d 3 1 N 3 D W l I d O H O I We Daily Texan ' s y n v a d o 9 CÍ7Q17 x n o e i / 5 S ¿ x.L Vol. 82, No. 69 (USPS 146-440) Student Newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin Thursday, December 9, 1982 Twenty-Five Cents Regent-approved HMO conditions may violate U.S. law, official says By R O B E R T B R O W N The 10 conditions for UT System insti­ tutions' acceptan ce of health m ainte­ nance organizations approved last F ri­ day by the UT System Board of R egents m ay violate federal law. an official of the D epartm ent of Health and Human R esources said W ednesday Ted Weinberg d i r e c to r of the office of em ployer c o m p lian c e in the Bureau of Health M a in te n an c e O rganizations and R esources, said in a telephone in­ terview from Washington that fe deral HMO law takes prec a-dence over w h a t ­ ever r e q u ir e m e n t s the UT S y s te m m a v de m a nd They < the UT S yste m do not have to p a s s additional r e q u i r e ­ the right m e n ts that a r e not a lre a d y in the i fe d ­ e r a l i law he said The d i re c to r of the UT S y s te m per sonnel office, which w ro te the HMO ac c e p ta n c e guidelines declined to c o m ­ m ent on the reg ulation s W ednesday, and o ther Sy stem personnel officials w ere unavailable for c o m m e n t Betty Ball e m p lo y e r c o m p lia n c e sp e ­ c ia lis t in the B u re a u of Health M a inte nance O rgan ization s and R esourc es, ag ree d with T exas HMO o p e r a t o r s b e ­ liefs that so m e of the conditions and s t a n d a r d s of the re g en t-app rove d c e r t i ­ fication r e q u ire m e n t^ m a y be in viola ­ tion of federal law The UT System re g u la tio n s th at Ball and the HMO o p e r a t o r s found to clash with federa l reg ulation s are • The applicant HMO m ust show fi­ nancial solvency by showing a net oper­ ating surplus for the last three fiscal years, and a ssets greater than liabili­ ties. • The HMO must provide a c c e ss to the sam e kinds of health practitioners that the standard prem ium group health in­ surance offers, such as chiropractors and osteopaths • The HMO m ust a ctiv ely follow a pro­ g r a m of a f f i r m a t i v e actio n in the r e ­ c r u i t m e n t of p r osp e ctive clients • The a pp licant HMO m u s t be both s t a te and federally qualified J i m Scoggins d i r e c to r of Good Health Plus a San Antonio HMO said These new University W ednesday federal r egu lations exceed stat<> and re g u la tio n s They effectively exc lude e very HMO in the sta te The r e gula tion s s t a te that the dead line for HMOs to apply to UT System institutions is Feb 1 HMOs o ffer an a lt e r n a t i v e to t r a d i ­ tional health in su ra n ce plans by using their own physicia ns and c lim es and c harging a fee for these se rv ic e s University em p lo y e es a r e offered s ta n d a rd p r e m i u m insur a nce options through the Aetna I n su r­ a n c e Co re g u la r monthly Good Health Plus last O c to b e r a t ­ \n to n io into t e m p te d to force UT San offering its HMO a s in option for em- plovees but dropped p n x -e d in g s a f te r receiving a s s u r a n c e s irom a d m i n i s t r a ­ tion officials th a t the UT S \ s t e m would allow its c om pon e nt institutio ns to offer HMOs to em ployees in 198.1 Ball outlined the 12 steps that a feder­ ally qualified HMO m ust carry out to m andate an em ployer to offer its ser­ vice as an alternative insurance plan for em ployees “ As long as an HMO is f e d e r a lly qual­ ified they cannot o v e r rid e these steps; no em ployer can im pose m ore r estr ic ­ tions other than these 12,” she said. The 12 conditions r e q u ir e t h a t the HMO provide proof th at it is fe d era lly qualitted. d e sc rib e its se r v ic e a r e a and say w h e th e r it is a group HMO, one th at owns and o p e ra t e s its own clinics staffed with a group of phy sicians, or an individual physician asso c iatio n . HMO, one that is o p e r a te d by an a sso c iatio n of physicians Both r e g u la r HMOs m ust supply inform ation about the p h y sic ia n s their s u b s c r ib e rs utilize. \ 1 so an HMO m ust say w h e t h e r it is .i profit or non-profit unit, supply the n a m e s of its board of d i r e c to r s and m a n a g e r s , d e s c rib e its e n r o llm e n t c a ­ pacity. provide a it uses a fi n an cial s t a te m e n t for the last 11seal ye ar, a s a m p le em ploy er-H M O c o n tr a c t, ' a m p l e m a r k e tin g m a t e r i a l s and in fo rm a tio n on its r a t e s for clients. list of ho spitals IPA s and Weinberg said a f t e r the HMO appli- c a n t subm its this in fo rm a tio n in w riting to an e m p lo y e r, the e m p lo y e r h a s 60 days in which to respond to the requ est. A fter 60 days, he said, the institutio n is s ubje ct to an in vestigation by the f e d e r ­ al Office of HMO Com pliance. Only fe d erally qualified HM Os can force institutions to offer em p loyees an HMO option along with a standard premium health insurance plan, said Mary Ann R aesn er of the sta te Insur­ ance Board Of the 12 HMOs operating in Texas, which total m ore than 213.500 in enroll­ ment. only four are federally qualified, said Ernestina G onzales of the Insur­ ance Board. P r u C a r e Austin is the only fed erally a cc red ited HMO o p e ra tin g locally. The pro c ess of becom ing federally qualified ta k e s about six m on ths, said David F e rg u so n , d i re c to r of C e ntra l Texas Health P la n a local HMO t h a t is not T h e re f o re C T H P can not be com e fe dera lly q ua li­ fied tim e to m e e t the S y stem -set HMO a pp licatio n deadline for 1983. fe derally a c c r e d i t e d in Dean Davis, an Austin l a w y e r who helped to d r a ft the 1975 T ex a s HMO s ta tu te said “ T he HM Os which a r e the most effe c tiv e a r e not fe d erally q u a li­ fied. b e ca u se they do not need the fed­ eral that c o m e s with being federally q u a lified .” he said. funding David Atkinson, d i r e c t o r of the group insu ran ce division of the S ta te E m p l o y ­ ee R e ti r e m e n t System , says a p p r o x i­ m ate ly 13.000 of the 110.000 non-UT Sys­ tem s t a te e m p lo y e e s a r e e nrolled in five s e p a r a t e HMOs. 1 *'• f t» ., M • * « - v*. -y, » . * ' * - 4 . David Sprague, Daily Texan Staff Behind the eight ball G ra d u a te g e o lo g y stu d e n ts B.J. Tylka (I) and S co tt D a v i s stroll throug h c a m p u s to the G e o lo g y B u ild in g W e d n e sd a y with a tank of liq uid nitrogen p ain ted up as a b illia rd ball. T h e nitrogen is used to k e e p testing e q u ip ­ m ent a n d s a m p le s co ld for analysis. City to decide STNP solution by Dec. 16 By R IC H A R D G O L D S M IT H The Austin ( it'. < ouncil W ednesday set I )e< 16 as the d a te to decide the fa te ui the city > ¡inanci.il ' t a k e in th e t r o u ­ bled South T i'x a s N u c le a r P r o j e c t and to de cide w h e t h e r the c ity should sue Houston Lighting & P o w e r, the m a n a g ­ ing p a r t n e r of the p ro jec t, for m i s m a n ­ a g e m e n t Austin voted to sell its 16 p e rc e n t s h a r e of STM* last v e a r but m u s t con- tinue to m ak e p a y m e n t s of m o re th an $1 million p er week on the p ro jec t until a tound The $377 million a p ­ buyer proved by v oters for the p ro jec t will be depleted in mid-April and m o r e m oney m u st be a llo c ated o r the city will have to default on its c o n tr a c t is O p tio n ' to. r a i s e the m oney include issuing bonds legal under calling a bond e le ction, 1»ter a p pro val, without law. but illegal u nde r the City ra ising e le c t ri c utility or state C h a rte r rates. H.L P e te r s o n , a cting d i r e c to r of the E le c tr ic D e p a r tm e n t, said r a te s would need to be incre ased 22 p e rce n t i m m e ­ diately and a n o th e r 20 p e rc e n t in O c to ­ ber to m a k e S T N P p a y m e n t s without bonds The City E le c t r i c Utility C o m m i s ­ sion a n in o -m e m b er ad v is o ry hoard, has re c o m m e n d e d the city hold a $70 million bond election for the needed It also advised the city to sue money HL&P for m is m a n a g e m e n t City M a n a g e r Nicholas M eiszer and F in ance D e p a r t m e n t D ire c to r Phil Scheps have r e c o m m e n d e d the bonds be issued w ith out v oter a pp rov al i m m e d i ­ ately. The council is likely to call a bond election J a n 15 fo r the in te r im funds to m a k e S T N P p a y m e n ts through 1983. Mayor Carole McClellan is in fa vo r of issuing the bonds without v o t e r a p p r o v ­ al But sh e said if the v o te rs a r e a sk e d to ap p ro v e the bonds then they a ls o should be ask ed to vote on w h e th e r they would in­ c r e a se d instead to provide funds for the city to m a k e S T N P p a v m e n t s as a n a l ­ tern a tive to have utility r a t e s like “ L e t 's test the puise ot the public on the o th er option she said Ja n 15 is one of the few d a te s d uring 1983 on which the city can hold a r e ­ ferendum . Bond ra tin g se rv ice s h a v e told c ity officials A u s t i n s bond c r e d i t ra ting, w'hich d e te r m i n e s the a m o u n t of i n t e r ­ est paid on loans, would be low ered if the city defaults Default also could jeop a rdiz e the m oney the city a lr e a d y has invested in ST N P and could m a k e the city open to law suits by the o t h e r ST N P p a r tn e r s , officials say. The d a te for action was set a f te r a public h e a rin g on w h a t Austin's optio ns a r e in the p ro jec t Many of those who spoke urged the c ity to tak e legal actio n ag ain st HL& P and ¡o get out of the project Austin is in a law suit with d re ad y a p a r tn e r H L & P a g ainst Brown & Root In*. . tlu f o r m e r S T N P b u d d e r and c o n tra c to r HL&P h a s been considered a likely buyer for A u stin's share, but HL&:P C ha irm a n Don J o r d a n sent the city a le tte r Dec 1 saying the c om pany can not consider the p u r c h a s e because of fi n a n ­ the sa le cial pro blem s m igh t be the r e conside red p rojec t ha s gone into successful o p e r a ­ tion “ J o r d a n said “ w'hen Activism force behind creation of black studies Editor’s Note: Thi> is the tirst of a two-part series about the U n iversity’s African and A fro-Am erican Studies and R esearch segm ent de­ r r ib e s the research cen ter's creation in 1969 and the reasons behind its de­ clining popularity in the 1980s. ( enter This By G A R Y W A R R E N Da iy ' e x a n Sta*‘ those p r o g r a m s a r e d ra w in g P olitically and a c a d e m i c a ll y m o t i v a t ­ ed stude:.: a c t i v is m in the late 1960s and early 197c' w as largely responsible for the c rea tio n of black stu dies p r o g r a m s b\ u n iv ers ities in the U nited S ta te s but now less stude n t in terest. for black studies p r o ­ The d e m a n d m o r e politically g r a m s was inte n se than a ca d em ica lly m o t i v a t e d . ’' said John W arfield, d i r e c to r of the African and A fro -A m e ric a n Studies C e n te r since 1973 “ T he n a tu r e of the t im e s m e a n t that u n iv ers ities could not avoid the m o m e n ­ tum (of c h an g e and w e r e not in any­ way isolated ¡ ro m what w a s happening in the so-called re al world, he said “Clearly the students dem anding the courses had political c o n cern s,” Wil­ liam Darity. a sso cia te professor of eco ­ nom ics. said But they also wanted to learn m ore about their own (r a c e ’s) history which requires m ore sch olar­ ship P a r t ot D arity s d e velopm ent e co ­ n om ic s c ourse d e s c rib e s E u r o p e a n and A m e ric an black slave trad in g f r o m the ¡ate 1600s to the m iddle 1800s The nationw ide d e c r e a s e of student en ro llm en t in black studies c o u r se s was pre d ic ta b le b e ca u se of the unsustaineu student a c t i v is m behind the d e m a n d for the classes, said the c e n t e r s d i r e c to r T h a t pitch and fe rv o r within the black c o m m u n i ty that would a f fe c t s t u ­ dents probably could n't have m a i n ­ tained its e l f . ” W arfield sa id I think there > a re alis tic and r e a s o n a b le level ing off of in te res t in the co u rses The c e n te r and the M exican A m e n can Studies C e n te r w e r e divisions ot the in Ethnic Studies P r o g r a m c r e a te d June 1969 upon r e c o m m e n d a tio n by the UT Sy stem Board of R e g ents. Warfield said. The late Henry Bullock, a p rofessor e m e r it u s from Texas Southern U n ive r­ sity in Houston, was the c e n t e r 's first director Prior to Warfield s appointm ent as director, it was divided into instruction­ I cam e to al and research com ponents unify and stream line the functions un­ der a single ad m in istration .” he said Course topics include Afro-Am erican history, contem porary black literature folklore and black music Sixteen facul tv m em bers from the cen ter and va ri­ ous libero! arts departm ents teach the c lasses. S ta tistic s irom the Office of I n s titu ­ tional Studies indicate the n u m b e r of stu de nts taking black studies c la ss e s dropped fro m 472 in the fall -e m e ste r of 1974 to 283 in 1977 E n ro llm en t a v e r a g e s for the 2u c o u r s ­ es offere d p er s e m e s t e r u n d e r the p r o ­ g r a m a r e now approxim ately 450 Politics and public relations also p e r ­ suaded s o m e blacks there w a s no n e c e s ­ sity to ponder r a cial issues. Warfield said The politics of integration and the public relation s that c a m e have led a n u m b e r of black people to think the study of black A m e ric an s w a s p a s s e . ” he said. They c onvinced so m e people that it w a s no longer n e c e ssa ry to dwell on the question of r a c e . ” The low nu m b er of w hite stu d e n ts from such p r o g r a m s nationwide, too, caused low student particip atio n, s a i i Reuben R McDaniel