a l p r o se c u tio n “ T h e r e is the potential N e i th e r L e e n o r K e p p e l c o u ld a n ­ s w e r ju stic e s' q u e s t io n s on the n u m ­ ber o f stu d e n ts a f f e c te d bv the aid rule re g is tr a tio n , But L ee sa id that sin c e im p l e m e n t tion oi the ru les m ix in g s tu u c n i aid dr att n u m b e r < y o u n g m e n w h o h a v e fa iled to regist has d n p p e d f ro m m o r e than riXUX to a r o u n d 3 5 0 . (X the p e rc e n t o r a bou t 3 I p e rc e n t The dra ft w a s a b o li s h e d in 19 an d r e g is tr a tio n e n d e d in 1975. B r e g is tr a tio n w a s r e v iv e d bv P re sid e G a rter in 1980 in re s p o n s e to the S o \ et i n v a s io n o f A f g h a n i s t a n T h e r e still no d ra ft, but y o u n g m e n are r q u ired to p r o v id e the S e l e c t iv e Se vice with th e ir n a m e s a n d a d d r e s s e s T h e re g is tra tio n law itself h a s be¿ u p h e ld by the hig h c o u r t. O p p o n e n had c h a l l e n g e d it on the g r o u n d s i sex d i s c r im i n a t i o n . B u t the Su p re rr C o u r t r u le d last s u m m e r that w o m e c an lega lly be e x c l u d e d from r e g is tn tion. PagiaynwQÉhrTOTin/TuMd^, 1964 UNIVERSITY NEWS IN BRIEF Preregistration for fall continues throughout week Preregistration for fall 1984 classes w ill continue betw een 8 a.m . and 5 p .m . through Friday. Students can pick up preregistration m aterials in departmental o ffices and see their advisers during this tim e. C ourse request cards should be turned in at the A cadem ic Center during the w eek . Preregistration form s for disabled students are available in the A cadem ic C enter and must be returned by noon Thursday. Fee b ills are scheduled to be mailed in late Ju ly, and paym ents are due A u g. 15. Students may also preregister for fall c la sses June 27 and July 18. Fall c la sses begin Sept. 4. WICI presents awards W om en in C om m unications. Inc. w ill present awards to outstanding stu­ dents in each co lleg e at 7 p .m . T ues­ day in the Jesse H. Jones C om m unica­ tion C enter auditorium. T his is the first year the honors have been awarded. F ollo w in g the awards presentation, the m ovie “ Under Fire” will be show n. Jordan subject of book Former U .S . Rep. Barbara Jordan, w h o holds the endow ed Lyndon B. Johnson Centennial Chair in National P o licy , is the subject o f a new book for children. Entitled “'Barbara Jordan: The Great Lady from T e x a s.” the book describes som e o f the form ative influ­ en ces in Jordan's life, including her fam ily and som e o f her political asso­ cia tes, such as Lyndon B. Johnson. The author is Naurice Roberts, w ho has written numerous stories and po­ em s for children. UIL holds competitions T he U niversity Interscholastic League w ill hold its 75th annual State M eet Thursday through Saturday at the Joe C. Thom pson C onference Center. The m eet w ill include aca­ dem ic and literary com petition. T exas high sch ools w ill com pete in the Annual UIL one-act play contest beginning at 4 p .m . T uesday in the Perform ing Arts Center. T w o com petition session s will be held at 4 and 7:30 p.m . daily Tuesday through Saturday. Four plays w ill be perform ed during each session . T ick­ ets are $3 for adults and $2 for stu­ dents. Technology panel topic Everett M. R ogers, the Janet M. Peck professor o f international com ­ m unication at Stanford, w ill be a fea­ tured lecturer at the U niversity T ues­ day and W ednesday at a panel d iscu ssio n . T he visit is being sponsored by the Departm ent o f General B usiness and the C o lleg e o f C om m unication. R ogers w ill participate in a panel d iscu ssion on the acceptance, im ple­ m entation and social impact o f new com m u nication technology at 3 p.m . T u esd ay in the C o lleg e o f C om m uni­ cation auditorium . Professor heads council A U niversity professor o f anthro­ p o lo g y and associate director o f the Institute o f Latin Am erican Studies has been appointed president o f the Hum an B io lo g y C ouncil. Robert M alina w ill preside over the c o u n c il, an international organization o f approxim ately 6 0 0 mem bers d evot­ ed to the study o f human biological variation and related topics, including stu d ies o f growth and maturation o f children under diverse ecological con ­ d itio n s, relationships betw een obesity and fertility and adaptation o f differ­ ent environm ental stresses. POLICE REPORT In the period beginning 3 p.m. Sunday and ending 3 p.m. Mon­ day, the University Police Depart­ ment reported the following inci­ dents: Assault: A U T fem a le student re­ ported she w as assau lted by another female student at B lan ton D orm itory at approximately 6 :3 0 p .m . Friday. Theft: A U T stu den t reported tw o hub caps stolen from h is veh icle parked in the 2 0 0 0 b lo ck o f East Campus D riv e b etw een 7 p .m . April 15 and II a .m . M o n d a y . T h e th ief also broke the radio antenna and a windshield wiper b lad e. T h e value of the items taken and d am age is approximately $65. J a m ie D e d e n c h s (c) o f U n iversity R ep u b lica n s sh ow s her su p p o rt o f P resid en t R eaga n o u tsid e th e L B J a u d ito riu m a fte r p resid en tia l ca n d id ate G ary H art's s p e e c h * ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Conservative group protests Hart’s ideas By M IC H E L L E OGDEN Daily Texan Staff G ary H a rt’s claim s that he has new ideas to bring into the p re s id e n t's o ff­ ice are nothing but c am p a ig n rhetoric, said the president o f the U T c h a p te r o f Stu dents o f America. T h e gro u p d em o n strated outside the L y nd on B. John son au dito riu m M o n ­ day w hile Hart spoke inside. President o f Stu dents o f A m erica John C o ly an d ro said H a n ' s talk about a new leadership is like new and im ­ proved T id e, it’s really the sam e old product with a different nam e. “ H a rt’s new d e m o c r a c y just more go vern m en t intervention into the marketplace, and increased interven­ tion is exactly w hat Stu den ts o f A m e r ­ is ica is a g a in s t,’’ C o ly a n d ro said. “W h en R onald R eag an c am e into office, he totally reversed the same that C arter bank ru pt was im plem enting — intervention into the m arketplace and a w eak foreign p o li c y .’’ C o ly an d ro said. federal policy D em o nstrator Jim L o effler, g o v e rn ­ m ent so ph om ore, said in reference to Hart s foreign policy plans, “ Hart has a naive conception o f the po w ers in this w orld and their intentions “ Hart has the basic idea that we (the United States) should unilaterally disarm , but this policy ob viously d o e s n 't work. President N i x o n ’s Salt l talks with the Soviet U nion is a fine e x a m p l e . " L oeffler said. A fter an ag reem en t w as reached for TSP appoints Stubbe Texan managing editor By CA RO L PEO PLES D aily Texan Staff T h e T ex as S tudent Publications B oard o f O perating T ru stees app oin t­ ed R ic hard S tubbe. jo u rn a lism senior, as m a n a g in g editor o f The D aily T ex­ an for the 1984 su m m e r session M o n ­ d ay. S tu bb e was ap po inted to the posi­ tion on the basis o f no qualifications b ecause the board voted against w aiv ­ ing the 2.5 required grade-point aver­ age, w hich he did not have. “ W e did not w ant to establish a preced en t where so m e o n e without a 2.5 co uld be m an agin g e d i t o r .’’ said Steve R udner, T S P board president. T h e s u m m e r m anag ing editor p osi­ tion w as vacated by G . W . Babb, j o u r ­ nalism senior, w ho resigned April lb to accep t a su m m e r internship at The Dallas M o m m y N ew s. S tu bb e said he was “ re lie v e d ” at the b o a rd 's decision. “ I w as w orried becau se the T S P board is not know n for breaking its o w n r u l e s . ” Stubbe said. “ I wish they co u ld a grandfather clau se so that can did a tes for editor and m an ag in g editor in the future will have ad v a n c e notice o f the req uire­ ments th e y 'll have to m e e t . ” have passed S tu bb e said his first d uty as m a n a g ­ ing editor will be to hire a staff. Texan editor-elect D avid W oodruff said he is pleased w ith the b o a rd 's d e ­ cision. “ I 'm glad w e 'r e finally g oing to get started w orking the s u m m e r . ” for W oo dru ff said. “ It's hard to get much d o n e w ithout a m anag ing editor. ” W o o d ru f f said his f irst respo nsibili­ ty with the new m an ag in g editor will be to “ get out and recruit a staff and hire o ne. W e re going to hire d e p a rt­ ment heads as soon as possible so we can begin the planning p r o c e s s . " AROUND CAMPUS A round C am pus is a daily colum n listing University related activities. T he deadline for subm itting item s is I p .m . the day before publication. No excep tions will be m ade. A N N O U N C EM E N TS Phi Chi Theta will meet ai 5 JO p m Tuesday in the Graduate School of Busi ness Building. This meeting is mandato­ ry T he O ff-C am pus Students A ssocia­ tion announces the tenant phone line will be open from 5 to 8 p.m Tuesday. If you have a tenant problem, call 471 O C SA or go by Texas Union Building 5.320. The Russian C lub will present a Russian language table from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m . Tuesday in the Texas Union Building Ballroom. T he S tud ents’ A ssociation and SURE announces that 5 p.m. Wednes­ day is the application deadline for SURI; director for the fall. Submit applications at the Students' Association office in Texas Union Building 4.300. The M easurem ent and Evaluation Center will offer the Gramm ar. Spell­ ing and Punctuation Test, the Typing lest and test lor credit in M305G Tues­ day The G S P and M305G tests will he ottered at 6:15 p.m and the Typing Test will be offered at 6 ; 15 p.m. and 8:30 p.m Tickets will be on sale Tuesday in the Batts Hall auditorium ticket office trom 3:15 to 6:15 p.m For more infor­ mation. call 4 7 1 3032. The Liberal Arts C ouncil will hold its annual appreciation dinner at 7 p.m. Tuesday in (he Stephen F. Austin Hotel. K appa Alpha Psi will hold an infor­ mal rap session entitled “ A Look Into the Future: Black Corporate America S p eak s" at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Education Building 104. M EETIN G S The C atholic Stud en ts’ Association will hold a “ prayer and share' at 9:30 p.m . Tuesday at the University Catholic Student Center. 2010 University Ave. O vereaters A nonym ous will hold meetings to study the 12-step program as set up by Alcoholics Anonymous from noon to I p.m. every Tuesday at the University Catholic Student Center. 2010 University Ave. C sardas will meet at 7:15 p.m. Tues­ both countries to freeze and disarm the countries o f nuclear m issiles, the United States stopped and S oviet pro ­ duction b o o m e d , he said. said L oeffler he believes also R e a g a n 's policy in C entral A m erica has favorable results for the s o u th of A merica. “ By Reagan having a p ro - A m e ri­ can group in El S alv ado r, he is p ro­ tecting A m erican y outh in that as long as ou r pro -A m erican g ro u p is w inning and in pow er, the less ch an ce we have o f going over and f i g h ti n g ." Loeffler said. W hile R eagan realizes the fight in El Salvador is the p e o p le 's fight, he also realizes the United States has a national institution to protect. Loeffler said. “ I'm 20 and I can be d ratted ... and I personally feel better that Reagan is in o f f i c e , ” L o effler said. C o ly a n d ro agreed that H a rt's p ro ­ posal o f w ith draw in g aid to C entral A m erican w ould have negative effects on the U nited States. “ The short-term effects if c o m m u ­ nists to ok o v e r in Central A m erica would be a massive flood ot refugees into the United States, and these refu ­ gees w ould from A m erican youth trying to get into the jo b m a r k e t , ” C o ly a n d ro said jobs aw as take T h e long-term effect w ould be h o s­ tile forces on the border of o ur country and this is not con du cive to a peaceful hemisphere, C o ly an d ro said d e m o nstrators In contrast to the protest d urinc to mer Secretary of State Henry K in inger s speech at the LBJ auditoriun the during Hart speech stood quietly outside the aud torium holding signs and say ing little Capt. Harry Eastm an with the tie. operations division of the Universe Police D epartm ent said officers h. no problem s with the protesters >tf than the group initially briny u c soar inside the H old ing But once the sti dents were told to take their signs ou side they did. he said. I he protesters at the Kissinet speech were told to take their sier outside, but h rou eht them in the b uik ing anv w av. E astm an said Many LBJ papers await review By SHARLET W AGNER Daily Texan Staff A pp rox im ately 6() percent of the 3 I million papers housed in the L yn do n B. Joh n so n Presidential Library are still aw aiting review before being o p e n e d to the public, a sp o k es w o m an at the library said M onday " W e try to estim ate w hat percentage is o p e n , but it's hard to do. " said T ina L aw s o n , supervisory archiv ist at the library. “ I w ould say about 40 percent W e ’ve still got a lot to d o . ” The Johnson library was the first presidential library to be built on a university ca m p u s. W W H eath, then ch airm an o f the UT S y stem Board of R eg en ts, called the library “ the greatest single acquisition o f the U n i­ versity o f T e x a s . ” But the library may not rem ain a part ot the U niv ersi­ ty 's property. L aw so n said the G eneral Services A d ­ ministration. w hich is responsible tor all g o vernm en t buildings, is negotiating with the University for transfer o f the building to the g o vernm en t. The library is currently o w n e d by the University and operated by the federal g o v ern m en t. L aw son said the library has traditionally received more use from U T professors than stu den ts, but this trend has been reversed in recent years In tfu 198.' school year. I 70 students used the library, co m pared to 68 faculty m em b ers. The library con tains papers from Jo h n s o n 's c h il d ­ hood through his years in C o n g re ss , as vice piesidcnt and president, and finally his post-presidential years W hen Johnson turned o ver his pap ers, he stipulated that security-classified defense inform ation, papers re lating to his family or private affairs and “ materials containing statem ents which may in anv mannei be used to injure, em b arrass, or harass any p e rs o n ” should rem ain restricted. These stipulations require that all papers he reviewed before being released L aw so n supervises the eieht at chivists responsible for review ing the papers L aw son said the statt has concentrated on J o h n s o n 's personal papers and the papers from his presidency “ W hen the library first o pen ed . (Johnson) wanted things open ed by s u b j e c t,” Law son said “ After he died, what w L co ncentrated on were the presidential years. A lot o f those are open O n e million o f the papers in the library are classified and can only be opened by the g o vernm en t d epartm ent that originally classified the d ocu m ent day tor teaching and recreational lolk dancing in Anna Hiss Gym I 36 The Texas Union Special Program s C om m ittee will meet from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Texas Union Building 4.224. IX'partment o! Astronomy, will lecture on “ The Vertical Structure and Stability ot Alpha Model Accretion D i s k s " and at 2 p m. Kepler Oliveira will lecture on “ A Study o f the Pulsations of the /./. Ceti Stars “ T he T exas Union M anagem ent C om m ittee w ill meet at 6 p.m Tuesday in the Texas Union Building G overnor's Room. This is the Iasi meeting of the semester. All members must attend. T he UT Ad C lub will hold its final meeting of the semester at 8 p.m. Tues­ day in the Texas Union Building East­ woods Room. Charles Blakemore. exec­ utive vice president of creative services at Benton and Bowles, will be the guest speaker. The Plant R esources C enter will hold its monthly meeting ol the Native Plant Society at 6:30 p.m . Tuesday in I S Painter Hall 1.01. Linda Vorobik will discuss the art of botanical illustrat­ ing. L E C T U R E S/FIL M S T h e D e p a rtm e n t o f Art will present a lecture by painter Marianne Stikas e n ­ titled “ A Discussion of Mv W o rk " at 4 p m Tuesday in Art Building 1 1 1 0 The D epartm ent o f M usic will pres­ ent a lecture and demonstration on Afro Jazz/Folk Fusion by Paul Berliner at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Art Building audi­ torium. T he C enter for Intercultural S tu d ­ ies in Folklore and Kthnomusicology will present a lecture by Paul Smith, re­ search fellow . Center for English C ul­ tural Tradition and Language. Universi­ ty o f Sheffield. England, entitled “ In C omes I: Current Trends in Folk Drama Scholarship in the United K in gdom ” at 4 p.m . Tuesday in Burdine Hall 602. T he D epartm ent o f A stronom y will present two lectures Tuesday in Robert L. Moore Hall I5.2 I6 B . At 10:30 a.m. John Cannizzo. research assitant in the T he T ranscendental M editation C lub will present two talks on T ran­ scendental Meditation at noon W ednes­ day in Texas Union Building 4.108 and at 8 p.in. in the le xas I nion Buiiumg Stahrles Room I he Institute of Latin American Studies will present a lecture by James V reeland entitled Desert Farmers md Craftsmen in Coastal Peru: the I uture ot an Ancient Technology' at noon lues day in Sid Richardson Hall i U 3 W omen in C om m unications, Inc. will sponsor a brown bag lunch at noon Tuesday in Burdine Hall 234 with Cathv Bonner, president ol W ICI and Bonner and Assoc Advertising She will speak on women I he group in advertising will also present the movie " I nder Fire ' at 7 p.m Tuesday in the Jesse H Jones Communication Center auditori um. The Am erican M arketing Associa­ tion will meet at 6 p.m Tuesday in Ciraduate School ot Business Buildine 1.214. James Stafford, executive vice president of f irst f ederal Savings Bank, will he the guest speaker Le C ercle Francais will present “ L ’Horloger Do Saint P au l." a French movie with English subtitles bv Her trand Tavernier, at 8 p.m Tuesday in Batts Hall 12 t Wife beating found to be major problem By JIL L KHIEYV Daily Texan Staff One out of every three women in Texas has been abused in her lifetime, a statewide comprehensive studv on spouse abuse indicates Roughly 80 percent of the abuse in volves physical harm, said Raymond Teske. a researcher and associate pro­ fessor of criminal justice at Sam Houston State University The remaining 20 percent deals with threats, Teske said Mondav. Entitled “ Spouse Abuse in Texas — A Study o f W om en's Attitudes and Exp eriences." Teske s study involved 1.210 random, statewide mail survevs of women two summers ago. One-lourth of those physically abused suffered abuses at least once a week, Teske said. But he said it is difficult to tell it spouse abuse in Texas has been a problem, or is becoming a problem because of the lack of statew ide com ­ prehensive studies on the is^ue “ The study only shouv there is a very serious problem ," said Teske. G ail R ice, coordinator of com m uni­ ty education in the Austin Battered W om en's Center, said wife battering is also a serious problem in Austin "T h e problem has been around for a long time. Rice said But, “ it has only l>een identified as a problem in the last 10 years Teske said only one third of those surveyed were aware of some type of services available for battered women He said women need to be aware of the types o f services their communi­ t ie s offer. Although 15 percent of those sur­ veyed said they were aware of shelter less facilities than I percent had made use of them. Teske said in their communities, Rice also said many women in Aus­ tin are not aware of the types of ser­ vices available at the center Besides offering counseling services. Rice said the center has a shelter that hous­ es 10 to 12 women The center gets an average of 10 calls a day from women who have ex­ perienced type of physical some abuses. Rice said. if a man h it s hi s “ Traditionally, w ife, no one w ill interfere." said Rice, adding many people consider wife beating not as an act of violence, but a s a family matter. Many people are embarrassed to talk about physical abuses. she s a i d CORRECTION Monday s issue of The Daily Texan incorrectly identified Scott Polikov, newly elected president of the Interfratemity Council, as belonging to Phi Kappa Theta fraternity A ctu ally. Polikov belongs to Phi Kappa Tau The Texan regrets the error. JU N E 16 GMAT a Call Days, evenings. & Weekends in Austin: 1801 Lavaca, Suite 104 Austin, T X 78701 5 1 2 4 7 2 -8 0 8 5 In Dallas: 11617N Cent Exprwy 75243 T E S T r R c F A K A T iu n SPECIALISTS S IN C E 1 9 3 8 T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff A U S T IN ,T E X A S BEER & GRILL EXPERIENCE JL_ * S P E R 3Y PERSONAL COMPUTER P* A FREE HANDS-ON DEMONSTRATION TODAY! COMPUTERS & CALCULATORS -street level behind school supplies i l ' K I l ' l X > 1 1 M JU O R IM Q IN S K B V IC I S D fC I 1896 The Sperry what the personal computer should have been in the first place Editor Managing Editor Associate M anaging Editors News Editor Associate News Editor University Editor General Reporter Editorial Page Editors Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor General Sports Reporters Entertainment Editor Entertainment Images Assignments Editor Images Editor Associate Images Editor Graphics Editor Photo Editors Roger Campbell D a v e Lindsey Hector Cantu Tracy Duncan Eddie P w k in s Herb B e n e r s o r Scott W illiam s P a u ’ de ia Garza J a y Bem anke Tela Goodw ir David Woodruff Richard 5 'jb b e Brad Townsend :kwel Ed Com bs S ta r Ro b ed s R u s s e l Scott B r an B am au d Lisa Brown-Richau Dan ° ckens G W Babb Morris G o e r Jim Sigmon D a v d Elliot Doug Henderson ; Shartet W agner i W ard Todd Pratt Laura Fisher Mark Antonuccic Drew Parm a Davd Dea'' iper Rober- 3ruce Margaret Leag ue Debbie Fetterman News Assignments Editor News Assistants Newswriters Editorial Assistant Editorial Cartoonist Editorial Columnist Sports Make-up Editor Sports Assistants Make-up Editor W ire Editor Copy Editors Photographers Issue Staff S arah Duke Gary Fulgt D avid Nather Michelle Ogden. Carol Pe o Jill Khiew . Thomias Walker Mien Leslie Mann Carolyn Mangold Julie Gullat Emte Palla Glen Diamond Display Advertising Kelly Kohlrusch Karen Bennett Linda Salsburg Frank Stowell Bnan Caldwet! Glenda Parmer Cassie Spill ner Jan Wiseman Ken Grays Greg Payne Jim Sweeney Doug Urban The Daily Texan a student newspaper at The University ot 'exa Publications. Drawer D. University Station Austin TX 78’ ’ 3 '2 0 9 TN Wednesday Thursday and Friday except holiday a rc exam periods 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone 47‘ 459’ at the editorial 3ft,< nq Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory Communication Building A4 >6 classified advertising should be made in T S P Building 3 20C (471 5244 The national advertising representative ot The Daily Texan s Cass Commumcatx Evanston Illinois 60201 C M P S 1680 North Vine Suite 900 HoHywod CA 90028 Avenue West Seattle. W A 98119 The Daily Texan subsenbes to United Press international and New York 'm e s member of the Associated Collegiate Press the Southwest Jooma-ism Congres; u,mbia Scholar' p Association and American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1983 Texas Student Publications The D a ly Texan Subscription Rates ond cia >s postage paid exas -Jude'-' day Tuesday at AuSlir Tx ant Publications ■q delivery arc One Semester ( Fall or Spring) Two Semesters (Fall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall Spring and Summer) Building C3 200 The Daly TexarvTuesday, April 2 4 ,1984/Page 3 ate— 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1:30 Open at 10:30 a.m. 7 days a week Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 5-7 FOREIGN STUDENT GRADUATES Immigration Assistance H -l Professional V isas P erm an en t Labor C e rtific a tio n s PAUL PARSONS PC. Attorney a t Law BOARD CERTIFIED • IMMIGRATION 1 n a t i o n a l i t y l a w TEXAS BOARD O f LEGAL SPECIALIZATION 2200 GUADALUPE. SUITE 216 477-7887 Authentic Old Family Recipe Spicing 5 Different Picante Sauces Kick the grease! Try our marinated chicken — the tastiest in Texas. “Chicken Capital o f T exas"- Texas Monthly To Go or Eat Here Free Parking IH 35 Lot s MEXICAN STYLE CHARBROILED CHICKEN 605 Sabine • Mon.-Sat 1 lam-3pm 5pm-9pm • 472-7720 GRADUATION SPECIAL UNIV6RSITV o f T0CAS STUD6NTS, STAFF, FACULTV DISCOUNT ON KAVPftO NOULI RVRILRBLC FROM KRVPRO CORP. FOR 5% OFF ANY KRVPRO COMPUTCR FR€€ SOFTWARE • ujord processing • spelling checker • term no! em u la to r • s p re a d sheets • basic • ASK AQOlT KRVPRO S NELLI FINANCING PLAN • PAIC6S STAPT A~ S123 0 UJITH STUDENT DISCOUNT RVRILRBIE ONLV AT J&OMHJTER ADVANTAGE BALCONES UUOODS SHOPPING CENTER 11150 RESERRCH BLVD. 345-5222 Class sta rtin g the w eek o f 4-23 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications p O Bo* . Au Austin Progressive Coalition WHO ARE WE? . . . T he A u stin P r o g r e ssiv e C o a litio n is a group of Austin students and citizens dedicated to better government for Travis County and the State of Texas. Active since the early 1970’s, then under the name Student Action Coalition, A P C has worked for candidates lik e Jim Hightower, Ann Richards, Roger Duncan, and Lloyd Doggett, and issues such as F air Housing and Selling Austin’s Partnership in the S.T .N .P. W e have endorsed sever­ al candidates for the elections on April 28th (Special Election) and M a y 5th (Prim ary Election). W e ’ll try to tell you something about these people during the next two weeks in these advertisements. W e urge you to give them your support and your vote. If you have any questions, or would like to be involved in grass roots politics, please call us at 472-2302. Our J u d icia l E n d orsem en ts TAU KAPPA EPSILON PRESENTS "FIRE UP FOR FINALS" WITH THE ARGYLES THURSDAY, APRIL 26th, 1984 Texas Union Ballroom Proceeds to benefit THE AUSTIN FIRE DEPARTMENT PENSION FUND . l i l t John Hill Chief Justice, Texas Supreme Court A lawyer for 37 years former Texas Attorney Gen­ era! John Hill has experienced first hand the prob­ lems and needs of the Texas Judicial System As our Chief Justice. John Hill will apply this experi­ ence and his widely respected legal skills to the refinement and improvement of Texas law C.L. Ray Texas Supreme Court Judge Ray has served more than 15 years on the bench and has earned your confidence for his hon­ est and diligent administration of justice Judge Ray believes the peoples needs should come be­ fore the desires of wealthy special interest groups Sam Houston Clinton Court of Criminal Appeals With more than 6 years on the Court of Criminal Appeals Sam Houston Clinton ranks as one of the finest progressive judges in Texas Voted Texas most outstanding |udge by the Trail Lawyers Asso­ ciation Sam Houston Clinton deserves your vote Political Ad Paid For By Austin Progressive Coalition, 1701 West Avenue, Austin, TX 78701 ____ - A b sen tee — — Voting — for the May 5th Primary is now going on at the Faculty Center 25th & Guadalupe P»9» < /T ht DaBy T«M n/T u iid ^ f, AprV 24,1984 EDITORIA1S The Daily Texan Edrtor Roger Campbel Edkorial page edftors Tela Goodwin David Woodruff Edrtonal Assistants Columnists Andrea BJumberg Laura Fisher Mary Jo Galindo Mark Horvit Dan H. Jester Lee Kite Rick Rutledge Andrea Beebe Chns Boyd Drew Parma Julte Daniels Annette Davis Scott Durfee Lesli Hicks John C. Bradshaw Editorial Researchers Lora Norvell Joe Rubio • Cartoonists Mark Antonucao Brad Wines Opínons expressed m The Daily Texan are those of ?he«edrtor or the writer of the article and are not necessanfy those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Monday’s speech: Hart’s stance ambiguous Gary Hart m ade “ a call id e a l i s m " M onday at the L B J auditorium , id e n tify ­ ing h im se lf as a m em ber o f the “ N e w G en eration ," callin g for a “ N e w D e m o c r a c y . ” to At the sam e tim e, he im plied that he is the latest in a line o f national leaders from Je ffe rs o n to Johnson, w ith no sm all e m p h a s is on Jo h n F. K ennedy, his role m odel. In light o f this schizophrenia betw een the old and the n ew , one m ight be inclined to d is m is s Hart’s speech as an ex am p le o f the posturing that has been the substance o f his cam paign for the presidency to date. But a num ber o f interest­ ing points w ere raised in his sp eech , points that merit c lo se consideration . • Hart said that the next president probably w ill have the opportunity to c h o o se at least one the celebrated Suprem e Court ju stice. W ith through already “ sleaze Ronald R eagan ’s C abinet, the thought o f that factor pervading the court lon g after R eagan 's running factor” departure m ust g iv e one pause. . • Hart decried R eag an ’s foreign p o licy as “ tough and stupid” and W alter M on d ale's as w eak and tentative. But the extent o f H art’s foreign p o licy is to “ try p eace before w e try w a r .” T his is a w onderfully general p h iloso- Embassy expulsion: p hy , w h ic h indicates that H art values life, but o ne that d o e s not p ro v id e a n y solu tio n s to tricky p r o b le m s in c o u n trie s like L e b a n o n and th o se in C entral A m e ric a . • H art m a d e a b o ld call for a freeze an d r e ­ d u c tio n o f the n u c le a r a rse n a ls o f the U n ited States a n d the S o v ie t U n io n and a freeze in in tern atio nal e x p o rts o f p lu to n iu m . H o w e v e r , it is, as M ó n d a le has this is u n c le a r w h e th e r a c c u s e d , the latest o f se v e ra l H art flip -flop s on the s u b je c t o r, ra th e r, a d e fin itiv e sta te m e n t o f his n u c le a r stance. re s ta te m e n t T h is a m b ig u ity se e m s to be the m a jo r p r o b ­ lem w ith H a r t ’s s p e e c h M o n d a y . T h e press r e ­ leases p r o m is e d a “ m a jo r s p e e c h ” and an “ a g ­ c a n d i d a c y . ” g re ssiv e In ste a d , th e a u d ie n c e at the sp ee c h w as treated to the s a m e H art p la tfo rm w ith a series o f glib c a tc h - p h r a s e s a n d a re g re tta b le e m p h a s is on M o n d a l e ’s ties to J im m y C a r t e r 's failed p r e s i­ de n c y. his o f T h e m a n w h o c a p tu r e d the altern ative vote for the D e m o c r a tic race is n o w taking the low road in an a tte m p t to u n s e a t M o n d a l e 's front- ru n n e r statu s again . But w h a t w o rk e d for M ó n ­ dale m a y p ro v e to be d is a s tr o u s for H art. — Scott Durfee Britain sends strong signal T he British govern m en t h a s d is p la y e d ish e m b a s s y in T rip oli. O f c o u r s e , this c a m e as no s u rp rise , c o n s id e rin g the absurdity o f C o l. K h a d a f y 's regim e. com m en d ab le restraint and g o o d sen se by breaking o ff dip lom atic re lations w ith Libya. Britain is sh o w in g L ibya and its ilk that international law should a lw a y s be o b e y e d , no to a v e n g e a matter how tem pting the urge L ib y a has n o w th r e a te n e d to increase su p p o rt o f the Irish R e p u b lic a n A r m y , a d a m n in g a d ­ m issio n o f gu ilt, and take o th e r “ re volutionary a c ti o n ” if B ritain d o e s not e x tra d ite the “ c r i m i ­ n a l s ” — the police — th at L ib y a c la im s a t­ ta c k e d its e m b a ss y . T h e re q u e st is lu d ic ro u s and e x e m p lifie s the tw isted m e n ta lity o f a re g im e that blatantly e x ­ ports te rro ris m . L ib y a n o ffic ia ls sh ould be glad Britain a cte d in a c a lm , c o r r e c t fashion unlike their o w n sad istic, irrational g o v e r n m e n t. — Chris Boyd w rong m ay be. The m ove cam e six days after a man fired a subm achine gun from a Libyan em b assy w i n ­ d o w , k illin g a British p olicew om an and w o u n d ­ ing 11 Libyan dem onstrators. Police h av e s u r ­ it, rounded the em b a ssy , rather than seizing w hich w ou ld violate Libyan sovereign ty. Instead o f d e c r y in g the in c id e n t, the L ib y a n governm ent retaliated by su rr o u n d in g the B rit­ FIRING UNE TH E ALL-WHITE JURY Mark Antonuccio, Daily Texan Cartoonist Excellence that we can afford Drew Parma Daily Texan Colum nist lo n g er B y no w . I'm sure e ve ryo ne out there has heard o f the Select C o m m ittee on Public E d u ca ­ tion. or S C O P E , and what H. R o ss Perot and his friends have co m e up with. L on ger school days, better teacher salaries andl scho ol a year all have one thing in co m m o n: they all cost more m oney. Y ou c o n ­ tax ­ cerned T ex as payers have heard your state g o vernm en t toying with the idea o f new taxes to pay for it all: gasoline taxes, sales taxes, liquor and thing you taxes. But one cigarette w o n 't hear th em suggest is a higher petroleum severance tax A severance tax is a fee that a c o m ­ pany pays the state for the privilege of “ se v e r in g " minerals from the ground For decades. Texas has had one ot the lowest mineral severance taxes in the nation. O ne reason given in the past was that the state could never spend it all. T h e re 's alw ays been that de ep d is­ trust o f big gov ern m ent in Texas What would those boys in Austin do with all that m on ey ? Well, now that the state g o v e rn ­ ment is basically broke, and now that we re asking it to spend more money on schools and h ighw ay s, w e sure could use som e o f that extra cash But those boys in the Legislature w o n 't get it from an oil severance tax T exas' rise from a farming state to an urban industrial state started with oil that Oil provided capital loans for d id n ’t co m e from East C oast banks. Oil started the b o o m on the Third Coast that has lasted ev er since. Oil helped Texas decla re its eco no m ic in­ dependence. C on seq u e n tly , oil and gas interests have a lot o f clout and d o n 't want that tax raised Yet there is an appealing logic to raising that severance tax. O u r neig h­ bors in New M exico have som ething they call an “ e m erg e n c y school t a x . ” which amounts to an extra severance tax on oil and gas. In M o ntan a, they slap a 30 percent tax on coal to help pay for land reclam ation, am o ng other things (Ask the city of Austin about that one. We b u m M on tana coal in the Fayette 1 and 2 p o w er plants.) In Alaska, the state is able to pay its citi­ zens cash from its oil and gas sever­ ance tax — this sho w s what a lucra­ tive source of in com e the severance tax can be. As form er state senator A. R. “ B a b e " S chw artz, liberal gadfly and nemesis o f oil and gas interests, in 1981. “ If o u r gas and oil said severance taxes were the sam e am ount as L ouisiana's, we d have no trouble at all financing all our s c h o o l s .” Incidentally, if T exas had taxed oil at the same rate as L ouisiana in 1981. the treasury w ould have collected more than $2.5 b illion in extra funds. The major oil co m p an ies, inde­ pendent producers and royalty ow ners fighting against higher have been severance taxes for years. T heir politi­ cian apologists have given a lot of rea­ sons for keeping the tax at its low level: the major oil co m p a n ies would pull out. exploration w ould decrease, e tc . But no o n e 's going to d rop his share o f the East Texas oil field because o f a Increasing the oil severance tax hike tax would not result in significantly higher gasoline prices — certainly not the extra nickel a gallon that the pro­ posed gasoline tax w ould require. Besides, the oil and gas that a r e n ’t being taxed are d w indling resources. Oil production in this state has been declining since 1972. O ne reason g iv ­ en for the renew ed em phasis on e d u ­ cation is that, in the future, we no longer will be able to rely on oil for income. That sounds a lot like the present situation in M innesota. M innesota has enorm o us deposits o f an ore called taconite. Turning this ore into iron prov ides lots o f jo b s , lots o f income and lots o f econom ic activi­ ty. Som etim e after the year 2000, how ever, the taconite will run out. W hat happens then? W ell, M innesota is going to find out. T h e y 'v e set aside a share o f their 15 percent severance tax on taconite as a reserve fund to develop and attract new industry. and E ngineering W’e should do the sam e thing here. I m ean, we already know the direction that T ex as' future m ust take. T he e n ­ dow m ents to the Colleges o f Natural Sciences assure preem inence at the college level in those fields. Are we going to have to bring in undergraduates from New York and W isconsin and C alifornia to study, or can we raise h o m eg ro w n tal­ ent? More im portantly, can we raise the m oney? I wish our state could salt aw ay som ething for a rainy day from all the oil we have now . but it just w o n 't happen. I guess the only thing that re­ ally bothers me is that I pay a higher tax rate on a candy bar than producers pay to extract our dw indling natural resources.