pro fessor of m a n ­ ag e m e n t “ Som e ot them ju st don't ha ve any p a r ti c u l a r interest 'i n black s t u d i e s ' . ” ‘O thers don't u n d e rstand the he said a c a d e m ic be nefits the c ou rses McDaniel has s e r v e d on the c e n te r s E x e c u tiv e C o m m itte e sin c e 1975. taking from P a r e n ta l influence also w a s a facto r stu d ie s e n r o ll­ in d e c re a s in g black m ents. Warfield said For so m e p a re n ts, the a c tiv is m of the Sixties w as not a positive force for th e ir sons and d a u g h te r s going off to predominantly white sc hools.” he said A lot of p a r e n t s sent th e ir black c hildren a w a y sa y ing don t get in­ volved with that black stuff on those c a m p u se s W arfield said Which a t so m e point m e a n s don t bother w ith black co urses Lack of k now ledge by black stu d e n ts about black str u g g le s against d i s c r im i ­ nation during the 1940s and 1950s in the United S ta te s also coincided with d e ­ c rea se d c o u r s e en ro llm en ts Warfield sa id The students d o n 't know what th a t just as I don't period ot life was about know what J i m C row was a bo ut in th e e a r l y 1900s. W arfield said They gre w up allegedly un d e r an in t e g ra te d soc iety the u n lo r tu n a te a sp e c t is that every black ge n era tio n has to grow up bv 11self Without identity without c u ltu re, without history, one tends to m a k e the s a m e m is ta k e s ' W arfield said Friday The advantages and disad­ vantages of black 'tu d ies program s and ideas tor their im provem ent. House OKs defense spending WASHINGTON C PI) Pentagon critics m ade turther inroads in the MX m issile program Wednesday but tailed to cut tunds for the B-l bomber and a new aircraft carrier as the House ap­ proved a $231 6 billion defense appropri­ ation bill The House approved the 1983 supple­ mental spending bill 346-68 and sent it to the Senate, which is expected to take up the m easure next week The lame-duck Congress is scheduled to adjourn next Friday In a lull day of debate, the House, by voice vote, agreed to hold up spending until April 30. 1983 of $560 m illion of $775 m illion earm arked for research on the controversial dense pack” basing mode for the MX It w.is the second de feat for President Reagan s MX p r o ­ gram in as many days The delay is intended to give Con­ gress m ore tim e to scrutinize R eagan’s in a plan to deploy 100 MX m issiles dense pack of superhardened silos in Wyoming We would hope we could jointly, with the Pentagon and with the White House, start to resolve the question of basing, said Rep Jack Edwards R- Ala who joined Rep Joseph Addabbo. D-N Y in agreeing to set the lim it The House also approved, on a 411-0 vote, an am endm ent to bar the CIA or other a g en cies from providing m ilitary equipm ent or training to groups trying to overthrow ihe leftist Sandim sta gov­ ernm ent ot Nicaragua or try ing to pro­ conflict between Nicaragua and voke Honduras The action on the MX researc h funds cam e one day after the House voted 245 176 to d elete almost $1 billion in funds to produce the m issile dealing the Reagan adm inistration a se v e r e setback Addabbo who led the su ccessfu l fight against the MX Tuesday, offered other am endm ents to cut $3 5 billion from the defense bill leaving enough tor just one ot the tw o carriers and to cut $3 9 bil­ lion toi B-l produ' ¡on Reagan fighting for MX/p.3 cooi ‘n’ cloudy T ,-rsday, skies in the Austin area are expected to be mostly cloudy w to a 20 p e r c e n t ch an ce of rain ' ne 1 )w will be m the 40s, the ifteraoon high predicted in the lower 50s Annas wilt be from the north at 15- ;Q mph A chance of rain exists )ver the weekend, with skies expected to c¡ear on Sunday today’s high tonight’s low 52 45 Hank is ‘gunned d o w n ’ on the W est Mall W e d n e s d a y . Hank assassination attempt triggers mournful outbreak of sympathy calls to ‘Texan’ B y J IM M Y M U N O Z Dany rexan Staff Judging by the number of phone calls T h e D a i l y T e x a n received Wednesday from grief-stricken students, the appar­ ent assassination of Hank the H alluci­ nation has thrown the cam pus into a tiz­ zy The seen callers, who had the “ E yeb eam ” com ic strip depicting the shooting of Hank in W ednesday’s T e x ­ a n , wanted to know w here funeral ser­ v ice s would be held and w here flow ers could be sent. H owever, T e x a n secre­ tary Sylvia Bravo inform ed “ a bunch” of callers Hank s next of kin” had not been contacted and no arrangem ents had yet been made. W ednesday’s “ E y eb ea m ” showed a child pretending to shoot Hank with his finger and Hank falling to the ground and disappearing Sam Hurt, author of the com ic strip, confirm ed the shooting and said the a s­ sailant w as a child whose “ vivid im agi­ nation w as stronger than a powerful hallucination." Hurt would not say whether Hank is really dead. “ Even I don’t know “ I thought it w as a good way to cap off the se m e ste r ,” he added. Hurt said it w as the third assassin a­ tion attem pt m ade on Hank since he w as voted president of the Students’ As­ sociation Hank garnered 3,013 w rite-in-votes in the student governm ent election s Nov 10. com pared to Paul B eg a la ’s 1,327 and P at Chivái s 1,406 votes. Although Hank's nam e was not included on the ballot in the Nov 17 runoff which Bega- la won. Hank supporters did not file a petition for his inclusion because they said they considered Hank student gov­ ernm ent president The initial assassin ation attem pt was ' m ade an appear­ m ade when Hank a n c e ” at his inaugural ball Friday night A group of m asked gunm en burst into the ballroom shouting and waving what appeared to be cap guns and water pistols The second attem p t occurred in M onday’s "Eyebeam ,” in which a man shot a bullet through Hank but failed to injure him. Hurt said flow ers could be sent to the T e x a n offices. Texas Student Publica­ tions C2.122 N ew s of the shooting disturbed many Hank cam paign supporters. “ I'm shocked and dism ayed, said Hank's press secretary, John Denson, fourth-year law public affairs student “That's the price w e pay for standing for and showing a strong stand on poli­ tics." Denson added, how ever, “ K illing a hallucination is as hard as killing an idea My feelin g is that som ehow Hank will pull through ” David Weber, third-year law student and Hank supporter, agreed “ How can you kill an id ea0 His life w as an illu­ sion. and so his death w ill have to be the sa m e .’’ Hurt said students w 11 have to wait until next sem ester to se e whether Hank's days in “ E y eb ea m ” are over page 2/The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9,1982 Jana’s Haircuts 1 la m e dollars 504 W. 24th 480-9701 P a rk Free Behind M ad Dog & Beans •¡iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiHiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu; I STOP PLAYING GAMES! I I GET YOUR COMPLETE ATARI 800 HOME COMPUTER SYSTEM | FOR ONLY $1100! ¡ I 800 CPU with 32K and Basic Cartridges, 810 disk drive, § jjj 820 40-column impact printer, 410 program recorder. = 5 Price includes 30-day factory authorized warranty. 5 I DA TALYST COMPUTERS ! ¡ 835-8745 § á iiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim iiiim iiiiiH iiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiH iiiiift • IM M IG R A T IO N • Labor Certifications • Permanent Residency • Citizenship • Student Matters • Asylums • School Approvals • Etc. \ NO CHARGE FOR INITIAL CONSULTATION FREE PARKING J O E L B . B E N N E T T ATT ORNE Y-AT-L AW 316 W. 12th Street, Suite 208 (512) 476-8595 L I C E N S E D B Y T H E T E X A S S U P R E M E C O U R T Not Cert * ed Dy the Texas B o ard df Legal Specialization Th e Da il y T e x a n PERMANENT STAFF Assistant Managing Editors U sa Beyer Editor Managing E d i t o r .................David Teece . . George Associate Managing Editor. Voadracek . Mike . 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Heidi Reinberg, Doug Rapier, Jeanette Sigler The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin is published by Texas Student Publications Drawer D, University Station, Austin, TX 78712-7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday and Friday except holiday and exam periods Second class-postage paid at Austin TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone 4714591 i at the editorial office Texas Student Publications Building 2 122> or at the news laboratory 'Communica­ tion Building A4 136 Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in T S P Bunding 3 200 ■ 471-5244 The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students. 1533 West Central Street Evanston Illinois 60201 CMPS. 1680 North Vine Suite 900 Hollywood CA 90028 American Passage 500 Third Avenue West. 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Spring and Summer i $24 00 48 00 15 60 60 00 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications P O Box D P U B NO 146440 Austin T X 78712-7209 or to T SP Building C3 200 AUSTIN CRUZER BICYCLE SHOP 620B W 34 452-6864 ^ Parts Sales Service HOME OF THE TWENTY-SIX INCHERS’ Groups protest culture rooms ruling By LAURA FISH ER Daily Texan Staff The Texas Union Board of D irectors’ decision to allow non-culture-related student organizations to reserve the Texas Union Building culture rooms for meetings is a “policy reversal” that will not go unchallenged, minority stu­ dent leaders said Wednesday. ‘‘We expect to preserve our culture area. We re here, and we re going to stay,” liberal arts junior Rene Segundo, chairman of the Coalition for Minority Students, said in a forum in the Chicano Culture Room of the Texas Union Build­ ing. Approximately 50 students attended the forum to discuss the Union board's recent decision to allow any group to reserve the Chicano Culture Room and the Afro-American Culture Room for programs or meetings, with the excep­ tion that any related cultural activity sponsor can displace any non-cultural activity sponsor as long as the former gives two weeks notice, allowing the time to res­ displaced organization chedule in another location The board passed the proposal based on a Union 'Management Committee re­ port that cultural activity sponsors re­ served the culture rooms only an aver­ age of eight times per month during September and October while five or six other organization'' are turned away for lack of space Kent Hughes chairman of the Texas Union Film Committee said minority students, program coordinators and the Union board are all responsible for the lack of programming \\* can get to­ gether and work out some things and get back to the status of what things used to be. You can’t take a negative approach,” Hughes said Communication junior Eddie Reeves, president of the Black Students' Alli­ ance, said, “ We find it hard to take with any degree of respect or seriousness the action of the board because these things we thought we had settled last y ear.” At its Dec. 4, 1981 meeting, the board voted in favor of a proposal stating the rooms “ shall be full-time culture rooms and shall not be available for reserva­ tion by any organization for meeting purposes other than for cultural pro­ gramming. They shall be open to all students at all times." The proposal also stated "The rooms shall exist solely for the purpose of and shall be reserved for the expres­ sion of their cultural theme and for cul­ tural interaction at the University of Texas " Reeves said People don't have a concept of what these rooms are about We were looking for a place to show­ case Chicano culture and Afro-Ameri­ can culture Paul Begala. liberal arts senior and Students Association president, said As a member of the Union board I hope the board gives serious considera­ It s tion to reversing their decision painfully obvious to me the Union board is backing out on a commitment It s a eop-out They saw a problem with the culture rooms in that not enough people were using them and instead of trying to improve their use as culture rooms, they turned them into meeting rooms Reeves said all Union board mem­ bers were invited to attend the meeting but Begala was the only one present Segundo said the only way minority students will be heard by UT poli­ cymakers is if they form a “ united m i­ nority front.” John Pacer, liberal arts sophomore, added, “ You have to have the threat of political power to get some attention if they’re ignoring you already.” Segundo said, "T o get everything w e’ve gotten we've pushed and pushed them hard ... A room, a culture room, would represent the Union's continuing commitment This would represent something specific of the Union, of the University to cultural diversity." But Debra Turner Afro-American Culture Committee program coordina­ tor. disagreed “ I t ’s like a token — 'give us this little space and we ll be satisfied the issue is much larger than that It ’s how the University deals with minority needs the After forum Turner added: "When I hear the minority students talk about what they think a culture center should be and then I hear the board talk about what they think it should he. I agree the hoard there's a real gap handled the process wrongly and han­ dled the evaluation process wrongly. There seems to be a lack of understand­ ing as to what they the rooms) should be " Carol Prior Texas Union assistant programming director said after the forum. 