____________________________ Parma is an e co n o m ics senior. End emotional appeal As a strongly u n sy m p a th e tic, firm ly o u tspo ken student co nc ern ing South A frican issues, it m ight seem strange that I now a p p e a r to be taking the o th er side. T he recent attention my fo rm e r co un try has been receiv in g , h o w ev er, has resulted in my c o n cern o v e r w h eth er the right thing is being done; w h ethe r the public is being p re ­ sented with issue. Since the w hole m ost publicity has been in the form o f the editorial articles, all “ d i v e s t” side. I feel the need to id en ­ tify facts co n ce rn in g the o th er side. reflecting A m ag nifyin g call for divestiture o f the University 's $ 30 0 million in c o m ­ panies that operate or have su b sid iar­ ies in South A frica has resorted to the em otio na l appeal o f moral respo nsib il­ ity and integrity Reliance on moral princip les, h o w ever, is not alw ay s the m ost e d uc ated approach to political and e c o n o m ic situations such as this In an April 16 editorial in The D aily T ex a n , D avid W o o d ru f f c onclude d that the U n iv e rs ity 's investm ent su p ­ ports apartheid. T his statem ent w ould better read: “ T h e U n iversity's invest­ m en t supports that which supports apartheid.” In this political sense, the transitive property does not hold A divestiture w ould support from the reg im e that instituted a p a r­ theid, the South A frican g o vern m en t. W oodruff claim ed “ Ideally, apartheid w ould be a b olish ed ” by con tinu ed re­ m oval o f su pp o rt. Fie fails to identify the realistic result, ho w ev er, w hich ultim ately w ould be the c o u n tr y 's c o l­ lapse. U n d ersta nd ing that this is not the end sought after (this oc curren ce resulting in much turmoil and most lik ely ultimate co’m m unist intrusion), on e must reestablish con clu sion s and realize that our mutual goal is the end o f apartheid. C learly divestiture is not the m eans to ach ieve this end. rem ov e Perhaps while the United States w orks on repressing and sanctioning South A frica in the hope ot ending apartheid, we can allow our money to help feed, no m atter how m eage rly. the blacks that hold jo b s with those U .S .-s u p p o rte d co m p an ie s. A nd p e r­ haps in the light o f global repression moral co n c e rn s ov er in hum ane treatm ent of blacks in South Africa will broad en to an und erstand ing that m u ch n eeds to be done to put an end the world to all h u m a n oppression over. But we must arm ou rse lv e s against the rash con clu sion s o f e m o ­ tional rationale and seek to achie ve the d esire d e nd s by way o f intelligent means. the K e v in A b e l E lectrical en g in ee rin g Columns lack substance C hris B oyd may write w ell, but ev en S h a k esp eare w ould be unable to m ak e B o y d 's most recent ideas ( The D a ily T exa n . April 16) into so m eth in g interesting. the D em oc ratic Boyd presidential lacking can d id a tes leadership. T h e n he turns a ro un d and claim s that A m erican voters d o not they are care about co n c ern ed with “ more c o n c r e t e ” m a t­ ters. W h y . th e n , even bring up the is­ sue? leade rship, criticizes that for A side from w eav ing that c o n tr a d ic ­ tion into his c o lu m n , Boyd offers no rem arks o f any interest Surely no one is genuinely surprised that presidential cand idates spend a lot of time arguing with each other; anyone with a m e m ­ ory exte n d in g at least four years back the spirited co nflicts b e ­ can recall tw een G e o rg e Bush and Ronald R e ag an , for instance D uring a c a m ­ is p aign . co nflict a m o n g cand ida tes not sh o c k in g but rather is exactly what one w ould exp ect. O v erall, Boyd s colum n sounds like it was w ritten by a high school fresh­ man w ho only had 10 m inu tes to spend on the task. Let s have some genuine an alysis next time, not ju st a tired and superficial parroting o f anti - D em ocratic slogans H anno T. B eck L in g u istics graduate Women more intelligent Julie Daniels m issed one possibility in her e x a m i n a ­ tion o f the scarcity o f fem ale e x e c u ­ tives in corpo rate America. co lu m n ist G uest Perhaps there are few er fem ale e x ­ ecu tiv es beca use fem ales are m ore in­ telligent than m en and being so. they do not aspire to such a shallow . m e a n ­ ingless. pathetic existence. Law rence R eichard U T stall to “ G reek S ystem Greek stereotype unfair I am w riting to Firing Line in re­ r a c is t" sponse I am sorry Patrick Biashill (April 16) has such a limited scope o f mind and seem s to be looking for som eth ing to c o m p la in about. Yes, there may have been a q u e stio n a b le float in the parade but this is not a true reflection o f e v e ­ ry single sorority or fraternity m e m ­ ber, thus Biashill has broadly g e n e ra l­ ized for his o w n purposes. T o hit on the point o f harassm en t in west c a m ­ pus, I seriously do ub t, regardless o f G ree k or n on -G reek affiliation, that people are harassed for their clothing prefe ren ce. T h ere are a majority of that* are Polo-less and have G re ek s T o psid er-Iess feet: here, to o, a broad stereotypical ge neralization has been and made. friends. scream s to that Biashill has “ Skip and M u f f y ” were taught by M um m y an d Daddy never to be o ff e n ­ to him self failed R efe rring realize insults and to sive in public. It a p p e a r s Biashill may have a slight insecurity about G reeks and all they have done for both the University and the comm unity E lizab eth Stew art E ducation Misinformed patriotism Perry P arrig in 's April 17 letter criti­ cizing Tela G oodw in's editorial “ Stop M ining H arbors N o w " not only show s a lack o f understanding of the issues su rrounding the present conflict in Central A m erica, it also subjects A m erica to a standard of behax tor that is merely co m p arativ e to Soviet b e ­ havior. thereby justifying any A m e ri­ can g ov ernm en tal action, do m estic or foreign, so long as an even m ore o f ­ fensive Soviet action can be noted. First, to add to P arrigin's poor u n ­ derstanding o f the issues, his assertion that the U .S . is merely “ backing c o n ­ tras w ho are doing the m in in g ” is ut­ terly wrong Not only has T he W all Street Journal reported over the last tw o w eeks that the e xecutive branch Central Intelligence Agency financed, planned and directed the m ining o f the N ic arag ua n harbors, but U .S . N e w s a n d W o rld R e p o rt's April 16 issue noted that the C IA -trained squad of divers w ho planted the exp losives were not con tras at all, but C IA -paid South A m erican m ercenaries. H o w e v e r disturbing P arrig in's ig­ norance may be, sadder is his evident belie f that criticism o f Reagan a d m i n ­ istration to A m erica. He asks. “ Instead o f only the criticizing time, w hy not criticize the Soviet U n ­ io n ? ” the United States all threatening actions is Perhaps Parrigin d o e s n 't realize that criticism and the reform that results from it is w hat m akes A m erica great and calls like his to reduce criticism can only hurt. Perhaps Parrigin would benefit from reading Frederick D o u g ­ lass. w ho once w rote. “ So long as my voice can be heard on this or the other side of the A tlantic. I will hold up A m erica to the lightning scorn o f m o r­ al indignation. In doing this. I shall feel my self dis charging the duty o f a true patriot: for he is a lover o f his country w ho rebukes and does not It is righteousness that excuse its sins exalteth a nation while is a reproach to any p e o p l e . " sin This. Parrigin. is the proper fo rm u ­ la tor a moral, intelligent dem ocracy. Your frantic fear o f truth sheltered in your moral relativism w ould be. on the other hand, putty in the hands of the totalitarian M oscow g overnm ent so expert in m arshalling m isinform ed patriotism such as yours. C h ristop her D. A tw o o d E nglish L u is A . Ubinas L atin A m eric a n S tud ies, visitin g from H arvard Requirements archaic W hen I graduate I will have spent more class hours studying Spanish than any other subject except my m a ­ jor. Let me assure y ou , this is not by choice. There is great diversity in language requirem ents am o n g the various co l­ leges at the U niversity. S om e do not require a language at all. T he College o f C o m m u n icatio n requires a fourth sem ester proficiency, w hich turns out to be 16 class hours if you d o n 't place out The idea that no college education is com plete w ithout k now ledge of a language is out o f date. If we adhered to that classic point o f view we would all be studying Latin and G reek. We would also require (and rightly so) more balance am o n g the real basics: math, science, English, history and the arts. I think the U niversity should set standards for all the colleges m uch as the T exas Legislature has done re­ garding the six-hour history and g o v ­ ern m en t requirem ents. If it decides students should study a language the required n um b er o f hours should be in direct proportion to other subjects. M ich ele M iller Journalism Joe Bob: cultural coup C ong ratulatio ns on your sy nd ica­ tion of D allas T im es H erald colum nist Joe Bob Briggs O v e r the last several years, Austin has b ecom e saturated with a horde o f hipper-than-thou crit­ ics w ho feel their duty is to elevate the tastes o f their audience. T he ap p ear­ ance o t Joe Bob on the scene is an inevitable backlash to this disturbing trend. With the possible exception o f the C in e m a T e x a s staff, the grade-B e x ­ ploitation film has been virtually ig­ nored by everyb od y in Austin People in A ustin need a journalist o f Joe B o b 's stature and talents to point out cultural m asterpieces that might o th er­ w ise be o verlooked. Joe B o b 's m ethod o f ignoring the aesthetic aspects o f a film and faith­ fully reporting more important infor­ m atio n, such as breast counts, d e ca p i­ tations and a m ou nts o f blood shed (m easu red by the bucket for easy ref­ erence), is refreshingly simplistic. His co lu m n will probably attract a large au dience w ho are c onfused by term i­ nology such as film noir and editing. I am glad that the T exan scooped the oth er c om p etitio n in to w n by g et­ ting Joe B o b ’s w eekly review s to local m ov iego ers. E v ery bo dy should be m ore enlig htened because o f it. Randy Ross Radio-television-film The Daly Texan/Tuesday, April 24, 1984/Page 5 _________VIEWPOINTS No double standard fo r Jackson From our readers Bruce Becker W ash in g to n — Presid ent Ronald Reagan today reaf­ firmed his support for his long-time friend and grand dragon o f the Ku Klux Klan, I M Biggatywite, who said on a national radio broadcast last week that the white W ashington Post reporter who o verheard Reagan refer to blacks as “ ju ng le b u n n ie s " should be put to death for making the rem arks public. The above story is true. Only the names have been chan g ed to protect Jesse Jackson. It was actually Jackson who real firmed his support for Louis f arra khan, leader of the National o f Islam, a black militant organization believing in black superiority o ver w hites, who said that a black reporter should be put to death for writing that Jack son used the word " H y m i e " to refer to Jew s The juxtaposition is m ade for a r e a ­ son. If President R eagan, or any white tor president, had made candidate these rem arks and continued to show leader of a radical support for the m ovem ent that advocates the violent oppression o f a people based on race, he would be fighting oft calls for his im peachment. Jesse Jackson, h o w e v ­ er. continues to cam paig n while c o m ­ plaining that too much has been made o f the whole affair. But his co m plaint just w o n 't wash Jack so n 's Rainbow C o a li ti o n " is. it you believe the rhetoric, supposed to religious unite diverse ethnic and backgrounds into a new type of p oliti­ cal organization one without class distinctions. Jac kso n, particularly b e ­ cause he is trying to appeal to such a coalition and particularly because he is in the fish bowl as the first serious black contender for the presidential n o m i n a t i o n , m u s t b e y o n d reproach His supporters would argue that the public and the m edia are set­ ting unrealistic standards for him; that other candidates are not so quick tobe judged; but this is just not so One needs only look at the record. b e First. Jackson is not the first p resi­ dential candidate to make such a slip In 1972. in New H am pshire. M a n ­ che ster I nnm L eader publisher W il­ that L d m u n d liam L oeb w rote Muskie. candidate tor the D em ocratic presidential nom ination, had laughed at the term “ C a n u c k s " when it w is used to describe A m erican s o f French C anadian descent. In M u s k ie 's rebut tal speech, he broke do w n and burst into this scene cost him the nomination tears. M any believe that Second, oth er high officials have paid the price tor m aking racial slurs In 1976. John D ean reported for P oll m g S tone m agazin e that Secretary of Agriculture F.arl Butz hail said, under circum stances similiar to Jac kso n's that all blacks want are “ loose shoes, a tight pussy and a w arm place to take a shit " That slur cost him his |ob. it may have cost G erald Ford the elec tion. Just last fall. Secretary ot the Interi or Jam es Watt w as forced to resign after c om m enting on the composition ot a coal advisory c o m m ittee appoint ed to assist him W att said. " I have a black. I have a w o m a n , two J e w s and a cripple. " T he statem ent was aecu rate, although it exhibited a rare sense of poor taste. W att offered a prompt and com plete apology; it was not enough to save his job But Jesse Jackson wants a double lying about ha vine standard A fter made the statem ent. Jackson finalb. confessed H o w ever, he still contend the media have made tar too much of the “ H y m ie " slur He also continues to support I arrakhan. who has called Adolf Hit let Jackson that whites are not turning to his Rainbow Coalition, vet who can blame them ’ a great man complains lurther to Jackson s policy seems to be to di- v ide and conquer rather than unite and overcom e Will Louis Farrakhan be made head of the Civil Rights C om m ission, appointed the Suprem e Court, named secretary ot s t a t e ’ He did accompany Jackson on his mis sion to Syria to tree A merican pilot Robert G o o d m a n , after all The politi cal ties of the other candidates are a part ot daily news coverage Jackson writes his ties off as inconsequential It seem s that the term “ civil rights h a s come to mean “ racism as prac­ ticed by m in o ritie s." It is unco n scio n ­ able that Jackson would continue to align himselt with someone with the is views of Farrakhan H ow ever, not unbelievable I have long main­ tained blacks and other minorities arc just as rae ¡st as whites are no more, no less; they just have a better position to bargain from. it B ecker i s a graduate student Southerners should take pride in Confederate heritage From our readers George Kalas Samuel T a y lo r's guest colu m n in The Daily Texan iApril 17) dragged the C on fed erate States o f America through the muddy waters of his o w n biases and misperceptions. T aylor blithely asserts that the C o n ­ federacy was no different from South Africa or H itler's Nazi G erm any This is a gross distortion o f historical fact The C onfederacy was a freely elect­ ed republic whose constitution was patterned after the United States. T he southern states exercised their constitutional rights as sovereign states when they seceded, in self-de­ fense, against northern political inter­ ests that sought to crush the So u th 's that political the shooting was secession. caused influence. The that o f issue not slavery. Indeed, slavery needs to be put into perspective. The South inherited the institution from G reat Britain, France and Spain. It died out in the North only because the climate and soil there were unsmted to large-scale ag ric ul­ ture. Yankee ship captains did. h o w ­ ever. continue to engage in the brisk business transporting African slaves to America. o f At the time o f the Civil W ar, slav­ ery was still an accepted, although receding, institution in m uch o f the civilized world. Nations that e m a n c i­ pated their slaves saw to it that the ow ners were com p ensated for their fi­ nancial loss In this country, how ever, the abolitionist m o vem ent w as alm ost universally o p po se d to financial c o m ­ pensation upon em ancipation. S om e might contend that the ab o li­ tionists were the onlv ones w ork inn to tree the slaves. W ro n g Many South em ers were o pp osed to slavery and worked for em an c ip atio n with c o m ­ pensation. They were an integral part o f the em erg ing w o rldw id e consensus that slavery was morally suspect and economically stagnating insulted by Furthermore, a majority of South em ers d id n 't o w n slaves and would have been that they risked their necks so another man could keep his slaves Indeed, many white U nion soldiers rejected the idea that they w ere fighting to free the slaves the assertn In fact, more than 5 0 ,(KK) I nion themselves soldiers ow ned The four slave states that did not se cede were not included in L in coln 's Emane i pat ion Proclamation. slaves Taylor seeks to ignore history by that northern society was asserting less racist than the S ou th, yet he gives no facts to support this view. The truth is, white supremacy was universal in all the states of the I 'nion in I860. During the New York draft free Negroes were riots of 1863. lynched by the score. Negro r e g i­ ments were often the first to be sent into combat to reduce the n um be r ot white casualties am ong I nion troops By the w ay. T aylor, why didn 't the 3 million black slaves in the South rise up in bloody rebellion against while Southerners at a time when more than 80 percent o f the southern white man power was tied d o w n fighting Yankee soldiers at the front? While I do not, in any way. con- done slavery. I must observe that, a s a whole, slavery in the southern states was the most docile and least violent version of the institution to be found in existence anyw here in the world at that time. the North not forced Yet. Southerners continue to be portrayed as a nation of racist r e d ­ ut necks who took morbid pleasure of whipping and lynching black pec pie. Had the South into secession and war. e m a n e ; pation would have com e voluntarily, a ave bloody and bitter war would been avoided and rave relations in the South would not have been poisoned by the abuses o f R econstruction re­ gimes in the occupied South in re ­ trospect. it is clear to the scholarly ob­ server that Southerners fought l or the very principle*' for which the I nited States had been established in 1776 It is. however, understandable why t Taylor is offended by the display the Confederate flag It is an unfor­ tunate fact that the despicable and re ­ actionary KKK has adopted and a n tinues to misuse the Stars and Bars as a symbol of their dem ented ideoloev that they represent I ay lor commits a gro--s error when ne /- n o his finger at the Kuan and the C o n ­ dates federacy i'h<>se w hite-robed cow ards could not hold a torch to the integrity t the C onfederate soldier and valor Educated 'southerners t C o nfederate descent can take pride in the true sy m ­ bolic importance of the flag, which is represent a just and noble cause and t com m em orate the memory o f the men and w mien wh* supported that cause. in every Apri 26 is G nt'ederate Memorial Day former C onfederate state. I urge all Southerners to pro- claim their heritage and display the Confederate Hag on th o day in c o m ­ memoration of those w ho wore the 2rav Kalas o a em m ent senior the NOW wine sensation from Italy PEREGRINUS LAW SCHOOL YEARBOOK Pick up your copy in the TSP Building (at the corner of 25th and Whitis) CMC 3.200 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. imported by - V/tj 4E SHIPPERS IMPORT CO % OSSET. N Y Copies on sale — only $10.50 Distributed locally by Block Distributing Company p ifl« 6/The Daly Ttxan/Tu—cfny, April 24,1964 WORLD & NATION U. S. -China nuclear pact expected bitious co m m ercial nuclear p ow er program , " is in the interests o f both s id e s .” A sen ior o ffic ia l said con sid erab le progress w as m ade during a round o f talks that began in P eking April 15 and co n c lu d e d in the past fe w d ays. A d m in istration sou rces earlier indi­ cated R eagan m ight be in a position to a n n ou n ce an agreem en t in p rincip le, w h ich w o u ld perm it additional n e g o ti­ ation s w ith the C h in ese and C on gress o v e r co n sen t requirem ent on righ ts, con tain ed in U .S . law the U nder U .S . law , W ash in gton must app rove the rep rocessin g o f any fuel used in reactors purchased from the U n ited S tates. T he C h in ese lon g have v ie w e d this " c o n sen t righ ts" issu e as an in frin gem en t on their national s o v ­ ereign ty. T he adm inistration, w h ile striving for an ag reem en t, has been lim ited in its ab ility law , to circu m ven t w h ich w a s aim ed largely at countries that m ight spend nuclear fuel to pro­ du ce atom ic w ea p o n s. C hina already is a nu clear pow er. the T he W hite H ou se had hoped for a breakthrough to counter su g g estio n s R e a g a n 's visit to C hina — the first by an A m erican president sin ce 1975 — w as to be h eavy on sy m b o lism and cerem o n y but short on su bstance. The C h in ese have agreem en ts w ith other co u n tries, m ost notably France, but have been pursuing talks w ith in h op es o f u sin g U . S . W ash in gton te ch n o lo g y to build 12 nuclear plants in the next fe w years R eagan 's trip to C hina is v iew ed as ev id e n c e o f a profound ch an ge in atti­ tude — a recogn ition that norm al rela­ tions w ith P ek in g, w h ich he bitterly o p p o se d , has yield ed rich e co n o m ic and strategic b en efits w ithout jeopard­ izin g T aiw an . 150 miles CANADA LñOntario U nited Press In tern ation al H O N O L U L U — T h e U n i t e d S ta te s and C hina have n e g o ti a te d a n u c le a r coop eration agreem en t an d are e x p e c t ­ ed to an n ou n ce the b r e a k t h r o u g h d u r ing P resident R e a g a n ’s visit later this w e ek , sen ior a d m i n i s t r a t i o n o fficials said M onday. T he o ffic ia ls , tr a v e li n g w ith the presidential en tou rage to C h i n a , i n d i ­ cated the pact is all but si g n e d a nd sealed , d esp ite an e a r l ie r im p a s s e o v e r the handling o f any a to m i c fuel used in U . S . -built nu clear re a c to rs . “ T he n eg o tia tio n s ha v e b e e n p a i n ­ ful and e x c r u c ia tin g ," o n e official said. " B u t a n a g r e e m e n t is at h a n d . " I he d i s c lo s u r e c a m e as R e a g a n and his w ife , N a n c y , sp e n t the su n. re sting up fo r the next leg o f th eir tr a n s - P a c if ic j o u r n e y — a 3 , 3 1 8 - m i l e flight T u e s d a y to G u a m — a n d their s c h e d u le d a rriv a l T h u r s d a y in P e king . tim e in W h ite H o u s e s p o k e s m a n R o b e rt Sim s d e c l i n e d to c o n f i r m the n u c le a r b r e a k t h r o u g h , bu t e m p h a s i z e d that " w h a t e v e r is d o n e has to be c o n s is te n t w ith U . S . l a w . ” an sa id S i m s a g r e e m e n t , s u c h w h ic h w o u l d c l e a r the w a y for U . S . c o m p a n i e s to c o m p e t e fo r up to $ 2 0 billion in e s t i m a t e d outlay s fo r an a m - Casualties rise in border battle U n ited Press In tern ation al B A N G K O K . T h a i l a n d — C a m b o ­ d ia n g u e r ri l l a s c l a i m e d M o n d a y they h a v e k ille d m o r e t h a n 5 0 0 V i e tn a m e s e tr o o p s in a n i n e - d a y battle for c ontrol o f a ke y r e s i s t a n c e b a se on the T h a i- C a m b o d i a n b o r d e r. G e n . S a k S u k s a k h o n . c h i e f o f sta f f o f the K h m e r P e o p l e 's N a tio n a l L i b e r ­ atio n F r o n t , sa id V i e tn a m e s e f o r c e s h a v e s u f f e r e d m o r e than 5 0 0 d e a d a nd 3 0 0 w o u n d e d sin c e A pril 15. w h e n H a n o i l a u n c h e d a m a j o r o f f e n s i v e a g a in s t K P N L F m ilita ry h e a d q u a r te r s at A m p il. 120 m ile s east o f B a n g k o k . S a k sa id 22 K P N L F f igh te rs h a v e b e e n k ille d a n d 101 w o u n d e d in the battle fo r A m p i i . a s p r a w l i n g b o r d e r c a m p e v a c u a t e d by 3 6 , (XX) C a m b o d i ­ an r e fu g e e s last w e e k w h e n the V i e t ­ n a m e s e b e g a n th e ir b ig g es t m ilitary p u sh o f the c u r r e n t d ry se a so n . A f t e r a w e e k o f s k i r m is h e s . Sak sa id his fig h te rs S u n d a y l a u n c h e d a m a j o r c o u n t e r a t t a c k on V i e tn a m e s e fo r c e s w h o h a d s u r r o u n d e d A m p il. T h e g u e r ri l l a s said they re c a p tu r e d B e o u n g A m p i l . a sm all lake 2 m ile s w e st o f A m p i l the V i e t ­ n a m e s e at th e b e g in n i n g o f their o f ­ fe n siv e. t a k e n by T h a i m ilita r y s o u r c e s w e r e un a b le figures to to c o n f i r m K P N L F casualty but sa id h a v e b r o k e n o u t o f A m p il. the g u e r rilla s a p p e a r e d F ig h tin g c o n t i n u e d M o n d a y , w h e n K P N L F fo rc e s s u f fe re d fo u r d e a d a nd 2 0 w o u n d e d as th e y a d v a n c e d on V i e t n a m e s e p o s i t io n s d e f e n d e d by 82 m m m o r ta r s , r o c k e t - p r o p e l l e d g r e ­ n a d e s a n d 130 m m a rtille ry , the s o u r c ­ es said. T h e y sa id V i e t n a m e s e artillery a ls o fired into N o n g C h a n , a r e fu g e e c a m p a n d r e s i s t a n c e b a s e 12 m ile s s o u t h ­ four o f A m p i l , w o u n d i n g w e st K P N L F g u e r rilla s. W e s te r n r e li e f o f f ic ia ls at the b o r ­ d e r said a b o u t 6 0 , (XX) C a m b o d i a n c i ­ vilia n s w e r e p r e p a r e d to flee a cro ss th e b o r d e r into T h a i l a n d fr o m N o n g C'han a n d the n e a r b y c a m p at N o n g S a m e t it the V i e t n a m e s e sh e llin g c o n ­ tin u e d . A n o t h e r 8 0 , 0 0 0 r e f u g e e s h a v e a l­ ready b e e n g r a n te d t e m p o r a r y re fu g e in T h a i l a n d sin c e H a n o i 's o f f e n s i v e b e g a n . n u m b e r b e li e v e d T h e a n t i - c o m m u n i s t K P N L F g u e r ­ a b o u t to rillas. 12.(XX), are a llie d w ith the c o m m u n i s t K h m e r R o u g e a n d a royalist fa ction loyal to P rin c e N o r o d o m S i h a n o u k in a c o a l i ti o n g o v e r n m e n t p l e d g e d to d r iv e out H a n o i ' s 1 8 0 . 0 0 0 - s t r o n g o c ­ c u p a t i o n a rm y . A V i e t n a m e s e i n v a s io n , b a c k e d by the S o v i e t U n i o n , d r o v e the K h m e r R o u g e f r o m P h n o m P e n h in J a n u a r y 1979. T h e K h m e r R o u g e still are r e c ­ o g n i z e d by the U n ite d N a tio n s as C a m b o d i a ’s l e g itim a te g o v e r n m e n t . In W a s h i n g t o n , the State D e p a r t ­ m e n t said M o n d a y V i e t n a m e s e a tta ck s on C a m b o d i a n r e fu g e e c a m p s in T h a i ­ land arc e v i d e n c e that V i e t n a m , s u p ­ p o r te d by the S o v i e t U n i o n , " c o n t i n ­ ues in S o u t h e a s t A s i a . ' ' to s e e k a m il i ta ry s o l u t io n in T h e d e p a r t m e n t , a p r e p a r e d s t a t e m e n t , c a l l e d on the S o v ie t U n io n to su p p o r t a p o litic a l s e t tl e m e n t, c o n ­ sistent w ith a U n ite d N a t io n s - s u p p o r t - e d f o r m u la . " T h e U n i t e d Sta te s s u p p o rts the e f ­ forts o f the A s s o c i a t i o n o f S o uth East A s ia n N a t io n s ( A S E A N ) to a c h i e v e a political s o l u t io n to the K a m p u c h e a n ( C a m b o d i a n ) p r o b l e m , b a se d o n the total w i t h d r a w a l o f V i e t n a m e s e t r o o p s an d the r e s t o r a t io n o f s e l f - d e t e r m i n a ­ tio n f o r the K h m e r p e o p le t h r o u g h in­ t e r n a tio n a l s u p e r v i s e d e l e c t i o n s , ” the d e p a r t m e n t said. " V i e t n a m , th e U . S . S R . . has r e je c te d suc h a se t tl e ­ m e n t a n d c o n t i n u e s to seek a m ilita ry s o l u t io n w h i c h w o u l d c o n s o l id a t e its d o m i n a t i o n o f K a m p u c h e a . s u p p o r t e d by T h e d e p a r t m e n t sa id S ta te s will A S E A N ' s e ffo rt s . c o n t i n u e the U n ite d s u p p o rt to WEST VIRGINIA s WASHINGTON D.C. \ VIRGINIA N E W ® JERSEY deLaWARS Atlantic WceanM Pennsylvania quake United Press International A f t e rs h o c k s o f a m ild e a r t h q u a k e in so uth c en tral Phila- dish e s S u n d a y , w a s felt in six sta te s f r o m New Y ork to d e lp h i a that re g is te r e d 4 . 1 o n the R i c h t e r S c a le c o n t i n u e d V irg in ia , a U . S . G e o l o g ic a l S e r v i c e s p o k e s m a n sa id. N o M o n d a y . The t r e m o r , w h i c h s h o o k h o m e s a n d rattled inju ries o r m a j o r d a m a g e s w e r e r e p o rte d . Teachers’ union accuses Reagan of inadequate funding U nited Press International t e a c h e r s ' W A S H I N G T O N — A m e r i c a ' s l a r g e st u n i o n M o n d a y a c c u s e d P r e sid e n t R e a g a n o f p e r p e t u ­ ating " e d u c a t i o n a l d i s a r m a m e n t " bv r e d u c in g the fe d era l sh a re o f p u b lic sc hoo l f i n a n c in g to the l o w e s t level in nearly 20 y e ars. T h e N a tio n a l E d u c a ti o n A s s o c i a ­ tion , in a re p o rt b a s e d o n f ig u re s from state d e p a r t m e n t s o f e d u c a t i o n , said the federal sh a re is e x p e c te d to be 6 . 4 pe r c e n t this s c h o o l y e a r , the sm allest since 1964-65. M a ry F utrell, h e a d o f the 1.7 m i l ­ l i o n - m e m b e r u n io n , said the figures are e v i d e n c e R e a g a n , w h i l e c a l l in g for b e tte r s c h o o l s , h a s fa iled to p r o v id e the n e e d e d d o l la rs . T h e N E A has e n d o r s e d D e m o c r a t W a lte r M ó n d a l e for p r e s i d e n t , h a v in g r e p e a te d ly c r it i c i z e d R e a g a n on i n a d e ­ q ua te fo r e d u c a ti o n a l p u r ­ pose s. f u n d i n g She told a n e w s c o n f e r e n c e R e a g a n has c o n t i n u e d the " u n i l a t e r a l e d u c a ­ tional d i s a r m a m e n t " c it e d in a 1983 report b \ the N a t io n a l C o m m i s s i o n on E x c e ll e n c e in E d u c a ti o n that tr ig g e re d a m o u n t i n g c a m p a i g n to u p g r a d e schoo ls " I n a nut sh e ll, the R e a g a n a d m i n ­ istration is p r o p o s i n g a n d a d v o c a ti n g that w e c o n ti n u e this q u o t e - u n q u o t e unila teral act o f d i s a r m a m e n t by not p ro p e rly f u n d in g e d u c a ti o n a n d by not i m p l e m e n t i n g " n e e d e d a n d c o s tly r e ­ f o r m s , she sa id. Futrell a p p la u d e d the R e a g a n a d ­ m in istr a tio n fo r f o c u s i n g a tte n ti o n on s c h o o ls , but sa id it n o w m u s t b a ck w o rd s with dolla rs. T h e N E A repo rt s h o w e d the a v e r ­ ag e salary o f a c la s s r o o m t e a c h e r this sc h ool y e a r is e x p e c t e d to rise 6 . 3 p e r ­ c e n t, from $ 2 0 , 7 1 5 to $ 2 2 , 0 1 9 . T h e sa lary hike is a b o v e the p r o ­ j e c t e d in fla tio n rate fo r that p e r io d . but the N E A n o te d that t e a c h e r s ' p u r ­ ch a s in g p o w e r will still be 6 p e rc e n t b e lo w w h a t it w a s a d e c a d e a g o . Futrell h a s c a lle d f o r an a v e r a g e starting t e a c h e r sa lary o f $ 2 0 , 0 0 0 to $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 , w ith fig ure o f a b o u t $ 3 5 , 0 0 0 fo r e x p e r i e n c e d te a c h e rs . a T h e N E A re p o rt a ls o f o u n d that per pupil e x p e n d i t u r e is e x p e c t e d to rise 7 .8 p e r c e n t, the s m a lle s t in c re a s e in m o re th an a d e c a d e , f r o m $ 2 , 9 4 4 to $ 3 , 1 7 3 . T h e N E A s tu d y sa id the e s t im a te d federal sh a re o f f u n d in g o f p u b lic s c h o o ls , e le m e n t a r y a n d s e c o n d a r y , is e x p e c te d to be 6 . 4 p e rc e n t this s c h o o l y e ar, o r $ 8 . 2 b illio n , d o w n f r o m 6 . 8 p e rce n t in 1982-83. T h a t w o u l d be the sm a lle st fe dera l sh a re s in c e 1 96 4 -6 5 . w h e n it w a s 3 .8 p e r c e n t. T h e fe deral sh a re w a s 8 . 7 p e r c e n t w h e n R e a g a n took o ff ic e in J a n u a ry 1981. by S in c e r e le a s e o f the 1983 " N a t i o n r e p o rt, w h ic h fo u n d s c h o o l s at R i s k ’ o f " r i s i n g e n g u lt e d ra is e d m e d i o c r i t y , " 47 states h a v e high sc h o o l g r a d u a t io n r e q u i r e m e n t s a nd m o re th a n h a l f h a v e i n c r e a s e d t a x ­ es to b o o s t s c h o o l b u d g e ts . tide a Vegas negotiators say end of strike possible U n ited P ress International L A S V E G A S , N e v . — U n ion lead ­ ers said M onday the len gthy strike by thou san ds o f w orkers against Las V e g a s c a sin o s cou ld be c o m in g to an end. " W e are w ithin c ro ssin g the ‘t’s i s o f se ttlin g ," said and dottin g the J e ff M c C o ll. seeretary-treasurer o f C ulinary L ocal 2 2 6 . " O n c e a H ilton contract is app roved I b e lie v e m ost o f the other h otels w ill take a look at is a what is w orked out and say decen t c o n tr a ct." it Intense n egotiation s w ere under w ay w ith tw o huge Las V eg a s H iltons w h ich p rovide m ore than 4 0 percent o f the in co m e for the entire H ilton e m ­ pire. T he strike by 1 7 ,0 0 0 h o tel-ca sin o w orkers w a s in its 22nd day as H ilton e x e c u tiv e s and n egotiators for the bar­ tenders and culin ary un ions sch ed u led a fourth straight night o f talks M on ­ day. N e g o tia tio n s r ecessed shortly b e­ fore m idnigh t Easter Sunday — the tourists by h olid ay d am p en ed for lin es alon g picket the Strip w here strikers c o p e d w ith the desert heat by w earin g broad-brim m ed Easter b o n ­ nets and shorts. T here have been no recent incid en ts o f v io le n c e su ch as those w h ich o c ­ curred the w alkou t and brought nearly 4 0 0 arrests. early in langu age M cC oll said tw o issu es rem ain — bell captain tips and so- c a lle d " m e - t o ” contracts — before the H ilton m on ey package is c o n sid ­ ered. T he last kn ow n m anagem en t o f ­ fer w a s for $ 1 .3 4 an hour increases ov e r a fiv e-y e a r period. T he union had dem an d ed $ 1 .9 4 an hour o v er a four- year period. M cC oll the H ilton p ackage con tain s a 3 0 -d ay no-strike cla u se and retains w ork w eek guarantees w h ich the N evad a Resort A sso c ia tio n had sou ght to e lim in a te entirely. said M cC oll said a contract draft by C aesars P alace H otel w ou ld be c o n ­ sidered o n c e n egotiation s co n clu d ed w ith the Las V e g a s and F lam in go H il­ tons. M ore than h a lf o f the H ilto n ’s 6 .0 0 0 e m p lo y e e s are union w orkers. Protesters in court United Press International M em b ers ot the ‘P L O W S H A R E 8 ’ raise th e ir h a n d s in unity during their initial c o u rt a p p e a ra n c e in O r l a n d o . Fla. M artin M arietta d e fe n se plant in O rlando Sunday and sm earin g b lood o v e r P ersh in g-2 m issile co m p o n en ts to M on d ay. T he group was a rre ste d afte r b r e a k i n g in to the protest the basin g o f the m issile s in Europe. NEWS IN BRIEF From Texan news services Easter recess ends; Congress to face deficit, foreign aid in W A S H IN G T O N — C o n g ress re­ turns from its E aster r ecess T u esd ay to face the p o litic a lly potent issu es o f aid to Central A m erica and cutting budget d e fic its this e le ctio n year. But law m ak ers, w h o h ave sch ed u led am ­ ple tim e to cam p aign in their hom e d istricts, w ill be o f f to a slo w start. T he H o u se agen d a lists an A rctic re­ search bill as its first item , and Senate aides said M on d ay work on the fiscal 19 8 5 bu dget resolu tion and on d eficit- red uction m easu res sh ould top the list. Nicaraguan troops kill 25 M A N A G U A , N icaragua — N icara­ troops killed 25 guan g overn m en t U .S .-b a c k e d reb els and w ou n d ed at least 35 others in tw o c la sh e s in the c o u n tr y 's northern p ro v in ces, the o f fi­ c ia l S an d in ista n ew sp ap er said M on ­ d ay. O n the Salvad oran war front, l ,2(K) go v ern m en t troops launched a drive against leftist reb els w h o the arm y feared w ou ld attack the c o u n ­ try's n ew est h yd roelectric dam , m ili­ tary o ffic e r s said. 2 0 , 0 0 0 c h e e r in g F e r d i n a n d M a r c o s Opponent warns Marcos M A N I L A , P h i l ip p i n e s — A n e s t i ­ s u p p o r t e r s m a t e d M o n d a y j a m m e d a s u b u r b a n c o li s e u m l e a d e r w a rn to h e a r an o p p o s i t io n P r e s i d e n t that “ c h a o s m a y f o l l o w " if f r a u d o c c u r s in p a r l i a m e n t a r y e le c t i o n s next m o n th . M il it a ry r e p o rts r e a c h e d the c a p i t a l , m e a n w h i l e , that a to w n m a y o r w as sh o t a n d killed w h ile a tt e n d in g E a s te r S u n d a y s e rv i c e s . L oca l te le v is io n r e ­ po rts sa id that the o fficial w a s a " p o s ­ sible v i c t i m o f p o litica l v i o l e n c e . " Candidates campaigning N E W Y O R K , N Y. — W a l t e r M ó n d a l e p r o s p e c t e d f o r m o re high- p o w e r e d e n d o r s e m e n t s , J e s s e J a c k s o n g o t a q u a l i f i e d p le d g e in his se a rc h for m o r e D e m o c r a t i c d e le g a t e s a n d U .S . S e n . G a r y H a r t fo u n d a r e c e p ti v e a u ­ d i e n c e f o r a n e w atta ck o n o ld -sty le p o litic s M o n d a y . A f te r a p r e -E a s t e r w e e k o f lim ite d a c tiv ity , all three c o n ­ te n d e r s w e re o n the r o a d a n d in full c ry as the c r u c ia l e arly M a y p r i m a r i e s a n d a p p r o a c h e d . T e x a s , M a r y l a n d a n d O h i o , all c h o o s i n g d e l ­ e g a t e s th e first w e e k o f M a y . are the f o c u s o f the r e n e w e d c a m p a i g n i n g . c a u c u s e s New AIDS evidence found and W A S H I N G T O N — H e a lth H u m a n S e r v i c e s S e c r e t a r y M a r g a r e t H e c k l e r a n n o u n c e d M o n d a y th ere is st r o n g n e w e v i d e n c e a v a r ia tio n o f a h u m a n c a n c e r v iru s is the c a u s e o f the d e a d l y s y n d r o m e A I D S , w h i c h has c l a i m e d m o r e th a n 1.7(X) lives. T h e n e w l y d i s c o v e r e d virus is n a m e d H T L V - I 1 I , f o r h u m a n T -ce li ly m p h o - tr o p h ic viru s, a m e m b e r o f the retro- \ i r u s f a m i l y , w h i c h has b e en u n d e r s u s p i c i o n as a c a u s e o f A I D S , o r a c ­ q u i r e d i m m u n e d e f ic ie n c y s y n d r o m e , sin c e 1981. Leak delays further tests p o w e r plant w a s A V I L A B E A C H . C a lif . — A c o o ­ lant lea k f o r c i n g a n o th e r d e la y in low- level te s ti n g at the D ia b lo C a n y o n n u ­ a m i n o r c l e a r i n c o n v e n i e n c e that w o u l d hav e p o se d n o d a n g e r if the plant had b e en o p e r a ­ t in g , a fe d era l o ff ic ia l said M o n d a y . T h e le a k , d i s c o v e r e d F rid a y by e n g i ­ n e e r s w h o w e r e h e a tin g the w a t e r c i r ­ c u l a t i n g in the p l a n t ’s U n it I re a c to r, i n v o lv e d a failure in a r u b b e ri z e d seal, sa id o f f i c i a l s for P a c ific G a s & E l e c ­ tric C o . , o w n e r o f the $ 4 .9 billion p l a n t o n the c e n tr a l C a li f o r n i a c o as t. Court rulings vary that said a W A S H I N G T O N — T h e S u p r e m e C o u r t M o n d a y u p h e ld a l o w e r c o urt ru l in g that said p ro b a ti o n a r y t e a c h e rs h a v e c o n s t i t u t i o n a l l y p r o t e c te d rights s c h o o l b o a r d s to e m p l o y m e n t that in a n o th e r m u s t h o n o r . T h e c o u rt, c a s e , v o t e d 6-3 to o v e r tu r n a F lo rid a r u lin g legal, w a rr a n tle s s s e a r c h o f a c a r d u ri n g an arrest d o e s no t a l l o w p o l ic e the c a r a g a i n late r w i t h o u t a w a rr a n t . In yet o t h e r a c t i o n , the c o u rt let sta n d a r u l ­ in g a ll o w i n g a T e x a s p a r o le e to sue his p a r o le o f f i c e r for m is ta k e n ly o r ­ d e r i n g h i m j a i l e d . Stocks sink in late trades to s e a rc h in slu g g ish N E W Y O R K — The stock m arket, after w an dering a im le ssly m ost o f the d a y , d e v e lo p e d a late sin k in g spell that drove prices broadly low er M o n ­ day trading. T he D o w Jon es industrial average lost 8 .5 8 to 1 ,1 4 9 .5 0 . T he N e w York Stock E x ­ c h a n g e index dropped 0 .6 6 to 9 0 .2 3 and the price o f an average share d e ­ c rea sed 23 cen ts. D e c lin e s topped ad­ v a n c e s 1 ,0 6 1 -5 3 7 am on g the 2 ,0 1 4 is­ su es traded. B ig Board v o lu m e totaled the 7 3 .0 8 0 .0 0 0 sh ares, d o w n 7 5 .6 8 0 .0 0 0 traded T hursday. from WORLD & NATION The Daffy Texan/Tuesday, April 24,1964/Page 7 Coal, postal unions begin negotiations United Press International W A S H IN G T O N Contract nego­ tiations tor the I S Postal Service and the soft coal industry open Tues day with leaders of 602.(XX) mail de­ liverers and postal workers and 160.(XX) miners prepared to take strike action United Mine Workers President Richard Trumka has thrown a new twist into talks with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association, by aban­ doning the union's "n o contract, no w o rk " tradition, prepanne instead for selective strikes financed with a mul- timillion-dollar strike fund A selective strike is one called by a union against only certain companies, while workers at other firms covered by the same contract continue on the job. Jr Trumka. the young lawyer-miner in is conducting his first major who unseated Sam Church 1982. contract negotiations with the Bitumi nous Coal Operators Association, and has set up the union's first pre-negoti­ ations strike fund, a $70 million war chest based on a 2 5 percent assess­ ment against miners' wages in Pittsburgh The U M W convention last Decem­ ber issued a sternly worded bargaining policy — " N o backward steps, no takeaway con­ tracts Strikes by postal unions are illegal because they involve federal workers, but that has not stopped a strike threat. Letter Carriers President Vincent Sombrotto said he would call his members out on an illegal strike against the nation's mail system this summer if an acceptable agreement is not reached, and the American Postal Workers Union has been equally m ili­ tant Joint bargaining will be conducted by the American Postal Workers U n ­ ion. which represents 301,000 clerks, maintenance employees, motor vehi­ cle operators, and special delivery messengers, and the National Associ­ ation of letter Carriers, which repre­ sents I96.(XX) city delivery letter car­ riers Both Sombrotto and Postal Workers President Moe Bille r laid down a bot­ tom line of no concessions, no give- backs. after the Postal Service Board of Governors issued a policy state­ ment directing to "seek correction of what it said is higher pay for postal workers than for comparable work in the private sector its management If an agreement is not reached by July 20. it is anticipated that a deci­ sion on an strike action would be made when the Letter Carriers and Postal Worker^ hold simultaneous conventions in Las Vegas beginning Aug. 20 Printed at gunpoint United Press International A woman of the M-19 guerrilla movement in Bogota. Colombia torces an operations Monday and forced journalists to publish 12 pages of information employee of the daily newspaper El Bogotano at gunpoint to add subversive proclamations to the paper before publication. The M-19 took over the paper s group s information. concerning the movement. The paper was printed and distributed with the 100,000 West Germans protest U.S. deployment of missiles United Press International M U T L A N G E N , W est Germany — More than 100,000 anti-nuclear dem­ onstrators marched throughout West Germany Monday, staging a token blockade at the U .S . Pershing-2 mis­ sile base at Mutlangen to wind up five days of Easter protests. An estimated 15,000 people massed at the Pershing-2 base at Mutlangen and circled the facility, clasping hands in a token blockade. Some protesters carried signs say­ ing "A m ericans go h om e." while others clutched crosses bla/oned with the names of their home towns. Another 12.0(X) anti-missile pro­ testers held hands to form a human chain around the U .S . munitions de­ pot in the Frankfurt suburb of Hausen, chanting "S to p the rockets " Holding replicas of Pershing-2 mis­ siles and banners lettered "Jo b s in­ stead of m issiles" and "S w o rd s into plowshares." they marched back to the downtown area o f the city for a rally. Demonstrators turned out in all of West Germ any's I I states Monday, climaxing five days of anti-missile protests staged by trade union, stu­ dent. religious and opposition political groups. Organizers claimed 375.(XX) people took part Monday but police estimated the turn-out at about 100,(XX). Police said there were about 15.(XX) protest­ ers in Dortmund. 6.(XX) in Hanover and 10,(XX) each in Heilbronn. West Berlin. Cologne. Munich and Nurem­ berg. Authorities said all of M onday's demonstrations were peaceful and no incidents were reported Frankfurt The headquarters of the Easter demonstrations an­ in nounced "m ore than 6e fo lk s that arc l o o k i n g at a c o n v e n t i o n c e n t e r a n d a irp o rt b e tt e r fo rg et i t . " Ci I ley said. T h e b o n d s are the first part o f the ele ctric utility d e p a r t m e n t s g e n e r a ­ in c r e a s e tion p la n to that p r o p o s e s \U'tir¡ ' ele ctric g e n e r a t i n g . a p a a t y by 1 ,6 0 0 m e g a w a t t ' by the y e a r 2 0 0 0 usin g plan*' P o w e r h i g h - g r a d e w e ste rn coal w o u l d p r o d u c e p o w e r co n stan tly w h ile the n a tu ra l g a s fired p l a n t ' w o u l d on ly be u se d d u r i n g p e r i ­ o d s o f h i g h d e m a n d . th ree reason'- A utility re p o rt T h e utility d e p a r t m e n t e s t i m a t e d the lion * >r d t ing ev - total bill at $ 2 . 8 5 b e r y th i n g a c c o r d i n g to plan issued f o r last m o n th the p r o p s e d c ite d p o w e r e x p a n s i o n d e f e a t o f the p r o ­ lignite p l a n t at the p o s e d F a y e tte 3 s u r ­ last O c t o b e r , u n c e r ta in ty polls r o u n d i n g \ u c l e a r the S o u t h T e x a s Proje ct a n d c o n ti n u e d r a p id g r o w t h in Austin Martina Langley recounts Central American trip. Carrie Robertson, Daily Texan Staff City Council searches for money to show government proceedings By JOHN JENKS D aily Texan S ta ff A u s ti n A u s t i n 's televTses a w i d e r a n g e o f city g o v e r n m e n t p r o c e e d i n g s o n c a b l e c h a n n e l 6 but the C i ty C o u n c i l h a s n 't f ig u re d o u t how to pay for it. c a b l e an d b u d g e t o f f i c e M o n d a y g a v e the c o u n ­ cil w id e ly d i f f e r i n g r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s o n how to g e t the h a l f - m i ll i o n d o l la r s n e e d e d to set up m u n ic i p a l p r o g r a m ­ m in g w ith its o w n e q u i p m e n t an d staff. c o m m i s s i o n U ntil the c o u n c i l m a k e s the d e c i ­ s io n , e m p l o y e e s o f the city p u b lic i n ­ f o r m a t i o n o f f i c e , s u p p l e m e n t e d by v o l u n te e r s , will te le v is e city g o v e r n ­ m e n t b o r r o w e d e q u i p m e n t p r o c e e d i n g s w ith T h e o ff i c e a lre ady t e l e v is e s c o u n c i l m e e t in g s , m a n y b o a r d a n d c o m m i s ­ sion m e e t in g s a n d a w e ekly show with M a y o r R o n M u l l e n M a n a n n W i z a r d , c h a i r w o m a n o f the c a b l e c o m m i s s i o n , to ld the c o u n c i l the city s h o u l d get $ 4 7 2 . 0 0 0 f r o m the f ra n c h i s e fe e s the c it y c o ll e c t s f r o m A u s tin C a b l e V i s i o n . C a b l e V i s i o n p a y s A u s ti n 5 p e r c e n t o f its a n n u a l g r o s s r e v e n u e s as its fee fo r an e x c l u s i v e fr a n c h i s e . In fiscal y e a r 1 9 8 3 - 8 4 th a t 5 p e r c e n t will ad d ‘ W e fe e l we cannot plan un­ less we know what funds to plan f o r , ’ — M ariann W izard , cable commission chairwoman u p to $ 1.2 m illio n T h e city n e e d s $ 3 9 7 . 0 0 0 to buy c a b l e a n d $ 3 3 , 0 0 0 to hire a n d pay t h re e p e o p le for the r e m a i n d e r o f the fiscal y e a r e q u i p m e n t t e l e v i s i n g T h e c a b l e c o m m i s s i o n r e q u e s t e d m o re b e c a u s e it in c l u d e d s a la rie s t o r a full y e ar. A f t e r the initial e q u i p m e n t in v e s t ­ m e n t . the c ity will n e e d $ 8 6 . (XX) a n ­ nually f o r sa laries a n d e m p l o y e e b e n e ­ fits. W i z a r d said re li a n c e o n f r a n c h i s e f e e s w o u l d g ive the c a b l e o f fi c e a r e li ­ ab le s o u r c e o f f u n d in g “ W e feel w e c a n n o t p la n u n le s s w e k no w w h a t fu n d s to p la n f o r . ' W i z a r d said. But the city b u d g e t o f f i c e r e c o m ­ m e n d e d p a y i n g only sa laries a n d o t h e r p e r s o n n e l c o s t s ou t o f the f r a n c h i s e fees. B u d e e t O f f i c e r G l e n n Bell said b e ­ c a u s e the e n tire $ 1 . 2 m illio n now goes into the c i t y ’s g e n e ra l f u n d , s p e n d i n g $ 3 9 6 . 0 0 0 t o r c a b l e e q u i p m e n t w o u l d m a k e a s e r i o u s d e n t in the c i t y ' s e n d ­ ing b a la n c e T h e city u se s th e e n d i n g b a la n c e as a b u f f e r b e t w e e n a n n u a l a l­ lo ca tio n s G l e n n a ls o said m o n ey fo r e q u i p ­ m en t s h o u l d c o m e fr o m f u n d s set up specifically fo r that p u r p o s e “ W e w a n t to s p r e a d the c o s t s to the a p p r o p r i a te fu n d s . Bell sa id But the 5 to c h a r g e C a b l e V i s i o n p e rc e n t fee. A u s tin h a d to apply f o r a sp ecial w a i v e r fro m the F e d e r a l C o m ­ m u n i c a t i o n s C o m m i s s i o n T h e F C C has not a c t e d o n the a p p li c a t io n I n d e r the te r m s o f the w a i v e r . \ « i - tin w o u l d sp e n d all f r a n c h i s e f e e s on c a b l e - r e l a t e d p u r p o s e s C u r r e n tl y the city s p e n d s only 2 5 p e r c e n t o f the fee re c e ip ts — $ 3 0 0 , 0 0 0 — o n c a b l e p u r ­ p o s e s . C o u n c i l m a n R o g e r D u n c a n said that s h o u l d c h a n g e “ I thin k all the fees s h o u l d be >pent o n c a b l e . D u n c a n said T h e c o u n c il will d e c i d e w h e r e the f u n d s for t e l e v is in g city g o v e r n m e n t will c o m e f ro m at its M ay 3 m e e u n e BALFOUR HOUS€ 811 W. 24th St. in Tri-Towers Bldg. 469-9505 Jewelry — Sportswear — Party Favors GO BANANAS HALF PRICE BURGERS Wednesday Nights 5 until 11:30 Restaurant & Bar 1601 Guadalupe 476-7202 TOEFL WORKSHOP BEGINNING MAY 14 — MORNING CLASSES — 4 WEEK INTENSIVE COURSE AUTHORIZED UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO ENROLL NON-IMMIGRANT ALIEN S T U D E N T S I-20 FORM DURHAM-NIXON CLAY COLLEGE 119 W. 8th, 2nd Floor 4 7 8 -1 6 0 2 L o w s r L e v e l D o b ie M a l l 477-8766 0 OFF Regular i$2 of Com plete Styling (Shampoo, Cut & Blow Dry] Price Good until A pril 28, 1984 Good until A pril 28, 1984 j I I | I I I | | j COUPON Half Shirts in Stock Buy One - Get One for l< ! COUPON Russell Cotton Twill | Sl .Nylon shell shorts | j with pockets i m S i i h S Buv one get one for $ I. COUPON Russell Sweat Pants with pocket Buy one get one for $ I. COUPON Russell Sleeveless Sweatshirts in Stock Buy one get one for $ 1. COUPON Summer Sweat Pants in Slock Buv one get one for $ 1. COUPON Russell Cotton Twill Shorts 1.00 off Good until A pril 28, 1984 Good un til A pril 28, 1984 | Good until A p ril 28.1984 | Good un til A p ril 28, 1984 | 0 ^ L v w / c o u p o n — o n * p e r c u s to m e r "S. Hours: Mon.-Pri. 9 30-7 30 S o t 9 3 0 - 5 0 0 Waiting for Hart D avid Cortner, Daily Texan S taff Stu d en ts a n d fa c u lty line up to se e a n d h e a r D e m o c r a t i c p r e sid e n tia l c a n d i ­ date U . S . S e n . G a r y Hart at the L B J a u d it o r i u m M o n d a y T h e s p e e c h m arked H a r t 's s e c o n d sto p at the U n i v e r is ty d u r i n g his c a m p a i g n s w in g through T e x a s . VACATION TIME AGAIN SELECT YOUR STORAGE SPACE NOW 52 8 UNITS BEN WHITE SELF STORAGE 4 0 5 E. BEN WHITE BLVD. QFF IH-35 VARIOUS SIZES 5x5, 5x10. 10x10, 10x15, 10x20 REASONABLE RATES SECURITY FENCED ON SITE MANAGER DRIVE TO YOUR UNIT NO HALLWAY CARRYING 441-9463 Hook-em Horns P ig» 10/Ttw M y TmaiVTuMday, April 24,1984 BUSINESS New Wang computer can digitize images Bv STEPHEN BONIN By STEPHEN BONIN Daily Texan Staff In an effort to make its presence known in the computer market, representatives o f W a n g L a b oratories Inc. previewed its new Professional Image Computer (PIC) to the Austin media Monday. A desktop unit, the PIC uses a camera-like scanner to digitize images from a sheet of paper. The system also utilizes a high-resolution moni­ tor for image display and a desktop thermal printer for hard copy. This revolutionary capacity allows PIC to reproduce a variety of graphic information — including pictures, handwritten notes, margin notations on correspondence, drawings and text. A Wang spokesman emphasized the benefit of reproducing signatures on official documents For this and other uses, Sam Ha l l , a s si st a nt dean for placement and business affairs with the UT School of Law, said he foresees the law school purchasing a Professional Image C o m ­ puter. “ Wang has the slickest word-processing s y s ­ tem on the m arket,” Hall said. The law schl implemented Wang's 2 VS 100 super mini-computer system last August with a purchase of 105 terminals. Each full-time faculty member uses a terminal. Hall said the system's main benefit is the ca­ pacity for higher productivity. “ Some faculty say they’re up 50 percent in productivity,” he said While the faculty’s workload has increased. Hall said the secretaries’ traditional workload has decreased. This pattern has ensured the need lor the same number o f personnel. Headquartered in Lowell, Mass., Wang is one of the leading suppliers of computer-based off­ ice automation systems which span six technolo­ gies: data processing, word processing, image processing, audio processing, networking and human factors. Currently ranked 264 in total revenue among the Fortune 500, Wang accumulated $1.5 billion in 1983. This sum is a 33 percent increase over fiscal 1982 figures o f $1.15 billion. Wang is ranked 227 among the Fortune 500 companies for sales figures, which are ap­ proaching $2 billion. Wang Laboratories was chartered in 1951. In ^ ^ its first three years, it created specialty products, including the electronic scoreboard at Shea Sta­ dium in New York City In the 1960s the com ­ pany specialized in calculators, and in the 1970s it emerged as one of the world s leading s u p pliers of word-processing systems and as the No. 2 company in small business computers. In Texas, Wang earned $90 million in 1983 orders, said Sandy Gilbert, district manager tor the com pany's Houston region, which covers marketing activities in Beaumont. San Antonio. Austin and Houston. Seminars for Austin businesses are being con­ ducted at the Austin Hyatt Regency Hotel, 208 Barton Springs Road, and will continue through Wednesday. NEWS IN BRIEF From Texan news services Shell committee asks stockholders to reject offer HOUSTON — A shareholders committee o f Shell Oil Monday scheduled meetings in Houston to urge minority stockholders of Shell Oil to reject a tender offer to sell their stock to the Royal Dutch Shell Group o f London. James H. McElroy, of the Share­ holders Consulting Group and the Shell Oil Shareholders Committee, said the meetings are designed to urge Shell Oil stockholders to “ refrain” from tendering their stock to Royal Dutch Shell for the $58 a share being offered by Shell's parent company. McElroy said shareholders should consider their options, including an opportunity for a Delaware Court to appraise the value o f their shares. Un der Delaware law. he said stockhold­ ers in a merger have the opportunity to obtain a court-determined price for their stock. the The stock has been appraised at $80 to $85 a share by Goldman Sachs & Company, investment banking firm for Shell’s board o f directors, McElroy said. Bechtel denies charges SEOUL, South Korea — Bechtel Corp. and its consultant Yoon Sik Cho, in formal statements Monday, denied charges the construction firm bribed South Korean officials to ob­ tain nuclear power contracts. The accusations appeared last week in M other Jones, a San Francisco- based magazine, and the M ultination­ al M onitor, published in Washington. They said American law enforcement agencies had been investigating the matter since last year. “ The reports regarding alleged im­ proper conduct in business dealings by Bechtel in Korea are extremely se­ rio u s,” Bechtel said in a statement dated Saturday but distributed by its Seoul office Monday. “ Bechtel’s policy regarding ethical business conduct is very clear and prohibits any illegal payment to any­ one. This policy is vigorously and strictly enforced.” Cho, a Korean-American consult­ ant alleged to have arranged a series of pay-offs to government officials, said the magazines were guilty of “ very serious misrepresentations." The U.S. Justice Department and the FBI have withheld comment on the reports that Bechtel, a San Fran­ cisco-based conglomerate, is under in­ vestigation for violation of the 1977 Foreign Corrupt Business Act. The stories said Bechtel had no suc­ cess pursuing nuclear power contracts in South Korea until it hired Cho, who apparently had good contacts within the Seoul government. Reveo agrees to terms T W IN SBURG , Ohio — Reveo D.S. Inc. Monday announced it has reached a $113.5 million agreement to acquire Odd Lot Trading Inc., an East Coast wholesaler and retailer of close­ out consumer goods. Reveo will issue 4.4 million shares of its common stock to acquire Odd Lots’ 58 retail stores in metropolitan areas ot New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Connecticut. The acquisition is subject to federal gov­ ernment approval. The stores sell a variety of non­ clothing consumer goods consisting of manufacturers’ overruns, close-outs and discontinued items. The acquisition is “ a logical diver­ sification move because its business is closely related and complementary to our drug store business,” Reveo chairman Sidney Dworkin said “ More importantly, it will enable us to significantly expand our stake in a fast-growing niche of off-price re­ tailing, a market that would be diffi­ cult and costly for us to enter on an internal start-up basis,” he said U.S. dollar strengthens T O KY O — The dollar strengthened slightly against the Japanese yen on the Tokyo Foreign Exchange Market Monday, closing at 225.03 yen, up 0.08 from Friday’s 224.95. With European financial markets closed and overseas banks closed for the Easter holidays, traders received few incentives and preferred to sit back on the sidelines, the sources said. The dollar opened marginally high­ er Monday in Tokyo at $225.05 and then edged up to the day’s high of $225.2 0, banking sources said. Trading by both domestic banks and exporters was restrained and the dollar fluctuated narrowly between $224.97 and $225.20 compared to $224.90 and $225.20 Friday, they said. Money marketeer to repay funds United Press International SAN DIEGO — Fugitive money markets speculator J. David Dominelíi said from his Caribbean island hidea­ way Monday he plans to resume for­ eign currency trading with $50 million put up by diehard investors. Dominelli also reiterated that he is working out details to return $112 million to 1,500 investors in his ban­ krupt J. David & Company. “ T here’s satisfaction in proving people w ro n g ,” Dominelli told the San D iego Union in discussing the plight o f his investors. “ I think there’s more satisfaction in being able to bring a little bit of peace and tranquility to people who have gone through a lot o f anguish and per­ sonal embarrassment. ‘‘I ’m going to do what I had been doing before — trade on the interna­ tional currency market. I intend to op­ erate out of here. ” isla n d Dominelli, with a staff of four in­ cluding his former secretary, Deborah Hart, was staying in a walled villa guarded by three security men at Isle’s Bay Mountain at the east end of Montserrat. T he o f f s h o r e , is “brassplate” banking center which has no extradition the United States. Montserrat authorities, worried about their international business im­ age, summoned Dominelli to a Tues­ day meeting to document his claims he can return investors' money. treaty with an A federal judge in San Diego issued a no-bail arrest warrant April 20 for Dominelli when he failed to show up at a contempt hearing and for leaving California in violation of a court or­ der. Dominelli faced a jail sentence at the contempt hearing for failure to co­ operate with a bankruptcy trustee, Louis Metzger. Metzger told the court that Dominelli had sent trustee offi­ cials on a wild goose chase to Europe seeking non-existent assets of J. Da­ vid. He said the trustees’ European mission recovered “ not one p enn y.” Dominelli asserted Monday that investors who have known him for many years have already pledged be­ tween $40 million and $50 million so he could resume operations. Company checks started bouncing in December, a run developed in Jan­ uary, and in February, investors who could not get their money out forced the firm into involuntary bankruptcy. Metzger has said that the board of Montserrat-headquartered J. David Banking has been changed to include two representatives of the trustee. He implied that this would thwart Domi­ nelli from dealing on the island. Metzger also said any investor re­ ceiving money directly from Dominel­ li could be in violation of U.S. law. Dominelli said his San Diego attor­ ney, Herbert Katz, would be contact­ ing Metzger this week on arrange­ ments for return of the funds. He said the return would be conditioned to the trustee's agreement not to publicly re­ veal the names of investors. \ 1 1984 The N ew York Times Vf \ r l f T i m x r c I »4 TO RO N TO — A sense is emerging here that many o f the bitter disputes between government and business that characterized the past decade are over. And that is likely to affect the business relationships between Cana­ da and the United States as well. Prime Minister Pierre Elliott T ru­ deau has announced his resignation, and when he leaves many o f his eco­ nomic nationalist and social interven­ tionist policies are expected to go with him. An election is expected this year. The front-runner to succeed Tru­ deau as Liberal Party leader is John Turner, a silver-haired corporate law­ yer. The leader of the opposition Pro­ gressive Conservative Party is Brian Mulroney, a former president of the Iron Ore Co. o f Canada. If elected. Turner has promised to “ slice” government programs. Mul­ look roney recently said he would closely at two Canadian programs that have particularly irked American busi­ ness executives: the plans to “ Canadi- anize” the oil industry and to police I n ro i r t n i n i a i c t m o n f foreign investment. An indication that things may al­ ready be shifting in a more pro-Amer­ ican direction came when Trudeau's government introduced legislation re­ cently allowing foreign banks to dou­ ble the size of their operations in C an­ ada. The legislation, which is virtually guaranteed to pass because of the Lib­ eral majority, would allow 58 foreign banks — of which 19 are American — to raise their share of the Canadian market to 16 percent, from 8 percent. John Altenau, president of Manufac­ turers Hanover Bank of Canada, called the move “ a positive step in the right direction.” Not all foreign banks figure to e m ­ erge winners, however. Although their share of over-all assets is small, they have concentrated their efforts on the corporate lending sector. Through price-cutting and other aggressive selling practices, they have claimed a quarter of this business It is a tough business, though. For the first quarter, the foreign banks' re­ Autocenter United Press Internationa! At this autocenter, a new concept in auto merchandising in San Francisco, the new car showrooms for eight different makes are under one roof with six of the makes imports. One of every 10 cars bought in America is sold in California, where imports now account for 50 percent of new car sales. Canadian relationships expected to improve What WilliWear? U n ited Press In tern atio n a l Willi Smith, designer for WilliWear, launches New Vork s tall-winter fashion collections 1 uesdav with tweed coat and short wool skirt worn over slim s l a c k s with ankle- high boots. Smith calls the look Sub-urban turn on equity averaged 5 percent, compared with 15.7 percent for the Big Five Canadian banks. i r “ It's pretty doubtful that they can all be successful," Gerald Braun, banking analyst for the securities firm of Richardson Greenshields of Canada Ltd., said. “ This is not such a large country.” For business people here, one thing that surely cannot get much worse is taxes. This year, the country’s tax- collecting agency has been the target of investigations, political abuse and bitter jokes. In Parliament, the government has acknowledged setting revenue quotas for investigators, awarding free gour­ met lunches to auditors who found the largest amount o f unpaid taxes, and, on one occasion, publishing the names of 107 tax evaders, even though a dozen turned out to have al­ ready been cleared ot any wrongdo­ ing. Although the top tax bureaucrat re­ cently resigned, the opposition Tories have continued to play the issue for all . ^ . . it is worth. Recently, they offered 73 recommendations for overhauling the tax system that grew out of a month­ long series of hearings across Canada. “ The first impression we had w a s the fear in which National Revenue is held by so many Canadians." Perrin Beatty, chairman of the task force, said. film training Such an attitude is certainly reflect­ ed in films produced by the tax agen­ cy. A for auditors, shown to members of Parliament not long ago, instructs employees to treat every audit as “ a fishing expedition.” But the training film pales in com pari­ son with the brazen ness of an earlier film intended for the general public but withdrawn after one showing. That film depicts a number of ordi­ nary people — a woodcutter, for ex­ ample — doing such things as not d e­ claring income from moonlighting or rent, and paying taxes late The co m ­ puter catches offenders in the act and reprimands them in an eerily gentle voice. We can put liens on your proper­ ty, seize your bank accounts.” th< the woodcutter to computer purrs Between the United States and Can ada, not everything is sweetness an*, light. There are the hogs lowans are hopping mad at an in crease in imports of Canadian pork products from 26,000 tons in 1977 ti 169.000 tons in 1982. They content that Canada is subsidizing the pig', and demanding that the Agriculture Department investigate to determine il a tariff is warranted. “ I think that it is asking too much ot United States pork producers — at a time when they are suffering from depressed hog prices and negative feeding margins — to stand aside and let subsidized Canadian hogs and pork products flow in an unrestrained man­ ner the United States,” U.S Rep. Berkley Bedell, D-I owa, ^aid into So far. Washington is not con­ vinced. The Agriculture Department says that Iowa markets more than 20 million head of hogs annually, md that in comparison Canadian bacon is just a drop in the trying pan Mead Data expects to grow ‘ 1984 The New York Times DAYTON. Ohio — The Mead Corp , while not neglecting its main business of paper and forest products, is keeping a sharp eye on the home its Mead computer market Data Central division. through two in form ation Mead Data, which last year contrib­ uted only a speck of the overall c o m ­ pany's $2.4 billion in revenues, over­ retrieval sees services: Lexis, used primarily by lawyers to research court decisions, and Nexis, used by others to research information published by magazines and newspapers The outlook for Mead Data bright­ ened late last year when it announced that its system could be used in con­ computers junction with personal made by the International Business Machines Corp. This development al­ lows Mead Data from growth of’ the home computer indus­ try. When a user calls up information on a home terminal. Mead will rack up a sale. to benefit “ IBM expects to sell 6,000 person­ al computers a d a y ,” said Paul F. Nezi, Mead D ata’s vice president for marketing. “ As the personal com put­ er business explodes. Mead Data e x ­ pects to grow with it “ Mead Data believes results will be helped by its pricing strategy, which makes it cheaper to retrieve informa­ tion at night, in off-peak hours. “ We see ourselves being a billion- dollar-a-year organization,” said Jack W. Simpson, Mead D ata’s president and a former IBM executive. Last year Mead Data's revenues were $95 million. Mead Data is counting on three fac­ tors to help it grow: it is ahead of competitors in developing a bank of data; there is a growing awareness in American business that rapid electron­ ic information retrieval can increase office productivity; and Mead is de­ veloping new services for specialty markets. Last spring, for example, the co m ­ pany started Lextat, which is intended to offer quick access to U.S. patents And on May I Mead Data will intro­ duce its Exchange service, allowing users to call up analysts’ reports done at investment firms such as Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith. Much growth is projected for the industry, which electronic retrieval now numbers about 2 8 0 companies, many of them small Mead estimates that industry sales will reach $ ; bil­ lion by 1 987, up from about SI bi l l i on in 1982. But that does not take into account the possible impact ol person­ al computers. “ I've seen some growth numbers bandied about that I w ouldn’t even r e ­ peat — they're so astronomical,” said George Adler, an analyst at Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Companv In the crowded field, he said. Mead has a head start because it has already accumulated a large data base Mead Data is constantly adding to its base with more sources of news information. The New York and Times Co is one source In February Time Inc. joined with Mead in an agreement to provide the contents of all its magazines through Mead Data’s Nexis service. Revenue growth at Mead Data averaged 42 4 percent annually from 1979 through 1983 During that peri­ od, revenues expanded to $95 million from $23 million Mead predicts $120 million for 1984. The division's pre­ tax profits typically run between 15 and 20 percent o f sales. Wallace’s radio silenced LOCAL The Daiy T g gguw day, April 24, 1964/Page 11 Absence of showers in Austin area caused by surface-wind, official says By HARRY T. M EADOWS Daily Texan S ta ff in T h e lack o f p r e c i p it a ti o n the A u s ti n a r e a is the resujt o f a dry w i n d b l o w i n g in f r o m the w e st, said D a v e O w e n s , m e t e o r o l o g i s t the U S D e p a r t m e n t o f C o m m e r c e . for T h e c ity h a s b e e n e x p e r i e n c i n g a dry spell f o r the past se v e ra l m o n t h s Dry s u r f a c e - w m d is c r e a ti n g a lo w - p re ssu re s y s te m re la tiv e ly a b s e n t o f m o is tu r e ; c o n s e q u e n t l y , the t e m p e r a ­ ture is h i g h , the h u m id i t y low a n d the rainfa ll a lm o s t nil. A1 R e d d , a f o r e c a s t e r f o r the D e ­ the o f C o m m e r c e , p a rtm e n t w i n d s f r o m th e W e s t a n d S o u t h w e s t are g e n e r a ll y w a r m b e c a u s e they blo w m a d o w n w a r d d i r e c ti o n o f f the C o l o ­ ra d o R o c k ie s sa id " A s the w i n d d r o p s o f f the R o c k ­ ies. it te n d s to w a r m u p , " R e d d said. “ D o w n s l o p i n g w i n d s s u r fa c e w in d s d o n ' t ha v e the a b ility to ga in m o is tu re b e c a u s e they d e s c e n d t o w a r d the su rfa ce w h e r e it is w a r m e r and He said the pa tte rn of p r e c i p it a ti o n is usu ally c h a n g e d by w i n d s b lo w i n g out o f the S o u th o r S o u t h e a s t o f f the is m o i s ­ G u l f o f M e x i c o T h e w in d t u re - c h a r g e d a n d a c c o u n t s the lor sn a p p i n g o f o c c a s i o n a l dry spe lls T h e A u s tin rain fall level for April is 07 low c o n s i d e r i n g the in c h e s . O w e n s is only the rate o f last o f this y e a r , as o f A pril 23. inches — very April a v e r a g e is 3 11 said. But slightly A p r i l 's 16 in ch es this m o n t h ' s rate l o w e r than S o there really is no n e e d to d e c l a r e an e m e r g e n c y just yet " O n e g o o d line o f t h u n d e r s h o w e r s c o u ld w ip e th a t (the low p r e c i p it a ti o n rate) o u t . " sa id R e d d a d d in g that al the c o n d i t i o n s h e r e are dry t h o u g h livin g c o m p a r e d just w est o f A u s tin arc g e tt i n g the bru n t of the m o is tu r e - s h o r t a g e p ro b lem s to n o r m a l , p e o p le " T h e c o n d it i o n s h e r e arc s o m e t h i n g w e ju st h a v e to d eal w i t h . " he sa id " T h i s has h a p p e n e d b e f o re a n d it r e a l ­ ly is n o th in g m a j o r W e ' v e |Ust hud s o m e very dry air an d ju st h a v e n 't ha d the m o is tu r e to p r o d u c e s h o w e r s " A b o u t 4 0 to 5 0 m i l e s w e s t , the c o n d it i o n s are w o r s e . R e d d sa id " I ' v e he ard that th eir ( w a t e r ) s t o r a g e is g e tting low R e d d said the rain s h o r t a g e is noth m g ne ar the level n e e d e d to p r e c ip ita te a d r o u g h t " A d ro u g h t is a p r o l o n g e d s h o r t a g e , a tw o - to t h r e e - y e a r th in g , he said Professor, media watcher debate advocacy, factual journalism By KELLY FRANKENY Daily Texan S ta ff A U n i v e r s i ty p r o f e s s o r a n d a m e m ­ b e r o f A c c u r a c y in the M e d i a M o n d a y s h o u l d d e b a t e d w h e t h e r h a v e the rig h t to v o ic e t h e ir o p i n i o n s o r stick so le ly to a ctu al facts. the m e d ia In a d i s c u s s i o n s p o n s o r e d by the T e x a s R e v i e w S o c ie ty a n d the T e x a s U n i o n Id e as a n d I n t e r a c t i o n s C o m m i t ­ tee, C h a r l e s W il e y a n d T o m P h ilp o tt. a ss o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r o f h is to r y , d e b a t e d t actu al j o u r n a l i s m a n d a d v o c a c y j o u r ­ n a lism . W ile y f a v o r s le a v i n g the f o r m in g o f o p i n i o n s u p to the re a d e r s an d not the j o u r n a l i s t s . " T h e ba sic issue is w h a t the m e d i a sh o u ld b e . " W ile y said. " I t h in k th ey sh o u ld be o b j e c t i v e , c le a r l y m a r k i n g e d ito r ia ls, a v o id i n g sla nts an d r e p e t i ­ tio us c o v e r a g e . Y o u s h o u l d m a k e the m e d i a y o u r in te l li g e n c e s e r v i c e . " P h ilp o tt e x p r e s s e d the d e s ire fo r a c ­ c u r a te j o u r n a l i s m , b u t a ls o u s in g the m e d i a as a " v e h i c l e " to b e tt e r u n d e r ­ sta n d a n d i n f lu e n c e w h a t h a p p e n s in the U n i t e d S ta te s. " Y o u ( W i l e y ) if the U .S . d e c l a r e d w a r . w h i c h w e h a v e n 't in 43 y e a r s , that he w h o c r it i c i z e s is B e n e d ic t A r n o l d . T h a t im p l i e d that is not so. They (the media) do a fa ir jo b from time to time ... Td like to see ju s t the facts . . . I t is possible fo r people to give facts. Like one plus one is two and is four. ’ two plus two — Charles W iley, Accuracy ____________________in the Media member Philpott said. " I f M C C . IB M o r the U . S . A d e ­ cla res s o m e t h i n g , it is up to us to u n ­ d e r s ta n d a n d in f lu e n c e in th e ir n a m e o r o u r o w n , " said P h ilp o tt. a d d in g , “ I t ’s o u r c o u n t r y , a n d the m e d ia is o u r v e h ic le. It is o u r p la c e to learn W ile v is a f o r m e r in te rn a tio n a l c o r ­ r e s p o n d e n t a n d a m e m b e r o f A I M , an o r g a n iz a t i o n f o r m e d in the late 1960s w h ic h u rg e s p e o p le to w rite to their m e d i a r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s w h e n they b e ­ lieve all facts h a v e not b e e n p re s e n t e d o r re p o rtin g is b ia s e d " I d o n 't th ink the m e d i a has d o n e a g o o d |ob on g i v in g us b a c k g r o u n d . W iley said " T h e y d o a fa ir j o b from . I ' d like t o see |ust the tim e to tim e facts It is p o s s ib le fo r p e o p le to giv e facts L ik e o n e pl us o n e is t w o a n d t w o plus t w o is f o u r , he sa id tell But Philpott c o u n t e r a c t e d I d o n t run a truth sq u a d that tells y o u w h a t is a cc u ra te an d I d o n ' t th e m (stu d e n ts i that o n e pl us o n e is t w o ,md tell t h e m to w rite it d o w n Philpott s tre s s e d is im p o rta n t to u n d e r s t a n d i n g and q u o t e d S o c r a te s as s a y i n g . " L i f e w ith o u t c n t icism is not w o rth liv ing that c r it i c i s m s im ila r p re s s u r e s a n d " W e all l ac e t o w a rd c o n f o r m i t y , o b je c tiv ity a d h e rin g to n o r m s , But w e m ust be able to let j Philpott is ail right sa id that " W e are living in a society w h e r e N o r m s w e are t a u g h t not to let g o m ust be c h a l l e n g e d an d real p o l ic i e s m ust be d e b a t e d W ile y said " T h e m e d i a m usi g iv e the five W s ( w h o , w h a t , w h e n , w h e r e a n d w h y ) a n d the H now i. an d w e m ust go e l s e w h e r e fo r o p i n i o n s Thev s h o u l d n 't be a b le t o d e f in e is s u e s a nd set a g e n d a s Philpott a g r e e d facts c a n be m a n i p ­ u late d an d the m e d i a c a n c r e a te a m a r ket fo r s t o n e s an d set a g e n d a s , a d d in g he an d W iley d o d e sire the s a m e a c ­ c u r a c y " in the m e d ia . PREREGISTRATION FOR FALL A p ril 23 — April 2 7 , 1 9 8 4 1. Pick up preregistration Course Request at v o u r major department. 