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OUR PUB PRICE PRICE TITLE Prim solo ° UTiting $9500 $25.00 American Masterpieces 3250 10.00 Advertising Art 2.98 Photographers Mkt. '82 2.98 Christmas Crafts 449 Christmas in the S.W. 1.74 1095 1495 17.95 095 AND A LARGE SELECTION O f LEATHER BOUND BIBLES AT Vi PUBLISHER'S PRICE h a l t c p n m r Q •RECORDS MAGAZINES 1514 LAVACA 6103 BURNET RD 1914 E. RIVERSIDE 9 5 30 TUESDAY FRIDAY 9-1 00 SATl KDAY 1206 W EST 38TH STREET 459-1303 DEL EMBER OSL ) l\ hen you phone for your hair cut apt ointment mention thi- ad We will schedule a tree intensive conditioning treatment world & nation page 3/ The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9,1982 Reagan begins campaign to save MX WASHINGTON (U PI) - With Presi­ dent Reagan ready to do “everything he can” to reverse House defeat of the MX missile, the administration opened a last-ditch campaign Wednesday for Sen­ ate approval of $1 billion to produce the weapon. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberg­ er and arms negotiator Edward Rowny the Senate their case to presented Armed Services Committee, where the administration's "dense pack" plan to base the m issile in closely spaced silos got a cool reception At the White House, aides said R ea­ gan was prepared to take his case to the American people. p re ss D eputy s e c r e ta ry L arry Speakes also said R eagan is com m itted to his plan to deploy 100 m issiles in a "dense pack ' of superhardened silos in Wyoming "The president is sticking by the plan. He is solidly behind it." Speakes said The House, in a major setback for the White House, voted 245-176 Tuesday to delete nearly $1 billion in production funds for the m issile Reagan says he needs as a bargaining chip for arms control talks with the Soviets. It was Reagan’s first major defeat on defense policy, and cam e despite intense per­ sonal lobbying by the president The Joint Chiefs of Staff C hairm an Jam es Vessey told the Senate com m it­ tee a m ajority of his five-m em ber panel against recom m ended "dense the p a c k ." T he s u r p r is e d is c lo s u re appeared to sta rtle Defense S ecretary C aspar W einberger. In the m eantim e, Speakes said, R ea­ gan will do everything that he can to assure passage of the bill "W e feel what we will do is take the m essage the A m erican people," Speakes said "T he p resid ent will be speaking out forcefully and often ." to Speakes ruled out out-of-town trips and Oval Office speeches for the presi­ dent. But he said Reagan will telephone senators and indicated R eagan will hold a news conference next week. Rowny. chief U.S. n egotiator to the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks, told the Senate com m ittee the MX is essen­ tial — "not a bargaining chip " for the Geneva arm s control talks. said W einberger the House vote "isn 't really a total repudiation of the m issile itself. But it clearly is a set­ back It's a very unwise, unfortunate vote because it will alm ost inevitably insert some delays in the pro gram , and we think delay is very, very danger­ ous." But Sen. Sam Nunn. D-Ga., a strong supporter of m ilitary program s, told W einberger. "I don't think you realize the trouble you're in with resp ect to the basing m ode." in Geneva w ithout Nunn also said Reagan was "u n w ise" in suggesting the United S tates could not negotiate the MX Sen Carl Levin. D-Mich.. an oppo­ trillion defense nent of R eagan's $1 buildup, said Reagan used s c a re ta c ­ tics and exaggerated the Soviet th reat Although Republicans have a 54-46 m argin in the Senate, foes said they have the votes to stop production funds. Baker said he was su rprised" bv the m argin of defeat in the House but said. I think we re somewhat stro n g er over here ." Sen Bob Dole. R-Kan.. interview ed on NBC's “ Today program , predicted the Senate would approve the funds a f­ ter “ a long, long debate' but see how it can be done this year ” I don't "Good Morning America Senate A rm ed Services C om m ittee Chairman John Tower, R-Texas, said on ABC's program, it is "very possible the Senate will re ject an attem p t to delete the pro­ duction money from the Senate bill and if th at's done, of course then it will go to conference T here’s a possibility a com prom ise can be worked out between the House and Senate The lam e-duck session is scheduled to end next F riday If the MX m a tter is not resolved, a stopgap funding bill would be needed for other defense pro grams The process would start ever again next y ear in the 98th Congress with a strengthened Demor ata House m ajority. Anti-war protester killed after bomb threa WASHINGTON of explo­ sives he said were stashed inside a white truck unless the nation heeded the dangers of the arm s race Shugart said a fter a prelim inary search of the truck. We re satisfied that the contents of the truck did not include any explosive devices The vehicle was towed from the scene and a fu r­ The daylong dram a played out only three blocks from the White House, exploded into violence when the truck suddenly began moving away from the monum ent entrance about 6 30 p.m . CST Wednes­ day and U.S. Park Police opened fire. The vehicle fishtailed and overturned about 200 yards down the sidewalk M ayer w as federal agents the driver, and prom ptly handcuffed him to the steering wheel of the van to prevent him from detonating any explo­ sives Officials said he died in an am bulance at the scene The van he was driving had a sign taped to its side reading. No 1 P rio rity - Ban N uclear Weap­ ons.” Explaining the decision to shoot. P ark Police Chief Lynn Herring said if the van left the area. W e would have actually had a moving tim e bomb ¡n the city of Washington Herring said a special police team " is going step by step trying to make determ ination if there is in fact a second individual in the W ashington Monu­ ment ” It will probably take at least a couple more he said while briefing rep o rters at 10 45 hours, p m Something like this m ust go very slowly." Herring said initial searches of the truck and inside the monum ent had not revealed any explo­ sives. "T he explosion danger is o v er." he said. Mayer had negotiated with a police go-between ther search was being carried out during the seige Mayer had been a frequent dem onstrator in front of the White House and acquaintances said he was obsessed with the nuclear issue and depressed by the failure of his p ro tests to m ake any real im pact W ednesday. he threatened to blow up the m onu­ m ent unless his dem ands w ere m et for a national dialogue on nuclear w ar and his views w ere giv­ en extensive m edia coverage A spokesman for the D istrict of Columbia m edi­ cal exam iner s office said an autopsy was being conducted early Thursday Police concerned an accom plice believed to nave fled inside the tow er m ight be carrying explo­ sives, fired teargas into the lobby of the popular tourist attraction before entering Shugart said a police officer watching with bi­ noculars reported he had seen a man en ter the m e­ m orial A loner who had worked as a m aintenance m an in Florida, he had told a friend e a rlie r this year he had a plan to take out an icon " in Washington to dram atize his disarm am ent views The second man had hidden out of sight inside the truck all day. police said took explosives with him Shugart said there were initial indications the second man into the monum ent, but a package found there "w as exa­ mined and found not to be an explosive." Shugart said it could have been a radio control detonator. "T he search team is now at the top of the monu­ ment They believe there is a suspect on one of the room s at the top of the m onum ent." he said. M ayer has a police record dating back m ore than 30 years, in this country and overseas, and was well known among protesters who usually line the sidewalks outside the White House A 66-year-old activist threatens to blow up the W ashington M onum ent Israeli troops kill two Lebanese soldiers in firefight By U nited P ress In tern a tio n a l Israeli troops killed two Lebanese sol­ diers in a firefight at the Defense Minis­ try east of Beirut Wednesday, the first direct clash between Israelis and Leba­ nese since the opening day of Israel s 6- month-old invasion One Israeli soldier was wounded, offi­ cials said Lebanese and Israeli auth ori­ ties agreed on the num ber of casualties in the fighting in the district of Yarze. four miles east of B eirut, but differed on how it began A Lebanese arm y spokesm an said the Israelis, driving a jeep, tried to enter the defense compound in Yarze When Lebanese soldiers stopped the vehicle, " they i Israelis opened up on the crack units of the arm y badly wounding two they w ere soldiers who died before transported to hospital "T he regulars returned the tire, wounding one Israeli soldier. ' he said The Israeli M ilitary Command in Tel Aviv however, said Lebanese arm y sol­ diers manning a roadblock cocked their weapons at the approach of the Israeli firing once and patrol, accidentally wounding an Israeli soldier The Israeli troops returned fire killing the two Lebanese soldiers Lebanese television, quoting well-in­ formed sources, said the governm ent had decided to ban Israeli troops from patrolling roads near the m inistry It said U S Marines in the tri-national peacekeeping force would patrol all roads in the vicinity of the m inistry The clash — the first betw een Leba­ nese and Israeli forces since an isolated firelight in Baabda just aftei Israel s June 6 invasion of Lebanon cam e amid increasingly bitter dem ands by Lebanese officials tor a w ithdraw al of some 30.0(H) Israeli troops from L eba­ non Lebanese President Amin G em axel ordered an investigation into the inci­ dent The shootout occurred than a mile aw ay from the Baabda presid en­ tial palace where Gemavel was m e e t­ less ing with E gyptian Ministei >1 S Foreign A ffairs Butro^- Ghali Ghali arriv ed unexpectedly V da\ on what was the first visit by ranking Egyptian diplom at since broke oft ties with ( airo in 197 the late P resid en t Anwar Sadat s separate peace treaty with Is m Ghali said he conveyed to G the "full support of the Egypt!.ir dent, governm ent and people I drive to free Lebanon ot foreign and assert governm ent sovereign ucn a el n it after ned a lay el • the news in photos EPA to clean up dioxin-tainted soi ST LOUIS (U PI) - The E nviron­ m ental Protection Agency Wednesday said it would rem ove dioxin-contanii nated soil from a suburban a re a and tem porarily relocate the resid en ts until the danger from the deadly chem ical is elim inated A ssistant EPA ad m in istrato r R ita M Lavelle also reversed an e a rlie r deci the federal Superfund sion and said would be made available the cleanup for "I have decided it would be appro pri­ ate to release Superfund m onies for planned rem oval action at the residen tial areas, she said in a le tte r to Gov Christopher S Bond that was m ade pub lie Wednesday The change in position apparently w as the result of m eetings am ong state and federal officials, and i hail of pm test from residents over the KP V s fail ure to act in the case However, the agency m aintained its previous position that no health em er gency exists from the dioxin which is in soil dumped eight years ago as nil m aterial in suburban Im perial, Mo Dennis Lynch, who lives n ear one of the contam inated sites, 'aid he wanted tern no part of the proposed voluntary porary relocation "I think that the EPA . the state and whoever else is involved in this m ess should buy us out Lynch angrily told EPA representative Art Spratlin at a news conference This in ridiculous We don t want a tem porary move When I leave my house I want to leave for good " R esidents ot the six houses at an area referred to as the Minker site will be offered voluntary relocation Only two abandoned mobile homes the Stout site ire at Unless they move residents face the risk of continued exposure to the deadlv chem ical, which is one of the m ost toxu substances known and i1- suspected to be a potent carcinogen Dioxin contam ination is confirm ed at 14 sites in Missouri and is suspected .it 41 others The highest dioxin le v e l was 301 p arts per billion discovered at the M inker site, the EPA said Amounts of only one part per billion art said by the < en ters for D isease Control to pose a health risk An EPA consultant this year argued that a level oí 100 parts tier billion was safe, but Spratlin said the co n tam in a­ the Stout site tion at the Minker site and R om aine Creek would be reduced to the level recom mended by the (IK The cleanup could include rem oval of sediment from the creek Harold Minker on whose property much of the contam inated soil is iocat ed sanj ot the proposed cleanup If the\ re planning to do it at som e d a te in the future, the thing I can say is. I'll believe it when i see it Minker noted that soil containing one part per billion of dioxin is supposed to be bad and we ve got 9(H) parts per billion That s only 90(i tim es as bad And to plan on doing they re going something in the future ' A Nov 22 EPA risk assessm ent ob­ tained this we< k by the Environm ent d Defense Fund disclosed that children play mg routinely in the contam inated soil face a seven in 10 risk of suffering from cancer Vernon Stout, an excavation co n trac­ tor now living in Florida, dumped the contam inated soil in the area as landfill in about 1972 or 1973, after removing it from a horse arena because it was linked to the deaths of 90 horses and illnesses to at least nine persons the contam inant In 1974 the C enters for Disease Con trol determ ined dioxins originating at a chem ical plant Southwest Missouri were soil the Health investigators then learned diox- in-contaminated oil from the plant was sprayed on several horse arenas and on roads tor dust control, out authorities only in the last four y ears have begun to take t lean up action in Dr Renate Kimbrough a dioxin ex­ pert at the disease center, said she hoped, that it a relocation tx < urs resi­ dents will be put in houses rath er than in hotels She noted the Chemical w aste tragedy at Lov« ('an al in New \ ork suffered emotional stress when they w ere shuffled to hotels for week s v k tinis of a i ■ _ _ Salvadoran guerrillas Guerrillas guard a path that leads to one of their camps Tuesday The leftist rebels are holding about 150 people who they led away from a soccer field near the town of San Sebastian in a mass recruitment, in Santa Clara about 500 uniformed rebels overran soldiers in a town of 5,(XX) people Wednesday, sacking stores and homes and then ambush­ ing a column sent to relieve beleaguered government troops UPI T e le p h o to news in brief r rom Texan news services Britain to develop economy, farming of Falkland Islands LONDON - Britain said Wednesday ' will spend $51 1 million over six years develop the economy of the Falkland Island^ guaranteeing the future liveli­ hood of 1,800 B ritish subjects on the uth \tk in tic archipelago. "We have source said 1989 W orld’s Fair in Paris PARIS A w orld's fair will be held i in s m 1989 followed by a joint fair n Chi ago and Seville. Spain, in 1992 ■ : iting the discovery of A m erica, tu'vernmg body for international ex­ it ions has decided The Bureau of In- c'-’i.cional Expositions iB IE approved ■ w - and sites for the fairs Tues- liter lefeating a Soviet motion to . decision The ruling paved the • .i fair in P aris celebrating the the the beginning of . i\ ■ * i . i tefinial of ren h Revolution in 1789 : * ■eagan withdraws names . i . ■ ■ ' \SH1NGT0N President Reagan 'day withdrew his nom inations • t'h m em bers for the em battled Le- ■ ■ ¡ces Board because the Senate the ones we ; w illing to confirm in official said The cu rren t .rit cades m em bers considered ■ vative by the legal aid communi- 1 >eputy W hite House press secretary The president . > decision to w ithdraw them : 1 • a mts i board that will be philo- illy in tune with him R eagan's tc abolish the legal service : ■ for the poor have been re- .