2. See your adviser for course selection approval. 3. Submit your completed Course Request at the Academic Center between 8:00am and 5:00pm 4. Preregistration fee bills for the fall semester w ill be mailed to your PERMANENT address (unless local marked) in late July. 5. PAYMENT DEADLINE IS AUGUST 15,1984. OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR By GARY FULGHUM D aily Texan S ta ff The A m e r i c a n S o c i e t y o f C o m p o s ­ e rs . A u t h o r s an d P u b lish e r s h a s in­ s tructed W a l l a c e 's B ook S to re to sto p p la y in g r a d io m u sic o v e r store s p e a k ­ ers. t h e A S C A P is a c o ll e c t io n a g e n c y that acts o n b e h a l f o f the artists o n its label with m u sic o r w ritten w o r k s in the p ublic m a r k e t. T h e c o m p a n i e s are r e s p o n s ib le f o r c o ll e c t in g r o y a ltie s fo r their artists. W a l l a c e 's r e c e n tl y r e c e iv e d letters fr o m the A S C A P in fo rm i n g it that it w a s in fr in g in g on the 1976 C o p y r i g h t A c t by p l a y i n g m u s i c by m e a n s o f r a ­ d io b ra o d c a s t s o v e r l o u d s p e a k e r s fo r the e n j o y m e n t o f its pa trons. T h e letter w e nt o n to state that u n ­ less W a l l a c e ' s p u r c h a s e d a license f ro m the o r g a n i z a t i o n o r d i s c o n t i n u e d use o f the ra d io fo r public e n t e r t a i n ­ m e n t, it w o u l d be g u ilty o f u n a u t h o r ­ ized use o f a c o p y r i g h t e d m u sic a l c o m p o s it i o n . U n d e r the c o p y r i g h t law. W a l l a c e 's c o u ld tace tin e s o f $ 2 5 0 p e r s o n g up to $ 1 0 . 0 0 0 a n d u p to $ 5 0 , 0 0 0 f o r w i l l ­ ful m isu se o f the c o m p a n y ' s m u s i c . j u n k mail " T h e y sent us a letter a n d it lo o k ed like J o e a m a n a g e r at W a l l a c e 's . K e e n a n , " T h e y se nt us a n o t h e r letter an d the bo ss said, ' N o m o r e s t e r e o . ' to u s , " sa id K e e n a n said he h a d n e v e r h e a r d o f the law o r the o r g a n iz a t i o n b e f o re a nd fo u n d out o n ly r e c e n tl y afte r talk in g to v a rio u s store o w n e r s that it w a s an o b ­ scure ruling w h i c h n o r m a lly is not e n ­ forced. " E v e r y p la c e y o u g o it s e e m s like they h a v e the r a d io p l a y i n g . " K e e n a n " M y p e r s o n a l b e e f is that the said r a d i o , ' p u b l i c ' t h o u g h t , w a s a irw a v e s. A n o t h e r th in g is e m e r g e n c y th ere w a s an in c a s e b r o a d c a s t in g , e m e r g e n c y it w o u l d c o m e o v e r the ra ­ dio. w h ic h is u s e f u l , " K e e n a n said. I L etters fr o m A S C A P state that all e s t a b l i s h m e n t s are re q u ire d to pay the license tee s w h i c h vary a c c o r d i n g to the type o f b u s i n e s s , the n u m b e r o f s p e a k ers a n d the a m o u n t o f s q u a re fo o ta g e the b u s i n e s s is o c c u p y i n g . [ h e letter W a l l a c e ' s r e c e iv e d c a lle d for a fee o f $ 1 0 0 for the first three spe a k ers an d $ 2 0 fo r e ac h a d d itio n a l sp e a k e r C u r re n tl y the store has e ight s p e a k e r s, but they are not h o o k e d up at the m o m e n t . K e e n a n said. T0NITE AT TRICKY MICKEY’S while kegs last REGISTER TO WIN A SONY WALKMAN F R E E Albums Posters T-shirts Business Week Career Magazine Brought to you by: CBS Records, Business Week, Hastings ^ DELTA SIGMA PI The radio at Wallace's Book Store is off, manager Joe Keenan said. Ken Riddick, Daily Texan Staff B arry K m t te l , a s p o k e s m a n f o r A S ­ C A P . sa id that u n d e r the l a w , a store o n ly c o u ld be c h a r g e d a m a x i m u m o f $ 8 8 0 p e r y e a r fo r th e use o f m u s ic K m tte l said the s to r e a lso c o u l d be f o r c e d to p a y B r o a d c a s t M u s i c Inc an d C E S A C — w h i c h h a n d le o t h e r artists — in a d d it i o n to A S C A P if the station it u se s p la y s m u s i c f r o m the c o m p a n i e s ’ artist list J a c k D a ily , o p e r a t i o n s m a n a g e r at the U n i v e r s i ty C o - O p . said the C o - O p pays A S C A P a fee s i m il a r t o w ha t W a l l a c e 's has b e e n a s k e d to p a y . but that i t's is h i g h e r b e c a u s e the C o - O p h a s s p e a k e r s a p p r o x i m a t e l y t h r o u g h o u t the store. 21 " T h e r e ' s a p re tty o b s c u r e l a w . but i t's not v e rv w e ll e n f o r c e d , " said R o g e r G a r r e t t , sta tio n m a n a g e r at K H F 1 -F M . T h e r e a s o n f o r this lack o f e n f o r c e m e n t , he sa id , is b e c a u s e the c o m p a n y d o e s not h a v e e n o u g h p e o ­ ple to c h e c k up o n all the b u s i n e s s e s " T h e y h a v e g o t te n to w h e r e t h e y ' r e sa id B .J. f o r c r a c k i n g d o w n on A d a m s , o p e r a t i o n s m a n a g e r K N O W 7 A M - F M a n d K E Y 1 - F M . i t . " " I t ' s not the m o n e y , i t 's the p r i n c i ­ p l e , " K e e n a n said. “ A n d he (the o w n e r ) r e f u s e s to p a y it on the p r i n c i ­ ple, he sa id. But until the m a t t e r is c l e a r e d b e ­ tw e e n the t w o c o m p a n i e s . W a l l a c e ’s B o o k S t o r e will be a little bit q u i e t e r w h ile its s p e a k e r s tak e an u n s c h e d u l e d v a c a ti o n . FREE BEER A n ig h t d a n c e m e n AT W O R K ^ N a r e o s p e e d w a g o n JACKSONS £DD C H E A P T R I CK $2.00 DONATION AT THE DOOR PROCEEDS TO BENEFIT THE T.J. MARTELL FOUNDATION FOR LEUKEMIA AND CANCER RESEARCH R S H I L L TO t L H P l s AREA \ '^ a u . i. ":L Featuring ♦ Pizza 4 Strombdi é Salad t Calzone 4 8 0 - 9 9 3 3 ♦ N E X T T O C O -O P ♦ 2 2 7 0 G u a d a l u p e Pagt 12/The M y Texan/Tuesday, Apr! 24,1984 Budweiser MC SPORTS HUB... IM S BUD'S FOR YOUT M (, Of BE f RS » • A N H f Sí R B JSC h nc M C IK M T S U P M T I is a prsracordsd broadcast by lb* Division of Recreationol Sports, designed to supplement the informa­ tion on Ibis page. Information for inclusion on lb* 24 hour tap*, recorded each Tuesday, should ba forwarded to Gregory 33. Colt M C S K M T S n at 471-4373. Rec Sports Review Representing the Division of Recreational Sports The REC SPORTS REVIEW is a weekly pro­ duction of the Division of Recreational Sports designed to keep the University abreast of oil recreational activities. Editor is Don Lesem and the assistant editor is Howard Murphy Out­ door articles are submitted by Suzan Salisbury All articles for publication should be forward­ ed to Gregory Gym 30 or 33 by Fndcry of the preceding week. G o Climb a Rock With Rec Sports Trade the flourescent lights and dosed -in high places o f campus buildings fo r a sunny weekend climbing high atop Enchanted Rock A p ril 28-2 9 . Break aw ay. Scam per up the granite sides o f Enchanted Rock to the summit fo r a panoram ic view o f the Texas hill country. Leam the techniques o f clim bing using movement and grace, rope-handling, and protec­ tion and belaying systems. Come w eekend rockclimbing and dis­ co ve r a new perspective. Transportation, climbing equip- ment, gro u p camping equipment, supper and breakfast and experi­ enced guides are included in the $ 3 5 ($ 3 9 non-UT) fee. For a leisurely afternoon in the to woods, hike o ff w ith Recreational Sports the Pedernales State Park A pril 28. Join a naturalist guide fo r a look at the spectacular w aterfalls and impressionistic rocks o f this unusual area. W alk across the d ry limestone hills and along the sheltered canyons with luxuriant plant their contrasting Transportation, binoculars and a naturalist guide is included in the $5 trip fee. River fun is still available with a River Canoe I trip scheduled for A pril 28. Sure you canoed once, maybe twice. Never? O h dear. Canoeing is a lifetime sport, one you never outgrow . It is also an enjoyable sport that can take you places you've never been; places your autom obile can't take you. Come canoe the San M arcos and discover o r re-discover canoeing. Transportation, canoes, instruc­ tion and guides are provided fo r the $18 ($ 2 0 non-UT) trip fee. com bination ideal fo r the Hang ten on a sailboard. It's possible. W indsurfing is a com bi­ nation o f sailing and surfing. A sport challenging that is lakes and winds o f central Texas. Come leam to w indsurf A pril 2 8 -2 9 and start enjoying this exciting sport. This tw o -d a y windsurfing clinic in­ cludes instruction, simulator p ra c­ tice on land, lots o f on-the-w ater practice. Instruction and all equip­ ment are provided fo r the $35 ($ 3 9 non-UT) clinic fee. Splashing dow n the Guadalupe in a big rubber raft is scheduled fo r A pril 29. Leam to paddle and roll with the rapids on this one- day river excursion. You might w a nt to take this local opportunity to prepare fo r the M a y Break Roller Coasting Rafting trip on the San Juan River in Utah. rafts, Transportation, rafting equipment, instruction and guides are provided fo r the $ 2 0 ($22 non-UT) trip fee. For more inform ation on the above trips o r fo r a schedule of summer trips (extended summer excitement is coming) come by G reg o ry Gym 31 o r call 471- 1093. Intramural Track Meet Results MEN » 1st Talented Ten 2nd Speed M erchant 3rd M en at w ork WOMEN 1st H ot C ocoa M ix 2nd G o o d News Bears 3 rd Brand: Y WOMEN'S 100 METER LOW HURDLES 1st Talented Ten 2nd Karen Staff 3rd Robin McQuary Mike Stroebel Brand Y Hot Cocoa Mi* MEN'S 400 METER RELAY 1st Talented Ten POINTS 46 Mike Stroebel Rickey Jones Arthur Pertile Charlton Hornsby YvetteKersec Robin McQuary Carmen Hinoiosa Tnsh Porter Corol Kersec Charlton Hornsby Rickey Jones Tnsh Porter 2nd Precious Times 3rd Speed Merchants WOMEN'S 400 METER RELAY 1st Hot Cocoa Mi* 2nd Pretenders 3rd Good News Bears COED 400 METER RELAY 1st RC&RC 2nd Heat 3rd Good News Bears MEN'S 1500 METER RUN 1st Mike Hi* 2nd Ricardo Troncoso 3rd Stephen Pollard 42 18 17 65 17 94 42 18 43.82 4395 54 90 57 09 59 06 47 32 49 50 52 8 7 WOMEN'S 1500 METER RUN 1st Carmen Ayala Independent 2nd Lisa Horber 3rd Julie Williams Good News Bears Hot Cocoa Mi* 4 46 27 ' New IM Record 5 47 55 5 48.53 Talented Ten Ricardo's Team Independent 3 59 23 ’ New IM Record 4 03 80 4 10 48 Announcements Intram ural Council Students in serving interested on the Intramural Council fo r the 1 9 8 4 -8 5 school year should a p ­ ply in G re g o ry Gym 33 by M a y 1. Twelve Students (6 men, 6 w om ­ en) are needed to serve as volun­ teers on this advisory/protest b o a rd fo r Intramurals. The council meets every M on day from 2-3 pm in G re g o ry Gym 33. Suggestion Box Do you have a rule, policy o r p rocedure that you w ould like to see changed o r modified fo r the 1 9 8 4 -8 5 intramural season? If so, proposed changes may be sub­ mitted to G rego ry Gym 33 by the end o f this month. A ll proposals w ill be considered and reviewed by the Intramural Council. Wanted Recreational Sports Committee If you have an interest in and a know ledge o f Recreational Sports and w ant to serve on this standing committee, you should apply by 5 p.m., A pril 27 in the Texas Union Building room 4.310. This Committee acts as advisory and helps in approving matters o f policy fo r Recreational Sports. It also serves to hear appeal from the Intramural Council. Supervisor Openings Students interested in w orking as a supervisor fo r the Intramural Program next fall should apply in G re gory Gym 33. Applicants should have a know ledge o f in­ tramural sports, playing experi­ ence and some officiating experi­ ence. The job averages 12 hours a week and it is a flexible schedule. You should be able to w ork late on weekends. These people are on the Rec Sports most wanted list. The follow ing three people need to come by G rego ry Gym 33 to have their picture taken for the IM C ham p picture board. Laura M a frid g e M itch N ielson D avid Key Homerun Derby Homerun Derby Men's B Handball Singles WOMEN'S 400 MITER RUN 1st Beth Harms 2nd Jessica Keneally 3rd Sandra Martínez MEN'S 400 METER RUN 1st Patrick Scranton 2nd Rey Torres 3rd Joe Mooney MEN'S 800 METER RELAY 1st Talented Ten Brand Y Independent Brand Y Talented Ten Precious Times Talented Ten Rickey Jones Arthur Pertile Charlton Hornsby Mike Stroebel 1 31 70 1 34 64 2nd Speed Merchants 3rd Men at Work WOMEN'S 800 METER RUN 1st Claudia Bachmann 2nd Janice DeVries 3rd Rita Tyler Hot Cocoa Mix Good News Bears Good News Bears MEN'S 100 METER DASH 1st Chortton Hornsby 2nd Glenn Whittenberg 3rd Arthur Pertile Talented Ten Precious Times Talented Ten WOMEN'S 100 METER DASH 1st Yvette Kersec 2nd Tnsh Porter 3rd Tammy Rodgers Hot Cocoa Mix Hot Cocoa Mi* Brand Y COED 800 METER RELAY 1st Hot Cocoa Mi* Enc Trumble Robert Sutton Yvette Kersec Carmen Hinoiosa Men at Work Masked Avengers Independent Ricardo Troncoso Carmen Ayala Claudia Bachmann Robert Sutton 2nd Phi Kappa Theta 3rd El Grupo MEN'S 800 METER RUN 1st Dale Londos 2nd Scott Hippsensteel 3rd Doug Allen COED 800 METER DOUBLES 1st Independent 2nd Chicken Soup 3rd El Grupo No 2 MEN'S 200 METER DASH 1st William Anderson 2nd Barry Jones 3rd Kevin Crouch Nozods Speed Merchants Speed Merchants WOMEN'S 200 METER DASH 1st Tnsh Porter 2nd Robin McQuary 3rd Carmen Hinoiosa Hot Cocoa Mix Hot Cocoa Mix Hot Cocoa Mix WOMEN'S 1600 METER RELAY 1st Brand Y Karen Holzmon Tammy Rodgers Beth Harms Karen Staff Rick Jones Joe Mooney Ed Reeves Pot Scranton 2nd Phi Kappa Theta MEN'S 1600 METER RELAY 1st Talented Ten 2nd Men at Work 3rd Precious Times Sports C lubs UT Crew 102 87 ‘ New IM Record 1:06 70 1:11 86 50 87 51 27 51 31 1 28.40 ' New IM Record 2 5104 3 04 90 3 0813 10 57 10 75 10 84 13 29 13 43 14 04 1 49 32 1 54 77 1 59 65 1:57 50 2 02 49 2 05 50 2261 22 83 2315 2867 29 66 29 75 5 2122 3 28 02 3 30 34 3 4153 4 36 43 ' New IM Record The Crew Club rounded o ff a big season by placing third in the Big 8 championships behind Kan sas University and Kansas State. is becoming a The C rew Club more recognized organization in the sport with its impressive wins over W ashington, Kansas State, W ashbourne and Austin. The club is looking fo rw a rd to the next year with recruiting com ­ ing soon. For more information, call Kelly Bobbitt at 469-9814. UT Water Polo The UT W ater Polo Club w on its the tournam ent at ow n Spring Texas Swim Center by beating the San Antonio N orthside A team 9- 7. Jim Dugan o f Texas led all scores with 13 goals, while team ­ mates Jeff Coulter and Robert Al- bach each had 9. Excellent goal- keeping by Peter Kraus and Phillip A rcher held opponents shooting to about 20% . UT Sq uash Club The club w ill hold a tourney at the Bellmont Squash courts start­ ing Sgnday, A p ril 29 at noon Also, persons wishing to hold o ff­ ice fo r the 1 984-85 year in the club should call Kathy o r John Velasquez at 453-1513. O utdoor Adventures 16-July 1 Car Camping in the Rockies $295 17 19 20,23,25,27,30 23 7 9 9 10 10 12 16,17 16 16 23 24 24 26 30 1 4 7 7 8 8 Introduction to Kayakmq on Barton Creek Enchanted Rock Nature Hike Snorkelmg on the San Marcos River Rafting on the Guadalupe R.ver Horseback Riding at Ncmeless Valley Ranch Canoe Clinic on Town Lake Windsurfing on Town Lake Photography Hike on Barton Creek River Canoe 1 Pedernales Nature Hike Introduction to Kayaking on Barton Creek Kayaking Workshop Walking Tour of Natural Bridge Caverns and Cave Without a Name River Canoe 1 Horseback Riding at Nameless Valley Ranch Photography Hike at Enchanted Rock Canoe Clinic on Town Lake Rafting on the Guadalupe River River Canoe 1 West Cave/Krause Springs Nature Hike Canoe Clinic on Town Lake Snorkelmg on the San Marcos River River Canoe ' Horseback Riding at Nameless Valley Ranch Introduction to Kayaking on Barton Creek 29-August 11 Bicycling in the San Juan Islands, Washington Rafting Tnp 4-11 21-31 21-30 21 September 1 Women s Backpacking in the Pecos Wilderness Canoeing in the Boundary Wafers, Minnesota SnorkeÜng in Florida Wsemmuche Backpacking, Colorado $150 $290 $215 ‘ Fee to be determined July late July- Early August August Non-UT people are welcome to participate at a slightly additional *ee. For more information, call 471-1093 or drop by G egory Gym 31 IM Softball Action Finals Thursday, May 3 It's dow n to the quarter finals and the best o f the best are hold ­ ing fields are getting hotter and hotter as the players bid fo r that number one position. fast. The In the B division the MEN WITHOUT BATS out batted the MEGABATS 7-6 with Miami Mike Barth's outstanding pitching The M en clinch the league title. The NADS finished up the regu­ lar season with a perfect 5-0 the RADI­ record by beating CALS 13-12. Time had run out but clutch hitting in pressure moments made the difference for the Nads. The BIG BALLS keep their p layoff hopes alive with a win over the PHOBOS 17-10. Brian Abbey's homer kept the Big rolling. The RAZORS Balls EDGE jumped to a 3-run lead in the first inning and never looked back. Travis Schwarzbach had three RBI's and Jay G ravitt made a fine catch in right field to end the game. W ith 16 runs in the fourth inning and eight more throughout the rest o f the game the BRONX BOMBERS wast­ ed CHEMICAL WARFARE 24 0. Homeruns were by Fitzgerald, Glenn and Zimmerman. THE WRANGLERS II went to 5-0 fo r the the season outlasting RAIDERS 9-7. Tod Thompson and M a tt M a rino provided pow er hitting on the W ra n gle r bench. In the Coed division the PUR­ PLE HAZE got by the previously undefeated KEYSTONES 5-4. time A triple in the bottom o f the fifth inning by Ken Loe gave the Haze a 5-1 lead over Keystone. With three runs scored by Keystone in the sixth inning it was a 5-4 game but ran out and Haze claimed the victory. Despite the wind and a couple o f no shows RELAMPAGO still managed to come from behind to beat TAOS 12-7. Leading the Relámpago gang were David Cortez, Sylvia Benevidez and Gilbert Gomez THE BREW CREW finished a perfect regular season with a 7-3 victory over LOST CAUSE ILLEGAL ALIENS won their last and only game 4-2 with great pitching by Ervin M uller and M iar- iza Diaz. In the A division THE WILD TURKEYS beat OMEGA PSI 7 0 The WILD TURKEYS were led in sparkling defense play by M ark Ohnoutka and a homerun by Todd Harris. DELTA SIGMA PI got by the SIG EPS 16-12. Ronnie W eaver got the lead in the bottom o f the last inning with second grand slam o f the game THE DIAMOND HEADS fin ished the HAS BEENS with a spectacular first inning perform ­ ance by Jeff Nativi, Bert Laws and Peter Bachl. The final was 19-4. In d iv is io n the th e C SCHLONGHORNS smoked ZBT The 1 3 -6 . SCHLONGHORNS, led by the good shortstop play o f Larry S c h n itz e r, w in a g a in . A SPORTS The Daity TexdrvTuesday, April 24, 1964/Page 13 Three SWC athletes make cut United Press International B L O O M IN G T O N . Ind — C o ach Bobby Knight concluded his basket­ ball boot c a m p Monday at the U .S. Olympic trials with 20 survivors left standing Patrick A lter a week o f exhausting basket­ ball in what many in the original field of 72 called their greatest athletic challenge, the A ll-Am eric a team e s­ caped the latest cutdow n the for N C A A cham pion G e org eto w n, and Michael Jordan of North C arolina, the Player of the Year, were joined by Sam Perkins of North C arolina, Way man Tisdale it O k lah o m a and Chris Muilin o f St John s F.wing center Dave G avitt. chairm an o f the selec­ tion comm ittee announced the cuts at a m orning news co nference after he and Knight met with the players M onday s cut was to have n ar­ rowed the squad from ^4 players to about 18 but Knight said there was good reason for increasing the n u m ­ ber The play at guard was so strong that rather than try to establish the guards through debate, we wanted to establish the guards through play .' he said “ W e 'll reduce the squad when we feel justified in making a d eci­ sion Besides Jordan nine other guards to qualify were Steve Alford of Indi­ ana. Johnny D aw kins o f Duke. Vem Fleming o f G eo rg ia. L ancaster G o r ­ don >f Louisville Maurice Martin of St Jo s e p h 's . Terre Porter of W iscon- sin-Stevens Point. Alvin Robertson of Arkansas. John Stockton o f G on zaga and Leon W o o d of Fullerton Slate Perkins. Tisdale and Muilin were chosen at forward with Charles Bark- le\ and Chuck Person o f Xuhum and Jeff T u rne r o f Vanderbilt A ccom panying Ewing at center were Joe Kleine o f Arkansas, Jon K oncak o f S M I and Tim M cC orm ick o f Michigan Players cut were Ri>osevelt C h a p ­ man ot Dayton Ty rone ( orhin o f De- Paui. Dell Currx ot Virginia Tech. Kenns Fields ot U C L A , Bobby Lee H u r o f Alabama Karl Malone of Louisiana Tech. Jim Master o f Ken- \n th o n y Teachey o f W ake tuck Forest and Michael Young >t H o u s ­ ton. Sophom ore Longhorn guard Kamie Ethridge is one o f 17 who made M onday's Olym pic cut. Travis Spradlins. Dailv Texan Staff Texas interrupts conference race with double-header By M IK E BLACKWELL Daily Texan Staff In tw o games as significant as a grain of sand in the M ojave Desert, the T e x a s plays baseb all Southwestern at 5 p .m Tuesday at Disch-Falk Field team W ho c a r e s 1 G ood question T exas coach C liff G ustafso n said he does not expect his team to gain much from the double-header. 11-4. “ I always wish I h ad n 't scheduled games in the middle o f the conference race. G ustafson said. By beating Rice in tw o o f three games last w eekend, the L onghorns put th em selves on top o f the South­ west C o nference standings with a 12 3 mark. Texas A & M . which lost two o f three to Baylor, is a gam e back at The Longhorns travel to Lubbock to play Texas Tech next weekend. The Aggies host the O w ls T he L o n g ­ horns and Aggies face each other in Austin on the last w ee k e n d o f c o nfer­ e n c e play. “ I still think we can eet som e posi­ tive things out of playing S outhw est­ Some 4 our e r n . " G ustatson said pitchers who h av en 't been throwing a lot will get som e action. letters o f intent to play for G ustafson next year G ustafson said he doesn t plan to bench any regulars but expects to use several pitchers Rusts Richards 5-1 4 .0 6 F.RA) will start the first game and Bruce Ruffin (4-1. 3 .88 ) or Dan iel Pena (3-0. d ^0) the second G ustafson said L an in Hengsi tnd Dennis Cook will see action on the m ound as well. Three basebali players have signed Curt K n p p n er a from Cypress right-handed pitcher ( reek High School, is < justafson s top catch But K np pn er. w ho G ustafso n said should he a high draft cho tee, nay turn pro Dodd Johnson, another signee - a first basem an/thir I basem an < ut tie icier from M cL en nan Ju nior C ollege ( ut- fielder from McLennan Jay Buhner a ls o is P I" Í , V é#k in,# 1 J £ Ethridge survives cut; Lloyd, Harris do not By STAN ROBERTS Daily Texan Staff T e x a s ’ Kamie Ethridge was one o í 17 w om en basketball players to survive the third cut at the U .S. O ly m p ic w o m e n 's basketball trials in C o l­ orad o Springs. C o lo .. M onday. L onghorn team m ates A ndrea Lioyd and bran H a m s , how ev er, were am on g 11 cut from the team “ Kamie messed up all their (selection c o m ­ mittee m e m b e rs ’) p la n s .” said Texas coach Jody C on radt, w ho accom panied Ethridge and four other L onghorns to the Rockies Ethridge was still thrilled by the news when team worked out M onday the reached after night “ T h e re 's no question she said. " I t ' s been a great experience for me just being on the same court with 16 A ll- A m e ric a s ." Ethridge, one o f only four underclassm en se­ lected. is also one o f only seven selections who didn t com pete in last su m m e r's Pan American gam es. The brand o f basketball the Olym pic hopefuls have been playing is som ew hat differ­ ent from the style Ethridge is used to. “ It's been rough, even more so than last year (w hen she played on the South team at the N a ­ tional Sports Festival). ' Ethridge said " I t ' s so much more physically dem and ing The girls are that m uch bigger and that much more physical Ethridge w o n 't have m uch time to rest, how ever, as the U S finalists will compete in C o lo ­ rado S prings this week against teams from Ja­ pan. H ungary, Korea. C h ina and Australia. the Japanese T uesday, Ethridge, how ever, d o e sn 't seem bothered by the extra work team faces the L S “ O h. there are lots of hurts, hut not e nough to keep me do w n , she said. “ O nce you get on the court and start warming up, they seem to go a w a y . " The squad will be cut to an active roster o f 12 by May I. Ethridge will remain in C olo rado Springs to c o m p ete in gam es next w eekend as competition against international teams contin­ ues. C onradt said Lloyd and Harris also played well before being cut “ All three o f them had great tr y o u ts ," C o n ­ “ W hen everybody else hit the wall radt said tired, they kept going C onradt said Lloyd suffered a foot in|ury that may affect her availability as a h igh -ju m p er for the Texas the 6-2 indicated track team , but freshman still impressed trial observers. “ T he media were stunned by A n d re a 's pass­ e s . " C onradt said. “ But she has about 55 bruises in addition to the foot p r o b l e m " S o ph om ore center Cara Priddy and transfer Gay Hemphill also made the trip from Austin but were cut last weekend. Follow ing are the hopefuls for Los Angeles: C E N T E R S — A nne D onovan, 6-8 graduate. Old D om inion. Tresa S paulding. 6-7 Fr , Brig­ ham Young; C in dy Noble. 6-5 graduate, T e n ­ nessee; and, Carol M enk en-S haudt. 6-5 gradu­ ate. O rego n State. F O R W A R D S — Janice L aw rence. 6-4 Sr.. L ouisiana Tech; Pam M cG ee, 6-3 S r.. USC; Cheryl Miller. 6-2 S op h.. USC; Denise Curry, 6-2 graduate. U C L A ; C athy Bosw ell. 6-0 Sr.. Illinois State; and. L aT a un ya Pollard. 5-10 grad­ uate. L ong Beach State. P O IN T G U A R D S — Ethridge. Patty Jo H edges. 5-8 graduate. K entucky; Kim Mulkey. 5-4 Sr . Louisiana Tech; and. Lea Henry. 5-4 graduate. T ennessee. O F F G U A R D S — Lynette W o od ard , 5-11 graduate. Kansas; Teresa E dw ards. 5-1 I Soph . G eorgia; and. Joyce W alker. 5-9 Sr . LSU Pollard, the 1983 W ade Trophy winner, in- lured a knee at the trials and may be sidelined this sum m er She underw ent arthroscopic knee surgery Monday. C ollege coaches com prised the bulk o f the selection com m ittee, and no doubt selected a tall roster to battle the towering Russians this su m ­ mer The USSR is led by 7-3 U lyana Sem enova Before We Put You In Charge Of The World’s Most Sophisticated Nuclear Equipment, We Put You Through The World’s Most Sophisticated Nuclear Training. 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(No surprise A d d r e s s _ A p t . « * _ ________ < n > \|it s i .,i, Z ip _ t ’o ll e n e i nI \ e rs 1 1 \ _ __ ____ tY eur in C ollege.____________________»(1PA A M . M i n . > P h o n e N u m b e r _____________ . . I . \ r r „ < I I , . l . n u t . T T T I i engineering or the physical sciences, and you want to know more abo u t a future in nuclear power, fill in the coupon. Today's Nuclear Navy is an o p p ortun ity like no other in the world. Navy Officers Get Responsibility Vast. 7, 11, 14 ft. Trucks 4ft-12ft. Trailers Rent a U-Haui Truck or T railer Now! Boxes and light hookups available. CALL NOW to reserve a U-Haul. 8405 Research Blvd. Phone 834-1551 ask for Mary. P af*14rt!tt M y Tran/TuMdqf, Apr! 24,1964 Dallas fights to stay alive as NBA playoffs progress Untied Press International S EA T T L E — After a regular sea­ son notable mainly for his team's in­ consistency, Fred Brown thinks the Seattle SuperSonics are showing signs of coming around now that the playoffs are here. The Sonics took a 2-1 lead in their best-of-five series with Dallas with a 104-94 come-from-behind victory over the Mavericks Saturday. The Sonics could progress to a second- round series with the Los Angeles Lakers by beating Dallas Tuesday night in the Kingdome. Brown, along with Gus Williams and Jack Sikma, is one of the few sur­ vivors from Seattle's championship 1979 season on this year's rebuilt club. Now a 13-year veteran. Brown qualifies as one of the N B A ’s elder statesmen, giving his hopeful com­ ments a little more credibility. “ I am seeing enough now to give me some indication that there is po­ tential, a start of something that can be very good,” Brown said. “ We do not have all the elements. But we have enough to be winners.” The Sonics have won two in a row over Dallas after losing the series opener. The win Saturday was an im­ pressive one in which Seattle bounced back from a five-point halftime deficit to dominate the Mavericks with tough defensive play in the second half. Seattle’s playoff performance is helping erase some sour memories from a year ago when the club was quickly eliminated in two consecutive losses to Portland in an opening mini­ series. “ Late in the season and in the playoffs, you have to play good de­ fense and avoid mistakes — and that's what we’ve been doing,” Brown said. “ We have undergone so many pitfalls over the course of the year But the team is still willing to listen and learn... “ Last year, we had a lot of guvs who were close-minded to suggestion When that happens, you have prob­ lems.” Although Brown scored less this year than in any season since he was a rookie, he is still a feared shooter around the league. “ If I make a couple of shots, I find coaches now immediately calling a timeout to explain how to defend me. or automatically making a substitu­ tion,” Brown said. “ That's what I like because it means I am definitely having an effect on the game “ If the other team makes an adjust­ ment just on me, it should be a cake­ walk for Jack or Gus or AI (Wood).” Outside shooting has been a prob­ lem for Dallas in the series. Although Rolando Blackman is having a productive series, Dallas’ other starting guard. Brad Davis, has been mired in a shooting slump. Davis has hit just one-of-13 shots from the field in the last two games, both Dallas losses. That has allowed the Sonics to collapse on high-scoring forward Mark Aguirre when he tries to get the ball inside. “ I think that I've been thinking too much, trying to get everthing too per- tect, Davis said. “ I'm worrying too much about my mechanics. ” I ve got to shoot it and not think about it. I'm still not keeping Gus honest enough on defense. I've got to make that shot so that he can’t col­ lapse inside. He's making it difficult to get the ball inside.” Davis, who runs the Dallas offense, is usually a reliable shooter, finishing eighth in the N BA in shooting per­ centage this season with a .541 mark. If the Mavericks rebound for a vic­ tory Tuesday, the two teams will play the decisive fifth game in Dallas Thursday. In other playoff games Tuesday night the Nuggets (leading 2-1) square off against Utah at Denver; the Suns (leading 2-1) take on Portland in Phoenix; the Hawks confront Milwaukee (leading 2-1) in Atlanta, Washington hosts Boston (leading 2- 1) and Seattle (leading 2-1) hosts Dal­ las. New York, which holds a 2-1 lead in its series, plays its fourth game against Detroit Wednesday night in New York. United Press In te rn a tio n al Utah’s Darrel G riffith (35) puts a move on Denver's T.R. Dunn (23) Sunday. The teams meet again Tuesday. Canadiens meet Islanders United Press International Montreal hopes to secure its future in the NHL playoffs by forgetting its past season and concentrating on the distant past. The Canadiens, who host the Islan­ ders in Tuesday night's opener of their best-of-seven Wales Conference final, are trying to forget they lost three con­ secutive games to the Islanders this season and were outscored, 21-7. “ When the puck is dropped, we'll have the same chance they do,” said Mats Naslund, Montreal's leading post-season scorer with three goals and seven assists Perhaps as important, the Cana­ diens want to protect the record five consecutive Stanley Cup champion­ ships won by Montreal from 1956-60 The Islanders have won the last four NHL Stanley Cups. In the Campbell Conference finals beginning Tuesday, the Oilers host Minnesota, which gained its meeting with Edmonton with a 4-3 overtime victory over St. Louis Sunday in the seventh game of that series New York Islander general mana­ ger Bill Torrey has been impressed bv the job done by Montreal coach Jacques Lemaire. ” I hey have learned Lemane s sys­ tem of shutting down the opposition,” like a counter he said. puncher in boxing, they send one man in and hope the other guys make a mistake.” “ They re ” They re expected to win — in a he said way. they don't have the right to lose, “ We've got every thing to gam because nobody thought wed be here.” “ New York is a well-balanced team, but their defense is slow and we can exploit that weakness, he said ” i think we'll be able to create a lot of one-on-ones, and two-on-one situa tions.'' In Edmonton, Minnesota takes on the Oilers with one person in n ind scoring whiz Wayne Gretzk “ W e'll have to knock Gret/.k\ around, said Minnesota defi asoman Brad Maxwell. ' There s n, lotting around it. When you pla\ I dmonton, you've got' to think about , ( 25% OFF BUSINESS, ACCOUNTING & ECONOMIC BOOKS Monday thru Friday 12-2 p.m. ONLY! G e n e r a l H o o k s — s e c o n d le v e l "T Quebec and Montreal players brawl in Friday’s N H L playoff game. Montreal won the game and the series. United Press International FAMOUS BRANDS CLOTHING SALE THREE DAYS ONLY! TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, AND THURSDAY ONLY! 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S * ? T I T I T S ? T Cf T ? ” ? * * ? • * * ^ s r -sj f r t f f S * 1 f * f f ♦ l f U f ' i W M I t i t fd Russell drives in decisive run in 2-1 win over Astros Expos* ca tch er Gary C arter holds up the ball after tagging out New Y ork 's Ron H odges at the plate M ondas mted Press Internationa BASEBALL Bernazard’s RBI triple leads Indians past Texas U nited Press International C L E V E L A N D l o n \ B e m a / a r d tripled in O tis N ix o n a n d J u l i o F r a n c o f o llo w e d w ith an RBI d o u b l e in the fifth in n in g M o n d a y to lead the ( leve land In d ian s to a 3-1 victory o v e r the Texas R a n g e r s . Rick S u tc liff e , now 3 - 1 , p ic k e d u p in n in g s b e fo re re liev e d by E rn ie C a m a c h o , his s a v e . r e g i s t e r e d six h its, w a l k e d the w in . g o i n g 7 < be ing w h o Sutcliffe a ll o w e d n on e a n d stru c k o u t fo u r t h i r d T e x a s got its on ly run in the e ig h t h w h e n Ned Y o s t w a s s a fe on a f i e l d e r 's c h o ic e , m o v e d to s e c o n d o n B obbx J o n e s p in c h -h i t sing le an d s c o r e d on a sing le by M i c k e y R iv ers . C h a r li e H o u g h , I I. t o o k the loss, a ll o w i n g e ig h t hits in g o i n g the «.lis tance. N ix o n led o f f the C l e v e l a n d fifth with a walk a n d w a s s a c rific e d to sec ond. B e m a / a r d tr ip le d to c e n t e r field for a 1-0 C l e v e l a n d ru n a n d F r a n c o doublet! in B e m a / a r d In the e ig h t h . F r a n c o led o f f w ith a sin g le , stole s e c o n d an d s c o r e d o n A n dre T h o r n t o n ’s sing le White Sox 7, Orioles 6 C H I C A G O J u l i o C r u / s RBI single with n o n e o u t in the b o t to m of the C h i c a g o the 10th W h ite Sox to a v i c t o r y o v e r the Balti m o r e O r i o l e s i n n in g lifted V a n c e Law' led o f f w ith a w a lk o f f T ip p y M a r t in e z , 0 - 2 , a n d S a m m y S te w a r t r e li e v e d a n d is s u e d a w a lk to S c o tt F l e tc h e r b e f o r e C r u z d e li v e re d his g a m e - w i n n i n g hit Britt B u r n s . 1 l. p itc h e d the final three i n n in g s , strik in g o u t se v e n , to c a m the v ictory The O r i o l e s t w o r u n s tied the sc o re at 6 - 6 the e ig h t h . Jo h n in led o f f with a w a l k o f f with L o w e n s t e i n AMERICAN the s e v e n th , a n d w e nt re lie v e d Tom Ron R e e d , w'ho had S e a v e r in to third on Ken S i n g l e t o n s single. Jo e N o l a n ’s s c o r e d L o w e n s t e i n a n d Rick D e m p s e y ’s sac rifice fly s c o r e d \ l B u m b r y , w h o w as p i n c h - r u n n i n g f o r S i n g le to n . p i n c h hit s i n g l e Red Sox 2, Angels 0 B O S T O N B o b b y O j e d a a l l o w e d three hits a n d M a rty B arrett on ly d r o v e in o n e run a n d s c o r e d a n o t h e r to lead the B o s to n R e d Sox to a v ic to r y o v e r the C a li f o r n i a A n g e l s m a g a m e ca lle d by rain with o n e out in the b o t ­ tom o f the sixth. The u m p i r e s w a i te d 5 0 m in u t e s be fore c a llin g the g a m e The R e d S o x took a I -0 lea d in the in ning w h e n R e id N i c h o ls se c o n d d o u b l e d , m o v e d to third o n J a c k ie G u ­ t ie r r e z ’s field a n d fly ball sc o r e d o n B a r r e t t ' s single. to right Barrett led o f f the fifth w ith his third hit. a s i n g l e , o f f sta rte r G e o f f / a h n . 2 i . and m o v e d to se c o n d w'hen n g h t - f i e l d e r d r o p p e d D w ig h t E w a ns’ s h a l l o w fly ball. Both r u n n e rs m o v e d u p o n W a d e B o g g s sa c rifice b u n t a n d B a rrett s c o r e d on M ik e h a s l e r ’s s a c rif ic e fly to right L y n n F re d in C a li f o r n i a t h r e a te n e d the sixth n m n g w h e n L y n n w a l k e d a n d D o u g D e C i n c e s r e a c h e d b a s e o n s h o r t s t o p G u t i e r r e z 's e rror. O j e d a , 1-2. stru ck out R e g g ie J a c k s o n f o r the third t im e m d then f o r c e d B r ia n D o w n i n g to hit into a d o u b l e p l a y to en d the in nin g. T O R O N T O Blue Jays 8, Mariners 5 - L lo y d M o s e h y trove in l o u r r u n s w ith a b a s e s - l o a d e d d o u b l e a n d a trip le to p o w e r the T o ­ ro n to Blue Ja y s to a triu m p h o v e r the Seattle M a r i n e r s D a v e S t i e b , J-0, w o r k e d 7 v inn ings and a l l o w e d five ru ns on eig ht fo u r a n d w a l k in g hits, strik in g out five R o y L ee J a c k s o n fin is h e d for his s e c o n d save. T r a i l in g 4 -3 . the Blue J a y s struck fo r fo u r ru n s m the fifth. C o n s e c u t i v e sin g le s by B u c k M a rtin e z a n d A l f r e d o G riffin a n d a hit b a ts m a n lo a d e d the ba s e s w ith n o n e ou t M o s e h y slice d M ark L a n g s t o n ’s pitc h d o w n the left field line f o r a t h r e e - ru n d o u b l e B o b S to d d a r d r e li e v e d L a n g s to n a n d o n e out later, D a v e C o l li n s sin g l e d in a run that g a v e the B lue Ja y s a 7 -4 lead Brewers-A’s, ppd. M I L W A U K E E The M i l w a u k e e B r e w e r s ' g a m e a g ainst the O a k l a n d A s w a s p o s t p o n e d d u e to w e t g r o u n d s an d c o ld w e a t h e r , the t e a m sa id It has b e e n r e s c h e d u l e d fo r Ju ly 6 as tw i- n ig h t d o u b l e h e a d e r , part o f a s ta rtin g at 5 : 3 0 p . m . Tigers-Twins, ppd. D E T R O I T — T h e D e tro it T ig e r s g a m e with the M i n n e s o t a T w i n s w a s r a in e d out. T h e g a m e will be m a d e up T u e s d a y n ig h t as part o f a t w i - n ig h t d o u b l e - h e a d e r . sta rtin g at 4 : 3 0 p m C S T Royals-Yankees, ppd. N E W Y O R K T h e g a m e b e tw e e n the K a n s a s C ity R o y a ls a n d the New Y o rk Y a n k e e s w a s p o s t p o n e d b e c a u s e o f rain. N o m a k e u p d a te has b e en a n ­ n o u n c e d . The tw o t e a m s will p lay a r e g u la rly s c h e d u le d sin g le g a m e T u e s d a y at 12 p . m . C S T B u d B la c k , 3 - 0 , will pitch to r the R o y a ls an d the Y a n k e e s will start Phil N i e k r o . a ls o 3-0 U nited Press In tern ation al L O S A N G E L E S — Bill R u s s e l l , sta rtin g in c e n t e r field f o r the first tim e since 1971. d e l i v e r e d a s a c rif ic e fly in the third i n n in g M o n d a y n ig ht to the g a m e w i n n i n g run a nd d riv e lead the L o s A n g e l e s D o d g e r s to a 2 I triu m p h o v e r the H o u s to n Astros in B o b W e l c h , 2 - 2 , sc a tt e re d e ig h t hits in o u t d u e l i n g B o b K n e p p e r and a v e n g i n g a left lo ss to the h a n d e r at H o u s t o n . K n e p p e r s c a tte r e d five hits loss a g ain st t w o v icto ries . ta k i n g his s e c o n d \ s t r o s ' in T h e A s tr o s to ok a 1-0 lea d in the first w h e n K e v i n B a ss s i n g l e d t o k s e c o n d , w ent to t h ir d on a p a s s e d ball an d sc ored on J o s e C r u z s d o u b l e M ik e M a r s h a ll led o f t the s e c o n d for L os A n g e l e s w ith his fifth h o m e r o f the se a s o n — a n d t w o in g a m e s — to tie the sc o re at 1-1. third In the th ird . A n d e r s o n led off w ith a sin g le, w a s s a c r i f i c e d to s e c o n d an d r e a c h e d third on S te v e Sa x s sin g le b e fo re R u ss ell d e l i v e r e d his s a c ri fi c e fly to c e n te r . Russell st a ll e d in p l a c e o f K e n L a n d r e a u x , w h o s u f f e r e d a b r u is e d f i n g e r S u n d a y in c e n t e r field Expos 6, Mets 4 M O N T R E A L — t h r e e run h o m e r T im W a l l a c h s m a s h e d a the sixth i n n in g to h e lp the M o n tr e a l E x ­ p os flan th e ir w i n n i n g stre ak to fo u r g a me s w ith a v ic to ry o v e r the N e w Y o rk Met s in New York sta rte r W ait T erre ll hail a 4-3 lead w ith o n e in the sixth in n in g out he w a l k e d A n d r e D a w s o n a n d hit G a ry C a r t e r w i t h a pitc h. W it h a 3-2 c o u n t , W a l l a c h s l a m m e d his fifth h o ­ m e r o v e r the left field w all to g ive the E x p o s a 6 - 4 lead. C h a r li e L e a w e n t se v e n in n in g s a n d sc a tte re d e ig h t hits fo r the w i n , his third in fo u r d e c i s i o n s . G a r v L u c a s e n te r e d the g a m e w i t h a m a n on and n o n e ou t in the ninth an d re tired the NATIONAL M e ts f o r his th ird save. K eith H e r n a n d e z in s i n g l e d the th ird . G e o r g e F o s te r d o u b l e d an d D a r ryl S t r a w b e rr y f o l lo w e d w i t h a tw o- run sin g le , his six th c o n s e c u t i v e hit o v e r a t h r e e - g a m e sp a n , to put N e w Y o rk a h e a d 4-0. Cubs 6, Reds 2 ST . L O U I S — Scott S a n d e r s o n g a v e up t w o hits o v e r se v e n i n n in g s a n d L arry B o w a d r o v e in th r e e r u n s to lead th e C h i c a g o C u b s to a v ic to ry o v e r St. L o u is , th e C a r d i n a l s ' sixth c o n s e c u t i v e loss. S a n d e r s o n , 2 - 1 , w a l k e d the first b a tte r he f a c e d , but did not y i e l d a hit until the se v e n th w h e n M i k e R a m s e y d o u b l e d to right. R a m s e y m o v e d to third on a g r o u n d o u t a nd s c o r e d o n L o n n ie S m i t h ' s sa c rifice fly to right. The o n l y o t h e r hit o f f S a n d e r s o n w as a OEWTnEMIAL) ""T- .............. ^ I " " CONDOMINIUMS MARKETED BY IONO.HOHN PRO PERT IES INC ATA ^ f , n* Qual i t y BpfO. Since 'AM 5K Run For Fun 5 Kilometers (3.1 Miles) DATE: START AND FINISH: STARTING TIME: COI RSE: CATEGORIES: AWARDS: ENTRY FEE: REGISTRATION: A pril 2 8 . 1984 Rain or Shine) D elta Tau D elta Fraternity H ouse C orner of San Jacinto and 26th Street 11:00 A .M . 1.1 inties through W est C am pus N on-C reek M ale and F em ale, G reek M ale and F em ale. Fraternity Team. Sorority Team. C lub ream. H ighest C lub Participation. T rop h ies w ill be aw arded to 1st, 2nd, and 3rd p lace runners in each c a tc g o n All registered runners w ill re ceiv e a com m em orative T-shirt. ion-re fundable entry tee o f $ 5 .0 0 is required. • V • D ead lin e for pre-registration is April 25, 1984. • Late R egistration is $ 6 .0 0 from 9 :3 0 to 10:30 A .M Mail or d eliv er registration form and entry fee to: ihe day of the race. sK Run For Fun . o Delta Tau D elta Fraternity H ouse 2801 San Jacinto \ustin, Texas 78705 PROCEEDS BENEFIT FOR VlOK! INFORMA HON: The American Cancer Society C all 4 6 9 -0 7 1 0 or 4 7 4 -4 1 9 8 STREET PARTY Immediately Following the Race at the Delta Tau Delta House EVERYONE WELCOME - so lo h o m e r by D a rrell P o r t e r in the se v e n th . L ee S m i th h u rl e d the last t w o i n n ­ m an e lo re to e n d tne g a m e Padres 8. Giants 2 ings for the C u b s T h e C u b s s c o r e d .1 m n in the s e c o n d in n in g o f f lo s e r D a v e L a P o i n t , 1-3, on B o w a ' s RBI sin g le a n d C h i c a g o a d d ­ ed t w o ru ns in the fo urth o n w a l k s to L eon D u r h a m a n d R on Cev in RBI s in g le b y Jody D a v i s an d a sq u e e z e hunt by B o w a ihat s c o r e d • e y St. L o u is lo a d e d the b a s e s w ith tw< out in the n i n t h , hut S m ith stru c k out S A N D I E G O — G r a m N e t tl e 1- and Terry K e n n e d y e a c h hit h o m e r u n s m the fo u rth in n in g to lead the San D i­ e g o P a d r e s to a v ic to ry o v e r the San F r a n c is c o G ia n ts A n d y H a w k i n s , 2 - 0 . p i c k e d up the v ictory with relief h e lp fro m Da* e D r a v e c k y . w h o h u r l e d li­ ning. the final The P a d re s, a id e d by a t h r o w i n g 2r- ror by Nrst h a s e m a n A1 O l i v e r , sc o red o u r t im e s in the third n n in g o f f lose r Je tt R o b i n s o n . 2 -2. to -vtpe out a two* run San F r a n c is c o lead. S u c c e s s i v e sin g le s bv A lan W i g ­ gins, T ony G w y n n , Nettles an d S tev e Garvey p r o d u c e d t w o r u n s to put the P a d re s a h e a d -2 K e n n ed y :hen hit a a r o u n d e r *0 • d iver vfu sc th r o w w ent i u g o u t. a ll o w i n g N e t­ nú tle ¡1 M c R e v n o i d s de- ivered t sa c rifice fly o sc o r e G a rv ex with the the Padre o sc o re Kc ither run Extended by Popular Demand! SELL m TURN UNUSED ITEMS INTO CASH FOR ONLY... with a Classified Ad in USE THIS COUPON TOD AY AND SAVE OVER S5¡ T h e Daily T e x a n M a y 4, 1984 15 5 Days $3. Words Days E x p ire s Fn. Limited to items under S500 for sale O N L Y Price of item must a p p e ar in ad. Paym ent m ay be m ade by cash check or A d d r e s s ................................................................................... Phone. credit card only. A dd itio nal words, 4c per d a y per word) N a m e C i t y .................................................... State____Zip. . . Entry Form — Centennial Condominiums/Coors/Delta Tau Delta 5K Run First MI. MasterCard Name: Last Address: ______________ Social Security Num ber D aytim e Phone Nutnbei Mail or D eliv er to: 5K Run For Fun c /o D elta TaU D elta Fraternity H ou se 2801 San Jacinto A u stin , T exas 78705 Signature Date S ex. C ategory o f Entry. W A IV ER O F C L A IM (m ust be signed and subm itted with registration .) In con sid eration o f the accep tan ce o f this registration entry. I, the undersigned, assu m e full and com p lete resp on sibility for any injury or accident w hich may occur during participation in this race, or w h ile on the p rem ises o f this event; and I hereby release and hold harm less the sp on sors, prom oters and all other persons and entities associated with this event from any and all in- lury or d am age, w hether it be cau sed by n eg lig en ce of the sponsors or prom oters or other p ersons or en tities associated with this event or their agen ts or em p lo y ees or otherw ise. 1 6 11 1 6 21 2 7 i 12 17 22 3 “78 13 18 23 4 9 14 19 24 5 10 15 ►o © 25 PLACE CREDIT CARO ADS BY P H O N E AT 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 Cash Enclosed VISA M asterCard Acct # Exp. Date: Signature I Mail with p aym en t) to: Classified Ads P.O. Box D Austin, TX 7871 2 or bring to Texan W an t-A d Counter, 25tb & WhiHs Williams did not attend a news conference called to make the announcement, but a friend of the family read a statement he said was prepared by Williams and his mother, alleging intimidation by college recruiters. “ It is not my intention to harm or embarrass any indi­ vidual or university,” the statement said. “ However, dur­ ing the course of recruiting I did experience intimidation and extreme pressures which made me fear for our safety and I hope with this public statement disclosing these facts. I will put an end to the issue.” SMU signs top high school swimmers D A L L A S — Tom Genz and Randy Everatt, two of the top high school swimmers in the nation, have signed let- ters-of-intent to attend Southern Methodist University, of­ ficials announced Monday. Genz, of Parkview High School in Little Rock, Ark., had the top high school times in the nation in three events at U.S. Swimming Nationals last year — the 100-yard breaststroke, 200-yard breaststroke and individual medley. Everatt. of Winter Park High School in Orlando, Fla., posted the top high school times in both the 50-meter freestyle and the 200-meter freestyle last year. He was the nation’s top schoolboy in the 50-yard freestyle. Baltimore's Martinez guilty of DWI C A T O N S V IL L E , Md. — Baltimore Oriole pitcher Dennis Martinez Monday was found guilty of driving while intoxicated and resisting arrest in connection with a single-car accident. tence and ordered him to perform 150 hours of community service. He was also placed on two years of unsupervised probation. The charges against the 29-year-old right-hander, who suffered through a disappointing 1983 season, stemmed from a one-vehicle accident on Dec. 13 involving his car on a ramp leading to Interstate 695 near Baltimore. Martinez, 0-0, has pitched 8'A innings in five games this season for a 3.24 ER A NCAA proposes drug test for athletes C H A P E L H IL L. N.C. — College athletes can expect to face tests for drug use starting in the fall of 1985, accord­ ing to the chairman of an NCAA special committee. Dr. Carl S Blyth. a physical education professor at the University of North Carolina, said Sunday he expects de­ tails of the drug testing program and penalties for drug use to be approved at the N CAA convention in January. “ Our purpose is to protect young athletes from the dan­ gerous effects of drugs and to ensure that no one has an unfair advantage over anyone else in college sports,” Blyth said. Blyth, chairman of the NCAA drug testing committee, said the panel already has agreed on a preliminary list of 60 to 70 drugs that would be banned by the 787 member schools in the NCAA. They include anabolic steroids taken to build muscles and amphetamines, used as stimulants. Testing procedures will vary according to the sport, Blyth said. After issuing the verdict. District Judge Patricia Graham fined Martinez $500, handed him a 60-day suspended sen­ Blyth said the testing program probably will be institut­ ed during a three-year period. It eventually will involve testing of all top finishers in individual sports plus other competitors selected at random. Athletes would be tested for anabolic steroids during visits by N CAA representa­ tives. 2nd seed Lendl withdraws from WCT D A LL A S — The World Championship Tennis finals, an event that was near extinction a year ago, begins Tues­ day with renewed expectations that it will become one of the sport's most important tournaments. A 12-man field headed by John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors will compete for $500,000 in prize money with the title match scheduled for next Sunday. The tournament lost No. 2 seeded Ivan Lendl, who withdrew Monday night and was replaced by Tim May­ otte Lendl bruised his inner thigh and possibly suffered kid­ ney problems when he ran into a netpost in a Gran Prix tournament in Luxembourg two weeks ago, Tom Cook, a W C T spokesman said. McEnroe, Connors, Jimmy Arias and Johan Kriek will receive byes to the quarterfinals while the other eight battle on Tuesday and Wednesday night. Kingman named AL Player of Week N EW Y O R K — Designated hitter Dave Kingman of the Oakland A s, who hit six home runs in six games, has been named Player of the Week in the American League for the week ending April 22. Kingman knocked in 13 runs and had 26 total bases during the week and now leads the American League in homers (7) and R B I (18). x-Apr 26 Phoenix a! Portland 9 30 p m 229 senior Leon Wood Fullerton State (Santa Monica C a lif) guard 6-3 190 senior urn UNITED STATES FOOTBALL LEAGUE By United Press International Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Philadelphia New Jersey Pittsburgh Washington Birmingham W L T Pet. PF PA 889 222 115 778 208 140 222 134 182 111 120 255 8 1 0 7 2 0 2 7 0 1 8 0 Southern Division 8 1 0 889 262 132 New Orleans Tampa Bay Jacksonville Memphis Michigan Houston Oklahoma Chicago San Antonio Denver Arizona Los Angeles Oakland 2 0 3 0 6 0 7 0 7 6 3 2 Western Conference Central Division 6 3 0 6 3 0 3 0 6 6 0 3 2 7 0 Pacific Division 7 2 0 4 5 0 3 6 0 9 0 0 Friday's Results Jacksonville 12 Memphis 10 Chicago 49 I os Anaeies 29 778 219 '56 667 208 '80 333 170 196 222 140 243 Saturday's Results Birmingham 41 Oklahoma 17 Houston 37 Arizona 24 Sunday's Results 667 225 ¡80 667 294 235 667 147 192 333 209 746 222 104 147 778 205 181 444 242 151 333 143 198 000 82 218 New Orleans 20 Denver 18 Philadelphia 20 San Antonio 14 New Jersey 14 Pittsburgh 10 Washington 31 Oakland 17 T ampa B a y 20 Michigan 7 Monday's Result PGA PGA Tour Statistics By United Press International Scoring 1 Gary Koch 70 51 2 Nick Faldo 70 60 3 Doug Teweii 70 65 4 David Edwards 70 68 5 Calvin Peete 70 71 T6 Tom Kile and Fred Couples 70 75 8 Jack Renner 70 77 T9 Bruce Lietzke and Ben Crenshaw 70 84 Driving rtetance 1 Lon Hinkle 275 5 2 Fred Couples 274 3 3 Tom Purt7er 270 9 4 Jo ey Smdeiar 269 5 5 George Burns 268 2 6 Payne Stewart 267 9 7 Greg Norman 267 1 8 Clarence Rose 266 5 9 Mac O Grady 266 1 10 Dan Haidorson 265 8 Driving, percentage in fairway 1 Calvin Peele 767 2 Doug Tewell 754 3 Wayne Levi 748 4 Jack Renner 743 5 Peler Jacobsen 736 T6 Danny Edwards and Nick Faldo 733 8 Tim Norns 732 9 Bruce Lietzke 726 10 J a v C u r i r i 794 Make a good buy before you say goodbye. Pag» 16/Th# Daly Tman/TuMdiy, April 24,1964 SPOKTSWIRE From staff and wire reports UT places two on All-SWC golf team Texas and TCU both placed two women golfers on the Coaches All-SW C team announced Monday. Longhorns Nancy Ledbetter and Sherri Steinhauer were chosen, while TCU was represented by Rae Deal and Rita Moore. Rounding out the list were Texas A & M 's Susan Yantis and SM U 's Martha Foyer. Sampson chosen for All-Rookie team N EW Y O R K — Ralph Sampson of Houston was unani­ mously chosen for the 1984 N BA All-Rookie team select­ ed by the league’s 23 head coaches, the N BA announced Monday. Joining Sampson on the All-Rookie team were Steve Stipanovich of Indiana, Byron Scott of Los Angeles. Jeff Malone of Washington, and, in a tie for the final spot on the squad, Thurl Bailey of Utah and Darrell Walker of New Yoik. Sampson, the only unanimous choice, led the Rockets with 2I.0 points per game, ranked fifth in the N BA with 11. 1 rebounds per game and was third in the league with 2.40 blocked shots per game. He was also the first player to sweep th&NBA Rookie of the Month award in its three- year history. Williams to play for Louisiana State LO S A N G ELES — Prep All-America forward John Williams, considered one of the top basketball prospects in the nation, will attend Louisiana State University in the fall, it was announced Monday. SPORTSRECORD NATIONAL LEAGUE East L 5 6 7 7 10 9 Pet. GB Stk. W2 643 V* W1 600 '/? W4 588 1 563 L3 L6 412 3 4 357 W1 W 9 9 10 9 7 5 West 5 7 9 10 10 11 706 611 437 412 333 322 12 11 7 7 5 5 W1 IV* W2 4 7* L I L1 5 6 L2 6 V* 11 10 6-4 6-4 7-3 4-6 4-6 3-7 5-5 7-3 5-5 6-4 3-7 2-8 Philadelphia Chicago Montreal New York St Louis Pittsburgh San Diego Los Angeles San Francisco Houston Atlanta Cincinnati Monday’s Results Montreal 6 New York 4 Chicago 6 St Louis 2 San Diego 8 San Francisco 2 Los Angeles 2 Houston t Tuesday’s Games (Al Times CST) New York (Gooden 1-1) at Montreal (McGaffigan 0 0) 12 05 o m man 1-2) 6 35 p m Pittsburgh (Candelaria 2-1) at Philadelphia (Koos- Cincinnati (Soto 1-1) at Atlanta (Barker 1-2) 6 40 Chicago (Trout 2-1) at St Louis (Cox 21) 7 40 p m Houston (Madden 0-0) at Los Angeles (Pena 2-1) San Francisco (Krukow 12) at San Diego (Whittson 9 35 p m 1-1). 9 0 5 p m Wednesday's Games New York al Montreal Chicago akSt Lou* Pittsburgh at Philadelphia night Cincinnati at Atlanta, night Houston at Los Angeles night San Francisco at San Diego night AMERICAN LEAGUE East L 1 7 6 8 10 9 12 Pet. GB Stk W3 923 W1 588 4 W2 5 538 429 6 V? L2 375 7'/? W2 357 7 V* W1 9'/* L2 250 W 12 10 7 6 6 5 4 West 7 7 9 7 8 9 8 588 L1 V* L2 563 1 L1 526 500 17? L I 500 V/2 W1 471 2 L I 385 L3 3 10 9 10 7 8 8 5 10 9-1 5 5 5-5 5-5 3-7 5-5 3-7 4-6 4-6 6-4 5-5 5-5 6-4 4-6 Detroit Toronto Cleveland New York Boston Milwaukee Baltimore Oakland Seattle California Kansas City Minnesota Texas Chicago Monday's Results Cleveland 3 Texas 1 Toronto 8 Seattle 5 Boston 2 California 0 Chicago 7 Baltimore 6 10 innings Oakland at Milwaukee ppd wet grounds cold Kansas City at New York ppd ram Minnesota at Detroit ppd ram Tuesday's Games (Al Times CST) Kansas City (Black 3-0) at New York (Niekro 3-01 Texas (Stewart 0-4 ) at Cleveland iHeaton 1-2) 12 35 noon p m 6 00 p m p m p m 7 30 p m Minnesota (Williams 1-2 and Vioia 0-2) at Detroit (Morris 3-0 and Petry 2 1 )2 4 35 p m Oakland (Sorensen 1-2) at Milwaukee (Haas 1-2. Seattle (Moore 1 1) at Toronto (Ciancy 1-1) 6 35 California (Browr 0 1) at Boston (Boyd 0-2) 6 35 Baltimore (McGregor 1-3) at Chicago (Dotson 2-1) Wednesday's Games Chicago at Cleveland California al Milwaukee, night Seattle at Boston night Oakland at Toronto nigh! New York al Mmesota night Baltimore at Kansas City night Detroit at Texas nig’ht Stk.: Refers to a teams current wmnmq or losing streak 10: Refers to a teams performance in its ast 10 games NBA NBA Playoffs By United Press International (Best-of-Five) (Al Times CST) Eastern Conference Washington vs. Boston (Boston leads series 2-1) Apr 17 Boston 91 Washington 83 Apr 19 Boston 88 Washington 85 Apr 21 Washington 1 1 1 Boston 108 (O T) Apr 24 Boston at Washington 7 p m x-Apr 26 Washington at Boston 6 30 p m Ph iedslphia vs. New Jersey (New Jersey leeds series, 2-1) Apr 18 New Jersey 116 Philadelphia 10! Apr 20 ^New Jersey 116 F*hiiadeiphia 102 Apr 22 * Philadelphia 108 New Jersey 100 Apr 24 Philadelphia at New Jersey 7 p m x-Apr 26 New Jersey al Philadelphia 6 3 0 p m MMwaukee vs. Atlanta (MMwaukee leads series 2-1) Apr 17 Milwaukee 105 Atlanta 89 Apr 19 Milwaukee 10' Atlanta 87 Apr 21 Atlanta 103 Milwaukee 94 Apr 24 Milwaukee al Atlanta 7 p m x-Apr 26 Atlanta at Milwaukee 7 p m Detroit vs. New Yorti (New York leads sedes, 2-1) Apr 1 7 New York 94 Detroit 93 Apr 19 Detroit 113 New York 105 Apr 22 New York 120 Detroit 113 Apr 25 Detroit at New York 8 p m x-Apr 27 New York at Detroit 7 p m Western Conference Utah vs. Denver (Denver leade series, 2-1) Apr 17 Utah 123 Denver 121 Apr 19 Denver 132 Utah 116 Apr 22 Denver 121 Utah 117 Apr 24 Utah at penver 9 30 p m x-Apr 26 Denver at Utah 9 30 p m Portland vs. Phoenix (flfc I, - nil «--- « ----1-- A 4k nKMfvl I99QI N n t t i 4*1) Apr 18 — Phoenix 113 Portland 106 Apr 20 Portland 122 Phoenix 116 Apr 22 — Phoenix 106. Portland 103 Apr 24 — Portland at Phoenix. 8 30 p m Dates vs. Seattle (Seattle leads series, 2-1) Apr 17 Dallas 88 Seattle 86 Apr 19 Seattle 95 Dallas 92 Apr 21 Apr 24 Dallas at Seattle 9 30 p m x-Apr 26 Seattle at Dallas 7 p m Seattle 104 Dallas 94 Los Angeles vs. Kansas City (Los Angeles wins series, 3-0) Apr 18 Los Angeles 116 Kansas City 105 Apr 20 Los Angeles 109 Kansas City 102 Apr 22 Los Angeles 108 Kansas City 102 x-if necessary NHL Playoffs By United Press International (AN Tunes CST) (Best-of-Seven) Division Finals Wales Conference Patrick Division Washington vs. N.Y. Islanders (N.Y. Islanders win series 4-1) Apr 12 Washington 3 Islanders 2 Apr 13 Apr 15 Apr 16 Apr 18 Islanders 5 Washington 4 (OT) Islanders 3 Washington 1 Islanders 5 Washington 2 Islanders 5 Washington 3 Adams Division Montreal vs. Quebec (Montreal wins series 4-2) Apr 12 Quebec 4 Montreal 2 Apr 13 Montreal 4 Quebec 1 Apr 15 Montreal 2 Quebec 1 Apr 16 Apr 18 Apr 20 Quebec 4 Montreal 3 (OT) Montreal 4 Quebec 0 Montreal 5 Quebec 3 Campbell Conference Norris Division St. Louis vs. Minnesota (Minnesota wins series 4-3) Apr 12 - Minnesota 2 St Louis 1 Apr 13 St Louis 4 Minnesota 3 (OTi Apr 15 St I ours 3 Minnesota 1 Apr 16 Mim esota3 St Louis ? Apr 18 Minnesota 6 St Lours 0 Apr 20 St Louis 4 Minnesota 0 Apr 22 Mmm.sota 4 St _oui«, 1 (OT) Smythe Division Calgary vs. Edmonton (Edmonton wins series 4-3) Edmonton 5 Ca'gary 2 Apr 12 Apr 13 Calgary 6 Edmonton 5 Edmonton 3 Calgary 2 Apr 15 Apr 16 Edmonton 5 Caigary 3 Apr 18 Calgary 5. Edmonton 4 Apr 20 Caigary 5 Edmonton 4 Edmonton 7 C anary 4 Apr 22 x-if necessary Conference Championships (Best-of-seven) Wales Conference (N.Y. Islanders vs. Montreal) Apr 24 New York at Montreal 6 <5 o rr * Apr 26 New York at Montrea, 6 15 p m Apr 28 Montreal at New York 6:05 p n May 1 Montreal at New York. 7 05 i m x-May 3 - New York at Montreal 6 35 m x M ay5 Montreal at New York 6 0 5 p m x May 8 New York at Montreai 6 35 pm Campbell Conference (Edmonton vs. Minnesota) Apr 24 Minnesota at Edmonton 8 35 p m Apr 26 Minnesota at Edmonton 8 35 p m Edmonton a! Minnesota 7 35 p m Apr 28 May 1 Edmonton at Minnesota 7 35 p m x May 3 Minnesota a! Edmonton 8 35 p m x May 6 Edmonton at Minnesota 7 35 p m x M ay8 Minnesota at Edmonton 8 3 5 p m x-if necesary NHL Scoring Leaders By United Press International 1984 Stanley Cup Playofts As of April 23 Gretzky Edmonton Reinhart Caigary Kurri Edmonton Messier E tmonton Mactnnis Calgary McDonald Canary Coftey Edmonton Gilmour St L ours Pettersson St louis Acton Minnesota Anderson Edmonton Naslund Montreal Gartner Washington Christian Washington E aves Calgarv Maruk Minnesota P Stastny Que bet Ramage St Lou s Stevens Washingtor G A P 5 13 18 6 11 17 7 7 14 4 10 14 2 1? 14 6 7 13 5 8 13 2 9 11 7 3 10 4 6 10 4 6 10 3 7 10 3 7 10 5 4 9 4 5 9 4 5 9 2 7 9 1 8 9 1 8 9 OLYMPICS Ind BLOOM INGTON The .’0 players to it the U S Olympic bos make M ondays second ( ketbaii trials (team to oe reduced to 12 players by July 14) (U PI) Steve Alford Indiana (Now Castle Ind 5 guard 6 1 163 freshman 284 |umor 1 165 sophomore center 7 0 248 |unior senior Lancaster Gordon guard 6-3 192 senior guard 6 5 199 luhior tumor center 7-0 250 ¡umor 6-5 204 sophomore Char-es Barkiey Auburn ¡Leeds Aid i. forward 6 b Johny Oawkms Duke (Washington D i > guard 6 Patrick Ewmg Georgetown (Cambridge Mass i Vern Fuming Georgia (New York) guard 6-5 184 Louisville (Jacxson Mis-, i Micnae- Jordan Norm Carolina (Wilmington N C Jo e Kleine Afkansas (Slater M o ) center b 11 269 Jon Koncak Southern Methodist (Kansas City Mo) Maurice Martin St Joseph s (Liberty N Y ) guard Tim McCormick Michigan (Oarkston Mich ) center Chris Muiim St John s (Brooklyn N Y i forward 6 b Sarr Perkms North Carolina (Lamarr N Y ¡ forward Chuck Person Auburn (Brantley Ala ) forward 6 7 Terry Porter Wrsconsm-Stevens Point (Milwaukee) guard 6 2 199 lunior Alvin Robertson Arkansas (Barberton Ohio! guard John Stockton Gonzaga (Spokane Wash guard Wayman Tisdale Oklahoma ( Tuisa Okta i forward 6-9 259 sophomore Jeff Turner Vanderbilt (Brandon Fla ) forward 6 9 6-11 232 senior 211 ¡umor b 9 233 senior 226 sophomore 6-4 193 senior 6-1 1 76 senior Buying your leased phone now saves you time and money next term. This year, don’t leave for home without your phone. Buy it before sum ­ m er and save yourself some tim e and money. Buying your AT&T leased phone now m eans you’ll have your phone with you the very first day back to class. To buy the phone you’re leasing, ju st call AT&T Consum er Sales & Service’s toll-free num ber. I t ’s th a t easy. So call us before you say goodbye. Then unplug your phone and take it with you. And have a nice summer. 1- 800 - 555-8111 C .ill this toll I k v number '1 1 hours a day. ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT The OaMy Texan/Tuesday, April 24, 1984/Page 17 ‘Moon’ ‘nice’ movie By HEATHER JO H NSO N Daily Texan Staff in language. i he word “ nice" has an ambigu­ ous meaning, and for this reason, is often steered clear of by those who strive tor strength In some cases, however, there is gist no other word that will do. When speak ing of the film "Racing With the Moon, " n ic e " seems to he the ma­ jor theme around which the film re­ volves, so the use of the word " n ic e " becomes an imperative. "Racing With the Moon is neither a fantastically good film nor a horribly bad film. It doesn't reallv express enough passion in any one area to af­ fect its audience in any way. What the film does do is present a well-photographed, nostalgic portrait of the I940s and the trials and tribula­ tions that the World W ar II era im­ posed upon the youth of America. These trials and tribulations could have provided for some meatier sub­ ject matter, but the creators of "Rac­ ing With the Moon obviously made the decision that the lighter side of wartime adolescents would make fora "nicer" movie than the darker side After all, who wants to see sensitive young men killed and maimed or pregnant young women grieving over their dead lovers? In "Racing With the Moon, everything comes out in the wash W ar or no war. we know our hero will return and be united with his heroine. * The story of "Racing With the Moon” centers around Hopper, a 17 year-old hoy who is waiting for his IKth birthday so he can be inducted into the Marines. While Hopper waits for the date of his departure, he meets anil falls in love with Caddie, the cashier at the local movie house The conflict comes in when Nash follows Caddie home to a mansion and mis­ takenly believes she is wealthy. In truth. Caddie is the maid's daughter and is no more wealthy than Hopper himself Caddie discovers Hopper's mistake but plays along with his no­ tions of richness because she is afraid she will lose him if she doesn’t. Hopper is played by Sean Penn. Since his popularity in "Fast Times at Ridgemont H igh." Penn has proved that he can play more than just a drugged out dude. His latest project was "Sla b B o y s . " which had a limit­ ed and successful run on Broadway Penn is one of the few really excep­ tional points of "Racing With the Moon." Visually he is perfect for the part. He has a look about him that has nostalgia and sexual desire tempered with innocent naivete. Penn's acting is a combination of a kind of clutzy sexuality and sensitive masculinity. What he has shown us so far of his acting ability only scratches the sur face of the talent he posseses. The part of Caddie is played by Elizabeth McGovern. A s usual, the most that can be said for McGovern s characterization is that it w a s prettv McGovern continues to disappoint her roles with a kind of cool flatness She is beautiful, hut she lacks the sensual qualities that she requires to effective ly play opposite her male leads Nicolas Cage plays Hopper s best friend, Nicky Nicky is a troubled young man who has had a hard life and doesn’t quite know how to treat other people fairly Cage plays Nicks with tough charm This young actor is another one bound to go far and get better at his craf t as time goes on "Racing With the Moon is Rich ard Benjamin s second try at direct ing. His first directing feat. " M y Fa­ vorite Y ear." was another "nice nostalgic movie Benjamin’s movies, on the whole, are well-done, mildlv amusing and entoyable He tends to return to the days gone by not onlv for the subjects of his movies but for his directing techniques also alwavs expect a happv ending. Benjamin's films are in no w a v in­ novative or spectacular, but occasion­ ally it's good to go to a " n ic e " little movie that provokes no thought, emo­ tion or trauma “ Racing W ith the M o o n "; direct­ ed by Richard Benjam in; starring Sean Penn, Elizabeth M cGovern and Nicolas Cage. Rating: ★ ★ ★ Nice guy Sean Penn watches a nice train speed along in nice movie, ‘Racing with the M oon.’ Isn't it nice? Local hardcore bands reunite at Voltaire’s By RON M l LLER Daily Texan Staff “I want to he different I want to make vou see I want to make you wonder /s it you or is it me ' I'm the hie question You 'll never understand And to all you stupid hrat boys H e got vour money m our land — “We've got ) our Mone- n Our Hands The Big Bovs “ You can’t find justice ill find YOU — "T h e Dicks Hate the Polu. The Dicks ie .vorki Sir. It is only with a twinge of *thno- tig centrism that Í proclaim Boys and The Dick the two greatest punk urkF these are the ravings of a dedicated fan, but anybody who a,." -ccn ie Dicks blast through ‘Fake lands or danced to The Big Boy s version Of Kool and the Cane s ‘Holly wood Swinging ’ sari t help hut > a fan. It is becoming increasingly an to find either if these band" v. v ru anywhere, but Tuesday nght the w ill he together at Voltaire s ( 'atfee House at Fourth and Lavaea "tree!" This double real h a rk s back to the lays of Raul »r at leas! Studio 29 What make1" these hands stand above the loardes of other hardcore uinds v that thev ion • plus !hrash They piav a combination of "class of heavy metal and unk ust K A Z I on "Trendsetters .o ikelv to hear The Bie B o v - K U T D punk. Í as ’ exemplify this. >ou are 1 Both bands were ^pawned from ’he luttile grounds >f Raul’s Club in the late 1970s. The bands pulled their finances to record "T h e D i c k s an i ' ie Biy Bov -. i ¡ve it Raul' The album was the prototypical in­ dependent local production, and lis­ tening to t is like mainlining adre Boys have since naiine The Bie recordings, released "Indiistrv Standard. " f un. Tun. Fun and "Lullabies Help the Brain Grow . " Last year The Dicks released the fantastic " K il l From The Heart " three areat Raul's js a pool hail now Studio t .ub 1 >ot las 29 v i o 'kstore closed town But The Bin Boys and The D i c k s uitmue — carrying 'he torch >f individualism and rebel­ lion TONITE * C A R O L I N A ★ S I Dnnks Jd ies Drink pree 9 -11 FRIDAY ★ BUBBA COX ★ Ladies night. 