¡i Speakes said iptii f t ; *»ufled b\ C mgress HRC OK's Diablo blueprint .' vote, V» ASHINGTO.N The Nuclear Regu- íiu¡v * .mimission approved a compli- iied plan Wixlnesday to clear the way ; the problem-plagued Diablo Canyon a ;• ,u p.>wer plant in California to be- 'p e ra t’on next year By a unani- the commissioners ap- : i\ ed a blueprint aimed at finishing a t en under construction since 1966. Radio Marti appears dead w lodged Wednesday \\ ASHINGTO.N — Administration of- sought a compromise with Sen- ;ul :e opponents of Radio Marti but ac- they were mining out of time to save the plan for . governm ent station to beam broad- iists to Cuba Despite lobbying by Vice ‘ resident George Bush and top State i department officials, legislation calling >r creation of the radio station in the * h rida Keys appeared dead and proba- \ will be abandoned Heart recipient improves SALT LAKE CITY - Artificial heart - iH ipient Barney Clark opened his eyes md responded to voices Wednesday for the first tim e since suffering a series of eizures traced to a post-operative lack >f body salts Doctors said the plastic, air-driven pump was working fine and even helping him overcome other post- jperative problems. Doctors believe he seizures were the result of rapid hanges in the salt and water balance in is body Clark lost 11 pounds of fluid in one day which could have easily caused !he imbalance, a doctor said. Dow Jones drops 9.85 NEW YORK — Stock prices fell in a ale selloff Wednesday after Pac Man’s owner W arner Communications, issued a disappointing earnings forecast and pulled the market back from an attack >>n its all-time highs The Dow Jones in­ dustrial average, which rose to within Í ur points of its record high of 1,065.49 it midsession, retreated 9.85 points to 1,047 09 paga 4/The Daily Texan/Thureday, December 9,1982 L-CMe ¡I ^ Bevo. UCAve it to Scvo. : ^'.pressed The Daily T ex a n are those o ' the editor or the writer of the art.cle and are not necessarily those of the University ■ it me B o a r ; jt R e g e nts or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees viewpoint_________ The more things change ... Either pick up the pun or remain a sniveling coward. Eldridge (leaver, 1968 Eldridge Cleaver has put down the gun. In its place, he has picked up the Bible. The former Black Panther turned do-gooder has traded in his jingoism for the good o'id-f ash toned gospel Cleaver is a changed man indeed. He no longer advo­ cates, as he did in 1968. the “ overthrow of the govern­ ment" by “ any means necessary." Instead, he supports the government and even applauds Ronald Reagan’s campaign to fight communism. Cleaver has gone from one extreme to the other. Ten years ago Christianity was the mother of racist oppres­ sion Today, she holds the answers to man’s problems. S milarly, it used to be that “ power comes from the barrel of a gun ”; today, it comes from the status of a three-piece suit. What does it mean when an infamous figure behind one cause suddenly becomes infamous behind another completely opposite cause? What it means is that the black nationalist movement and others like it are dead. Either their leaders have been imprisoned, killed or born-again. Chalk up another victory for the ghost of J Edgar Hoover and his merry band of counter-subversives. It is sad to see someone whom blacks and whites once looked up to as a source of courage turn sour. But then again, even in the halcyon days of the Black Panther Party, Eldridge Cleaver was more myth than man Cleaver’s open support of violence and persistent threats of a race war were exactly the invitations J. Edgar Hoover needed to sick his ruthless COINTEL- PRO hacks on legitimate black nationalist groups and their sympathizers. So. though we might lament that yet another radical has joined “ the system,’’ Eldridge Cleaver probably did just as much to ensure his movement’s demise as he did to give it life. And yet, as the mention of E l­ dridge Cleaver does conjure up the Ché Guevaras, Mal­ colm Xs and Huey Newtons of yesteryear, it is disen­ chanting to see him today sharing company with Sun Myung Moons and Jerry Falwells. Even if he is a myth, we don't like to see our heroes consorting with the enemy. Of course, Eldridge Cleaver has a right to change his mind and choose his own friends. However, just as he did in his days as the “ Minister of Propaganda" for the Panthers. Cleaver has again seized an opportunity to bring attention to himself If he is serious about making the world safe for god and capitalism then he should stop selling himself as a wizened radical from the past. His selection of the phrase “ World Revolution ” in the title of his speech inaccurately gives us the impression that Cleaver is still fighting the same “ gangsters," when in fact he has joined timm. _______________ R oger W o rth in g to n Worthington is a Texan columnist. firing line UT’s shadowy tests With the beginning of December, the t awdry process of arranging the Illegal­ ly Scheduled Final Examination is in motion. Students and faculty have al­ ready struck the shabby bargains that w ill enable examinations to be held dur­ ing this last week of classes. These tests will be “ non-comprehensive," briefer, and very often easier than final examinations would be. But let there be no self-delusion The proliferation of these less-than-rigorous tests is not a sign of intellectual health for anyone in­ volved Vigorous action from the aca­ demic community to preserve the integ­ rity of the final examination process seems a remote prospect, and mean­ while these sub rosa equivalents for real final examinations flourish in the shadowy places of the University. Lew is L. Gould (’hairman, Department o f History Display-case racism Judging by the Texan account of the new Texas Union policy on use of the “ culture rooms" (Afro-American and Chicanoi, racism plays frighteningly well in Texas Union board meetings. That these rooms should be, as board member David Bright put it, “ a show­ case for culture." smacks of remark­ able insensitivity — as though we who happen not to belong to either minority group may simply stroll by at our lei­ sure to see what’s happening in the lit­ tle display case, safely under glass. More likely they serve as a vital or­ ganizing space for blacks and Chicanos to carry on the process of examining who they are in a dominant culture which can demean them in ways no white person could fully imagine. uSad indeed that board Vice President Fores- tier could claim a Mexican-American identity, yet still wonder why culture mom facilities don't extend, to use his example, to French and German stu­ dents Did he ever consider that they are overwhelmingly white'7 > The new policy needs reconsideration in a far more democratic fashion. The awkward “ bumping rights" it outlines for use of the rooms would surely cre­ ate conflicts between organizations competing for space Worse, the policy would reduce them to Afro-American and Chicano culture rooms in name only These rooms' present functions deserve more careful evaluation — and more respect Kathryn Hums Graduate student. ILAS est hypocrisy I was pleased to see est receive some bad press I did the training last sum­ mer and somehow managed to emerge unscathed from the experience Est is a high-tech, multi-million-dollar version of a Jim Jones type of mass manipula­ tion of what is becoming a significant TFC TIU cone _> /V' THE N IMF HAS COME vex a AR0UN SEttEF Members of the upcoming legislative session have said they support Mark White’s ideas I encourage John Bartho­ lomay and other skeptics to cut White some slack and give him a chance to develop his plans Gary Mathews Business To end state killings I would like to commend The Daily Texan for its front page lead stones covering the execution of Charlie Brooks. His death is a crucial issue, be­ ing the first execution in Texas since 1964. and should be treated as such Who has the right to take another's life0 No one, according to the law. yet the execution took Charlie Brooks' life This is the double standard as practiced by the state. The most sickening fact in this case is that it could never be proved that Brooks was indeed the man who pulled the trigger Justice is not served when Brooks’ accomplice pleads guilty and receives a 40-year sentence while Brooks pleads innocent and is ex­ ecuted. The death penalty does not deter crime; it only takes life Any person who commits a crime of the scale to possibly receive the death penalty is one of two types of criminals. Either he committed the crime in a fit of passion, a moment of insanity ( the classic ex­ ample being a husband walking in on his wife with another man and killing one or both of them), or the crime was premeditated, in which case the crimi nal never considered being caught and so was not deterred by the threat of the death penaltv Why then was Brooks killed? I do not want any more deaths on my conscience. For even though I am strongly against the death penalty for any crime, I am a member of the soci­ ety that killed Charlie Brooks. Another execution is scheduled in Texas in less than 10 days. If you don’t want any more killing by the state, protest against the death penalty' Let our elected officials know that this is not the way to deter criminals or reduce crime The war on crime should take place in the streets, not in the prisons where convicted criminals are secluded from society Instead of killing these people, we should reform our prison systems so criminals can earn their room and board. Abolishing the death penalty does not hare to mean letting convicted criminals out on the streets or paying their expenses with your tax­ es. Margaret Ann Rose Plan II percentage of the population Est proli­ ferates, like Amway. via the recruit­ ment efforts of its devotees. During the first day of the training I attended, one person had an epileptic seizure, several wet their pants and several vomited. No goal could be so lofty as to harbor the justification for brutality. Transformation of consciousness is a legitimate pursuit, a deeply personal commitment, not to be confused with est’s Header 's Digest version of a sort of badly condensed “ enlightenment." Erhard's vocational background is in advertising sales. He has taken a so­ phisticated knowledge of group behav­ ior. combined this with the tags of eve­ ry pop cult to grace the shores of California and emerged with a uniquely pompous and disgusting group of true believers. image of est it couid be just another cult if the price tag were not so high and the be­ havior manipulation techniques not so is sophisticated The white, upper-middle-class and smug. If I've got it. then you don't And the only way to get it is to part with an initial $425 — and this is only the beginning of an endless flow of dollars and volunteer time spent recruiting demanded from the novitiate. This automatically weeds out the hungry segment of the popula­ tion est pretends such concern for Through the Hunger Project, est re­ cruitment the banner of social welfare. forages on beneath I think it is time to see more bad press regarding this organization. The untrained are still in the majority and need more materials to refer to when accosted by zealots Peggy O’Connor Austin resident Give White a chance John Bartholomay's letter to the edi­ tor f Dec. 6 1 showed that he acquired outstanding writing and reasoning abili­ ties while he worked for The Texas Spectator REJWS \ LAST UTTLF NEL. LIFE into VNDULGEfCE. , EACH PERFORMANCE Namibia consensus needed flora lewis the new york times 1982 The New York Times LONDON Despite a p* i-vish sign.il of breakdown by Foreign Ministt'r Claude C'heysson of France some weeks ago. the western group working on Namibia still holds together It is probably the best * \ample of al lied cooperation on a tough issue now going when the West is bickering about everything else from press releases to butter to how to face the Russians The trouble is that it isn't going anywhere, and time is running out The United States. Canada Britain, France and West Germany have been negotiating for years as the contact group" between South Africa .md neigh boring black