2 'c r Qrirms. no cover Best Looking Cowooy Boot Contest $4.00 tn Fridays Bring this ad to get on mailing list & complimentary drink 5337 S. L am ar H w y 290W 392-2151 V 392-3542 J ! Let Us Entertain You w ith ~heatrei W e, at the Cultura’ Entertainment Commit about the 84 85 season and hope mat Entertain You ' in the upcoming year by cf pre-registration. ire excited ng at '3-2’ .¡r> i we want to make m re Prig-registration s mn you don t miss out ¡n >ur emn n >re exciting 84 35 season Here s a sneak preview )f ;ome upcoming plays King Lear Old Vic flfpertory heater 'Gigi" with Louis uordan, The Black Light Theatre of Drague, The National Theatre of the > n Dream Gins, Brighton Beach Memo’ s Du\,mount Theatre, Sophisticated .adies Paramour i Dracula Paramount Theatre, ano Sister Mary Ignatius with Cloris leachman ALL PR O G R A M S S U B JE C T 0 THANGL itre. '■ 7 Í C E C at Pre-Registration Cu-spunsoreu :>y the the Performing Arts inion (. iltu.a ntera¡mnent Committee and '-xas :-.inter.The omversitv at Texas it Austin B THE BEACH 1 la m -2 p m D A I L Y f I J Live Entertainment 7 Days A Week O ver 100 Different Kinds of Brews Daily Specials Like $3.00 on Wednesday, Cheeseburger, Pepsi & Chips or a Breaded Chicken Breast w/Fettucini Alfredo . . . or any number of Pasta Dishes. ñ lo w S e r v in g B r e a k f a s t o n W e e k e n d s NEW MUSIC GALORE 2 9 1 1 San Jacinto 4 7 4 -0 6 0 5 The Texas Union Presents an exibition and sale of original g r a p h i c art April 23, 24 & 25, 1984 1 0:0 0 AM to 6 :0 0 PM in the Texas Union Art Gallery. Sponsored by the Texas Union Fine Arts Committee. Arranged by Marson Graphics Inc. The Dicks pump out some of those lullabies that help the brain grow. Amigo's Nightclub is proud to host the cultural and political event of the year. "H appy H our Rally" for Gonzalo Barrientos with live entertainment by Ruben Ramos and th e Rocking R evolution M o n d a y A p ril 30th 5 —9p m $ 5 .0 0 1523 Tinnin Ford Road "just off Riverside Dr. behind Godfathers Pizza" 441 -3813 Ladies’ Night LADIES-50* DRAFT BEER & HIBALLS Live Tonight: COVER BOYS •25C Draft Beer 7-9 Every Night • Rock Videos On 10' Screen • 14 Pool Tables •Over 12,000 Sq. Feet NO COVER A neat appearance is required. THE N EW < ROD MUSIC - GA M ES 2015 E Riverside Drive Page 18/The Daiy Texan/Tuesday, April 24, 1984 Ansel Adams leaves American photo tradition memorable work was the black-and- white celebration of the natural beaut\ of Am erica in shot imnci that were His images where characterized b\ their detail and dimension. Full frame photos the jü^'thod of non-retouehed “ Straight and manipinüfed photography became popular in the 1910s and 20s The big 8-by- 10-inch negatives he produced with h i s view cameras were able to take in a wealth of information, and Adams' printing techniques gave h i s images a glowing, almost three-di mensional quality that made many of his best works stand out and become popular even with non-photographers. recognized photographer This popularity with the general public has led to A d a m s becoming the most in \merica. This recognition has. in the led to critisism by last tew years, many profesional photographers that Adams' work was commercial, the FeRoy Nieman ot photography. Yet the continued popularity of Adam s' books and his dedication to the teach­ ing of art form to the amateur in nu­ m erous books and workshops made Adams undeniably photography's li\ ine master. I ★ STUDENTS ★ I 41 R E B E L D R I V R I N Store your personal items for the summer at NORTH LAMAR MINI'S, 8129 N. Lamar 837-1715. iHnng this ad and receive a free lock) Pictured above, Adam s’ 1944 pho­ tograph ‘ Moonrise O ver H ernan­ dez.'' In 1982 a print from the nega­ tive sold for $71,000. BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5244 By BRIA N BARNAUD Daily Texan Staff Arise! Adams, known throughout the world as one of the premire A m er­ ican photographers and spokesman for the natural preserves of Am erica, died Monday in California. The 82-year-old Adams was best known for his “ Moonrise over Herna­ ndez, ' a 1944 photograph of a moon I it valley and town that Adams happened upon in a late night drive across New Mexico. A print o f the photograph sold at an auction two years ago for $71,(XX). Adams was born in 1902 in San Francisco, son of a wealthy insurance salesman In later years he traveled extensively throughout the mountains of the West as a guide for the Sierra Club. Trekking through the wilds of Yosemite National Park, Adams con­ tinued with experiments in photogra­ phy, a hobby he had started during childhood In 1927. a photograph he made of H a lf Dome Mountain in the park gave him the fame he needed to become well-known in photo circles. From then on. Adams was able to champion photography for its aesthet­ ic uses. Although Adams used the older techniques of photography in his most famous work, he was always interest­ ed in new technologies. His modern darkroom in his Monterey home even sported a microwave oven to dry the large prints quickly. He also was a fan ot instant photography, publishing a book that became an important text on the subject and more recently doing color work with the instant Polaroid SX-70 print system. But his most 75%(nearty 36,000 persons) of all University of Texas students shop at Highland Mall each month. SO U SC Ii TIm U niversity Marica», ISS1 AUSTIN 6 5 2 1 T H O M P S O N O F F 1 8 3 1 M IL E S O . o l M O N T O P O L IS I PH. 3 8 5 -5 3 2 8 2 * h r . a d u l t t h e a t h e r ] PRINCESS SEKA (X ) SEDUCTION CINDY (X) V ID E O T A P E R E N T - S E L L M A G A Z I N E S - N O V E L T I E S P E E P S . . . I N 6 C H A N N E L V I D E O A LL M A L E A U D I T O R I U M D IS : C O U P L E S - S T U D E N T S - S E N IO R S ■ ••••••••■ ••M M PH. 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 6 9 0 2 B urleson Rd. O R I G I N A L / U N C U T A D U L T S O N L Y PORNO SCREEN.. TEST pooq |xxx) AFTERNOON DELIGHTS OPENS 7:00 STARTS DUSK Radio Sound System I BAR< I M O N T ISUNAI <% GENERAL CINEMA B A R G A IN M A TIN E E S - S2 50 i THRU SAT A l l S H O W S S C F O R i 6 P M . H O L ID A Y S I S ' M A T IN i i S H O W O N L YI HIGHLAND MALL H IG H L A N D M A L L BLVD. 4 5 1 - 7 3 2 6 AGAINST ALL ODDS 2:20,4:50 r 7:20,9:50 LÍÍ1 fOLICE ACADEMY 1:45,3:45,5:45, 7:45,9:45 [Rl CAPITAL PLAZA 1-35 o f C A M E R O N RD. 4 5 2 - 7 6 4 6 B IG C H ILL 2 .6 10 STO N E BO Y 1:3 0 . 3 3 0 . 5 30 7 30 9 30 ED U C A TIN G R IT A 3 55 7 55 IC E M A N 2,4,6,8,10 AKIRA KUROSAWA - TOSHIRO MIFUNE JESTER AUD. 7 & 9:15 p.m. $1.75 UT, $2.25 non-UT YOJIMBO ¡ R m m m ! :::::::::: NOW SERVING DRAFT & BOTTLE BEER 2 8 1 5 Guadalupe store only m mS I R L O IN PIT 4 7 8 -3 5 6 0 M o*t»rC ard - Y _ v .'¿I - C o n v e n ie n tly lo c a t e d c lo s e to c a m p u s a t 2 8 1 5 G u a d a lu p e s e rv in g q u a lity U S D A c h o ic e b e e f, h a n d c u t by o u r c r o w , d a ily fra s h h o m e m a d e s a la d a a n d so u p s. O ffe rin g lu n c h a n d d in n e r s p a c ia ls d a ily . H o r n * o w n a d a n d o p e r a te d s in c e 1 9 7 0 . O p e n 1 1 -9 Su n. T h u rs and 1 1 -1 0 IFri. ft S a t. 4 7 8 -3 5 6 0 . I I I I I - 2 8 1 5 GUADALUPE | Good tor H I in party. Introductory Special ENCHILADAS HOMEMADE BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE $ 3 69 Choice of beef, cheese, or chicken. Served w refried beans & 8p* n* h rice w/verde sauce or chili con came expires 5-30-84 478 3560 I r — — — — — — — — i I m ■ QUARTER l b . h a m b u r g e r W/FRIES AND 16 oz. SOFT DRINK $ 2 M S* expires 5-30-84 478-3560 ! | I I I I o a ic m i A n A i h o c 2815 GUADALUPE I Good tor atm party. Pictured is Ansel Adam s’ self- portrait taken in Monument Valley, Utah, in 1958. The photo presents natural elements as the subject. i R f i m i 8C K E E I I S MERYL STREEP KURT RUSSELL CHER SILKWOOD 6 :0 0 - 8:35 X 3 r How much love, sex, fun and friendship can a person take? TH E BIG CHILL 6 : 35 - 9.00 UnfuUhfullij TH C /(f P /R fln t 1 1 0 5 ® 1 1 :1 5 p g All Shows $2 Monday - Saturday All Shows SI on Sunday P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S IV , " " " W , W o m a n c u v ? j kmiiv'to 1 : 4 5 - [ g 4 : 1 5 - 7 : 0 0 - 9 : 3 0 4 : 4 5 - 7 : 1 5 - 9 : 4 5 n $ 7 0 0 32 7 4-27 07 0 8 981 H O N D A C X 6 00 6 0 0 0 -rtrfe, on» 'wrier drive shoh ke new tree beimet 5 2 $1300 445 4302 H O N D A M S S 1982 bkxV red stapes •• eRent "npg. <*o»y porting $60 0 fir 6362 usk for Jo e ondition 350 mtles great Excellent 442 6 7 Mobile Homes for Sale LU X U R Y 3T R oyol ln*erixi*onol >978 &ek>w market 4 9 ? 9836 (Sor, A r t o n » ; 5- 7 $9 2 0 0 .off»' evtm ngs ond*t*on CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOB SALE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Consecutive Day Ratos 15 w o rd minimum Eoch w o rd 1 tim e Eoch w o rd 3 tim es E o cfi w o rd 5 tim es Eoch w o rd 10 tim m 1 cot * 1 inch 1 tim e 1 co l x 1 inch 2-9 tim m 1 co l. x 1 inch $ 24 $ 52 $ 64 $1 04 $6 60 $6 60 25 o r m ore tim m $6 00 $1 0 0 ch a rg e to ch an g e co p y First tw o w o rd » m ay b e a ll ca p íto l letter». 2 5 c fo r eoch ad d itio n a l w o rd in cap íto l letter». M asterca rd an d V isa a ccep ted 20% DISCOUNT on a ll classified ad vertisin g p lace d in person an d p re p aid (cash o r check only — no cred it card»). T SP Building, Room 3 2 0 0 2 5 0 0 W hitrs M o n d a y through En d ay Bam -4 30pm DEADLINE SCHEDULE Fndcry 11am M o n d a y Texon M o n d a y Horn Tuesday Texon Tuesday Horn W e d n e sd a y Texan Thursday Texon W e d n e sd a y llo m Erid o y Texon T h u rsd a yllo m In Ito event of errors modo In an advertisement. Imme­ diate notice most be given a s the publishers are re­ sponsible for only ONE In­ correct Ins ertion. AN claims for adjustment» should be m ade not later than 30 days after publication. Advertis­ ing prepaym ent non-re- fundable. CONDOS FOR SALE TRAVIS GREEN CONDOS Best value in Austin. First stop on UT shuttle south of river Pnced from low 540's. 7 5 units on 5Vi acres. RE/M A X CAPITOL REALTORS S o le s O ffic e 444-1110 o r 4 5 1 -2 2 4 2 FOR SALE BY OWNER Luxurious downtown condo; 2- 1; great view; fireplace; covered parking; security; one block to UT shuttle; near Town Lake Hike & Bike Trails. $84,500. Call owner at 477-1602. CONDOS FOR SALE Su n set v ie w o f S h o a l C r e e k G r e e n b e lt o n d H ill C o u n try 1 o n d 2BR c o n d o miniums, co n v e n ie n tly lo c a te d to UT o r d o w n to w n Austin A ssu m ab le, non q u alify in g lo a n s a v a ila b le a n d b e lo w m a rket fin a n cing . G r e a t investm ent fo r student o r p ro fe s s io n a l O m n i E n ­ terprises Inc 451-8577 FOR SALE BY OWNER Luxurious d o w n t o w n c o n d o 2 I; g r e a t v ie w fire p la c e c o v e r e d p a r k ­ ing, security; o n e b lock *o UT shuttlA n e a r T o w n L a k e H ik e & B ike Trails $84 500 C o ll o w n e r at 4 7 7 160? A U S T IN C O N D O M IN IU M N e w project west rampus Two bedroom two both two story Investor will seH at discount Call G ra h a m Gilliam d ay 2 1 4 / 4 2 20 0 0 ext 152, night 214 521 4106 5 4 O N E O F a kind west campus condo O verlook Condominiums spacious 2BR 2BA iarge bnck fireplace, ceiling fans micro w o ve dishwasher washer/dryer beautiful w o od decking with heated pool lovely view quiet neighbor and spa hood walk or campus $106 5 0 0 Don't mtss this great opportu 4 25 mty Call Jennifer 479 02 5 2 shuttle to THE G A Z E B O I b ath/lBR with loft Hof tub security, 4 blocks from UT $62 0 0 0 4-25 Call 478 8 6 8 3 , 327 20 5 7 THE P O IN T E Large 1-1, overlooking pool ond hot tub ceiling fan m icrow ave se curity gates private g a rag e & more By 4-27 ow ner 458 1585 4-27 FOR SALE A utos fo r S a le ___ N E E D C A S H 75 Rabbit, $ 9 0 0 transmis­ sion Rebuilt engine, stereo. A C 76 Fiat 131 w agon AC. 5 speed radio $1200 each/best offer 441-2615 474-1772 4 _________________________________________ 27 1978 V W Rabbit 4-door, A M FM cas­ 4-27 sette $ 2 3 0 0 458-8701 74 D U ST ER needs work $3 0 0 8488 444- 4-24 1977 T O Y O T A Célica GT l.ftbock 5- speed air conditioning, metallic blue e x ­ cellent condition, $ 2 4 9 5 448-3803 4 24 _____________ 1966 C H E V Y II N o va , good transporta­ tion, runs good, $2 7 5 or best offer Call 4-24 4 79 8044 leave message 67 V W Bug G o o d body, needs point runs O K drives well, new tires $7 0 0 4-24 477 0 7 6 7 1968 O L D S 98 450 H orsepow er W h ite with excellent blue interior $ 5 0 0 926- 4-25 7820 evenings 1978 T O Y O T A Coro lla w a g o n AC, good 4-25 gas Call 445-2570 LUXURY C O N D O S 2 Bedroom 2 Bath, ceiling fans, security systems, complete kitch­ en, pool & jocuzzi, special fi­ nancing For information call CULLEN INTERESTING 4 8 0 - 8 4 7 4 4-24 C R O IX C O N D O ?4 th St (U$t off campus, 2 yrs old 1-1 W D m icrow ave fireplace tacuzzi, pool choice parking, security, ex­ tra sharp 476-7161 ?14-783-0 3 4 ? 5-1 W A L K TO UT* For S a le 2107 R.o G ra n d e Ave 1BR 1BA condo Perfect for a stu dent* $55 0 0 0 1 y .o , 2 story loft unit W asher & dryer connections Central beat & A C Call N a tion a l Properties at 4-24 255-2533 2 2, furnished 3 blocks from campus W / D For more information call Chip 4.77- 4-26 9048 anytime H U G F C O N D O This o n e can't be b eat1 ’ fully furnished H yde bedroom 1 bath Park Complete kitchen, ceiling fans W / D hook-up big walk in closet fireplace Walk/shuttle to campus O riginal ow ner 4-27 467 0852 7 M IN U T E S to UT Beautiful 2-1 condo near shuttle, shopping, Town Lake priced to sell, call today for details K a y Killen Longhorn Properties 478-6313, 451- 4-27 2904 2 2 N D AT Rio G ra n d e 1BR/1BA with mi­ crow ave washer/dryer patio B B Q grill, lacuzzi, covered parking Call G re g 472 5-2 2821 2BR C O N D O |ust south of Town Lake and downtown Austin Assumable non qualifying loan ava ila b le G re a t a re a for investment Om ni Enterprises Inc 451- 4-27 8577, N E E D C A S H 65 O lds station w agon good condition good tires pow er win 4 25 daws sun roof $3 0 0 453 1301 B M W 2002 ( 74) 52 0 0 0 miles N e w ex hausts. air conditioner A M /E M stereo G o o d condition $4 200 477 1739 4 25 79 C A M A R O very clean well mam ♦amed. V8 camel color stereo-cassette one ow ner $3 8 0 0 Days 476-3754 I Cheryl) Evenings/weekends 346 62 0 3 4 25 V W RABBIT 1979 Alpine white 34,300 AM /FM . new tires mterior/body excel lent Blue book $ 3 3 0 0 Call 327 5354 4-25 p m 78 G R E M L IN AC AT body in good con dition Recently tuned-up, reliable frans 4-25 portotion $9 7 5 442 5116 82 M A X I Customized V an 31 0 0 0 miles Tope deck, stereo C B sleeps 2 2 N e w steel belted rodials and red shag carpet Must sell before summer school 5 7 4 74-9756 1973 M G M idget convertible N e w brakes new clutch new transmission Must sacrifice $1.700 459 1573 even 4-27 ings 1967 V W Bug, dependoble student car good running condition Michelm rodials needs pomt $72 5 negotiable 472 5-4 8813 1974 SU P E R Beetle good condition 4-25 S I 500 467 0 2 0 0 M IN E THE ports with this one' 1973 Dot sun 510-SW $5 0 0 Runs excellent n 4-27 spected Pat 451-4463 T O YO T A C O R O L L A * 1973 r ^ d e l $9 0 0 4-25 Call 447-1177 1975 T O YO T A Corolla Auto,air good condition $1 500 445-0582 evenings ______________________________________ 4-27 EO R D M U S T A N G 80 Red AC, autom at­ ic PS cruise control A M -FM stereo 23.000 M Call N o ra 478-4421 $37 0 0 4-27 1975 A U D I Fox w agon G re a t condition 4-27 $2,000 467 0 2 0 0 ' CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE From $80,700. UTAAEA 23rd Street & San Gabriel OWNER FINANCING DELOW 0 MARKET 479-6618 476-7238 ^ 10% Fixed interest* 11.05% Annual Percentage Rate 2 bedroom luxury condos, 10 min. from UT 1510 W. North Loop one block east of Burnet Swimming—Tennis— Sport Courts—Covered Parking M a r k e te d by M a c B ln tllff K C o., R ealto rs 451-2191 'Pw w M sb K td " *vwramort®-.'■<>" 'erumm*principa S.i.jicfduf did pavaMe 11the end oi the tenth iear Suver mav refinance ih ^ •„ i am 1 me wm no iirecavment ?• * Two bedroom, two bath luxury townhomes with heated pool and spa, covered parking and security systems. Four penthouses with views. Below market financing. Ready for occupancy summer 1984. 477-0099, 454-1755. C O N D O M I N I U M S 26th Street at S an G abriel INTRODUCING WESTVIEW HONDAMINIUMS The lucky first ten people who buy a Westview Condominium will receive a blonda Spree— the low-maintenance alter­ native to cars that scoots you to class with almost no gas. A n d your Westview Condo­ minium, at 2804 Rio Grande, helps keep your life in the fast lane— with lower level covered parking, stacked washer/dryers, microwaves, a beautiful pool, and more. C all Krasoff Builders today about a one or two bedroom Westview Hondaminium. W e ll put-put you in the right place. Located at 2804 Rio Grande in the West Campus area. Sales office open 10-6 Mon. —Scit., 12-6 Sun. From $73,500, West Campus CONDOMINIUMS A project of Krasoff Builders. For information call (512) 477-1878 Projected occupancy date— June, 1984. Outstanding Previously Owned Condominiums in the Best Communities Orange Tree 2 Bedroom 2' Bath one of the argest floor plans at Orange Tree 2 stories skylights 1 Bedroom 1 Bath exceptionally functional home many custom Matures mirrored entry, wood Shutters mim-blinds opens onto courtyard Croix 2 Bedroom 2 Bath absolutely the best location at Croix 3rd floor overlooking spa and fountain vault­ ed ceilings ceiling fans microwave 2 Bedroom 1 Bath completely furnished with a pri­ vate balcony overlooking pool a rare find in West campus two bedrooms under $100 000 Centennial 1 Bedroom 1 Bath with study The first resale at Centennial extra arge floor plan with ots of win­ dows on ’he 3rd floor overlooking courtyard Call or Drop in 22nd and Rio Grande 478-6313 LONGHORN PROPERTIES. INC. WHERE A SENSE OF TRADITION MEETS THE SPIRIT OF TODAY. N F A ehind the prestigious bnck walls of The r * < Vanderbilt lies a world made for X V ontemporarv aving ;ne and two bedroom ondomimumv n-ith every onvemence. everv luxurv Including — • Ceiling fans in living areas • All appliances including microwave oven washer and drver • Ceramic tile in entnes sjtchens and baths • Home secuntv svsterm Just a few blocks from U T., The Vanderbilt enjovs -.ecuntv-gate entry, abundant oarking and a pool with heated lacuzzi spa For >ales information call Benchmark Properties at 4804X197 910 West 22nd Street \ustin Texas 78705 Developed by Vanderbilt ondomimum- Partnership Tlx Y T N D E R B IIT A CLASSIC APPROACH TO CONTEMPORARY ELEGANCE. I I I magine a residence where the beautv of | l )ld World design has beeniviined with present-da> practicalitx "hat s "he Palladian a superior condominium now orfenng two bedroom two bath homes Graced with such features as ceiling tans, greenhouse windows, trench doors and ceramic tile entnes, kitchens and baths Plus time-saving conveniences like microwave ovens and washer'dryer units Discover tor yourself 'his beautiful community at The University s doorstep With its security gate entrv, on-site parking, pool and heated ^pa, The Palladian represents the ultimate in campus accommodation s For sales information, call Benchmark Properties at 480-iX)97 712 West 21st Street, \ustm. TX 78705 Developed bv H .A .P II loint Venture PALLADIAN 1981 D A T S U N 280ZX excellent condi tion bronze/tan interior AC ■ speed bra A M Fm cassette $9 100 250-8641 4-27 __________________ 74 FO R D Van 6 cylinders very econom­ ical runs good Call Jose at 495 80 5 0 4-27 leave message 82 V W Sa ro c co great shape a»r A M system FM $7 995 Kevin 452 3653 445 6 6 5 8 4 digital alarm cassette _ _ _ ______________ 27 1974 FIAT X-19 red, new tires new bat fery superb engine A M FM $1 850 4 27 445-3425 evenmgs Motorcycles fo r Sale WOODS HONDA FUN CENTER Largest Honda Dealer in Texas Best Deals Best Service CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE SOMETHING TO WRITE HOME ABOUT "1 I • I * I ^ O e x rD a d I I know that we can t afford one of mrise $90 000 < nodos withm - - I -ale Qy I >nq distance from the fa m o u s Du! I ' >uoct tnis -ea' steat ver ,n prest' gtons and secure M W Ht»w area I mat s gotnq to savg ygy n p o e y ' « s - - BA toan assum ption with L eihnq .et'tnq fans m irrors and wattpaper aeccn ’ ebeci no discount points and no '>>iy PC1 “ a' estate com mtsstoo rtm p u s d o w r a 2BR I ytNv acuzzi I tt S to» i ' a pr-r e '■< > | ( • I I MOP AC n that new / ? 8 you an a I i -xxnq lo save ,n this rteai We ve a I OOt lo get v jm e fh tnq itned up lor F a f ( soon :ia d so p*ease hurry O o n tie * l mis one get away C at1 mm now S 1 1 5 eventr>rjs and iMevWervls with ’he money you re -wner , ly - -om ie<, • WOODLANDS II a Riverside Area B From $37 500 a Fixed Interest a Fixed Closing Costs a 10 Day Closing a Immediate Occupancy 2500 BURLESON ROAD 443-5035 447-8303 H jte U VJeiW Savannah 911 West 221/: at San ( ¡atine! Twelve two bedroom flats and -tudms Priced from $94,000 Twenty Three H undred Leon 2300 Leon Street Ten two bedroom flats and studios Priced from $92,000 C.SI specializes in small private co n do m inium proiects located in the convenient W est C am p us area Both Savannah and Twenty Three H undred Leon feature • electronic secuntv access • private balconies or decks • tiled courtyards • extensive am em tv package A vailab le for S p rin g '84 occupancy 11.75*3 A R M financing availab le GS1 G O U LD /SH N C X i R IN T E R E S T S ’ R E A L Í STATE IN V E S T M E N T S 811 N ueces For inform ation phone 473-2031 Prices Start at $398 6509 N. Lamar b etw een Airport A Koerxg 81 H O N D A Passport excellent condition 4-24 $500 482 9022 H O N D A U R B A N D e lu x e 1982 Excellent condition Electnc start accessories in eluded $440 negotiable Must sell 469 5 1 95 6 7 76 SU Z U K I G T 750 looks Tharp $70 0 4-24 444-8488 N E W SU Z U K I G S 4 50T showroom clean 9 months warranty, $1100 N e w Bell 5-2 fullface helmet $75 459-3029 BEAUTIFUL 82 Kawasak. 5 5 0 LTD 50 0 0 miles, no problems, must sacrifice $1 0 0 0 4-24 FIRM 458-1099 476-9782 H O N D A 4 5 0 Nighthawk 1982 Bought new lost September Perfect ondition cover helmet $1,300 2 9 0 0 miles 4-24 Frank 837-9269 H O N D A VT 500 Veetwin W a te r cooled Shah drive Dark blue O n ly 500 miles Perfect condition $ 1 8 5 0 458 5-7 1789 FREE UN IV ER SIT Y Porkmg 1980 Honda low mileage excellent concfi Passport fion Call Todd 346-7280 478-0205 4-27 S 3 5 0 CONDOS FOR SALE U S 307 W. MLK Betw een Guadalupe & Lavaca 9 -6 Daily • • • Sim plify Your Search W alk On Over 479-6618 FOR SALE Over 100 Listings to Choose From OranoeTree 11 Croix 2/1:2/2 Presentation Square 1 1 Nueces Place 11 Wmdtree 22 Spring Hoflow 1 1 Hyde Park If 1 Chestnut Square 1 1V2 Somerset 22 Greenwood Towers 1 1; 2 2 ThePointe 11 Cottonwood 1 1 FOR LEASE Condos Starting $375 up to $1,250 BuenaV*ta2 2 Cottonwood 11 G«zebo11 0uadrangle2/2 Edgediff 21 Spring Holow 2 2 Taisman 2 2 2507 Quarry 2 1 b 2813b Rio Grande 1 1 A venueAH Croa 22 Nueces Comer 2 wtoft ..SELLS & RESELLS payment rate A New Style Of Home Has Taken Shape In Old Hyde Park ONLY 7 UNITS LEFT! COMPARE OUR PRICES PER SQUARE FEET The Quadrangle Twent\ ‘-even condominium homes designed around a quiet, tree-shaded courtyard in old H yd e Park. • Microwave ovens and ranges • Dishwashers • I ireplaces • Refrigerators * Patios or decks • Washers and dr\ ers • Trash compactors • Wet bars • Garage door openers • L filing tans • Skylights • Swim m ing pools and lacuzzi spa • 2 Bedrooms/2 Bath Plats available '-'tailing under $100,000 • One Bedroom from $83,950 THE QUADRANGLE in M il 1 FR l ) R M ) h \ Furnished model open daifi 611 East 45th Austin, Texas (512) 454-3055 Inquire N o w For Fall O c c u p a n c \ ! Pag» 20/Th# Daly Texan/Tuesday, April 24,1984 F08SAU Bkyci— for Soto IN C H U m vaqa 1 2-ipe*d, to * dtp*, 21 pu m p botti* m c o g * excellent condition 11 month. old $ 2 2 5 4 7 2 1037 R o la n d 4 -2 4 ____________________ 6-5PFE D M o u n tain bike A 10-speed four n g bike Chro m e -m o ly frame, sew -ups pu m p to oh $ 3 0 0 a n d $175 C h ip 4 72 4 -2 4 2113 N IC E A 2 U K I 10 spe e d S1 00 o r best of 4 2 6 fee 4 69 -9431, keep trying S T U D E N T D I S C O U N T 1 N e w cruisers, 10 speed, mountain b4ies, Puch, Takora Boss, A ro y a A D io m o ndb o ck $15 0 $ 3 3 9 South Austin Bicycies. 2210 S 1st St., 4 4 4 -0 8 0 5 4 - 2 7 U N f V E G A G R A N Tounsm o w om en's 19" pfus oil repair tools Excellent condition 4 2 7 $ 2 7 5 4 4 5 -0 5 8 2 e venings Stereo» tor Sole H IT A C H I RECEIV E R S R -2 0 0 ! ¡2 y n o T «warranty) $ 9 5 Bose studiocroft (4 years warranty) $170 poir, A IC A I cassette deck G X C 7101 Ifernte heod) $150 $ 4 0 0 to­ 4 26 tal A n d y 4 7 7 8 8 2 4 H IT A C H I C A SSET T E deck, 0 -E2 2, Dolby Recording M eters soft touch controls. $120 o b o hardly used Poul 4 9 5 5 5 2 9 4 3 0 8 35 -1 9 5 2 FUIN. APARTMENTS MASK VII APTS. SUMMER SPECIAL • 1BR Fum. $255-1280 • Shuttle Front Door • 2 Pools • SmaA Friendy Complex 3100 Speedway 477-2004 FOR S A II Stereos lo r Sole P A IR O F Polk A u d io 12c o n d subw o o fe r Excellent condition with w arranty $ 5 0 0 4 0 0 4 5 2 -2 0 0 8 M usical for Sale D ffU M S cym bot. C a ll 4 4 5 - 2 5 7 0 5 pieces C B - 7 0 0 with ZHdiian 4 - 2 5 O V A T IO N A C O U S T IC guitar Excellent condition $ 3 7 5 wrth case CoH 4 4 3 4 -2 6 ___________ ELUTE G e m e m ho rd t O p en -h o t#, solid stiver b o d y Heodtcwnt hos h a d custom w ork H ordly plo ye d $ 4 5 0 4 7 7 1559 4 3 0 Photo grap hy for Sole C A N N O N AE-1 with 5 0m m a n d 35- •05mm m acro zoom lens plus tnpod ond m uch m ore $ 3 2 5 neg. 4 7 4 6 8 8 6 4 2 5 Tickets for Sale C O M P U T E R T IC K E T S W e b u y sell, a n d trade them Friendly last se rvice $ 15 o n d 4 14 up 4 7 4 - 6 8 8 2 V A N H A L E N J udo s Pnest K o o l G o n g , P P M M a n d re ll, L ib e ro ce First five row s 5 ? C ra ig 4 72 78 9 6 F0RSAU Tklceti far Sole V A N H A L E N Hcketsl A p p le ordering coupons! C all 4 4 3 1474 late mornings 4 -3 0 o n d a fternoons 12-1 best time J U D A S P RIEST A pril 29, row s 3 a n d 6 , few re m aining seats O n ly $ 2 0 D uone 4 27 4 44 -2 1 4 3 Pets for Sole EAST B A R K IN G soles m an left me four cute block l a b puppies W ill sell to c o n ­ scientious applicants only $ 4 5 each Healthy fluffy a d o r a b le C o ll Jeff 8 3 7 4 3 0 6 0 3 9 Misc. for Sole include V e rno n's The Continuum C o Inc hos low b o o k s for sole w hich Texos C o d e s A n n o ta ted a n d Statutes A n n o tat­ ed. Texas Statutes a n d Crvil Statutes, Tex­ os Constitution Texas Session Low Ser vice M o d e m le g a l Forms, Bankruptcy Forms, U S C A W e s t’s L egal Form, Texas Prochce, Federal C o s e L aw s W e are a sk­ ing $ 1 5 0 0 for oil the b o o k s a n d supple menfv The b o o k s w ere ongtnoHy pur chose d w 1982 C o ll Teresa H o ys at 3 4 5 - 5 7 0 0 ext 2 0 3 FOR SAL! Misc. for Sale FOR SA Ii Misc. for Solo BosebaM Jackets, Uniform s, W ind- breakers, T-Shirts, Goff Shirts, Bum per Slickers. Boseboll Caps, Bow ling Shirts. N o minimum order on any item Call us before you buy 18' S O I C a t C atam aran , dilly trailer ex cedent c ondition $ 2 ,0 0 0 2 6 7 2 5 9 0 4 2 6 S O F A $ 1 5 0 C a ll after six 8 3 6 4 8 8 9 4 _ 2 6 AUSTIN SPECIALTY ADVERTISING 443-2595 M I S C H I A N E O U S F O R sole W ilso n l a ­ dies G o lf C lubs $ 7 5 w eight b e n c h with weights $ 7 5 , p in g -p o n g table $ 2 5 tw o sets o f b o r stools $ 2 5 o n d $15, W e stin g house w ashe r $ 1 5 0 o n d W h irlp o o l dryer $ 5 0 4 4 4 - 7 7 7 0 olter six M u s i sell by April 2 7 4 _ 2 6 S O I ID M A P L E table, 3 6 r ó O ' w ith T o u , Breuer-like choirs V e ry g o o d co n d itio n $ 2 6 0 4 7 4 6 4 7 0 4 3 0 C O R O N A M A T I C 2 2 0 0 $ 1 5 0 Excellent typew nter but n eed the cash C oll le n o re 4 4 7 4 3 7 8 late e ve n in g s o n ly 4 3 0 R E F R IG E R A T O R 2 8 cu ft 6 m onths old excellent condition $ 1 0 0 4 9 5 - 5 5 0 2 4 3 0 6 F O O T so fa w o o d frame, recently up holste red $ 1 0 0 o r best offer 4 4 4 8 9 2 5 D E A L Furniture G O O D sole l o v e s e a i & choirs couch, coffee table Excellent c ondition o n d c orn entables 4 2 4 C o ll 4 4 3 -1 0 1 4 fo r B O A T F O R sale 1 ^ 7 6 W R o y 18 h ~ 1 25 Evm ru d e o u tb o a rd Excellent sh a p e 4 - 2 7 Trailer, c o v e r C o ll 4 4 7 7 51 2 I O V E S E A T C H A IR very com fortable $ 1 5 0 Full size h e o d b o o rd 2 m ghtstands 4 6 7 $ 3 0 e a c h 8 2 3 7 4 . 2 7 Excellent c ondition G O L F C A R T a n d trailer with battery c h a r g e r 5 3 8 8 slightly b o d y d o m o q e d 4 4 7 - 4 2 7 W A I F R B E D Q U t F N S l Z E $ 7 5 Sleeper so fa $ 5 0 C o ll be fo re Horn, 4 5 3 - 0 3 5 7 FOR SALE Misc. for Sole F IN E ST S O U T H W E S T E R N Indian ,ewelry plus excellent selection gifts & cords N e l­ son's G ifts, 4 5 0 2 S Congress, 4 4 4 - 3 8 1 4 M A R K E R S A IL B O A R D 6 8 ft fotheod sad, kick up d a g g e r b o a r d od|ustable b o o m very fast $ 7 5 0 0 8 0 C h ip 4 7 2 2113 4 2 4 4 2 6 W IN D S U R F E R A l l equipm ent a n d sail in g o o d c ondition $ 4 7 5 C a ll m o rn in gs a f­ ter e ve n in gs after 5 p m 4 7 6 - 2 7 7 2 4 - 2 4 C O M P U T E R A T A R I 6 0 0 XL So ftw a re (D o n k e y K o n g , Jum pm on P o p e y e East­ ern Frant) Books. TV cassette-recorder $ 2 7 0 , extras touch-table 4 2 5 G e o r g e 4 74 8 5 5 4 (N e g o t ia b le , S o cn fic e K E H R E S A U D I O All type lo u d sp e a k e r repair, m usical electronic repair raw Lam ar Blvd sp e ake r 5 4 * 1 0 3 5 1 2 - 4 5 2 2 2 0 2 3 1 0 8 N soles FURN. APARTMENTS E S Q U IR f A P A R T M E N T S N o rth c am p u s a re a Efficiency Corpet, A C a p p lia n c e s $ 2 2 5 E 4 5 1 -8 1 2 2 , W e stw o rld Real Estate 4 - 3 0 __FURN. APARTMENTS------- FURN. APARTMENTS \ I \ FURN. APARTMENTS — I — FURN. APARTMENTS - r= = . = ,t FURN. APARTMENTS s, 7 — $275-$300 SU M M ER RATES apartments, 1BR L a ra e furnished, w alk-.n closets, w ail to wall carpet central air a n d heat disposal, sm oke detectors, ceiling fans, w ater a n d g a s p a id S w im m in g p o o l W a lk in g d is­ tance to U T N o pets please FO U NTAIN TERRACE APTS 610 W 30th Manager's Apt. #134 477-8858 __________ 5 - 7 1BR, 1BA on IF shuttle. CA- CH, pool, pets ok, $320- $330 + E until May. $235- 5^45 + E for summer. 3501 Speedway or call 472- 4893. W A L K T O cam pus, shuttle o n d city bus la r g e efficiency 28 R 2 B A eH ioenc.es M o u n p K a i 4 0 5 E 31st St 4 7 2 - 2 1 4 7 FURN. APARTMENTS V A C A N C IE S 2 BLOCKS UT 2902 NUECES r m i ■■■.i i . . C itiO w iia e » > 2 2 9 4 476-19S7 ICC Co-op Apta 4 7 6 -4 1 ONE BEDROOM 2200Nuocos 2 M o c k s from UT $ 2 8 5 474-9702 or 476-1 §57- ONE BEDROOM 2800 R IO G R A N D ! C L O S E T O U T $ 2 5 3 F O R W F O C A L L 482-8231 or 476-1957 NOW PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL W ILSHIRE H O U S T O N APARTMENTS 301 W. 29th 2801 Hemphill B R A N D Y W IN E 2808 Whitis DALLAS 2803 Hemphill 476-0411 476-0411 476-0411 476-0411 J. ALTON BAUERLE INVESTMENTS j ONE BEDROOM $375 Quiet Area Off Woodtond Off-Street Parking, Pool and Laundry Facilities 451-8178 ELLIOTT SYSTEM PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER ROADRUNNER APARTMENTS FURN. OR UNFURN. 1-1-9225 2-1-9275 Pool, Laundry Facilities. Walk to Campus. On Shuttle Cali Bryan at 4 7 6 -0 7 7 4 or come by 2508 San Gabriel THE ELLIOTT SYSTEM PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER AN D FALL Walk to Campus — 1-1 Summer -$225, Fall $295. Manager on Duty 480-8560 THE ELLIOTT SYSTEM Free Pre-Leasing Service Open 7 Days j l l l l M I I I I E I I I I I | | i i i | | | | | | | | | a i | | | | | | | | | k ¡ b l a c k s t o n e í ¡APARTMENTS! 5 Now Pre-Leasing for § | Summer. 2-2 $450 All f to § = Bills Paid. Walk § I Campus. | Call Tony at = ¡ 476-5631 ¡ \ or come by ¡ | 2910 Medical Arts ¡ ñiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiíT CONDOS • HOUSES APARTMENTS • DUPLEXES South/Riverside Central/U.T. North NW 448-2787 472-7250 450-0505 87584 Research 4235 S. Congress SPRING inTO FALL TMENT F U R N IS H E D A N D C A R P E T E D FULLY E Q U IP P E D K IT C H E N S E F F IC IE N T ELEVATO R S E R V IC E IN T E R C O M S Y S T E M C O N V E N IE N T L O C A T IO N E X E R C ISE R O O M A N D E Q U IP M E N T C A B L E T E L E V IS IO N H O O K - U P C O N V E N IE N T L A U N D R Y F A C ILIT IES G A R A G E P A R K IN G A VA ILA BLE A IR C O N D I T I O N E D M A I D S E R V IC E A VA ILA BLE G U E S T R O O M S A VA ILA BLE R E S E R V E D S T U D Y A R E A I a y O r- S E Uj é n *11 - a h t o LARGE POOL SUNDECK OVERLOOKING AUSTIN CASUAL A N D RELAXED ATMOSPHERE SHORT WALK TO CAMPUS T i i i f I R I H m t K S TRI-TOWERS 801 W . 24THSI. A U STIN, TEXAS 78705 (512) 476-7639 / / I \ / l I RSI I ) / O f / n / ' \ / i $ c s / / t u n / / I I \ t .S s / A O i l □ " " "II K XIV I K D R FURN. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS W ARW ICK APTS. 2907 WEST AVE. G a r d e n apartm ent, p o o l with waterfall a n d su ndecks b a r b q ue ptts All units ful­ ly furn ished C A / C H with fo ns o n d mint- bim ds Three blocks from c a m p u s N o w •easing for sum m er a n d fall Efficiencies startino from $ 2 1 5 o n e b e d ro o m s $ 2 4 5 2 b e d ro o m 2 bath $ 4 5 0 electric C o m e see a n y afte rn o on o r w eekend (12 7) o r coll 4 7 4 - 7 4 2 6 4 4 4 - 2 7 5 0 6 5 108 PLACE Fum. Eff./1BR 'D ish w o sh e r/ D isp o sa l ’Sw im m ing P oo l ’P atio / lo u n g e / B a rb e q u e G rill ’Individuol S to ra g e ’B oo kshe lve s ’V? Block IF Shuttle ’L au nd ry Facilities ’Resident M a n a g e r O N E BEDROO M S- FURNISHED W a l k to U T o n shuttle, p o o l w a lk -in c lose ts, p r e le a s in g fo r su m m e r ( $ 3 0 0 p e r m o nth), fo r foil ( $ 3 7 5 o m o n th ) C a l l o r visit 3 3 0 1 R e d R iv e r A p t # 2 1 0 4 7 4 9 9 0 ? N O W LEASING FOR SUMMER 1-Bedroom and Effi- # ciencies, summer rates $225 + electricity, close to UT shuttle. Linelle Apts. 4100 Ave. A. Call 452-7901. (leases begin June 1) SUM M ER PRE-LEASING Co m e visit our nice community at 3 0 2 W 38th. W e have all siz­ es, furnished or unfurnished, oil appliances, swimming pool, biock to shuttle. Pnces starting at $195. Call 4 5 3 -4 0 0 2 for more information. N E W E F F IC IE N C IE S S 3 5 0 - $ 3 9 5 plus utilities 4 blocks c am p u s H ow e ll P rop e r ties 4 7 7 9 9 2 5 Furn EH , $ 2 4 5 • E, iBR $ 3 0 5 4 5 2 1419 4 5 3 - 2 7 7 1 108 W 45th St. 5 - r SU M M ER RATES 1 B e d ro o m $ 2 2 5 ^ E Furnished IBR opts located 1 block east of G u a d a lu p e o n 4lst A p a r t ­ ments feature ceiling fons, individual outside storage, la u nd ry facilities w a ­ ter a n d g a s p a id C oll 4 5 2 - 7 9 0 1 o r 4 7 8 - 7 3 5 5 4 1 0 0 A v e n u e A Linelle Ap ts 5- Fleur de Lis Apts. 404 30th St, N ic e ly furnished !BR apts Available, for summer a n d fall Sh ort 5 min walk1 to cam pus O w n e r p a y s g a s a n d w a ­ ter ;ust a few units still a voila b le Colt M o lly 4 7 2 6 5 1 5 o r CliH M u sg r a v e 4 7 6 -7 0 1 1 _____________________________________________ 5 ^ W f S T C A M P U S L o rg e 2 B R ap a rtm e n t iff Fourplex F ve blocks to c a m p u s walk oi* shuttle $ 4 5 0 5 0 0 0 after 6 p m 4 7 8 - 2 4 1 0 E K e n M cW illiam s, 3 2 7 G R E A T O A K L a rg e clean, quiet 2-2, ceiling fans, A C p q o l sundeck, laundry, 2 9 0 0 Sw ish er L ease $ 5 4 5 3 3 8 8 , 4 7 2 - 2 0 9 7 __________________ E 4 7 7 t I b e d ro o m H Y D E P A R K is a su per location N e a t t u rnished Balconies, quiet C A - C H L o w sum m er rate 4 5 9 3 0 8 ? 4 - 2 7 3 4 6 - 7 2 3 3 4 3 0 3 D u v a l Street IBR, 1 B A c o n d o C e ilin g fons a n d m any extras Avatloble M a y 15th 3 3 1 6 G u a ­ 4 - 3 0 d a lu p e 2 5 5 - 7 8 7 7 after 5 3 0 p m W A L K T O university 1 bedro om , fur­ nished. water & g a s p a id A v a ila b le n o w $ 2 5 0 3 4 5 - 1 5 5 2 after 6 FURN. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS Open 7 Days a Week Transportation Provided Apartments, Condos, Duplexes Preteasing starts April 15 South/Riverside North/NW 441-2277 451-2223 474-6357 Central/UT 8501-8 Burnet Rd. RENT NOW FOR SUMMER & FALL i~n$!iisbAire A P A R T M E N 1919 BURTON DRIVE Furnished & Unfurnished Efficiencies One & Two Bedrooms Two Bedroom Townhouses Available 444-1846 Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:00, Sat. 9-5, Sun. 1-5 Long Elaven Diplomat Apts. Apts. Summer Rates — - Summer Rates — m • 1 BR Furn - $270 • Water, gas paid • Walk to Campus • Walk to campus 1911 San Gabriel 916 W. 23rd 476-7399 1Ü @1 2304 Pleasant Valley NOW PRELEASING • 1, 2 & 4 Bedrooms • Heating, Cooking & Water Paid • 2 Pools, Exercise Room • Free Satellite T.V. • U.T. Shuttle ASK ABOUT OUR STUDENT SPECIAL 442-1298 NOW WITH SUPER SUMMER RATES T H E 2124 Buxton Drive “S U P E R ” Summer Rates • Efficiency $235 • 1 BR Fum. $270 t 2 BR Fum. $370-$400 • Large Pool— Patio • Luxury Club Room • 2 Shuttle Routes • Furnished or Unfurnished CLUBHOUSE POOL 444-7880 Davis & Associates Management Co. i fU>W.APMTMEWT$ FU»N. APARTMENTS EURN. APARTMENTS FUR I. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS FURN. APARTMENTS TIMBERWOOD APARTMENTS C irc le V illa A p ts. Summer Special 1 BR $240-$270 Unfurn. Plus E 1 BR $270-$300 Fum . 2 BR $310 Unfurn. P lu sE P lu sE S h u t t l e B u s — Summer Rates —- • Large Eff. $260 • Finest Location in • Shuttle or Walk to UT Area Campus • BETTER HURRY! 26th & San Gabriel 473-8969 A p t s . Hyde Park ♦ ♦ ♦ f f f ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ f — Summer Rates — ♦ • Eff. Fum. I $220-1230 ♦ • 1 BR Fum. I $240-1255 ♦ • 2 BR Fum. $330 J • City Tennis ♦ Courts & Pool J across street 2323 Town Lake Circle 442-4967 ♦ 4413 Speedway ! 458-2096 ♦ A Tanglewood Westside Apartments Sum mer Special Run, don’t walk— tomorrow wHlbe too late for these choice residences 1 Bedroom Furnished S240-S270-S29C 2 Bedroom Furnished S370-S390 Gas & water paid by owner Shuttle bus is at your front door ^ 4 0 3 N o rw a lk Ln. 4 7 2 -9 6 1 4 Continental Apts. Fan tastic Summer Ra te 2 Bedroom Furnished. . . .$330 • Nice Pool • Shuttle Comer 910 E. 40th 467-9250 Villa Arcos — Summer Special — # 1BRFum.$290 • Shuttle Front Door t Nice Pooi-Patio 3301 Speedway 478-9555 4 B e d ro o m to Eff. Preleasing for S um m er G Fall S u m m e r rates starring at $255 Furnished S Unfurnished Shuttle Dus, Riverside Area, Pool C a b le TV M odern, Spacious 1 b 2 Bedrooms BRIDGE HOLLOW APARTMENTS 1 9 1 0 W illo w Creek 4 4 4 - 6 7 5 7 4 Bedrooms ro Eff POINT SOUTH APARTMENTS 1 9 1 0 W illo w Creek 4 4 4 -7 5 0 6 Tanglewood North Apartments — Summer Specials — We Pay All Your Air Conditioning 1 Bedroom Furnished $290-$300 2 Bedroom Furnished $390-$400 Shuttle Bus at Your Front Door 1020 E. 45th 452-0060 Professionally Managed by Davis & Assoc. r > : , . ' , ■ v • ' y ~ * - / ; •• - -' tfc T h e L iv in g E n d . A NEW BEGINNING. AT THE PERFECT ADDRESS. DUVAL VILLA APARTMENTS in Hyde Park 4305 Duval, Austin, Texas 78751 451-2343 From the collection of Hutkin Properties IF IT’S NOT IN OUR APARTMENTS, YOU PROBABLY DON’T NEED IT. Com pare our ap a rtm en t’s features with those of any condo in town tanning decks, hot tub, large pool, renovated interiors, art deco styling — a ll a stone s throw from campus. Now Leasing For Summer & Fall! • 1,2, i,') Bedrooms • lighted Tennis ( ourt • Shuttle Bus Stop SR • SeiuriU Service • ( its Transportation • Pool»ide Icemaker • Ponlside Restroom • ( .ir Washing Area • Ponlside shuttleboard • f cere ise Rooms Saunas • Putting C.reen • Bar R Que- \ Pk m< t a< ililies lor tac h • 3 Deluxe Laundrv Rooms Building W ith \e w Washer iv Drvers • 1 Pools - 1 targe 1 Huge Both w ith Spas • Some Models Available W ith C e ilin ? fans Open For Business M on-Fri 8-6, Sat 9-7, Sun 12-3 CALL US ABOUT A 12 M O NTH LEASE SUPER OFFER!! Cam ino Real Apartments offer condo luxury at student prices. V i l l a g e * le n Camino Real Apartments Se Habla Español rr All the amenities you need ■ 2180 Salado ■ Austin, Texas ■ 472-3816 From the collection of Hutkin Properties Nous pARLons Franc ais Nakakaintindi ng Pilipino 447-4130 2101 B urton D r. V — Sum mer Rate — • 1 BR Furn. $270 t Nice P o o l—- Patio • Shuttle C orner 3914 Av.. D 453-5983 ! Villa i North | Apartments ♦ Super Summer | Specials ♦ • Eff. Fum. $220 ♦ # 1BR Fum. $250-300 I *2BR Fum. $310-330 t Smal Fnendy Complex { 4520 Duval ♦ 458-3607 Apto. — Sum m er Rates — All BINs Paid IBRFum. $320 2 BR Fum. $390 Nice Pool— Patio Walk to Campus 1300W. 24th 477-3623 SUMMER LEASING SPECIAL — 1 BR 18.2BR ACT VII ANOTHER WORLD BARRISTER MANOR 1 BR BUCKINGHAM SQ . CASTLE ARMS CHIMNEYSWEEP LANTANA L0RRAIN PARK PLACE PENTHOUSE THREE ELMS THUNDERBIRD WINFL0 4303 DUVAL 415W.39TH 3301 REDRIVER 711W.32ND 3121 SPEEDWAY 1&2BR 1&2BR EFF.1&2 BR T05W.38’ g 1,2,8.3 BR 18.2 BR 1&2BR 1,2,8.3 BR 18.2 BR EFF.&1BR EFF. 1802 WEST AVE. 1401 ENFIELD RD. 809 WINFL0 1801 RIO GRANDE 400W.35TH 4510 DUVAL 808 WINFL0 459-3082 458-3661 474-9902 453-4991 472-2819 451-8083 478-7519 474-1341 474-8702 476-2084 452-6024 458-3607 478-5488 346-7230 " 346-7230 Y ou be the ju d g e ... B row nstone P ark o ffers m o re ... • Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedroom from S295 • 1st stop on IF shuttle • 1 block to UT Tennis courts • Gas & Water paid • Five Minutes from Highland Mali * 2 Pools 3 Laundry Rooms • Beautifully landscaped • Reduced Fad Rates with Summer Lease • Hours 9-5:30 M-F, 11-4 Sat. & Sun. Give us a look...you'lllike the park 5 1 0 6 N. LAMAR 4 5 4 -3 4 9 6 P ro fessio nally m anaged by P y ra m id Properties ¡IM IIIIIIIIIM IIIIIIIIIIIM N U IItlM lttg I MARK I | I XX § — Summer Special — | ¡ • 1 BR Fum. $250 ¡ • 2 BR Fum . $330 ¡ ¡ | i • Shuttle 2 Btks. | • Nice Pool— Patio | | 3815 Guadalupe | I 458-3671 I TIRIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlS SEQUOIA APARTMENTS — Summer Rates — • Large Eff. $225 • Shuttle Comer 301 W. 38th 452-4965 SvRmo Apts. Sum m er Special • 1 BR Fum $280 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool Lawn 2400 Longview 474-9874 I CHEZ I I JACGLUES | | — Summer Rate — | | • 1 BR Fum. $280 = • Walk to Campus § • Nice Pool — Patio f | i 1 1302 W. 24th | 474-2559 | ^ I R I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I R I R I I I I I f l R I I I I I I I I H I ^ The Daily Texan/Tuesday, April 24, 1984/Page 21 ; FURN. APARTMENTS- FURN.APARTMENTS PRE-LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL Eff. — I B.R. —2 H R. FANTASTIC SIM M ER RATES From $ 1 9 0 Walk or Shuttle to U T 4105 Speedway — Apt 103 104 E. 32nd — Apt. 103 451 -4919 476-5940 J e r r ic k A p a rtm e n ts GORDINGATE APARTMENTS NOW ACCEPTING LEASE APPLICATIONS FOR SUMMER & FALL ,0 C V / o' A . -J* £ a fi ^ cc Luxury 1BR Furnished 2222 Rio Grande 476-4992 Avoid the Last Minute Rush — Prime Locations Available Willowcreek Apts. 191 1 W illo w c re e k 4 4 4 - 0 0 1 0 SUPER SUMMER SPECIALS 4 4 4 - 0 0 1 4 Unfurnished— Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom Furnished $270-$280 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Furn. $370-$380 2 Bedroom 1 Bath Furn. $330 Professionally Managed by Davis Assoc. D O H im n A few choice apartment locations are still available — but they are going fast. Aspen wood Apts. 4539 Guadalupe 452-4447 Summer Rates 1 Bedroom Furnished S270 2 Bedroom Furnished S350 Shuttle Bus at Front Door! Intram ural Fields across street Professionally m anaged by Davis & Assoc. VILLA SOLANO APTS. S u m m e r S p e cia l • IBRFum. $270 • 2BR Fum. $350 • Shuttle Corner t Intramural Fields Across Street 51st& Guadalupe 451-6682 NOW LEASING FURNISHED APARTMENTS SUMMER RATES EL DORADO ARTS 3501 Speedway 472-4893 1BR1BA $235 $245 - E 3BR 2BA $395 + E LA PAZ APTS 401 W. 39th St. 451-4255 EL CID APTS 3704 Speedway 454-7015 1BR1BA 2BR 1BA $245 - E $345 - E 1BR 1BA 2BR 1BA $235 - E $335 - E EL CAMPO APTS 305 W. 39th St. 452-8537 1BR 1BA 2BR 1BA $245 - E $345 - E NOW PRE-LEASING 1 HSB For Summer and Fall ¡A p artm en ts I Rio Nueces The Westerner Condom inium s 2000 Whitis 3000 Guadalupe 600 W. 26th 2806 Hemphill • Ceiling fans • Washer/dryer • Microwave • Ceiling fans • Laundry room • Private parking 474-0971! 472-064Í 454-46211 454-4621 ed padgeft com pany, inc. FUtN.APAETM INTS ROOM AND BOARD UNFURN. APARTMENTS UNFURN. APARTMENTS CONDOS FOR RENT ROOMMATES TUTORING RESEARCH PAPER? I tu to r a n y subject specialist in re search C an also M I L S 5 -4 e d it pap e rs 4 4 7 2 7 6 8 Pag* 22/Ttw M y Tman/TuMday, Apri 24,1964 SUMMER LEASING LA CASITA APARTMENTS 2900 COLE 2BR/1BA 1 M /1 BA, 3 blocks campus, 40 ft. pool, gas & water paid, covorod parking. 482-9154 ABP EFFICIENCY $280 In Hyde Park, close to campus and shuttle, pool, beautifully paneled, car­ peted and draped, built in kitchen. CA7CH. 4 0 0 0 Ave A 458-4511 4 2 0 6 Ave. A 451-6966 CENTRAL PROPERTIES, INC. 451-6533 Hyde Park Twelve Oaks Apartments 301W. 39th Street One bedroom furnished, pool, loundry room, ceiling fan. $310 a month + E. 452-7454 SUPER SUMMER/FALL/ SPRING RATES u t a r e a • 2 - 2 , 2 -1 ,1 -1 • CA/CH, pool, loundry facilities • coble connections, dishwasher, disposal • plenty of parking • pleasant atmosphere 4 7 4 - 5 9 2 9 4-30 4 -2 4 UNEXPECTED V A C A N C Y 1 b e d ro o m , $ 2 9 0 W ot€tr gos A c a b le p o id G o o d c o n d itio n C A C H O n shuttle 1211 W 8th 5-1 St 4 7 7 -5 0 1 2 a fte r 4 p m SU M M E R F A IL p re leasing B eautiful fur nished 2BR, 2 BA apartm ents, 5 en tronces A ll bills p a id e x c e p t electric ity Fully e q u ip p e d kitchens p o o l w ith fo u n tom . 3 1*? blocks west o f cam pus N ic e at m o sp h e re very nice m a n a g e r O n ly $ 4 1 5 p e r m onth 1 802 W e st A v e n u e A pt 5 4 * 2 0 5 , 4 7 8 7519 PLEASAN T FU R N ISH ED e fficie n cy m H y d e P a ri on shuttle Q u ie t setting on W a lle r Creek m ostly g ro d u a te students 5 -4 $ 2 5 0 w a te r p o id 3 2 7 5 0 2 0 to w n h o u se 2BR 1BA C e n te r A shuttle C A C H $ 3 9 9 pets P hone 9 2 6 -1 2 1 9 a fte r 5pm n e o r H on co ck E N o 4 3 0 AC T I 3 8 th A S p e e d w a y e ffic ie n c y on a v a ila b le shuttle, bills 4 74 th ro u g h August a t $ 2 3 5 6 2 0 5 _____________ 4_25 lo u n d r o m a t n e o r 2 BLO C K S /U T super rotes, 1-1, C A CH d ish w a sh e r disposal c o b le la u n d ry cov ere d p a rkin g , pleasant, 4 5 2 0 7 7 9 4 7 4 5-4 5 9 2 9 _________________ G A R A G E APT M o p o c /E n fie ld sum m er sublet, fa ll o p tio n , re a s o n a b le re n t 4 72 4 .2 4 2 0 6 4 SUBLEASE RIO N ueces a p a rtm e n t fo r sum m er O n e b e d ro o m , o n e b a th fur E C a ll 4 8 2 9 3 9 2 4 24 mshed $ 3 2 5 IB a ENFIELD R O A D F urnished 2BR fro s t fre e r e frig e ra to r dishw asher, pool, q u ie t co m p le x o n UT shuttle $ 3 8 0 E f o r a p p o in tm e n t c a ll 4 7 7 1 3 0 3 , 2 5 8 4 2 5 0 2 2 4 E F F I C I E N C Y lS o R T ^ a lk fro m cam pus 1011 W 2 3 rd N ic e q u ie t lo c a tio n Sm all c o m p le x C oll Bill w e e k d a ys 4 7 7 - 7 8 0 0 ______________________________ 5 -7 THE C H IM N E Y A pts 1BR~ s tu d io s ,~ 2 b locks UT Sum m er rotes $ 3 2 5 FSA H a r 5 -7 nson Pearson 4 7 2 620 1 A V A ILA B LE M A Y 15, 2BR 2B A $ 5 4 5 p e r m onth, p o o l, secunty system jocuzzi n e a r shuttle 4 3 0 5 D uvol # 3 1 7 451 2 9 6 7 _______________________________ 5 0 M ATUR E STUDENTS Large, cleon, q u ie t IBR on shuttle $ 2 9 5 P o p o lo V illa g e 5 -7 A p ts 111 W 3 8 th St S U M M E R RATES M a rk Tw ain W est Cam pus, 1-1, nicely furnished, a ttra c tiv e ly d e s ig n e d m any am enities, $ 2 9 0 $ 3 5 0 E, 451 8122 o r 4 7 9 - 8 7 9 5 W e s tw o rld 5-4 R eal Estate S U M M E R 2BR 2B A ap a rtm e n t, 2 blocks w est o f UT cam pus La rge p o o l $415 4 2 7 4 6 9 - 0 8 7 8 S U M M E R SUBLET, ¡ O t h T l f e d ~ R i^ 7 ~ S p o o o u s 1 BR, CR Sm all c o m p le x w ith p o o l Q u ie t Sum m er rent $ 3 0 0 4 5 2 5 -7 6 5 1 8 , 4 5 8 - 4 0 5 3 4 -3 0 SU M M E R O N I Y I S pacious 2BR 18A~AÍi bills p a id P ool CR ro u te R educed rent Janet 4 7 7 2 7 3 7 , N a n c y 4 7 8 4 3 8 4 5 -3 RIO NUECES A p a rtm e n t S ublease fo r sum m er 1 BR, IB A $ 3 2 5 * E C a ll 4 7 6 4 -2 7 9 4 0 6 5 -7 2 b e d ro o m PARK PLAZA furnished a p a rtm e n t, shuttle route, sum m er only, p o o l, p a tio C oll Erie a t 4 7 7 9 2 7 4 Karl a t 4 6 9 - 0 0 0 4 o r M rs Jennings a t 4 5 2 4 27 6 5 1 8 PARK PLACE apartm en ts, 2 BR in H yde Park o ff UT shuttle A v a ila b le n o w C ov e re d p a rk in g $31 5 $ 4 2 5 C all Liz 8 3 7 5 4 7 8 8 0 o r 4 5 8 9 8 0 9 4 -3 0 S U M M E R SUBLET Law / L8J S chool w a lk in g dis tance nice 1 BR, fu rn is h e d du 4 -2 7 p le x $ 3 2 5 m o 4 5 2 4371 O NE BEDROOM $259 Close to campus ond shuttle Paneled, carpeted, a n d d ra p e d in bookshelves, large bedroom with walk m closet C A /C H , w oter a n d gos paid 4 3 0 7 Ave A, 459 -1 57 1 B uilt CENTRAL PROPERTIES, INC. 451-6533 105 E. 31st Efficiency, a va ila b le now, double bed, all appliances, w a te r/g a s heat paid. Manoger #103 10am-2 pm 47 7 -4 0 0 5 DUVAL VltLA Summer and Fall Leasing You've heord about the new Duval V.llo, now check it out Spocious Roorplons, new carpet ond t4e, mini blinds, renovat­ ed kitchens and baths, large pool, hot tubs A decks, security system, covered porkiog and more In the heart o f Hyde Pad*, convenient to shuttle, restaurants, ond shopping. Come see our model DUVAL VILLA 4 3 0 5 Duval 451-2343 N O W LEASING CASBAH APTS. 2 2 00 San Gabriel 2BR, 2BA, furnished, dishwosher, loundry room, ceiling fans, secunty gate, C A /C H , covered parking, and much more. Phone 4 7 3 - 8 5 5 3 O NE BEDROOM $250 V ery close to campus and shuttle Small quiet complex, large bedroom with queensize bed and w alk in do s ­ el, built in kitchen C A /C H W oter paid 2 0 2 E 32n d , 4 7 4 - 8 6 3 8 CENTRAL PROPERTIES, INC. 451-6533 O N E BEDROOM $269 »00M AMP BOARD In H yde Park, on shuttle, large pool, shaded courtyard, fully carpeted a nd draped. Large bedroom with w alk in closet, built in kitchen, C A /C H , w ater poid 4 2 0 9 Speedw ay, 4 5 8 -1 8 5 0 CENTRAL PROPERTIES, INC. 4 5 1 -6 5 3 3 4 -3 0 THE CASTILIAN is n o w o ffe rin g sum m er b o a rd c o n ­ tracts fo r $168 f o r e ach 6 w e e k ses­ sion {lunch a nd dinner, M o n d a y -F n fo r m ore d a y) S top b y o r ca ll in fo rm a tio n The Castilian, 2 3 2 3 San A n to n io St 478 -9 81 1 to d a y THE C A S T ILIA N is n o w a c c e p tin g o p p it cations fo r the Sum m er $ 3 9 4 fo r a d o u ­ b le $ 5 5 5 fo r a single, each session Pnce includes 15 scrum ptious m eals p e r w eek S top by fo r a to u r to d a y 1 The C astilian 2 3 2 3 Son A n to n io , 7 8 7 0 5 4 7 8 9811 fo r m o re in fo rm a tio n FURNISHED HOUSES SUBLET HOUSE in R osedaie 2BR M a y August, $ 3 7 5 p e r m o n th plus bills P refer entire rent in a d v a n c e plus d e p o s it 4 58 4 24 4 0 3 6 L A W / LBJ S chool W a lk in g dis tance 3BR house, sum m er sublet, 1 to 3 room s fe n ce d $ 2 6 7 pe r ro o m w a s h e r/d ry e r 4 -2 7 y a rd 4 7 9 6 9 4 5 LARGE HYDE Park house fo r sum m er 2 blks ia w school 3BR, 2 BA Furnished Gas, AC (cheap) N ic e c leon Rent n e g o 4 3 0 n o b le 4 6 9 9011 LARGE FULLY furnished house fo r sum m er sublet 2BR, IB A , A C , o n shuttle Rent $ 4 0 0 9 5 2 9 • utilities 4 6 0 8 A v e n u e D 451 4 2 7 UNFURNISHED HOUSES AVAILABLE N O W tw o a n d th re e bed ro o m o ld e r hom es, a p a rtm e n ts C a ll n o w f o r 2 4 h o u r in fo rm a tio n 4 5 2 - 5 9 7 9 W A L K T O UT S pacious 3BR, IB A , AC h a r d w o o d floors, lo rg e cov e re d deck A v a ila b le late M a y $ 6 0 0 m o 4 -2 4 * d e p o sit 4 7 3 - 2 3 7 2 fire p la c e , 3 B E D R O O M , 2 both , 1517 w ~ 3 2 ™ T $ 6 7 5 /m o n th Spocious livin g ro o m d in ­ ing ro o m , lo rq e tile kitchen, stove a n d re ­ 4 -2 5 frig e r a to r C all 4 7 7 - 7 4 6 2 O N SHUTTLE 3BR p u m p ceiling 3 4 5 9 4 4 2 l ’ -?BA C A -C H heot" fans, a p p lia n c e s $ 7 7 5 4 -2 4 HYDE PARK 1-1, AC a p p lia n c e s , y o rd 4 5 1 -8 1 2 2 W e s lw o rid g o ro g e 5 -4 R eal Estate $ 3 7 0 3 B E D R O O M 2 b a th 6 0 9 F a irfie ld la n e h a rd w o o d floors, la rg e fe n c e d y o rd , re ­ f rig e ra to r stove A v a ila b le June 1st Coll 4 5 4 - 7 8 9 9 o nytim e Pnce n e g o tia b le 5 -4 C H A R M IN G 2-1 co tta g e n e o r H a n co ck C e n te r Recently re m o d e le d C A -C H H a rd w o o d floors, la rg e p e c a n trees Per / LBJ student $ 6 0 0 m o feet 4 30 A v a ila b le M a y 15th 3 2 7 8 6 3 7 la w fo r N IC E LARGE 3-1, g o o d n e ig h b o rh o o d , shuttle, fe n ce d y a rd , c a rp o rt, C A -C H , a p ­ 251 pliances 4 -2 7 4 6 9 0 1 4 2 3 B n o rc liff $ 5 5 0 HYDE PARK co rn e r, 3 -2 , |O cuzzir Jenn- fans, a ir e m ic ro w a v e , 4 -2 7 liG a u is tile $ 8 2 5 4 5 4 -1 1 6 6 c e ilin g /o ttic ROOMS BOYS W A L K IN G distance to UT Fur mshed room s, $ 1 9 9 $21 5 a ll bills p o id H o w e ll Properties, 4 7 7 - 9 9 2 5 FUR NISHED PRIVATE, room s M e n /w o m e n , bills p o id K itchen privi leges, sum m er rates $ 1 6 0 -2 2 5 C a ll 4 7 7 1 5 2 9 _____________________ d o rm R O O M W IT H c o o k in g . $ 2 0 0 m o n th A ll bills p o id Shore b a th ro o m w ith o n e next- d o o r student o f som e sex $ 1 0 0 d e p o sit Full sum m er lease C oll b e tw e e n 5 3 0 - 8 3 0 p m 3 0 6 E 3 0 th St 4 7 2 - 5 1 3 4 4 26 1904 NUECES N e a r cam pus Bills p o id C A -C H , $ 2 2 5 m onth 4 7 2 7 5 6 2 4 8 0 4 -2 4 946 1 R O O M S IN 2 -sto ry b cickfaced house P ool tennis o n d b a s k e tb a ll courts ocross street M ic ro w a v e , w asher, d ry e r. 10 m in utes fro m cam pus $ 2 0 0 m onth, bills p o id 9 2 6 - 7 8 2 0 even ings F o r sho rt o r lo n g 4 - 2 5 term c o n tra c t UNFURN. APARTMENTS TAR R YTO W N 2 - l'/5 a n d 2 -2 , $ 4 5 0 electricity. 1 1 a t $ 3 5 0 • E, p o o l shuttle la u n d ry a n d co n v e n ie n t to d o w n to w n 4 7 4 5 9 3 0 a n d 4 7 6 3 0 0 2 , ask fo r B.ll 5 TELIURIDE APARTMENTS Furnished one bedrooms and one bedrooms wifh lofl m o quiet Hyde Pork complex Deluxe opplkmces, CA-CH, patios o r balconies, some with voutted ceilings ond skylights. Prices start at $2 7 5 * E for summer Come by: 4100 Avenue C or coll Hugh at 4 5 9 -95 92 Lease m the best location for the best priced! Seton Ave Parapet Nueces Place Stonesthrow Buena Vista lantern Lane Cod Proven Properties 47 4 -5 8 7 0 FLEURS DE LIS 404 E. 30lh Lorg* 181 kmw d io M y avatlobfa 2 blocks north of campus. Nicofy fur­ nished and carpeted. Covarad pork- ing ovatfabl $ 3 7 5 + E. Call Cliff Musgrav* 476-7011. LOW SUMMER RATES AVAILABLE Furnished 1 BR near UT shuttle. $ 2 5 0 + E. Call 459-1597. $245-1265 + E SUMMER RATES W » ore looking far quiet, conscien­ tious, non-smoking students interested in o locations: Hyde Pot*, or neor campus. CA/CH, laundry, deodbok, no pels. 458-2488 large efficiency. 2 SUPER SPECIAL Coll for Inform ation 1 BR apartments, $ 3 2 5 & $33 5 + electric, heotingond cooking gos. 6 Blocks to shuttle. Quiet courtyard setting. N O R W O O D A P A R T ­ MENTS 5 6 0 6 N o rth Lamar LARGE EFFICIENCIES C lose to cam pus 3 0 5 W 35th. V? b lo ck fro m IF shuttle Pool, gos A w a te r p o id , leasin g n o w fo r sum m er 4 5 9 4 9 7 7 4 -2 4 N EAR L A W S chool A ir c o n d itio n e d , fu r ­ nished ro o m S ho re baths $16 5 ABP 4 24 3 3 1 0 Red River 4 7 6 - 3 6 3 4 i r f ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD SUMMER SCHOOL IS CLOSER THAN YOU THINK...AND SO IS D0BIE ♦DOUBLE OCCUPANCY (12 wks.) including: * $ 9 o o • Meal Plan • H ousekeeping • M aintenance • Se cu rity D0BIE CENTER 472-8411 Tours Given Daily G o i n g . . . d fflk 2021 GUADALUPE Don’t be Out Bid for Fall Housing Check out The Castilian before you make your Fall 84/Spring 85 Housing Selection. Super Summer Rates Double $394 Single $555 15 Scrumptious Meals Weekly Unlim ited Seconds 24-Hour Study Lounge Indoor Fool The Castilian 478-9811 * 2323 San Antonio Stop By for a Tour Today Ceiling Fans For Summer Small quiet com plex. Silver C liff Apartm ents, 621 W . 31st. N o w leasing. $ 2 7 5 . FSA H arnson Pearson 4 7 2 -6 2 0 1 4 -2 5 SUMMER PRE-LEASING C om e visit o u r nice com m unity a t 3 0 2 W. 3 8tb . W e have all siz­ es, fam ished o r unfam ished, all appliances, sw im m ing p ool, '/} b lo ck to shuttle. Pnces starting at $195. Call 4 5 3 -4 0 0 2 fo r more inform a tio n O PEN HOUSE E xtra la rg e ro o m , huge closets, w o te r a n d gas p a id Landscaped, p riva te p o o l, co n ve n ie n t to shuttle o r ÍH 3 5 1 o r 2 b e d ro o m s $ 3 2 5 $ 3 9 5 (furniture a v a ila b le ) A pts # 1 0 7 , #119 o p e n d o ily 1 0o m -6 p m S panish Trail A p a rt­ ments, 4 5 2 0 B ennett o ff 4 5 th nea r A irp o r t Blvd 4 5 4 7619 $100 OFF HYDE PARK C atch us w ith o u r points d o w n d uring re m o d e lin g . O n e cute a n d e o ry effi ciency, n e w co rp e t, ce ilin g fan, o nd m ini blinds $ 1 0 0 o ff first m onth's rent o f $ 2 9 9 w ith h o t w a te r a n d gos p o id M o d e l o p e n d o ily, lO o m -ó p m , Retreat A partm ents, 4 5 th a n d A ve A Prim e P roperties, 4 5 4 -7 6 1 9 S J I I I I I M H H I t l U I N I I N I I t l l l l l l l l N l f t e i S A G E B K Ü S I § § 2604MmrRd. I I M y i m n M . 1 m d 5 S 2BFT» k M d * mow # O i l s M p tid . 5 h # M m la c m p w - = C M la M f c . L * g a p t a n d f f i s | s i s dack. I 3 MONTH SUMMER § ¡ SPECIAL ¡ i § “Pre-leasing for I fa*” I ¡ $310-$470a month I ! I 478-0992 (OMua ope n 3-dpm o ra g p t.) S — T l l H I I I I H I I I I I I I I I I I I I I M I I I I I I I I I I H H f r A S U M M E R to re m e m b e r 24 x 5 0 ' p o o l spa c lo th in g o p tio n a l, rec ro o m $ 3 2 5 mo., 2 b d rm 1 ba th stove & re frig e ra to r in clu d e d C all Miss W m disch 4 7 9 8 2 6 6 5 -4 N E W LY R EM O D ELED e ff.ce n c.e s 1 o n d 2BR som e w ith ftreploces a n d skylights Furnished a n d unfurnished c o n ve n ie n t no rth ce n tro l Pool $ 2 7 0 4 2 5 4 0 7 6 IF shuttle • E, 45 1 -4 5 6 1 4 4 2 4 -2 7 lo c a tio n n e a r 5 -7 N EAR IF shuttle nice IBR/1BA apartm e n ts o n d 2BR/1 ? B A tow n h o m e s in q u ie t c o m ­ E 4 5 3 7514 plex P ool $ 3 0 5 3 8 0 4 - 2 7 4 4 2 4 0 7 6 IBR LOFT (co n v e rte d g o ro g e ) W 18th A v a ila b le A p ril 16 $ 3 4 5 ABP D ep o sit 4 24 references 4 7 8 0 8 5 4 T W O W EEKS fre e rent N e w lu x u ry IBR on RC shuttle $ 3 9 5 N o pets 441 6 9 4 6 5 -4 afte r 6 w e e kd a ys 5 -7 LARGE EFFICIENCIES close to cam pus '? b lo ck fro m IF shuttle 3 0 5 W 3 5 th Pool, gas & w o te r p a id leasing n o w fo r 4 -2 4 sum m er 4 5 9 4 9 7 7 WEST CAM PUS Efficiencies, 4 d iffe re n t lo catio n s A ll facilities Rents o ld e r, small, q u ie t a rra n g e m e n ts U tility $ 1 8 5 - $ 2 5 0 v a ry D eposit $ 1 5 0 N o pets Refer enees In fo rm a tio n 10am- 4 pm Jock Jennings 4 7 2 6 8 9 7 C o n ­ s o lid a te d Realty re q u ire d 4 -2 6 C am in o Real Sum m er Rates F o ur blocks fro m cam pus Large pool, ta n n in g deck, h o t tub, tw o BBQ p a rty decks, a n d m o re a ttra ctio n s to com e 1 & 2 b ed ro om s, C A /C H C a m in o Reol A pts — 281 0 S alad o 4 7 2 3 81 6 DEL PREDO A p ts 3 0 3 W 4 0 th St N o w p re le a sin g sum m er a n d fa ll Large 1 2BR lo u n d ry C all 4 7 8 studios P ool a n d 5 4 3 5 3 3 Evenings 4 5 8 -1 6 3 4 fresh pamT C A M E R O N TRACE 1~2BR n e w ca rp e tin g , p o o l, laundry, on shuttle ro u te fro m $ 3 0 5 C all D a v id M c N e .l C o 4 7 8 3 5 3 3 o r see m a n a g e r 5-4 a p a rtm e n t # 1 0 5 b 1206 E 5 2 n d St p rice PEM BERTO N HEIGH TS E « e iiim 2 - 1 .n lo v e ly C o lo n to l house in q u ie t b e a u tifu l fro m university n e ig h b o rh o o d M inutes o n d hospitals N o pets R eferences re q u ire d A v a ila b le n o w $ 6 5 0 G a s /w a te r 5 -4 p a id 4 7 7 4 6 7 7 $12 5 OFF 1st m onth* Lorg e q u a lity effi oe n cie s n o w a t sum m er rate $ 2 5 0 m o O n CR shuttle W a te r W h e e l 451 4 8 6 8 5-4 UNFURN. DUPLEXES Parkside Apartm ents 4 2 0 9 Burnet Road L a rg e 1 a n d 2 b e d ro o m s Fully c a rp e te d 4 27 a n d d ra p e d C H /C A , d isposal gos ra n g e a n d the s treet fro m R am sey Park Id e a l fo r facu lty o r senous student R e asonable rates N o pets O w n e r M rs T hom pson 4 5 4 3251, 4 5 3 - 5 2 3 9 L o co te d across re m g e ra to r 4 -2 7 12 M O N T H LEASE D ISC O U NT N ic e southeast lo c a tio n , 1 b lo c k south o f T o w n la ke sp ocious 2 b e d ro o m opts., la rg e w o llr-tn closets, C A -C H , la rg e p o o l la u n d ry facilities, gas, w a te r do id on UT shuttle line, sta rtin g a t $ 3 6 0 Ask a b o u t o u r sum m er special 1201 Tinnm F ord 4 4 4 -3 4 1 1 C O N S U L APTS GREAT LOCATION L orqe 1BR, IB A , $ 3 2 5 + E C o vered p a rkin g , la u n d ry ro o m , p o o l Clean, q u ie t co m m u n ity o n b o th shuttle ond city bus lines C o m e on b y 415 W. 3 9 th St., m a n o g e r in # 1 0 6 o r call 4 5 8 -3 6 6 1 . A n o th e r W o H d A p a rt­ m ents P ro fe ssio na lly m a n a g e d b y J .l D Investments The Search Has Ended! This new secluded com m u nity w ith a c o zy setting in a q u ie t o re o offers ce ilin g fans & e xce lle n t re n ta l rates, n e a r shuttle bus service Please coll C o tto n w o o d A pts at 9 2 8 2581 fo r 5 -2 m o re in fo rm a tio n SUMMER RATES EFFICIENCIES 1 a nd 2BR • From $ 2 9 5 • 1st stop on IF shuttle • 1 block to IF fie ld a n d Tennis Courts • G as a nd w a te r p a id • 2 pools, 3 la u n d ry room s • Reduced fa ll rates w ith summer lease BROWNSTONE PARK 5 10 6 N o rth L am ar 4 5 4 - 3 4 9 6 N EAR L A W S chool, on shuttle la rg e 1BR in sm all quiet c o m p le x P ool $ 3 0 0 • E A v a ila b le June 1, 4 7 4 -1 2 4 0 , 4 4 2 - 4 0 7 6 4 27 J A M E S T O W N A P AR TM EN TS n o w ieas- m g th ro u g h D e ce m b e r S pend yo u r next semesters livin g in o u r n e w ly re m o d e le d apartm e n ts fe a tu rin g n e w c a rp e t a n d v i­ nyl, m ini-blinds, re n o v a te d kitchen and ba th En|oy the q u ie t o f o u r beautiful c o u rty a rd , hot tu b a n d 2 pools. C o n v e n ­ ient to M o p a c 4 3 2 0 Bull Creek, 4 5 4 2531________________________________5-4 APAR TM EN T O N 6 th Street Live on the most exc itin g street in A ustin 2BR w ith lo ft that can b e 3 rd b e d ro o m C eiling fans, antique fo o te d tub G re a t kitchen, hot tubs a v a ila b le M a y 1st 4 78 5814 5 -3 2 BR g a ra g e a p a rtm e n t in W e st cam pus V ery nice and q u ie t N e a r shuttle and stores 2 2 0 4 San G a b rie l $ 4 0 0 a m onth 5-4 A v a ila b le June 1 C a ll 4 7 8 - 8 9 0 5 PARK PLACE a p a rtm e n ts 2 BR m H yde p ark o ff UT shuttle A v a ila b le n o w C o v ­ ered p a rkin g $ 3 1 5 -5 4 2 5 C all Liz 8 3 7 - 5 -4 7 8 8 0 o r 4 5 8 - 9 8 0 9 HYDE PARK 1 BR. upstairs g a ra g e a p a rt­ m ent, 4 0 7 A W 4 5 th St For lease m id M a y A ugust 31st O n e occu p a n t, no pets 4 27 • bills 4 5 9 4 5 5 0 $ 2 7 5 - m o SUBLET G A R A G E a p a rtm e n t Six weeks total M a y 1-June 14 N e a r UT on ER 4 -2 6 $ 3 7 0 ABP C all 4 7 8 - 7 5 8 0 AVAILABLE JUNE 1st — 2 Bedroom • 1 Bath • Gas Appliances • Fire­ place • Washer-Dryer Connections • Large Fenced Yard ’BARGAIN” CaN Connie or Donna For Appointment 4 4 7 -8 3 0 3 CO-OP HOUSING 2 1 s t S T C O L L E G E H O U S E C O - O P ( c o e d ) W A N T E D Students seeking educational, fun aetf-governing hom e Join for a* sum m er Single — $ 309 paym ent mo Double — $ 2 2 5 35 paym ent mo 6 wk plan available Great fa* ratea too' 19 meals per w eek in­ cluded ABP 707 W 21st 4 7 6 -5 6 7 8 ■ THE ARK CO-OP 1 B§* Cf# aflemettve W» are a aatt-oov S Hgwrxng. c o a d s tu d e n t c o m m u n ity after H Bang in te rn a tio n a l m e m b e rs h ip s , a *>erai§| tn a n c ty a tm o s p h e re , aeam nsn gH Hand (v e g g ie a n d non-H Hpooi 19 m e e le w k B8freggw). A C fu n - te e d s o c a * an d edu-H Hflcaoonal a c b v W e s d a rk ro o m c o -o p a n d IS SHthe o p p o r tu n ity fo r y o u 10 e x p e rie n c e a R l||iota*y u n iq u e tv m g e n v iro n m e n t Su m - & SHmer ra te s (m e a ls in c lu d e d ) Sj double S 2 1 2 m o ■ MSingle 1 3 0 2 m o m 2 0 0 0 P e art J G re a t la fl ra te s to o ! n ^ 4 7 8 - 5 6 7 8 TAOS CO-OP ico-«di Looking tor g reat housing? Taos is a active comm unity Across from cam pus A C , 19 m erta weekly, fu* security, sundeck and intramural team s Tours available anytime S g m m e r r a t e s : t i n g l e — * 4 2 8 6 w k . D o u b le — * 3 8 8 • w k . G re a t f a l l ra te s! 2 6 1 2 Q u s d a lu p t 4 7 4 - 6 6 0 9 v e g e ta ria n H O U S E O F C o m m o n s n o n sm o kin g c o o p e ra tiv e lo o k in g fo r a ^ew g o o d responsible p e o p le to tom ou r house C om e see o u r p o o l a n d sundeck 2610 Rio G ra n d e , 4 7 6 - 7 9 0 5 O p e n in g s a v a ila b le fo r spring, sum m er a n d fall. 5 -4 SEN EC A FALLS C o -o p has sum m er a n d fa ll va cancies fo r v e g e ta ria n w o m e n $ 2 5 0 - 2 6 5 includes fo o d a n d bills C lose to cam pus 2 3 0 9 N ueces 4 7 4 4 6 5 2 4 -2 4 D ro p b y a fte r 5 V C O -O P S um m e r/F a ll vacancies. S ingle room s $ 2 5 0 Includes meals, utilities a n d p h o n e 6 blocks fro m cam pus M o re than 5 -4 a ch e a p p la ce to liv e 1 4 7 4 7 7 6 7 2 B LO C K UT Sha re spacious be a u tifu l hom e N in e m ature nonsm okers $180- 6 - 2 6 $ 2 3 0 (plus fo o d , bills). 4 7 4 2 0 0 2 N E W G U IL D C o -o p has ope n in g s for spring, summer, fa ll Low sum m er rates fo r ro o m a n d b o a rd best chance to try c o o p e ra tiv e livin g w ith in teresting p e o 4 -2 7 pie 510 W 2 3 rd 4 7 2 0 3 5 2 LAUREL H O U SE C o - o p is a c c e p tin g a p p lica tio n s fo r s u m m e r/fa ll S e lf-g o ve rn ing, 17 m e a ls /w e e k C A -C H , free p a rkin g , 2 4 h o u r kitchen privile ges, ABP C om e by 5 -7 190 5 N ue ce s o r call 4 7 8 0 4 7 0 1C C C O -O P Houses h ave vacancies for $ 2 4 5 a n d up Includes fo o d ro o m util* ties W a lk to UT C oll 4 7 6 -1 9 5 7 after 5 -7 1.30 p.m THE ATTIC APARTMENTS Large Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedrooms with Skylight Near Cameron Road Shuttle Pool — Laundry Room Convenient to Business & Shopping vial-35, 2 9 0 & 183 call 926-6664 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD Limited space is available tor the fall term in three of the most convenient residences in the University of Texas area Summer Contracts Available 2706 Nueces, three blocks from campus and on a shut­ tle bus stop Nineteen delicious meals per week, maid service, parking, swimming pool, lounges, many extras Coed 477-9766 Í T t o E G b W T B 8 8 ? V C\ \ /E . 8 T , 2707 Rio Grande, to co n v e n ie n t sorority houses and shopping, parking on prem­ ises, maid service, nineteen meals per week, pool, sundecks and lounges, kitchenettes in suite All women 476-4648 > L 27®° Nueces- on the shuttle bus route Small and quiet, no frills housing. Meals served at the Contessa, maid service and parking included All private rooms. Coed, upperclass. 472-7850 Call or write for information, or ju st come on by MATH TUTOR 504 W. 24th St. Office 477-7003 O ver 9 years o f proles sionai service Helping s tu d e n ts m a k e THE GlR A D E S tru gg lin g'»'/ Frustrated on C all or com e py try ap pom tment M a t o M301 30? M 3 0 3 f M 403K I c o m # e n g m EM306 SC IENC E FM311 C S304P F FM 30«K C S?06 FM314 S316 E M 3 '9 CSX10 MTOST, F F 31 6 C S 410 M 4 0 ’ F F 4 1 1 C S3?8 M 8 0 8 A B E E 3 I8 M 6 0 flF A B C S336 FF?1? C S345 M318K EE323 C S 3 W M 4?7K I C S37? M 3 i 1 E N G U S H C H E M IS T R Y ENGB03 PH YS IC S PHY301 CHEM 301 302E N G 307 ■>HV30?K 1 C H F M 6 1 0 A 8 FN G 308 °H Y 3 0 3 K L C H E M 8 1 8 A B EN G310 PMY3??K I B U SIN E SS ASTRO N D A T A PRO ACC311 312 A S T 30! AS? 302 STATSOS D PA310 AST303 FIN3S4 357 D PA33.3K AST307 D o n 't p u t th n o ft u n # t t » nlg tit b o to r * ansxam It's to o lata ttt« n • 1 B lock to UT •F ro o Parking • V e r y roaaonable ratea M ao N gh a ch o d couraea in th e above a u b le c ta e n d S A T A G R E R e v ie w ‘ L o tt o l pm tlonce rin a language you can underatand a* ^ , , / id X TUTORING SERVICE SERVICES NEED A Post O ffic e Box? UT a re a N o w a itin g list P rv a te M a ilb o x Rentals (across fro m the Castilian). C a ll 4 7 7 1915 5 0 4 W 24 th FURNITURE M O V IN G P ro te cte d trans p o rt m m y la rg e c a rg o va n Three years e x p e rie n c e Steve. 