countries to establish an independent state of Namibia on the vast, sparsely populated territory of South west Africa A German colon;, before World War 1. South West Africa was put under South African trusteeship by a League of Nations m n u ta te which ran out long ago A generation after de­ colonization in most of Africa it is a vestige of colonial empire that r.tnkh s deeply on the continent Furthermore patient, persistent di­ plomacy has almost solved the argu­ ment. so a collapse now would make resentments all the more bitter But after rosy predictions early this year, collapse is looming The I nited States will be blamed ¡’he issu e is the demand that Angola promise to expel Cuban troops in conjunction with Norm bian suspn ion among many American e x p e rts as well as European officials is that by support ing the demand, the I nited M a te - is just giving South Africa anothei exi us«- to hold out independence The There have been many signs that An gola would like to get rid of the 20.000 Cuban troops who are an expense md an irritant, but not as a condition for its neighbor's right to statehood aid nu« J o n t y rule And the Marxist regime wants first to be sure South Africa won ! be able to support continuing guerril’a war against Luanda, a war the I nited States doe- not discourage There is general agreement among western diplomats that the deadlock .m t tie broken without 1 S pressure on smith U rica America s partners don t oppose the Reagan administra­ tion s new that “ constructive engage­ ment might persuade Pretoria better than hostility and sanctions wha:h none of then want to r isk or lielieve can suc­ ceed But thev ve come to think the I nited States is really trying to force a coalition government on Angola, rather than ; re-- tor a Namibian settlement The • md of 1- « hruary is now the likely deadline for the contact group with i unilateral declaration of Namibian in­ dependence under South Africa s aegis to follow if nothing is arranged Tins would copy Rhodesia - ¡ttempt to break loose from Britain without a settlement in 1970 and would surely bring anutlu r long bloody struggle with Soviet support It is a formula to in­ crease Soviet influence in southern Af- whe: the tide could he turned Nor wmi. ¡ allied unity hold H ■ dilemma of course i- South \fri ca - it wants to forestall attacks on its -vstem of apartheid in every possible w iy In a courageous speech in Johan nesburg last fall the former World Bank said president ; jntly that without real change South \fnca w uld he as great a threat to tin [)* ic it tli-1 world in the 1990s as the Middle East is todav Robert McNamara McNamara said the American people would not support tbs South African if it is confronted by m ili­ government tant opposition from those who con demn apartheid even if the withhold­ ing of U.S. support carries with it the risk that South Africa will fall within the Soviet sphere of influence He suggested an ingenious way to make the message clear before it i- too late South Africa, he noted could re­ taliate by withholding exports of chro­ mium manganese vanadium and plati­ num which are essential to western industry and defense without much cost to itself So he proposed western stock piling and contingency planning now to show the mineral weapon" wouldn't work that The beauty of the plan is thM it isn’t punitive eouldn t he circumvented as sanctions can. wouldn t worry the Pen­ tagon and western husines- yet would provide a warning South Xfrica could not ignore A Senate Foreign Relations Committee report recommended -uch a move last October McNamara is a man who learned great lessons from hi- own mistakes He came from the automobile industry to the Pentagon under President Kenne­ dy to learn in the Vietnam W ar that bettei technology isn't enough to win i wrong and that more efficient y in cause isn t wisdom At the World Bunk he learned that people mu-t be motivat­ ed and helped to help themselves \ Namibian solution would only :>e a -tep tow.ird easing the terrible prob­ lems of southern Africa But it would be a great relict and bring time for South Africa to face painful changes ahead Failure after coming so near would future explosions Announce­ assure ment of a stockpile plan now would show U S determination for an agree­ ment. foresight and the power still to use influence for justice A joke a day keeps the nukes away Against the assault oj laughter nothing can stand Mark Twain Want some advice Next time your roommate unfairly a c ­ cuses you of single-handed 1> turning the place into a pigsty, get real close to his face, look him right square in the eye, and Roomie, 1 m sorry but your breath just ain't say. calmly making it That 11 show the bastard He’ll stand there gaping sputtering and horror-stricken What can he do" A punch in the pus- he would’ve accepted but pure unadulterated nonsense'.’ Never. He has met the ulti­ mate weapon A carefully planned wisecrack carries more force than all the nukes in America Its power to manipulate is unmatched Knowing this, it is regrettable that we spend so much tune and money on bombs, tanks and flamethrowers when we could be using these resources to arm ourselves with puns gross exaggerations and sick jokes Besides, these weapons do not even kill anyone I know that this fact will not win any supporters in the White House, but still it should be considered What these weapons do do is make us laugh at ourselves and other fools. Once we have firmly established that every idea, tradition and prima donna is fair game for the satirist’s poisoned pen, nobody will feel superior to anyone else Everybody will be considered as equally deserving of being laughed at. There are a couple of old stuffed shirts around who think that laughing is the sound a brain makes when it disengages reason These sober gentlemen, therefore, laugh little, reason a lot and. when they expire, usually get replaced by a Xerox machine or some such gadget i'm not advocating hedonism or any such thing, I lust think we ought to party, carry on. ficky-fick and eat ice cream whenever we can But deliriously, folks, laughter is not an escape from responsibility Instead, it’s a recognition that we hare no responsibilities — other than making ourselves and others laugh until it hurts It s true A laugh a day keeps death at bay (well, maybe twoi Laughing is not only great preventive medicine, nine doonesbury roger worthington daily texan columnist out oi 10 people who have tried laughing say that a robust guffaw now and then makes the disease they did get a little less painful Norman Cousins even wrote a book about the laugh-yourself-to-health approach to meaningful survival Cousins owes his life to humor, he says Afflicted with a rare disease, a doctor told him five years ago that he had a one in 500 chance of living another year So, after coolly in­ forming the doctor that his breath just wasn't making it,” Cousins immediately began watching old Marx Brothers films and reruns of “ Candid Camera " Cousins, of course, is •still smiling today I know that today's trying times seem to demand non-stop cry ing instead of laughing But still, we cannot afford to lose the ability or desire to laugh Abe Lincoln, who lived in per­ haps the most turbulent era of American history, used to open his cabinet meetings with a good yarn I'm not sure I'd encourage our current president to tell more jokes His ones about trees polluting, catsup containing all the essential vitamins and taxing the unemployed, were, well maybe it's his delivery that grates me so. However, I do enjoy the buffoonish unage he works hard to perpetuate in public I mean, c ’mon. how can you take a guy seriously who at age 71 doesn't have any gray hair° Telling a joke in troubled times takes courage, and this is probably why our president has so much trouble This rem ­ inds me of the Nazi stormtrooper who rudely stopped a Je w on the street and blurted in his face, “ Sw ine!" The Jew , extending his hand, casually responded “ Epstein Nice to meet you I still think he should've told the Nazi that his breath “ just wasn't making i t . " ______________________________ Worthington laughs first and last. OKAY. HUSBANDS, HERE WE GO, LEAP m w/ES JOAHE, SLOW THROUGH THE CHEST BREATH 1 BREATHING EX !N6 FIRST ERCtSES BY REAPIN' OUT'IN'OUT' RJFF' PUFF' SUM P O M ' OKAY, NOW THE PEEP CLEANSING BREATH, NO, THE SHALLOW ANP QUICK [ANTING1 READY? » « / IN/ OUT! IN/ OUT' y^GO ! IT ALL OUT OF SEQUENCE, RICK1 PUFF' pay attention. in, OUT'FASTER'NONO, TOO FAST'NOW ITS w me FASTER', 60PS5AKE, RJCKWILL you MAKE UP TOUR AM?? by garry trudeau MR.REPFERN, YOU'RE UP­ SETTING YOUR /W IF E ' SHE CANT FIND THE GROOVE. 5HOULPNT WE BE DOING THIS TDPtSCO OR 'SOMETHING7 Reflections of a French major I have been a student of one sort or another for 19 and a half years. But school, that integral part of m y life, is now about to be relinquished, as I am no longer w illing to play student. With m y in new ly acquired M aster of Arts French, I am ready to enter the work force in search of that elu sive ... right job. Do I want to be an interpretor, a French teacher, a State D epartm ent em ployee, a tour guide at the United N ation s9 No, I want to be a journalist, and so a knowledge of French literatu re should help m e a g r e a t deal I studied F re n c h l ite r a tu r e because I it. not because I believed it enjoyed would help m e get a job. When I w as an u n d e r g r a d u a te a t the U niversity of Chi­ cago. the talk about the univ ersity was that h u m a n itie s m a j o r s such a s m y se lf ne v e r get jobs As a g ra d u a te stu d e n t a t the U n iv e rsity of Texas I h e ard the s a m e line, but I don 't believe it, nope, not for a m in u te Job s exist for the non- business, non-science g ra d u ate. So the r e s t of you liberal a r ts fiends, hang in t h e r e ' One day a fte r 1 had field se ve ra l w riting and editing jobs a t T h e D a i l y T e x a n , it da w ned on m e - m y c a r e e r is m journ alism Yes. a fte r two y e a r s of writing news and editorials and copy editing 1 can safely say that j o u r n a lis m is the field for me. And b e c a u s e I a m the hallow ed g r a d u a t in g and halls of T e x u i d a n he re a r e so m e r e ­ fit' tions on s o m e of the m o m e n ts which m a d e m y stay h e r e enlightening. leaving h goi ■ r u m e n i a l i b e r a l a r t ’ Ask K ath leen k e ll e h e r who used to be an a ssista n t instru ctor in g o v e rn m e n t at the ! nu> rs i t \ Two year< ago she w a s amy mashberg (g asp !) bounced out of her classroom for sup­ posedly not follow ing the proper sy l­ labus guidelines. The controversy arose after two students com plained that she had allow ed two gay rights speakers into her introductory govern­ m ent class. Were left wing view s too prom inent, or did the U niversity sim ply want to suppress these view s entirely? Was her 14th A m endm ent right to due process violated 9 A faculty grievance panel found this to be the case, but be­ cause the upper level adm inistration overturned that decision, a federal d is­ trict court w ill hear the K elleher c a se against the U niversity at som e future date. its neighbors, I f o u g h t t h e l a u \ b u t t he l a w wo n . instead of peacefully The U nive rsity, co-existing with is su cceedin g in taking ov er the su rr o u n d ­ ing c o m m u n i ty The U n iv e rs ity 's re p u ­ tation outside of its ever-e xpansiv e b o r ­ d e rs is bad and g e ttin g w orse But when this school w a n ts som eth ing, it goes a f ­ te r it full force The U n iv e rsity w an ts land in E a s t Austin, well then, w ha t a r e a few displaced people he re a n a there, a couple of con d em n atio n h e a r in g s for those pesky r e sid e n ts who will not give up their h om es to the a lm ig h ty I te Ute should review its e xpansio nist policies, but will it'1 Today E a s t Austin, t o m o r ­ row the U niv e rse T h e d e c e n c y c a m p a i g n In 1981, Austin’s “ d ecen t” citizen s decided to band together and expel the hom osexual cancer within. The so-called Austin Cit­ izens for D ecen cy opposed an am end­ m ent to A ustin’s F air Housing Ordi­ nance which would extend housing rights to Hom osexuals The ACD op­ posed the ordinance by conducting prayer vigils, w aving B ibles and gener­ ally being indecently intolerant. Intoler­ ance lost by a landslide, how ever, and decency em erged the winner. T h e y p a v e d P a r a d i s e a n d p u t u p a p a r k i n g lot. Austin has seen, in the last 18 m onths, an explosion of condo­ m inium s, unfortunately they a r e not e x ­ ploding c on dom iniu m s. I c halleng e any sane person to drive, or walk, down 23rd S tre et be tw ee n San G a briel and Leon stre e ts. The a r e a has been torn up c ondom inium s. by T hree houses w e r e a nnihilated to m a k e room for this m o n stro sity of a r c h i t e c ­ ture. Now only one house re m a in s : a house, an a p a r t m e n t com plex an d co n ­ d om in ium s. all on one sm all s tre e t. To co ver the e n ti r e w e st c a m p u s a r e a with condos, m a y b e they will t e a r down the f r a t e r n it y houses next co n stru ctio n of What does all of this m e a n to m e ' 1 I a m finally e ditorializ ing about issues th a t I could not editorialize about when I was a r e p o r t e r we m u st, a f t e r all, r e m a in o b jec tiv e . But I also bring th em up to show th at I was given the c h a n c e to w rite about so m e in teresting issues, for giving m e and I thank you T e x a n the opportunity -30- _____ M a s h b e r g is u n c n a ; a f l a y s o m e ­ w h e r e o t f v z c w & o t x V o i / u e u g , ^ FOR MERCHANDISING,OF COURSE,WE STILL LIKE TO KEEP UP THE IMAGE,,, BUT I HAD 10 SET RIPOF THOSE ELVES YEARS A®, D eadlines, hallucinations and things E x c e s s > i d e a s a t ' a r c i n g d e a d i ’ie t i m e c a u s e s h a l l u c i n a t i o n s a n d t h i n g s i f St-mew here along the w a \ a n o n y m o u s c artoon hanging in the m an a ging ed itor s office during ind a bait y e a rs I h a v e called the two m yself I adopted i this rr.txirn as an absolute tru th The unreal be com es real, and the re al an illusion J u s t ask Sam Hurt sta ffe r . ;> think things im p o rta n t But besides the ha llucinations, th e r e things And it is th ese nebu- are the !ous that becom e they c a u s e us to do w hat we w ouldn't o th erw is e do to think what we w o u ld n't to know w h a t we itherw ise w ouldn’t o th erw ise know But just what is a t i n , The word m e a n s so m e th in g that exist-' an entity, a tangible object, an in an im ate object, a c r e a tu r e , an act deed or work, a thougnt a p iec e of inform ation, a m at- ter to be d e a lt with a turn of e v en ts í hi I )a y T e x a n is all of that 1 did ’hings I wouldn t ha ve o th e rw is e done Like trv to interpret a I T stock portfolio, spend three day s in E l P a so tor a re g ents m eetin g stand at a sit-in that w as about to get tea r-g asse d , drink beer in the T av e rn with a guy who m a d e his living by rep airing the U n iv e rsity 's vehicles I thought things I wouldn t h a v e o th ­ erw ise thought Before I b e c a m e a s s i s t ­ an t e dito r at the T e x a n ele ctions w e re a function of d e m o c r a c y an inalienable right to voice our opinions, the e p ito m e of the A m e ric an way But a s the sol­ diers of c o n s e rv a t is m c a m e a t m e with bayonets for endorsing liberal ' c a n d i­ dates. elections b e c a m e a pain in the ass I began to think it would be sim p le r to e n d o rse or not en d o rse a coup in G u a ­ te m a la than to su ffer through th e less- violent s y s te m of politics in the United States. I knew things I wouldn't h a v e o t h e r ­ wise known Until 1 w as a w ire editor and for a while, even then . I thought a Molotov cocktail w a s an alcoholic b e vera g e I had visions of t e r r o r i s t s si t ­ ting at a sidewalk c afe throwing drinks a t passing c a r s that a Molotov cocktail is a type of bo m b This disco very has saved m e c o n sid era b le e m b a r r a s s m e n t , a s I m ig h t ha v e un­ knowingly o rd e re d a Molotov cocktail in a bar s o m e d a y and found m yself, not in a drunk en euphoria, but in jail I know now I lea rned that b u r e a u c ra c y m e a n t talking to Joyc e before I could g a r n e r a no c o m m e n t ’' from P r e s i d e n t Flaw n, that a d m i n i s t r a t o r s a r e h u m a n too — s o m e ti m e s — and th a t the population at t h a t a 5 l arg e doesn t it o'clock deadline m e a n s re ally c a r e that “ no, wouldn t be all right if you get back to m e next week things Like D a i l y T e x a n de adlin es also c au s e oth er lung c a n c e r and ulcers 1 have c onsum ed m o r e coffee, m o r e c ig a r e t t e s , m o r e be er and m o r e a spirin during m y y e a r s a t thi< n e w s p a ­ per than all of m y o ther y e a rs c o m ­ bined D e ca d e nce s e e m s to be a r e q u i ­ site for survival in our u nde rground world of video d isplay t e r m i n a l s and fluorescent light But t h e r e is so m e thing a lm o s t r o ­ m a n tic in all of this W here else c an vou find people, brought t o g e th e r by a c o m ­ mon th rea d of m a s o c h is m , who end ure the m e a g e r the pay. the red eyes, the frazzled ne rv es the h a ll u c in a tio n ' and the things all in the n a m e of informing the public i n te rm in a b le hours, ideas, self-indulgent Writing a -30 colum n is an e x ce ssive i t ’s forcing of deadline tim e the hallucin ations and the things a r e nudging r e a lity out of m y g ra s p 1 have one last s t a t e m e n t and one last request I loved a lm o st e v e r y m in u te of it and if your le t t e r to P'iring Line these is never i m m o r ta liz e d on ha bo wed pages, p lea se do not call m e a t hom e ______________ -30-__________________ Hi l l i s n ’t t h e l i t t l e gi rl w h o ¡¡tilled t h e t r i g g e r on H a n k t h e H a l l u c i n a ­ tion. The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9 ,1982/page 5 . i*uTa . The NY-lA sill t " ’1 ire P a m e ­ la Amy Paula and Paula Sylvia T e r ­ ri Hey, th a t 's 16 girls 1 mentioned in a row — pre ttv good It s been real li s been fur , s been re al fun. -30- S t e i n b e r g is no lonip r h o o k e d u p to a c o m p u t e r This colum n explodes in 5 seconds THE D E A D L IN E FOR S U B M IT T IN G IT E M S TO C A M P U S N E W S IN B R IE F IS 1 P.M . T H E D A Y B EFO R E P U B L I­ C A T IO N . NO E X C E P T IO N S W IL L BE M A D E , YO U S C U M B A G S . A N N O U N C E M E N T S Ronnie says the Econom y is in a hell of a m ess1' and we are expected to get iObs Sorry, this is the only way I can write after doing these dam n (thanks. Kay) CNIBs th¡s sem ester Bold type. Sm aller type. M E E T IN G S get at the C o-O p I'm in a rush If I don't finish soon I'll e s e get caught in a liquidity trap. -30- cok ." eo *o et some c us dev ate this nage. The stench is starting to get to me, so :n ngs up I'd b e ttc wraj je o- M ore bold type. Italics. Betsy is smart now . (I rea y thins that should have been an a n n o u n ce ­ ment). Y'all have fun during the C e n te n m a 1 Man-, will fell you all about it if you pick up one of those free things you Thank you, TSP da. to type these tmr j : puter. Thanks to Dave the world c • n • __________________ -30-_ t . d w a r d s o i i esi ai n $9 i the c o m ­ ng me from >d j u s t in 11 Fellow-staffers help a broken, tired Vondracek endure Texan’ hardships it ' d a w n a n d T m st i l l h e r e S t o n e d at L o r d , J u k e b o x . P l a y r t Heap It I f I m S t i l l I n L o v e Wi t h Y o u ; C u u s e t h a t s t h e r i n d o f s o n g s it t a k e s to g e t al l t hi s I ( it t h e Did L o r d I o r e t h a t h u r t i n m u s i c ‘P a u s e I a m hur - h u r t in o u t t i n' too F r o m ‘S t o n e d a t t he J u k e b o x ” H a n k W i l l i a m s Jr. There s this parking lot n e a r w h e re I live. I t ’s the kind where you hav e to insert your p a ss into the m achine before the g a te a llows vou to e n te r At the exit, th ere’s another wooden g a te that has weight sensors built into the lot. It will ra is e when there s enough w eight placed on it — like when you p a ss th rough with your c a r Every weekend for the pa st three m onths, som eone has 'n a p p e d the sle nd er piece of wood from the casing, leaving it th ere in the lot until the m aintenance m an cam e Monday to re pair it It has been broken every w eekend That s the way I've felt every weekend after two years of working a t T h e D u t l y T e x a n Broken Not broken in the financia l sense — though th e re have been those tim e s, too — but broken in the physical and m en ta l sense This place w e a r s on you like a c h e a p suit T h ere a r e problem s you have to deal with people calling on the phone with the m ost o u trag e ous bitc hes y o u 'v e e v e r h e a r d thank you from the guy who c om pla ine d about the national w e a th e r map copy being too sm a ll i. p r o b le m s with P R folks who -n- sist their group is the most i m p o rta n t on c a m p u s and de serves to be c ov ere d and dealing with the e v er - p r e se n t staff m orale p ro b le m s It t e a r s you up T here's seldom an y thanks Usually it s a condescendin g com m ent fr o m a jo u r n a lism p ro fe s so r who thought a story w as “a decent enough effo rt " S o m e ti m e s i t ’s a l e t t e r from som eone truly a p p r e c ia tiv e of s o m e of the things we try to do down here But m ost of the tim e, it's an endless stream of negative There are som e — yes, even som e T e x a n s ta ff e r s — who say we take ourselves too seriously down here Perhaps that’s true But when your only accolad es and recognition com e when people know you by your first nam e at the Hole in the Wall, something is definitely wrong It seems everyone who's w ritten one of these alcoholic chemically induced little ditties likes to thank everybody else for the g r e a t tim e they ve had and s h a r e how taxing it was to work for the T e x a n To be sure, I'v e w ritte n end r e w ritten this at least 100 tim e s to m a k e it sound ha lfw ay coherent But if doesn t m a t t e r T im e flies Things ch an ge Shit hap­ pens It d o e s n ’t m a t t e r about weekends and or co m p la in ts from the public joint — but only to r one reason ill the c h e a p shots, exhausted I 11 m is s this The people People you rneei people you work with people you grow to h a te and learn to love In the long run, what it boils down to a r e p e o p l e I'v e m e t people w h o ’ve w anted to be ev ery th in g from jo u rn a lists to law y ers One guy I knew wanted to be the gen eral m a n a g e r of the Chicago Cubs T here s a m a g n e t is m about this place. Som ething that e v ­ ervone is a t a loss to identify, m u ch less c o r re c t At hours when m o st people a r e a slee p or p a rty in g 01 engaging in the nation's fa v o rite p a stim e , th e r e a r e people he re working, studying o r ju st plain talking Why' The question has never been a n s w e r e d N e v e r has and m a y b e ne ver w ill. God knows people have tried before If I had an a n s w e r now. m aybe I could have s p a r e d som e person who burned out too e a rly and is now pumping gas som ew here or peddling F u ller Brushes 1 g ue ss it’s a kind of a Cat. h 2 t • p tee >urns you out. but a f t e r a while it be co m es p a r ; of you It - like som e p o w e r ­ ful dru g to which th ere s no known e sc a p e But, such a s dru gs a r e you don t re ally know w h a t 's h a p ­ pening until it s alm ost »ver V>u rr to enjoy this p lace. We try and try to do things right and got very little c re d it fo r it a lw ays keeps us con ing back We h a n g doing so But around b ecau se w e ail need each to one d e g ree or a n ­ other tn e r And m aybe th a t's why we e ongregutt h e n in these o ffice s so often and at such god dam n ed houi - C a u s e t ha t s t he kiv. : s m t ill t h i s A n d L o r d I l o v e t h a t h u r t i n , c . - c I ¡ m h u r ­ h u r t i n ' ou t tin too. Wi t h V o n d r a c e k ' s l e a v i n g , t he Texan s f u c k e d a g a i n fTh® Daily Taxan/Thursday, December 9,1982 Child car safety campaign to begin; Texas’ high fatality rate first target By MARK STUTZ D aily T e x a n S ta ff T ex as w ill be th e f ir s t ta rg e t of a n a ­ tionw ide child c a r sa fe ty c am p aig n by the N a tio n a l T ra n sp o rta tio n S afety B oard w hen th e a g en c y opens h e a rin g s next J a n u a ry in D a lla s to study child a u to -re la te d tra ffic d e a th s in T exas. With 68 ch ild tra ffic deaths in 1982 and 294 sin c e 1978. T exas has th e d is­ tinction of leading th e nation in such fa ­ ta litie s fo r c h ild re n from infancy to ag e 4 and w ill s e rv e a s a sta rtin g p lace for a cam p aig n to e n a c t s ta te law s re q u irin g hild r e s tr a in t se a ts , said NTSB V ice C h a irm a n P a tr ic ia G oldm an. T ex as is one of 31 sta te s to w hich we have a d d re s s e d le tte r s to the g o v e rn o r n child sa fe ty la w s )." G oldm an said. N itionw ide, 2.755 ch ild ren from infancy to 1 y e a rs of age have been killed in auto a c c id e n ts sin ce 1978. In a letter to the governors, the NTSB requests they include, “ Legislation to require use of child safety seats for child passengers from infancy to age 4 to reduce the likelihood of death, disa- blity or disfigurem ent’’ in motor vehi­ cle accidents. Several T ex as le g isla to rs have r e ­ sponded to the le tte r from the NTSB by prefiling bills th a t w ill go before the re g u la r session of th e 68th L e g isla tu re in Ja n u a ry . Sen. C arl P a r k e r, D -P o rt A rth u r, p re ­ filed a bill in the S e n a te to re q u ire p a r ­ e n ts of ch ild ren un d er the age of 4 to use sa fety se a ts o r be fined up to $50. Rep. Stan S c h lu ete r, D -K illeen, has prefiled an id en tical bill in the H ouse, w ith an additional provision th a t “ if w ithin 10 days w ithin the d a te of the tic k e t, the co u rt w ill d ism iss th e o f­ fenses if the person show s proof of a c ­ quisition (of) a child sa fe ty s e a t." Goldman said, however, that it would take more than just legislation to make the campaign successful. “Just passing a law isn't enough. We need to develop child safety programs also,” Goldman said. She said such pro­ grams could be developed on a local level at hospitals, schools and churches to educate the public. The D a lla s h e arin g s in J a n u a ry w ill in v e s tig a te 50 child tra ffic a c c id e n ts in T exas to d e te rm in e th e e ffe c tiv e n e s s of child sa fe ty s e a ts G oldm an w ill c h a ir th e reg io n al hearin g . G oldm an said sin ce child tra ffic s a f e ­ ty law s had been e n a c te d in 19 s ta te s , the n u m b er of d e a th s had d e c re a s e d o v er the la s t fo u r y e a rs. She said , how ­ e v er, th a t th e c a m p a ig n still had a long w ay to go. “ It is d e c re a s in g , but w e w a n t to d e ­ c re a s e it m o re " G oldm an said David Sprague, Dally Texan Staff Installing a steer Terry Christensen, an employee of Seamless Home Products, puts trim around the newly renovated Bevo’s Bookstore at 2304 Guada­ lupe St. A giant plastic Bevo adorns the storefront. Court orders non-registrant to 2 years of volunteer work ROANOKE, Va. (U PI) — A minis­ ter’s son who said God didn’t want him to be a soldier was ordered to perform two years of volunteer work at a federal institution Wednesday for refusing to register for the peacetim e draft. Enten Eller, 20, said he welcomed the chance to perform “ constructive” ser­ vice for his country. The son of a Brethren minister and the first man convicted in a recent crackdown on those who failed to regis­ ter with the Selective Service, Eller had refused to challenge the draft laws, as others have, because his refusal was on religious and not legal grounds. He said he did not consider the sen­ tence — which could have been a prison term — a victory. “ A victory will accrue when some­ body is true to their conscience, more than that, true to God,” he said. “ I don’t know if my religious beliefs need to be vindicated. Whether the govern­ ment recognizes them or the court rec­ ognizes them is not the point.” Citing the biblical commandment against killing and his church’s teach­ ings against war, he said God did not want him in the military. “ I hope I set an exam ple for other Christians,” Eller said after he was sentenced. “ If not necessarily by my actions, then by my m otivations.” U.S. District Judge Jam es Turk or­ dered Eller to perform two years of al­ ternative service at either the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Sa­ lem or at another federal facility ap­ proved by his probation officer and the court. Turk rejected the arguments of fed­ eral prosecutors and probation officers that Eller should be imprisoned as an example to other draft resisters Turk said Eller's volunteer work could begin after he graduates from col­ lege in June. CHRISTINAS GIF! HENS S t u d y in g ? Let J J ’s b u y y o u a c u p off coffffee! 