441 7 9 3 0 INVISIBLE W E A V IN G a n d a ll kinds o f a l­ the price o f terations. Tw o lengths fo r 4 -2 4 o n e 441 4196 G E T T IN G M ARRIED? Professional p o r tra it a n d w e d d in g p h o to g ra p h e r Expert e n ced R easonable rates C all Kirk R Tuck 5 -7 P h o to g ro p h y 4 7 9 861 7 a n d RESUMES, VITAS: C o n su lta tio n p re p a ra tio n rush In d iv id u a liz e d service |obs w e lco m e C oll until )0 p m ask fo r 4 -2 5 M a ry 4 5 9 - 5 4 6 2 RESUME W R IT IN G C om p o sin g , p ro fe s ­ sional typ in g , a n d q u a lity c o p y in g C all 4 4 4 2 0 9 6 a fte r 6 p m A ls o a v a ila b le on 4 -2 4 w eeke n d s 9a m 5pm PORSCHE, V O L K S W A G E N ~ English sports cars* R easonable rates 4 4 0 -1 5 7 5 4 -2 7 Top CASH For Old Class Rings, Scrap Gold, Silver and Rings. F re e E stim a te s At 2 0 0 3 A W h e le s s 9 2 8 - 4 9 8 6 PHOTOS for PASSPORTS A P P LIC A TIO N S RESUMES 3 minute service M 0 N -F R I10-6 SAT 10-2 477-5555 THE THIRD EYE 2530 GUADALUPE TYPING r 't / e r a 7 e e e looking for good lookina, aggressive and energetic people Apply m person at 7604 IH -35 M-F between 2 5pm 4-25 UNIVERSITY CO-OP >s looking for port time supervisor for the Promotional De­ portment Must hove previous retail expe rience Display and advertising knowt edge is preferred Apply m personnel 9am ipm 2 2 4 6 Guadalupe 476-7211, E O E ________________ ________ 4-24 PART TIME TELLER POSITION at Subur bon Bank in Southwest Austm hours 3- 6 30 Monday-Fndoy experience r© 4-27 qmred, call 2 8 8 -2 8 3 0 LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE needed for EnfiekJ-Area Residence 2 0 -3 0 hourv/ week, flexible schedule, must be depend­ able Horticultural experience helpful but not nec essory Call Ben 345-4381 4-27 4 24 CAR RENTAL service agent wanted Ap­ ply m person only 3107 Manor Rd 4 -26 AEROBIC INSTRUCTOR port time expe­ nenced energetic $6 00-hr This sum mer fall spnng 3-5 hours-week Austin Aerobic Club 3 4 5 -4 7 7 9 4 24 CO-ED CAMP Fire camp needs enthus» astic young men and women to work with children dunng June-July Please 4-25 contact Paula 4 7 2 -7 3 3 7 reliable delivery person PART TIME needed from 10 am noon Monday through Fnday Must have own rronspor tation ond neat appearance $7 00 -boor For interview call 443 -*4 41 and ¡eave 4-27 meassoge FULL TIME groundskeepr wanted for North Austin apartment community FuH benefits Only dependable bard-wortong in person ^901 E applicants need apply Anderson The Creeks Apartments 4-27 HO N D A PARTS mmediate opening for parts counter personnel Previous expert ence helpfui but not necessary ,ong irst of benefits for the right person join Tex­ as largest Honda dealer now* Apply in person Woods Honda 6 5 0 9 North 4-27 tornar MOTHERS DAY out program seeking teachers Tuesdoy & Pr»doy 10 a m p m for a toddler class prefer someone with early childhood development train­ 4-27 ing $ 20 o day CaM 3 4 5 -9 2 9 7 SIXTH STREET STATION taking applica­ tions for cashier barbocks and borten ders Apply «n person 707 E 6th 2 3 4 27 pm Monday Friday NEED POCKET money* Like denting with the public* Part time position m down 5-4 town Austin 4 7 8 -69 70 PART TIME furniture salesperson Prefer someone with architecture or design background Apply »n person Store 4 25 house Highland Mall 4 59 3161 RECEPTIONIST WANTED Pon nme evenings M - F 5 10 p m , Saturday (0-3 4 25 $ 4 00 -hour Col. 837 0 0 3 8 PERFECT PART nme ,ob 12 15 hours per week woitpe^son to serve Austm s nicest beer customers in an English Pub crtmos pher© Must be available for BOTH 4 and 8 30 p m shifts as needed Apply be rween 5-6 p m Draught House 4112 4 26 M e d ia l Parkway PART TIME secretary-receptionist needed to work »n a busy therapy clm*c Good phone and typing skills necessary Send re$ume to Therapy P Q Box 9 8 0 2 No 4 27 637 Austin Y X 7 8 76 6 BUSPERSON A N D waftpervon needed Good pay and good nps CaH 346 311/ 5- 7 after 2 30 p m Ask for Mi*e THE CHERRY Street Cleaning Co needs immediate & summer hme *>©lp to dean residences in Austin Part time hours ftex< ble Must work some monngs $4 25 per 4-24 hour and up 4 53 339 RELIABLE PERSON needed to nelp pre fields N W Austin areo pore athietir some weekends 2 30-5 30pm daily 4 -27 451-2585 ext 5 00 CONTINENTAL RESTAURANT offers busperson positions Morning, evenings and weekend shifts available deal port time Calí 444 !888 for application 4 -26 NORTHWEST RECREATION CENTER .s accepting applications for nstrudors m gymnastics summer amp ©ode's and preschool development Call 4 58 4109 4 -25 ___________ PAT MAGEE'S is now accepting appl»ca tions for an assistant manager position at Highland Mall Detail clothmg expen ence *s required Pleose apply n person 4-27 M-F 10-lpm i NT ERE STING PART time position with ie gal services program G ood typmg, gen eral office experience excellent commu­ nication sktih required Afternoon hours 4 -2 7 call 4 7 6 -5 5 5 0 MARlMQNT CAFETERIA now accepting applications for full time counter help bus help porters and dishwashers Apply *n 4 -27 person at 6 23 W 38th Street PART TIME now and full time m summer 4 -2 7 Canme Hihon 9 2 6 -8 9 0 5 PART TIME help needed 2 -3 h a w week gh* 6 l5am-4prr 4- 27 housekeeping CoH 4 54-9112 Babysitting, some IO S TRES BOBOS Restouront >s now n*r- tog for kitchen bus waitperson hostper son and bartender positions Apply m 4-27 person at ) 2 06 W 38th THUNDERCLOUD SUBS needs day help Weekdays & weekends Neat appear once 2 30 8 Loke Austin Blvd 4 7 9 -6 5 0 4 4 -3 0 MOTEL NIGHT cfoft Hours 9pm- 7am Must be avartoble port weekends and through summer and fall semesters Previ ous wodr related experience desirable Apply mornings, Westwtnds Motel IH-35 at Airport BJvd EASTER AN D Mother's Day Rower ver, dors needed Start now Cosh pa»d doily Work any days you choose Please caH ________________ 4 5 9 7 45 3 START YOUR own career m a fast grow »ng business Sales expenence or training not necessary CaM Robert 495-5411 or Troo 4 95 378 8 between 6 0 0 -9 30pm 4-27 only ClERK TYPIST port time (possible fuM time summer) 20 hours/week flexible Must type nonsmoker excellent atmos­ IH-35/183 area phere Must have car 5-2 Telephone Terry 452 6 2 2 6 AMERICA'S FAVORITE singing telegrams now hiring femóle strippers, singers etc Up to $75 per act 4 78 /0 8 8 4 24 talent M ale and EXISTING SllK screen business needs someone to work as operating manoger possible by out option CaM 452-2)17 4-24 After 5pm 453-1979 MR GATTI'S Reliable delivery drivers and kitchen help needed FuM or port time Good money, great working condi­ tions Bakones Woods Shopping Center Call 3 4 6 -9 8 0 0 or apply in person 1150 4-24 Research CAMPAIGN JOBS* Need aright motivat ed students/graduates for paid political jobs Expenence preferred campaign 4-24 Ron Smith at 459 4 524 DEPENDABLE FRATERNITY ested in ieornmg men's clothmg business references required part time hours 4-24 477 5 65 6 9-5 NEEDED PART time typist mm 70wpm 1-6 15pm M-F, eoch week Contoct Jim Forbis 472-2681 for appointment 4 -30 FULL TIME babysitter/housekeeper for 2 children oges 1 ond 3 Expenence and references required Enfield areo 474- 4 3 4 4 _______________ WESTLAKE DAYCARE needs mature per son to supervise after school care from 2 - 6pm Monday-Fndoy 327 0 3 6 9 4-27 PART TIME dental assistant needed T/Th ond every other Sat Expenence pre 5-4 ferred 837 0 9 3 6 EXTREMELY DEPENDABLE mdividuoi needed to put up and take down rood- s*de reol estate signs on Fridays and Sun­ days in Northwest Austin on a weekly ba­ ys Will pay 75c a sign The right person could easily earn $100 a weekend NPC 4 -26 incorporated 258-4125 THE COUNTY Ime on the Hill is now hir­ ing cocktail bus bar personnel please call Adrienne 327 1742 for an appoint­ 5-1 ment E O E VALET PARKERS needed for prestigious restouront and mght dub $3 50 per hour 5-1 plus tips Coll 472-1358 EXPERIENCED ANN OU NCER for AuT tin's only Spanish-language radio station Must be bilingual speak and wnte Spon- sh and English Ability to translate from English to Spanish Apply m person iOam-5pm M-F KAAMM Radio 3108 N Lamar Equal Opportunity Employer 4- __________________________________ 25 LOCAL PHOTO iab needs full time re­ ceptionist / counter person Some knowl­ edge of photography necessary Must be neat and professional Good working conditions and chonce to learn Call 474- 1538 between 10am-12noon Monday- 4-27 Fndoy M A IN TE N A N C E PERSON needed 5-1 $3 50 per hour Call 472-1358 KERBEY LANE CAFE now accepting ap­ plications for Boor and cook positions 4-24 Apply at 3 70 4 Kerbey Lane GRADUATE STUDENT or student with flexible schedule Telephone answenng service Storting April 27th $4 0 0 hour Fnday 7am- 1pm Monday l-5pm & Tues­ day or Thursday afternoons Expenence desired but not mandatory Nommokers 4 -25 only 467 8221 TELLERS PART time openings available Experience necessary Contact Cheryl 477 5 4 0 0 National Bank of Texas 4-27 TEACHER INFANT/young toddler begin n»ng 6/1 Parent Cooperative Preschool infant toddler teochmg expenence re­ quired/degree preferred 474-5101 CAMP WEKEELA for boys/g»rts Canon Marne seeks dynomos for staff positions June 22 Aug 23 ,n water skiing, soiling/ windsurfing, competitive swimming (WSl required), tennis radio drama, creative arts Contort Enc, louren Scobkonko 144 5 Cossedy Columbus, O H 4 3 2 0 9 614- 5 4 2 3 5 :6 7 6 8 RECEPTIONIST & photographers assist ant for quality portrait studio, full or port time position available 472 8231 Chris­ tianson -t ebermon Studio ATTENDANT NEEDED for com-op Ioun- dry, mostly nights and weekends Call 4 -30 Heidi 250-0821 TOM THUMB Supermarket now taking applications for checker & pockoge Ap­ ply m person Sat 5 30 p m 7100 High­ way 290 W No phone calls pleose 4-17 CLEAN CUT expenenced afternoons, evenings 4. Soturdays 40 hrs per week 3 75 per hour Apply Solods-n-Such. 4-24 1408 Guadalupe SELF MOTIVATED people, earn $300- 5 0 0 /week Full and part time CaH Mr 4-24 Rose After 5 00pm 451-0411 FULL & PART time deli clerks needed Ex­ penence nec essory in food preparation restouront field Good pay ond benefits Tom Thumb # 7 7 , 3 7 0 0 Bee Caves Rd 4 __________________________________ 24 PART TIME checkers needed for day & evening shifts Good pay Some retail ex­ penence preferred Tom Thumb # 7 7 4-24 3 7 0 0 Bee Caves Rd RECEPTIONIST AND ponter positions availoble WiH train Apply 2 2 0 0 Gua­ dalupe, 6-!1pm weekdays, 9 am-6 pm 4-24 weekends MAINTENANCE PERSON Part time to become full time in near future Must have truck $5 0 0 hr Call 454-2157 4- __________________________________24 N O W HIRING full- & part-time woitper- sons & hostpersons Day & night shifts available Apply between 3-5 Mon -Fn international House of 901 E Koenig 4-24 Pancokes APARTMENT MANAGER needed for six unit complex located north-central near North Loop and Burnet Rd Compensa­ tion is $125 off rent on one bedroom un­ furnished apartment Reply P O Box 5-4 5342, Austin, 7 87 63 DRIVER / RECEIVING clerk, high school education and good handwriting pre­ ferred Some heavy lifting, standard shift truck Texas dnvers license and a good dnvmg record o must Polygraph re­ quired Apply m person to Don Morse Yanng's Warehouse 413 Congress (rear 4-30 entrance). NEW RESTAURANT N O W HIRING The Blue Moon Cafe located at 5122 W Bee Caves Rd (V? mile east of 360) is now hiring for all positions 70 positions avail­ able Apply m person Mon-Fn between 4-25 9am -4 pm CREDIT CLERKS full time and part time positions available Light typing, call for appointment 476-6511 Nancy Kelly, Yanng's downtown 506 Congress 4 -30 DANCER~WANTED Make $75 $125 plus daily Work at Austin's most exciting night club! W e offer flexible schedules daily pay, bonuses and fnendly people You will love it* Call today! (l-3pm) 835- 9204_________ FOUR IMMEDIATE openings for people willing to train to do professional house­ keeping work Transportation furnished. N o weekend or holiday work Hours 9- 3 30 Apply at 1505 Treadwell Suite 101 8-9om or 4-6pm Part time, full time 4 -2 6 EXCITING SUMMER iobs Banana s and The Red Tomato Restaurants are looking for their exciting summer staff No expen­ ence necessary We will tram Immediate lunch and dinner openings for cooks Apply m person Tuesday-Fnday be­ tween 4 3 0-5 30, 1601 Guadalupe 5 -4 NANNY/HOUSEKEEPER Port time for 21 month old Room board, and stipend Must have valid dnvers license Bi-ímgual 472- References Evelyn 928-3516, 4-27 4 47 7 ACC O U NTING STUDENT for local CPA a n d clencal work 20 hours a week Typ­ ing skills a n d transportation necessary Prefer work through summer Call 477 8155, $4 0 0 hour 4 -2 4 REAL ESTATE agents wanted Austin Corpus, Brownsville, Alice Tutoring and qualifying, Longona Realty, 445-6136 4- 24 EXPERIENCED WAITPERSON M l and p a rt tim e. Apply m p erson b e tw e e n 2 5p m M o n d a y -T h u rs d a y , M e x ic a li Rose R estaurant & C a n tin a 2113 W A n d e rso n 4 -2 4 Lane fall e m p l o y m e n t Th© ^exas Umor $ now accepting applications for the faH for part time dunng service positions Contact Judy m Texas Union 4 124 4-27 PART TIME assistant manager needed $4 50 per hour Flexible schedule oukJ lead »o full time ;f desired Apply m per 5-4 son at 6 5 3 5 North Lamar NEEDED MMEDlATElY dependable ef­ ficient housekeeper Thursday and ^ndav 12-6 pm or all day Fndoy Must be able to do laundry, some ramng, childcare $5 an hour and own transportation »s 4-27 essential 3 4 6 -0 4 9 0 2 5 8 -4 4 5 4 BABYSITTER FOR 1 year old, my home 3- 4 hours a day, weekdays Close to UT shuttle $2 00 hour 452 2 0 5 0 evenings 4-25 _________ RUNNERS POSITION available with ad­ vertising agency Please send resume ono hours available to Mary Etlen at P O Box 4-26 1905 Austin IX 7 8767 DRYCLEANING COUNTER help After­ noons 6 30 Zilker Park orea Call 478- 4-25 2 46 0 _______________ PART TIME yard work 8 a m 2 pm must have transportation $5 00-nour 4-27 4 5 3 -4 2 8 3 PART TIME receptionist/secretary for en­ ergetic fine eweler Must be personable dependable and have highest ¡ntegnty CaH T D Wemick 454-3133 for appoint­ 4-26 ment INSTRUCTOR Bam-2pm PRESCHOOL Experience preferred insurance benefits 4-26 offered 4112 Duval St 458-1891 DELIVERY PERSON wanted to moke lo­ cal deliveries Good dnvmg record re­ 4-27 quired. Call M-F 9-4 8 3 4 -0 3 4 6 PLEASANT COMPETENT mature nd»- viduot to assist with tight office duties Bii- 5-4 •nguats preferred 3 8 5 -6 2 3 2 TELEPHONE A N D door to door advertís ng, part nme solary ommissior, No expeience CaH 8 3 5 -9 4 3 8 2-8 onty 4- __________________________________ 27 TAKING APPLICATIONS for cord and gift shop cashier salesperson . ook tor aggressive individual Bexible hours Ap­ ply 2-3, Monday-Fnday 707 E 6th 4-27 SELL IT! With a Texan W ant-Ad! 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 USED COMPUTERS IBM PC & APPLE NOW IN STO CK M O ST M ONEY FOR YOUR USED C O M P U T EP Spicewood Sprmgs/183 Shopping Center 331-0362 C O M P U T C f l R E R U N S m -f ,2 6 s,-.- 9 - 6 PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz Y U C C A v i/C C A Y U C C A Y U C C A ----------------- O ' " jJH EN YOU LIV E A lU N E N H 4 E P 5 S E S - YOt M A\t ~C En _ U - V0U C A N ... .umAt B.C. v V H & N Yc \J 3 T Z 2 P b y j o l u m v t i a r t 1 C .. vV n & M YOU GroP CATCriltX? J p M T a v\e 4 -M j _ W c m e ONCE A0AJN, THE ^ ' '.AVVJA 6 t t t m v WHERE H M . "HE *TU" DENT5 J A Y S T tE "C U , -YE. 'HEy Y F ft? r I— - m " . - Y V P t*!N ',S T R IC T * C W & D * > C Y V -.'OWN RCK , ' A t CONSERVATION CONTROL CORPORATION An Austin based energy management firm is now occeptmg applications for the following positions • Receptiomst/Negotioble • Computer Bookkeeper/Negotiable • Consuftants/con average $ 4 0 ,0 0 0 ♦ per year Heating/AC experience helpful; not nec essory Complete training provided Per fed hours for students Coll after 9 0 0 am for appointment 451-8236 TEXAS COMMERCE BANK AUSTIN needs port time employees, moil clerk 2-6 p.m M-F, some heovy lifting $3 70 per hour Telephone inqmry rep 8-12 noon M-F, $4 10 per hour Receptionist/teller 9 30-2 30 p m M- F, $4 99 on hour, coH or come by 7th and Lavoca 476-6611 ext 2506 E.OE7AAE BUDGET Budget Rent-A-Car is now accepting op plications for the following positions ‘Full-time counter receptionist, 8-5 Tues Sat ‘Part-time counter receptionist, Sat & Sun "Full-time service agent morning & eve hours available 'Part-time service ogent, Sat & Sun Apply m person at 3 3 3 0 Manor Rd 4 7 8 -6 4 3 7 Phone Sales Pleasant voice, 5-9pm , Sun- day-Thursday. $ 4 .0 0 hour plus commission. Call 4 4 8 - 0 7 0 7 . STOP! If you're looking for excellent working hours and good storting pay, coll us W e hove openings for enthusiastic people to contact our clients. N o sell­ involved no experience neces­ ing sary For interview, call 4 5 4 - 8 8 6 7 or 4 5 4 -8 8 9 ? M on-Fn 12 noon-ópm 5-3 Austin Marriott We hove an opening for a switch­ board operator 20 hrs. per week eve­ ning shift and some AM shifts on weekends. Apply personnel, Mon- doy-Thursdoy, 10-4pm E O E /M /F/H /V Telemarketing time, afternoons. $ 5 .0 0 / Part h our plus incentive bonuses. N e a tly dressed a nd interested in long-term position. C all Linda at C riterion Telephone 4 5 4 -3 7 0 2 . PART TIME TELLER Sophomore or |unior accounting or finonce motor to work afternoons and Saturdays as a dnve in teller Will tram bnght, intelligent, outgoing, en­ ergetic individual Call Mr Rice, Cen­ tury National Bank, 9626 N Lamar 834-2000, E O E 4 -3 0 OVERSEAS JOBS Summer year round Europe, S America, Australia Asia All fields $ 900 $ 20 00 mo Sightseeing Free info Wnte IJC, P O Box 52 TX2 5 3 Corona Del Mor, CA 9 2 6 2 5 LOST A FOUND AMERICAN EXPRESS cord found Satur doy, April 21, Anytime University Co-op Holder Shihaby Identify 477 3 402 af­ 4 -26 ter 2 45pm HELP WANTED BEACH COMBERS WANTED Pelicans W harf is now accepting applications cocktail for part-tim e servers and assistant waitpersons Please ap­ ply in person only from 9 - 11am 7 days a week at 425 W. Riverside No phone calla pleaae EOE ¿ IIIIIIIIIIIH IIIIIIIIIIIM IIIia illllllltt I i INSTANT CASH | 1 ANDBONUS s 2 2 Currently running a special If S you need cash to hetp you out 2 while attending college why not 3 5 donate blood plasma You can 3» 3 donate twice m a 7 day period for the 1st donation receive $10, 3 ■» «5 3 for the 2nd donation in a 7 day 5 2 penod receive $12 Plus with 2 3 this ad you II receive a $2 bonus 2 2 on your firs! visit Also ask about 2 bonus programs So help others 3 2 2 while helping yourself Musf 2 have valid ID A some proof of 3 2 3 Austin residence Drawing hekJ 2 2 once a month for $50 bonus 2 3 Call 474-7941. Austin Plasma 2 2 Center 2800 Guadalupe 3 2 Special in effect from 3 26/04 2 3 thru 4/27 04 Ñ l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l l i SHOP HELPER W A N T E D Student to work at Austin's most presti­ gious Ceiling Fan Company Minimum 20 hours a week until end of semester Full time summer position Must have knowl edge of shop and power tools, be able to occept responsibility and work well under pressure Will assist in assembly w are­ house work and light delivery. Call for appointment TEXAS CEILING FANS 5-7 1205 W 6th, 477-3132 Pelican's W harf n o w accepting applicatio n s fo r part time assistant waitpersons, d o o r hostesses, hosts, m orning fo o d preppers. A p p ly in person only 9 -lla m . 4 2 5 W Riverside D r N o phone calls please. Pedunkel's 1003 Barton Springs Road taken Applications a re being for openings in all positions Part time, full time, all shifts G o o d benefits, and a wonderful working environment A p ­ ply betw een 2 -4pm , M onday-Thurs- day 4 -2 7 Financial Wnter/Editor Madison Financial Corporation is seeking a strong financial writer to wnte and edit its financial newsletters which are provid­ ed to customers of Madison's client bank The successful applicant must exhibit 'Record of academic achievement ‘Familianty with the financial industry and understanding of the changes brought about by deregulation 'Ability to manoge people and work with freelance wnters 'Desire to be part of the management team of rapidly growing company in the financial services industry and to grow in responsibility beyond financial writing ‘MBA or expenence in financial wntmg a necessity Excellent salary and extraordi­ nary opportunity for advancement Send resume to Carolyn Williams. M adi­ son Financial Corporation Box 12338, Nashville, TN 3 72 05 CHILI'S N o w accepting applications fo r cooks, bus help. A p p ly M -F 2-4pm . E.O.E. 4 5 1 -6 2 2 8 4-24 EXPERIENCE? It's hard to get but it pays o ff This summer you can get some e x p e n ­ ence, m ake money and have fun tool Evms Temporaries has |obs in Busi ness. Technical and industrial fields for students This is your best chancel Call 4 5 4 -9 5 6 1 north, 4 4 3 - 5 0 0 0 south light Needed Part time Telemarketing W e are seeking h a rd w o rk­ ing individuals with go o d com m unication skills to sell long distance telephone ser­ vice telem arketing program . W e offer: • G o o d pay in our • G o o d hours • Pleasant w orking conditions O penings are a va ilable fo r im m ediate employm ent. In­ terested candidates may call 8 37-8871. CDI TEK-SKILLS Services N O W HIRING part/full time secretary receptionist for growing energy manage­ ment firm Micro-computer and ornee 4 -27 skills preferred. 443-6109 N E W S ED ITO R /C O PY WRITER For Austin's only SpantsH-language radio station Must be bilingual, speak and wnte Spanish and English Must type and translate from English to Spanish Must Have expenence in gathenng, wnting, editing and on-air delivery of news Em­ phasis on local news Apply in person I0am-5pm M-F KM M M Radio 3108 N Lamar Equal Opportunity Employer 4-25 HARPO ON HENRY'S Im m ediate openings fo r oyster bartenders, dishwashers a nd cooks. Full and p a rt time posi­ tions a vailable. A p p ly in person 2 4pm. 6019 N . IH -35. EOE M A IL CLERK PART TIME Responsible for mail room, filing, post off­ ice pick-up & delivery & other errands. Must hove valid driver's license Salary $3 95/hr from 1 30-5 15 p.m Prefer col­ lege student Send resume to Personnel M R 4 00 West 15 St Suite 9 00 Austin, TX 78701 EOE LOCK STOCK & BARREL Daytim e busperson needed, will pay go o d m oney to right person. A p p ly in p e r­ son, 2 7 0 0 W. Anderson Lane. LIVE-IN RELIEF Excellent opportunity for students Im­ mediate openings for mature, respon­ sible persons to do home m a n ag e ­ ment hours on weekends. Temporary & perm anent positions available. Full onentation provided References required Call Pam ela at 4 5 4 -3 5 8 4 4 8 4-25 STUDENTS!! Great part time iob passing out samples in grocery stores Day work Fnday, Satur day or Sunday Clean-cut outgoing, de­ pendable people only Victor Temporary Services North 111 W Anderson Lane Suite # 3 2 8 454-5731 South 1301 S 1-35 Suite 101 445 -2 5 2 5 RUNNER/TELLER Sophom ore or |unior accounting or finance m a|or needed to w ork afte r­ noons and Saturdays Various duties as well as drive in teller Strong m a­ ture local person preferred Call M r Rice, Century N ational Bank, 9 6 2 6 N Lamar, 8 3 4 -2 0 0 0 , E.O.E. 4 -3 0 BURGER KING 2700 GUADALUPE N ow hiring — all shifts — full and part time. Ap­ ply in person. SOUPER SALADS 8 0 0 CON GR ESS AVE. We are accepting applications for part time, full time, doy and night prep & waitpersons positions. Apply in per­ son Mon-Fn 3-5pm or Sat 9-2 SMALL PACKAGE DELIVERY Inc., an Austin Sheridan based transportation service o rganization is no w hiring delivery persons. Must dress sharp and be sharp, and provide yo u r o w n transpor­ tation. A ll shifts open w ith some full time positions fo r the sum­ mer available. 480-8501 CASE W O RK ER PART TIME 20 hours/week M F W with 1 yea r related expenence or BA degree in relevant field and 4 years of related expenence. Expen­ ence with child w elfa re children and families; treatment expenence in clini­ cal setting and supervision of volun­ teers with abused children Special- zation in child w elfare services prefered Salary is $ 1 ,3 7 2 monthly to be increased after 6 months of em ­ ployment Apply by Fnday, Apnl 27th 5 pm at the Austin Travis County M e n ­ tal Health, M ental Retardation Center, 143 0 Collier St or call 4 4 7 2 16 6 for more information betw een 4 -5 p.m , M -F EOE CASE W O RK ER III A M aster s D egree in Social Services or related field plus 2 years full time paid expenence or D S. degree with 6 years full time paid expenence Considerable know ledge of princi­ pals methods, technique and practic es alcohol program Treatment group expenence preferred in Alcohol Drug Abuse Center K now ledge of Al-Anon preferred. Salary is $ 1 ,6 7 0 8 0 m onth­ ly to be increased after 6 months of em ployment Apply by Friday, Apnl 27th, 5 p.m. at Austin Travis County M ental Health, M ental Retardation Center 1 43 0 Collier St. or call 4 4 7 - 2 166 for m ore information betw een 4 -5 p.m , M -F, EOE. A T TE N TIO N GRADUATES If you a re seeking a career opportuni­ ty in Austin and have had prior retail expenence, you may be interested in investigating positions w e now have open in m anagem ent W e offer on the |Ob training, good starting salo­ nes, rapid advancem ent and many store fnnge benefits. Far an interview please contact M r Pent undgren Yanng s North Loop. 4 5 2 5 7 5 7 Y A R IN G S NEED CASH? Earn $ 5 0 0 each school year 2-4 iflexibie) hours/week placing & filling posters on campus Serious workers only; we give recommendations Call now for summer & next toll 1-800 243- 4-30 6 6 7 9 ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY Graduation from High School, some college desirable, applicant should hove typmg skills of 70wpm, no more than 5 errors os accredited by any Texos Employment Commission poor to applying. Skills in transenbmg from dictating equipment, and ability to compose written correspondence preferred 4 years of advanced com­ plex secretarial work expenence needed Word processing expenence prefei rred. Salary is $1,131 a month to be in ncreosed after 6 months of em­ ployment Apply by Fnday, April 27th, 5 p m at the Austin Travis County Mental HeoMh, Mental Retardation Center, 1430 Collier St or coll 447- 2166 for more information between 4-5 p m M-F, FOE ocessmg ex RESIDENTIAL C O O R D IN A TO R BA degree or equivalent preferred with a mo|or in Behavioral or Social Sciences 2 yeors full time poid expe­ nence in o recognized agency mov be substituted for each year of col­ lege Management of therapeutic halfway house expenence preferred Two of supervisory expenence pre­ ferred AA or Al-Anon expenence stronqly preferred Salary is $1,131 monthly increased after 6 months of employment Apply by Fn­ day, Apnl 27th, 5 p.m at the Austin Trovts County Mental Health, Mental Retardation Center, 1430 Collier St or call 447-2166 for more informa­ tion between 4-5 p.m., M-F, EOE to be Clerk I Part time - 20 hrs ./week An entry clencal position performing routine work under close supervision of the Methadone Treatment Program Unit Manager Paid employment in clencal work preferred Working knowledge of business English, SpelL mg, onthmetic, and use of simple off­ ice equipment Some typing and filing skills needed $407/monmly Apply by Friday, Apnl 27th, 5 pm at the Aus­ tin Travis County Mental Health, Men­ tal Retardation Center 1430 Collier St or coll 447-2166 for more infor­ mation between 4-5 p m , M-F, EOE Bus d n ve r/C h ild care High School graduation plus 1 year expenence working with special needs children Must obtain Texas Chauffeur's license and qualify for Center Insurance Salary $4.50 hour­ ly Apply by Fnday, Apnl 27th, 5 p.m at the Austin Travis County Mental Health, Mental Retardation Center 1430 Collier St or call 447-2166 for more information between 4-5 p.m, M-F, EOE. Behavior Specialist Relief High School graduation or G E D Ex­ penence wonting with autistic or au­ tistic-like individuals; implementation of highly structured programming. Special training in the area of behav­ ior management, child development, detailed maintenance of daily data in all skill areas Salary is $5.76/hourly. Apply by Fnday, Apnl 27th, 5 p m at the Austin Travis County Mental Health, Mental Retardation Center, 1430 Collier St or call 447 2166 for more information between 4-5 p.m, M-F, EOE GENERAL OFFICE CLERK Part time position available offering flexible hours now possible full time summer Duties include filing, phones, and light typing. Call Personnel 458- 1141 or apply in person at our MAIN OFFICE N A S H PHILLIPS/COPUS 6010 Brooks Ave. E.O.E., M /F PORTERS individuals needed for Responsible groundskeeping, fence repair, and general m aintenance of rental prop­ erty Must have ow n transportation Flexible hours now full *tme summer Call 458-1141 o r apply in person at our M A IN OFFICE. N A S H PHILLIPS/COPUS 6010 Brooks Ave. E.O.E., M /F S afew ay Stores, Inc. Has p a rt time openings fo r sack- ers, checkers a nd deli clerks. Flexible hours a nd starting pay a b o v e minimum w ag e . For a d d i­ tio na l inform a tio n call 8 3 7 4 2 2 8 . An Equal O p p o rtu n ity Em ployer M /F /H /V M ICROFILM OPERATOR 2 N D SHIFT Prefer second shift hours? If you w ould like w orking from 1 p.m 9 p.m and have six months expenence with a microfilm p n nter/reader and a mi­ crofilm machine, call Personnel 4 5 8 - 1141 or apply in person at our M A IN OFFICE N ash Phillips/Copus 6 0 1 0 Brooks Ave. E.O.E., M /F LOCK STOCK & Barrel needs day wait- ;>eop!e & day cashier Apply in person 4-27 2 7 0 0 W Anderson Lone BUSPERSON NEEDED Apply m person Threadgill's Restaurant 6416 N Lamar Ask tor Wendall or Judi Monday-Thurs- 4 -26 day 10 30am-2pm. SUMMER JOBS with THE BEST TEMPORARIES IN TOWN If you have clerical experience and at least one full weekday free, we can offer you the best pay and fringe benefits available. We have both long and short term assignm ents available with many fine com panies ail over Aus­ tin. No oth er sum m er job can offer you the flexibility and variety th at we can !! Call us today for an appointment. Never a fee. /^TEMPORARIES inc. The Best Temporaries in Town. 8 1 6 C ongress Ave. 477-1655 x TAX EXAMINER SEASONAL VACANCIES The IRS Austin Service Center is antici­ pating part-time (3:15pm-9:45pm and/or 6:00pm-10:00pm) and 8 hour day and night shift seasonable Tax Examiner va­ cancies paying up to $5.81 per hour. SUMMER JOBS $9.10 per hour Austin, Corpus, Dallas, Ft. Worth, Houston, San Antonio, and suburbs oí above. Interviews conducted at the Texas Union. Stahrles Sm. (3.208): Monday, April 2 3 :10am, 12pm, 2pm, 4pm ONLY Tuesday, April 24:9:45am, 2pm, 4pm ONLY Wednesday, April 2 5 :10am, 12pm, 2pm, 4pm ONLY Thursday, April 2 6 :10am, 12pm, 2pm, 9pm ONLY NO PHONE CALLS IMMEDIATE EMPLOYMENT Cozzoli’s Pizzaria Now Hiring Delivery Drivers 2270 Guadalupe (next to the Co-op) Must have car and insurance. Earn $6 -$ 10/hr. Come by for application and appointment. RUBY TUESDAY RESTAURANT N O W HIRING W e're Ruby Tuesday, Inc., a group of full ser­ vice specialty restaurants located throughout the South, and w e're now hiring for our restau­ rant in H ighland M all. W e re looking for the very best people — w aiting and kitchen staff, bus, dish and bartenders. Highest wages paid to start. It's a great opportunity to w ork in a beautiful restaurant w ith professional manage­ ment and secure,Jlrst-class operations. Apply in person only. RUBY TUESDAY RESTAURANTS Highland Mall 6001 Airport Blvd. *N o t m an y w a y a ffilia te d to rm e r Ruby w ith th e T u es d ay in A u stin THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING g Z I V L E Y ’ S 2707 HEMPHILL PARK At 27th A Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 Yes, we type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grades? Master Typist, Inc. C A L L c * 472-0293 < FOR TYPING/WORD PROCESSING RUSH WORK SPECIALISTS 10% discocnl os all P I'», Thttis and DiucrUtlotu. T«m papara, Kcattmca •ad C om Latlara 36 Doble Mall SPEEDWAY TYPING 472-4039 OVERNIGHT SUPER RUSH 7 30 a.m.-MIDNIGHT FROM $ 1 .6 5 A PAGE 37th AND SPEEDWAY ^ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ TYPING BY DEANNE W ord processing . $1 30 per page Specializing in theses term paper*, transcribing, dissertations, legal 447 7284 PATTY'S WORD Processing Term papers, professional reports dissertations Pick up. rush service till midnight 345 4269 PROFESSIONAL TYPING SI 35 T^hTs / discounts available Candace. 451- 4885 EXPERT WORD processing You can trust your dissertation or thesis with Lee Starr Equations and resumes 444-0801 M ELINDAS PROFESSIONAL TYPING Dissertations, theses. PRs N oon to M id ­ night Vicinity IH35 & 32nd 479 8871 .LIN D AS TYPING South Fast accurate inexpensive 4 42 -7 4 6 5 after 5pm TYPING $1 20 page $5 0 0 for pickup- d eiivery experienced South Kay 445-0108 Professional, $1 15 PAGE, double spaced Rush service available Professional, quality IBM typ­ ing Located south Donna 443-5613 $1 35 TYPING includes rush spelling, punctuation PR, thesis, legal, engineering expert Pat Henderson B A , 467-0167 4-27 (Lamar/55th). JEANNE S TYPING Service Typing/ W o rd processing. North Austin home Fast reasonable accurate daytime 836 ______________________ .4 3 0 3 95 CENTS, iouble spaced page. Rushes welcome at no extra charge Call 385- 4 -30 ’ 1764 anytime Antoinette Rhodes TEXT PROCESSING English assistance, ^ spelling, punctuation grammar aid. Com­ puterized graphs, data analysis. Per suasive lesumes with flair Personal atten­ tion Rush service available Creative Services, 2 42 0 Guadalupe 4 78 -3 63 3 5-4 RESUMES 2707 Hemphill Park Just North of 27th at Guadalupe 472-3210 472-7677 SARAH TYPES seven days a week. Meti- . ulous work, tost turnaround, north of 5-4 University Call 452 8 96 9 TEXAS TYPIST (word processing special­ ists) — Term papers, reports, resumes, etc 837 2657 or 442-7719 5- 4 theses, EXPERIENCED TYPIST m North Austin home, low rates, fast and accurate 836- 5-4 4971. TYPING $1 00 page Legal-$1.25. Profes­ sional, experienced typist IBM Selectric ¡I Near UT campus.) RUSHERS wel­ 5-4 come1477-5456. TYPING $1.50 per page N o extra charges (Including technical, tables, etc.) Nancy 477 3990. 7 6. 385 6262 4-27 TYPING REPORTS, charts, theses, etc. Rush ¡obs accepted. Call 8am- 10pm Reasonable rates Carolyn 459- 9527____________________________ 5-4 resumes, theses, TYPING RESEARCH papers, IBM Correcting Selectric, dissertations. pica/elite. 1 day service Fast, reasonable, 5-7 accurate, 441 1893 PROFESSIONAL RESUME Writing Typ­ ing Computei Design Reasonable prices, 5-7 call 4 77 -8 5 4 6 PROFESSIONAL QUALITY word p ro ­ cessing by experienced typist Fast and accurate $1.50 per page Jacquelyn 834 0 36 6 days. 4 6 7 -2 6 4 9 evenings 4-27 You II be glad you ve called TAMARAS TYPING Service 24 his ser vice Applications, Terms, College Papers 9 2 6 -0 2 4 0 Reagan High School area.5- 4 EXCELLENT TYPING and word process­ ing recommended by Computer Logic 4-25 836-0721 TRAVEL EUROPE* Roundtnp air from $ 559 (Dal­ los) or $569 (Houston) $ 37 0 2 months EURAILPASS, Hostel pass, Rainbow Tours 8 0 0 /3 9 2 -5 9 0 2 (Texos).___________4-25 WE HAVE the lowest airfares to Europe! For free color brochure, write to Campus Travel, Box 11387 St. Lou.s M O 63105. MISCELLANEOUS RESPONSIBLE MALE graduate student interested m housesittmg during all part of summer breok Call Joe Kohler 837- 4-27 1494. UT PROFESSOR needs 3 4 HR rim,,shed house for Fall 1984, 1 year lease Prefera­ bly West Austin. P.O. Box 944, Austin, TX 7 8767 4-27 __________ ______ QUAIL M EADO W boarding stoble Full care, lighted arena, 160 acres to ride on, lump area, pastures, box stalls, tack rooms, resident manager, 24 hours se­ curity 15 minutes from Austin 251-4834 4-27 EMPLOYMENT SERVICES AIRLINES HIRING, $14-$39,000! Stew­ ardesses, Reservations! WoHdwide! Call for Guide, Directory, Newsletter 1(916)- 4-26 9 44 4444 X UTEXAUSTINAiR CRUISESHIPS HIRING, $16 $30,000! Caribt>ean. Hawaii, World Call for Guide, Directory, Newsletter 1-(916)- 9 44 -4 4 4 4 XUTEXAUSTINCRUISE 4-26 BLOOM COUNTY by B e rk e B reath ed You must pass a written test to qualify. The test will be administered on Tuesday night, April 24 at 6:00pm in the front caf­ eteria of the IRS Service Center, 3651 South IH-35. m r ( M M W e t ? INFIPEL M T e m r r t k k r , j Q 0 H T OUR IÑSTITVTI0HAL L I K 6 mveRs toft LÚN0-6ARBP FOLKó! m i 1% LONb-emv M M ' T H e m iN 'SO W n o n < w r m rtísm t SHORT t m 1 IN AriW I PON T flflve flNt e w b m A ib o e v iR c-s,;». To obtain an application, come by the main lobby of the IRS Service Center. r Z & STATE & LOCAL Page 24/The Drty TwueVTuesdey, Aprtl 24,1964 Commission plans to appeal decision By SARAH DUKE Daily Texan Staff The Texas Railroad C om m ission is planning to appeal a decision by the Interstate Commerce Com m ission de­ nying the state agency the right to reg­ ulate intrastate railroad prices. The ICC issued the decision Friday as a result o f the com m ission's failure to conform to the Stagger’ s A ct o f 1980, which was intended to reduce over-regulation o f the railroads by both the state and federal agencies. The com m ission, w hich includes James Nugent, Buddy Tem ple and Chairman Mack W allace, w ill meet A p ril 30 to determine what action w ill be taken It cannot appeal the decision without giving p rio r notice o f the meeting. to prevent government over-regulation and still keep the railroads com peti­ tiv e ,” Wallace said. “ But it has done nothing to encourage c o m p e titio n .” W allace said the railroad com m is­ sion’ s main purpose, established in 1890, is to prevent price gouging. The IC C , he said, is not dedicated to this principle. Reese T a ylo r Jr., chairman o f the IC C , was not available fo r comment. The ICC decision w ould not require railroads to inform the comm ission o f their prices as currently done. The state comm ission w ould no longer have the authority to regulate railroad prices and certifications, and it could not ensure that all railroad customers are charged the same prices. The ICC decision w ill become e f­ “ The Stagger’ s A ct was supposed fective M ay 30. Light police fines bring in prostitutes U nited Press International The low fines historically imposed fo r prostitution in A ustin have encour­ aged out-of-tow n prostitutes to flock to an old business and church district, much to the consternation o f chur­ chgoers and merchants. Police say the only way to curb the is activ ity is to raise fines. “ They think A ustin just wide open because there are low fines, and they are not hassled too m uch,” po­ lice senior Sgt. Gene Freudenberg said. “ U n til the penalties are raised to the point where i t ’s not profitable to them, they’ ll continue to do i t . ” Police say the scantily clad prosti­ tutes, who w ork all hours, stroll along Congress Avenue in South A ustin and so licit business from people in cars stopped at tra ffic lights. Associate M unicipal Judge Harriet M urphy said the average fine imposed fo r the offense o f loitering in a road­ way is $112 to $124. Suspected pros­ titutes are often arrested on that charge since there is no need to verify that an o ffe r o f sex fo r money was made. A wheely big turtle United Press International A1 the tortoise takes a cruise on his scooter in El Paso as zoo employee A rm ida Gallegos gives A l a scratch under his neck. The 245-pound tortoise w ill be on the scooter tor another eight weeks w hile a torepaw injury heals. your choice Apple lie Starter System per month IBM PCjr System • CPU, 64K RAM, 80 column display • One disk drive, 143 Kb capacity • 12" green phosphor monitor • DOS 3.3 operating system • 3 hours hands-on introductory class CPU, 128K RAM, 80 column display one disk drive, 360 Kb capacity 12" green phosphor monitor PC-DOS operating system Modems, printers and software can be added for only dollars per month. Get instant ComputerCraft Credit with: • 10% down • $150 to $25,(X)0 purchase. ComputerCraft ★ BRING THIS COUPON * To Any Austin ComputerCra Before April 30, 1984, and Sa 3 $100.00 on the Price of an Printer purchased with either < the advertised computers Limit One Coupon per Customer 30 LOCATIONS THROUGHOUT TEXAS 9012 Research Rd. @ Burnet Rd./458-4236 • 123 E. 7th (Downtown)/482-0792 4211 S. Lamar @ Ben White Blvd.7443-4183 Stores open 10-6 Monday thru Saturday. Open Thursday nights until 9. Lucas says murders part of satan cult United Press International in­ G E O R G E T O W N — Skeptical vestigators are checking mass murder­ er Henry Lee Lucas's claim that he killed some o f his victim s because he belonged to a cult that required human sacrifice. In an interview published in Sun­ day's editions o f the Fort Worth Star- Telegram, the 47-year-old drifte r, who contends he killed 360 people, said the organization — called “ The Hands o f D eath” — has hundreds o f members roam ing the country. “ 1 belonged to a c u lt,” Lucas said. “ It was a d e v il’ s organization. For in itiation you w ould have to go out and k ill a p e rs o n .” Lucas was convicted in 1960 o f murdering his mother in M ichigan. He has been convicted o f two murders in Texas and pleaded g uilty to a third He is charged w ith 10 slayings in T e x ­ as, one in Louisiana and one in A r­ kansas, and authorities have said his confessions have cleared more than 100 unsolved homicides. Sister C lem m ie, a C atholic lay w orker who asked that her last name not be used, said she had heard from tw o prisoners the W illiam son in County Jail in Georgetown about the cult before she met Lucas. She said in both cases, the prisoners told her they could not convert to feared because C hristianity reprisals from the cult. they Lucas said the cult killed on con­ tract and performed ritual crucifixio ns o f animals and humans. “ They were supposed to bring the devil back to lif e ,” Lucas said. Lucas said he was first approached by the cult in Shreveport. La., after learning that a “ co m panion" already belonged, and later |oined the cult a f­ ter a failed attempt to reunite w ith his fam ily. Lucas did not name his companion, but said he “ participated in it worse than I did. He w ould eat human flesh and drink human b lo o d ." Lucas said he did not always k ill on the c u lt's behalf. 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