'i' m &teqot OFFICIAL • FICIALr » P iIPloo n j J S , V F W . I M a c G r e g o r X 6 0 0 0 S y n t h e t i c B a s k e t b a l l A d i d a s K e y r o l a n W a r m u p s C l a r i n o p a n e l s s e t i n t o a f o u r - p l y c a r c a s s m a k e t h e X6 0 0 0 p l a y C h o o s e f r o m o u r s e l e c t i i of A d i d a s K e y r o l a n w a r m u p p a n d f eel l i k e l e a t h e r b u t w i t h t h e d u r a b i l i t y o f r u b b e r . Ma y be A 1 5 a n d S u p e r s t a r a v m i b l e . U n i s e x s i t i n g . u s e d i n d o o r s o r o u t d o o r s , r eg. $29.95 r e g . $ 8 9 . 9 5 t o $ 9 9 . 9 5 S p e c i a l $ 1 9 . 9 5 S p e c i a l $ 7 7 . 0 0 * '-r> i L E K J E U M fa ' E k t e l o n I n t e r c e p t o r R a c k e t b a l l R a c k e t H u f f y R i v e r m i s t E x e r c i s e B i k e Ne w g e n e r a t i o n r a c k e t c o m b i n i n g t h e b e n e f i t s o f a l u m i n u m Ne w H u f f y o v a l m a i n t u b e d e s i g n . R i v e r m i s t f e a t u r e s c a l i p e r a n d g r a p h i t e . A l u m i n u m f r a m e , g r a p h i t e t h r o a t , n y l o n b u m p e r , t e n s i o n c o n t r o l d e v i c e , s p e e d o m e t e r / o d o m e t e r a n d t i m e r , a n d l e a t h e r g r i p . C o v e r i n c l u d e d , r eg. $45. 95 20 g r e y t i r e , q u i c k a d j u s t h a n d l e b a r s a n d s e a t , w i d e s t a b i l i z e r S p e c i a l $ 3 7 . 9 5 b a r s , a n d d e l u x e t r a c t o r s t y l e s e a t r e g . $1 39. 95 S p e c i a l $ 1 1 9 . 9 5 R o o s t e r A n d r e w s sp o rtin g good s 3901 Guadalupe Anderaon Lane at Shoal Creek Lamar at Ben White Open 8-9 Daily C o m e into J J ’s S u p e r S u bs anytim e be tw e en D ecem b er 11th a n d 21st a n d we'll buy y ou a cu p of o u r fresh-brew ed coffee (with a n y p u rchase) Ju st ask for it It’s o n e m o re way we sh o w you w h o w e are W e’re J J ’s an d w e ’re S u p er - any w ay you lo o k at u s. J J ’s wil Jan nan >>e t losed 3rd. De W e deliver in th is area. 4 5 t h $ l r t « i 1 i J X ML K O p e n 1 1 a m - 1 1 p m 7 d a y s a w e e k 4 7 6 - 4 3 9 2 JJ's Super Subs 7 0 4 W. 2 4 t h We have just the stuff to stuff those stockings! □ Shoe Laces D Pencil Paks □ Bath Cubes EH Kaleidoscopes EH Address Books EH Buttons CH Teddy Bears EH Laser Viewers □ Friction Toys G Glitter Pads & Pens EH Rubik Cubes EH Plus many other wonderful, small gifts P.S. Vie even have the stockings. Let us get you ready for C h ri s tm as ! PECIAL EFFECT HIGHEST BUY-BACK PRICES AT BOTH LOCATIONS Ca ribou Backpacks We ll make it worth you r while. U.T. Sportswear Caribou Backpacks Textbooks School Supplies Balfour Class Rings aribou Im o u n t a i n L l k i n S o g o o d » c g u a r a n t e e t h e m f o r life a n d w e 'll o f f e r y o u a n e a s \ r e f u n d poli cy p a c k a n d w e'll r e p la c e it. ju *t b r i n g u> t h e b a c k ­ World cham pions wear Balfour rings. 2007A E. Riverside Dr. 444-4703 (Both in Rivortow no M o ll) 2011A E. Riverside Dr. 443-1630 2323 San Antonio St. 478-9833 Y our clavs ring i« m ad e w ith th e very sam e c ra fts­ m an sh ip and care th at go in to th e m ak ing o f th e sports w orld 's m ost so u g h t a fter sy m b ols o f a c c o m ­ p lish m en t: T h e C h a m p io n sh ip rings. L ike you rs, m ade bt B a lfo u r , o f cou r se . 1454* CLASSIFIED HOT LINE 4 71 -5 2 4 4 FACULTY MEMBERS H a v e y o u r b o o k s not a r ­ r i v e d ? It 's the last m i n ­ ute a n d y o u 'd re a lly ra t h e r use y o u r ow n t e x t ? N o w you c a n p ro v id e y o u r stu d e nts with m a ­ terial they m i g h t not o t h e rw is e h a v e a v a i l ­ able to them. W e w o r k with fa c u lty m e m b e r s p erso n a lly, a n d we a re r e a d y to a s s i s t y ou with d ifficult jobs. W e find s e r v ic e that p e r so n a l e n s u r e s the s a tisfa ctio n of ou r clients. A s the a u ­ thor of y o u r publicatio n, you c a n be a ssu re d that the job will be done the w a y y ou w a n t it done. Paradigm Books 472-7986 407 W. 24th Austinites lobby against nuke arms By KYLE POPE D aily T exan Staff two m em b ers of City Council m em b er R oger Duncan and the N uclear F reeze Cam paign Steering C om m ittee to Austin W ednesday after returned m eeting with governm ent o fficials in W ashington to voice A ustin’s opposition to the nuclear arm s race In a new s conference at R o b e r t M uel­ ler Airport. Duncan sa id his m eeting with U.S Rep. J J “J a k e " Pickle. D- Texas. and aides fro m the offices of both Sen Joh n T ow er. R -T exa s, and Sen. Lloyd Bentsen. D-Texas, was ‘‘very su ccessfu l." “ They w e r e very respo nsiv e to u s ." D uncan said, addin g that the trip m a d e the r e p re s e n t a t i v e s a w a r e of how co n ­ the sa fety and c e r n e d the city is with m o r a l q uestion s' the freeze involved with The group p re s e n te d a City Council resolution asking P re sid e n t R e a g a n to call upon the Soviet Union ti a g r e e to a freeze the production of n u c le a r by both 'a t the s a m e tim e w eapon s nations Also p r e s e n te d wen- •tie r< m i: - info rm al r e fe re n d u m in of a Sept in ll which A ustinites voted to support a nu­ clear w eapons freeze. Nina Butts, m em ber of the N uclear F reeze Campaign Steering C om m ittee, said although she w as disappointed the group did not see Tower or B entsen per­ sonally, “ Rep. P ickle seem ed genuinely concerned with the fact that w e w ent to se e him ." She said although P ick le's attitude tow ard d efen se s e e m s to be changing, he is still a m e m b e r of the "old school" of p oliticians who believe th a t w h a t e v e r m oney is needed for d efen se m u s t be g ra n te d T h at a tt i tu d e is deeply e n ­ t ren c h ed in J a k e P i c k le ," B utts said. Pic kle said he w a n ted to see the a r m s r a c e stopped but do e sn 't h ave any idea how to do it. she said The g roup left W ashington one day a f ­ t e r the House dealt a blow to P re s id e n t R eag an, refu sing by a vote of 245-176 to a pprove ne arly $1 billion in funds to be- gin production of the MX m is sile Pickle, one of seven T exa s r e p r e s e n t ­ atives who refu sed to a pp rov e the fu nd­ told B utts th a t for the pa st two ing w eeks e v e r y t im e m y door is open i t ’s been som e o ne from the P e n ta g o n a s k ­ V wm a&aarea cnr rm jr*two •«non a* ar nr- ojrr c* soAcurry in# otaasttraan oeocm m e November 29 Coalition is calling for a ing m e to vote for the MX. " G eorge Hum phrey, a N uclear F reeze Cam paign Steering C om m ittee m em b er who also traveled to W ashington, said the nuclear freeze m ovem ent would save the A m erican people $20 billion He said in the last three m onths the Am erican people have voted 2-1 for a “ bilateral, verifiab le freeze. We need it now. We hope the leaders of our country w ill listen to us and not play p olitics." B u tts sa id desp ite P i c k le 's r e c e p t i v e ­ ness. th e r e w a s " a lot of r e s i s t a n c e f to the free z e) in W ash ing ton." She said th e re w e re m a n y people who sa id they did not supp ort a free z e but did support a re du ction in n u c le ar a r m s w e apon ry. 'T h a t 's a sm o k e s c r e e n , a way to skirt the issu e ." sh e said " T h e sh e e r m o m e n t u m >rAer you/ fiam< > a*At nj toon uj potuLí» (__ C itui ¡Ainys % U ven 4 itu & -0 (i j*** I hr m > 1 pur* has* Forget T h e Partridge in a Pear Tree' Send aGood Book! (It's so much easier to wrap.) The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9 ,1982/page 7 We're c logging the campus! CLOGS off Select Group Values to I | by Rave! I n'■sg r it y-Ser vice-Value v is a ’ 2348 G u a d a lu p e ■ ■ H ere are a few samples from oar la rg e selection of sm all gifts ranging fro m 1] to *20 t C hoose f r o m these or dozens of o th e r . I t C h ristm a s ideas for below *ZO. b ^ R a o w W in d h o e k n i , Wind * water resistant ’Ggfáfát \ A* French M echanical 5 ird Flaps its wings ¿ actually flies*, « raggf Powered oy a ru b b e r cane d \ \ \ Swiss Arm y Knives \ S ru O a : "ee yyotc - j stone a y eac" ¡ W V U S John M a n tis s a Fowles late st m a s te r p i e c e Dazzling & d isturbin g novel about an a u th o r and his muse. 13.95 n sh a n g e oassatrass. C y p r ess ln d i a dig !\>* * S a s s a f r a s s , C y p r e s s & In d ig o A c o n te m p o r a r y p o e t's first novel that takes us into a world of m agic, love & beauty in the Deep South. 10 95 10% OFF ! ! 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W A L L A C E S BOOK S T O R E 2 2 4 4 G U A D A L U P E M on.-Sat. 9 6 V I S A M / C Compact, 8 V2” x l l ” 16K m em ory, expandable to 32K Full-size keyboard Built-in printer and screen 10 program functions Runs on internal power source $795 The Computer Center 3736 Bee Cave Road, Suite 4 (512) 327-5864 Mullen enters Austin mayoral race By KELLEY SHANNON Daily T exan Staff Calling for a consensus of “ polarized view points’’ in city governm ent, Ron Mullen, City Council m em ber, P la c e 3, Wednesday b ecam e the first candidate to announce he will run for m ayor of Austin. “ P eop le have becom e hardened and polarized in their view points. As a re­ sult w e fail to progress,” Mullen told approxim ately 250 people at an 11:30 a.m . new s conference at Council Cham ­ bers. Mullen, who had said he would be a candidate for m ayor in a D a i l y T e x a n interview last July, said Austin needs leadership that is “ action oriented, not just r ea c tiv e .’’ H e said the city needs a m ayor who can m ake decisions without having to w ait for a special in terest group to give its approval, a s w ell a s one who can be se n sitiv e to coalitions. “ I ’m not here to criticize anything that has happened. I'm looking forward to what is going to happen,” M ullen said. Mullen said the m ajor issue in Austin is the c it y ’s growth. “ It really now am azes m e that the extrem e on both ends of this issu e really want the sam e things,” he said. Austin m ust “ zealou s­ ly guard” its sen sitiv e environm ent without stiflin g its econom y, he said. A consensus of view points m ust be achieved by working with neighborhood groups as w ell as builders and develop­ ers. Mullen said. D iscussing the c ity 's finances, he said the bulk of A ustin's m oney m ust be spent on basic ser v ic es such as the fire and police departm ents, em ergen cy m edical services, w ater and electricity . Mullen jokingly said he exp ects to spend under $1 m illion on his cam paign, adding that he really plans to spend a m inim um of $143,000. “ I won't .spend m oney to spend m o n e y , ” he said. Mullen, a council m e m b e r for six y e a rs, said he thinks recognition of his n a m e by v o ters will help him in the April 2 election next y e a r Psychologist pushes school prayer OKLAHOMA CITY ( U P I ) - M o r a l principles ta u g h t in ch urch a r e b e c o m ­ ing ir re l e v a n t b e ca u se religious t e a c h ­ ing is not allowed in the n a tio n ’s public school s y s te m s , a psychologist testified W ednesday "I think you m a k e the edu ca tio n s y s ­ tem b a r re n oi the purposeful child if you do not bring this s y s te m (religion ) into the school, said Dr Paul S c h m id t, a clinical psychologist from Louisville, Ky. S c h m id t 's t e s tim o n y c a m e du ring the trial of a fe d e r a l law suit c onte sting vol­ u n tary p r a y e r and o th e r religious a c t i v ­ the r u r a l Little Axe School ities a t southeast of O kla ho m a City suit a g a in st the school distric t in May- 1981 to halt w eekly " s h a r i n g s e s s io n s ,” the d istrib ution of Bibles and o th e r r e ­ ligious a c tiv itie s at the school The plaintiffs, re p re s e n t e d bv the A m erican Civil L ib e r tie s Union, also seek to o v e r tu r n O k la hom a s 1980 volun­ tary p r a y e r s t a t u t e School officials say they m ust allow religious a c t i v it i e s on school gro unds in c o n s t it u ­ o rd e r tional rights to p r e s e r v e stude n ts Schmidt, a m e m b e r of a group of Christian psychologists, told the c ourt he felt The f r e e d o m t h a t 's the m ost im p o rta n t he re is the freedom to e x ­ press religious beliefs Lucille McCord and Joa nn Bell filed He said unless religious a e t m t v is p e rm i t te d in the public schools ‘God would be se en a s an im potent, i r r e l e ­ vant figure He doesn t h a v e th e power to c o m e to school Under questio ning by AC LU attorney Mike Salem . S c hm idt said t h e n had been se v e ra l psychological studies that indicated th ere w as no d i f f e r e d < be tween the number of em otion al p r o b ­ lem s e x p erien c e d by C hristian s nd non-Christians He N.aid a to d e te r m i n e a p erso n s m o ra l iptitudc w as based essentially on t h * B i b l i c a l version of the se ve n deadly sins and to c hu rch w as g n e n out by p a sto rs m e m b e rs e xperienc in g e m otio nal diffi culties test he had devised * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * • k See K i c k Dods on d e m o n s t r a t i n g the art of Gl a s s m a k i n p . D a i l y Thru Ch r i s t ma s . T h e CIn i c o r n There's a world of shopping in your neighborhood. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * FOR 3 BIG DAYS T H U R S D A Y DEC. 9th F R ID A Y DEC. 10th S A T U R D A Y DEC. 11th Save on over 200 special selected Columbia Records — Featuring ... □ Aerosm ith □ Jeff Beck □ Neil Diamond □ Bob Dylan □ Judas Priest □ Carole King □ Lee Ritenour □ Mike Oldfield □ The Romantics □ Poco □ Blood, S w e a t & Tears □ Earth, W ind & Fire □ Kris Kristofferson □ The Producers □ REO Speedw agon □ Blue O yster Cult □ The Byrds □ C h e a p Trick □ C h ic a go □ D a vid A lla n C.oe □ Dan Fogelberg □ Steve Forbert □ Kinky Friedman □ Ian Hunter □ Janis Joplin □ Loggins & Messina □ Lene Lovich □ Simon & Garfunkel □ Kenny Loggins □ Santana □ Bob Marley □ Dave M ason □ Eddie M oney □ Boz Scaggs □ Willie Nelson □ Michael M urphy □ XTC □ Peter Tosh □ Toto □ Weather Report MAUL 21st & Guadalupe one world, under ONLY EACH REG. $4.99 “ Ye dwell in one world, and hare been created through the operation o f one It ill Blessed in he who niingleth with all men iri i spirit o f utm ost kindness and love. ” From the Bahai Sacred U ritines. In observance o f H I MAM R IG H T S I) H a video tape oj portions o f the (,ongressional Hearings on Religious Persecution will hr shown. 8 p.m. Thursday Dec. 9 Eastwoods Room — Student Union S p o n so r e d b v l 7 R ahui tsso c ia iio n M U 5/C e x pr e ss LOWER LEVEL DOBIE MALL "DEEP IN THE HEART OF U.T. OPEN 10-9 473-8500 Caribbean Basin Initiative faces defeat in committee WASHINGTON (U P I) - President the Reagan met with members of House Ways and Means Committee Wednesday in an effort to prevent an embarrassing defeat of his Caribbean Basin Initiative on Capitol Hill. House, but promised to try to push it through his committee Thursday. He disagreed with the outlook painted by O'Neill. "What the speaker said is it’s going to be very difficult," that Rostenkowski said. him he doesn't have the votes." But White House spokesman Mort Al­ lin said: "W e certainly don't see it that way. We've put a high priority on get­ ting it through this session. We think it s urgent we move on with it." Both House and Senate earlier ap­ proved the economic aid portion of the legislation and some of that $350 million already has been distributed to 23 Latin American countries. The program also calls for an in­ crease in duty-free imports from Carib­ bean countries to the United States and extension of a 10 percent investment tax credit to U.S. investors in that area. The Ways and Means committee is scheduled to take up the trade and tax provisions of the Caribbean Basin bill Thursday and the Senate Finance Com­ mittee considers it Friday With the lame-duek session scheduled to adjourn Dec. 17. both houses would then have to consider the legislation The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9 ,1982/page 9 The meeting came only hours after House Speaker Thomas O’Neill dis­ closed he had told Secretary of State the administration George Shultz doesn't have the votes" to pass the re­ maining elements of the initiative. Reagan heard the concerns of lawmakers under pressure to oppose *rade and tax provisions of the plan they contend will foster economic de­ velopment in the Caribbean and Central America but at the expense of jobs in this country Committee Chairman Dan Rosten- kowski, D -Ill . told reporters afterward in the the program faces problems Informed O'Neill had specifically said the legislation "doesn’t have the votes," Rostenkowski replied, I didn't hear him say that " I didn't count the votes." he contin­ ued. " I think my obligation first is to try to get the bill out of the committee and then see whether or not we can pass the full House." O'Neill told reporters earlier Shultz called him Tuesday from Brussels, Bel­ gium. to discuss the issue I told him he doesn't have tlm votes and I i still > don t think he has the votes think he i Shultz was kind of stunned when I told O'Neill said I police report In the period beginning 3 p.m. Tues­ day and ending 3 p.m. Wednesday, the University Police Department reported the following incidents: Arrests: A I T employee was arrest­ ed Wednesday morning after she was seen taking money from a student’s purs» in tf Jester Center cáfeteria. thefts. \ U T staff member reported that 20 yards of carpet, worth $300, were stolen roin tin education Annex building in October. Other thefts report­ ed include: a 55-gallon trash can stolen from a parking lot near Disch-Falk Field Tuesday or Wednesday, $18.75 stolen from a candy vending machine in Waggener Hall Wednesday morning and a student's $15 mathematics text stolen in the Frank Erw in Center Tuesday night Harassment: A Kinsolving Dormito­ that she has ry resident reported received four harassing phone calls from an unidentified male caller be tween Dec. 2 and Wednesday The Austin Police Department re­ ported the following incidents: Arrests: Austin police arrested a 21- year-old communication junior for [ " session of methamphetamine Tuesday afternoon. The student was in the apart ment of a 19-year-old Austin woman when nine police officers executed a search warrant, uncovering "a quantity of methamptietaniirie in various loca tions" in the woman apartment a po­ lice report said. \ttempted suicide: Th( husb nd if 29-year-old graduate student reported 'tempted suicide to police that his wife early Wednesday morning ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ msi E leg a n t, th o u g h tfu l V D IA M O N D S 478-1649 DIAMOND SOI I r URKS UT KOI NO CT ROUND UT Rot ND 1)1 K \ \MOND K U I V . S INI < T >n ( T r u ru $795 $450 YOl M BK R \5 IN esponds to ev e ry o n e 's need fo r new fe ,.m Of course, w e would insert * n pie s tra w to an noy hedonists v>: tc keep s itching for m o re than com fort T a ■- re a lly m eans to know E 1 37 S u tíÁ M j } } A t S 'A V c C iitfu \.lK ZlO O S<2*\, ¿ A -tvi fy u ? x • ' 1 ■'"C. 7 - , q S. , 1 ' Su ?/< i „ T s. . - - G if t in g Mati- nur\ for Men & Vi omen 1 UmiL' suitable lor everyone on your iist. nc ^election of Faton and Crane s Papers. ' Irri-d • p a r e h m i 'i t s * Idt-, o f < ,,lor- Bov. 1 from ■> K t c e t e r a T H E G R E A T CHRISTMAS COFFEE BREAK . * COFFEE M AKER BO X OF FILTERS 1 lb. COFFEE your choice) $12.95 OFFER GOOD DEC 6-17 while supplies Iasi CACTUS CONNECTION T e x a s U n io n In fo r m a tio n Lo b b y D U R H A M N I X O N - C L A Y COLLEGE INTENSIVE ENGLISH Enroll now for classes beginning Jan , 3, 1983 • TOEFL U n iv e r s ity p r e p a r o ! on • N in e m o n th co m p re h e n s iv e course • S m a ll classes c o n v e r s a ’ c a l m e th o d • A u th o r u e d u n d e r fe d e r a e w fo e n r o ll n o n ­ i m m ig r a n t a lie n s tu d e 'U |- 2 0 8th and Colorado 2 n d f l o e 4 7 8 -3 4 4 6 ENG INEERING , MATH, PHYSICS, CHEMISTRY MAJORS HAVE YOU CONSIDERED NUCLEAR ENGINEERING? The U .S. N a v y can train you to become a N uclear Eng ineer. A fter graduation you would receive one ‘ ull y e a r of post-graduate level training in nuclear e n g i n e e r i n g . Starting sa lary up to 527,800. The Navy oper at es more than half the reactors in A m e r i c a The training and experience you will get m a k e you a r a r e com m odity for the other half. And — if you q u a l i f y , you w ill be paid S1000 per month until g r a d u a t i o n . QUALIFICATIONS: M ust be com m issioned by age 27 j. Sophomores and juniors, m inim um 3.3 G P A . Seniors m inim um 3.0 G P A . U .S. citizens only. l ocal For T h u r s d a y , 9-3 i n t e r v i e w , call 1-800-292-5048 Monday- N AVY NUCLEAR POWER. THE FASTEST W A Y TO THE TOP IN NUCLEAR ENGINEERING. HEY PLASMA DONOR! THANKS! M eet E d d ie K e ro u ac, an 8-year-old boy with s e v e re h em p h ilia — the bleeding disease. Ju s t a few y e a rs ago E d d ie faced a shortened life filled with d esp air, severe pain, and exten sive c rip p lin g Y o u r p lasm a and the p lasm a from m a n y others just like you, has p rovided the d esp erately needed a n tih e m o p h ilia c fa cto r ( A H F ) E d d ie needs a'm o st d aily, enabling him to lead a co m p le te ly no rm al and a c tiv e life. E d d ie has often asked us to thank you for your continued help. W e would like to join him by sayin g ' H ey P la s m a D onor! T h a n k y o u ! " SAME FAMOUS LONG NECK TASTE IN Did you know that the average hemophiliac in the J S. rec donations per year in order to prepare his needed A H F cor cef "r 3 tn \ ■, hemophiiiac could easily require over 700 donations per year you see why the need for plasma is so great naf s c / A NEW 12 0Z. N0-DEP0SIT NO-RETURN BOTTLE Please donate plasma, and help these youngsters that despair and crippling. * - 1 LONE STAR...THE N A T IO N A L BEER OF TEXAS TMf f T AUST’N SV9 AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS Be a blood plasma donor and save a life $8.00 for 1st donation of week and $10 00 for 2nd donation within same w eek Hours: Mon. & Thurs. 9:00am to 5:00pm Tuos. & Fri. 9:00am to 2:00pm Ic On your 1st donation only ail new receive a $2.00 bonus with this coupor. s w il page 10/The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9f 1982 Illegal alien amnesty bill to be sent to House news capsules (UPI) WASHINGTON - The House Rules Committee opened the way Wednesday for a grinding floor fight over a controversial immigration reform bill that would grant amnesty to millions of aliens, mostly M exicans, now living illegally in the U nited S ta te s. The c o m m itte e a g ree d by voice vo te to send the bill to the H ouse floor o v er the p ro ­ te s ts o f both H ispanic and black m e m b e rs . T he pan el, w hich se ts the ru le s u n d e r w hich bills a r e d e ­ b ated a n d voted on. also d e ­ cided to allow an alm ost un­ o f l i m i t e d n u m b e r amendments when the bill is taken up. to be offered to As a p proved by the House Ju d ic ia ry C o m m ittee, th e bill would g ra n t p e rm a n e n t r e s i­ dence illeg al a lie n s who w e re in the c o u n try p rio r to J a n 1, 1977. It would g ra n t te m p o ra ry re sid e n c e to those who a rriv e d before Ja n . 1. 1980. The m e a s u r e also calls for both civil and c rim in al p e n al­ ties ag ain st em p lo y e rs who knowingly hire illegal aliens. Sponsors c la im this will help to s t e m the flow of poor Mexi­ can s a c r o ss the 1 S bo rde r in se a rc h of work The comm ittee sent the bill to the House floor after listen­ ing to two days of arguments for and against the bill and its controversial provi­ m o st sions. Two H ispanic c o n g re ss­ m en. R ep E d w a rd R oybal, D- C a l i f . and Rep. A b ra h am Ka- the 7en J r .. D -T exas, w ere final w itn esse s both w arned they would try to kill the bill w ith a m e n d m en ts. said Roybal and the House 75 h a s H isp a n ic C a u c u s a m e n d m e n t s to offer. " I expect to h a v e enough people on the floor to ha v e a roll call on e a c h one of them ,” he told the panel. time to prepare them. Roybal said Hispanics fear that sanctions against people who hire illegal aliens would lead employers to turn away even those who are American citizens. “ We oppose sanctions be­ cause we believe they won't work,” Roybal said. “ The end result of sanctions will be d ’S- crimination,” th re a t. D espite R o y b a l's a th a t c o m p la in e d Kazen c o m m itte e-im p o sed re q u ire ­ m ent th a t all a m e n d m e n ts be p rin te d in th e C ongressional R ecord fo r T h u rsd a y would not give th e opponents enough Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D- N.Y., the only black on the the panel, voted against motion sending the bill to the House floor. In a letter to House Speaker Thomas O’Neill last week, the Congressional Black Caucus said the bill should not be tak­ en up this year and warned it would be “ racked by discord" on reaching the House floor. A b itte r b a ttle also loom s ov er an a m e n d m e n t by Rep. Bill M cC ollum , R -F la to strip the bill of a m n e sty for alien s illeg ally in the c o u n try — a n u m b e r th a t se m e sav may be as high as 12 million. The bill, including the am­ nesty provision, has the full backing of chairman Peter Rodino, D-N.J., of the House Judiciary Committee, and Rep Romano Mazzoli, D-Ky., chairman of a judiciary sub­ comm ittee that drafted the measure. S im ila r le g isla tio n is pend­ ing in th e S e n a te , w h e re its ch ief sp o n so r is Sen Alan Sim pson, R-Wyo. If the H ouse p a sse s th e bill, som e c o m p ro m ise still would have to be re a c h e d w ith the S enate in the final d a y s of the lam e-duck session Dneamin’ a Qneen Chni&tmaú? Group sponsors contest for autism Channel 36 sp ortscaster Vic Jacobs and Longhorn football player Terry Orr w ill appear from 11 a .m . to 2 p m T h u rsd a y at the Alpha Kappa P si “ P roject Heart-throb” booth on the West Mall “ P roject H eart-throb” is a local “ b eau ty” c o n te st gone wild to support the T exas Society for A utistic C itizens. Ten A ustin c eleb rities are com peting to se e who can a p p e a r the m ost out­ rageous. T h u rsd a y is th e la s t day to vo te in the contest. Votes co^t 50 c e n ts e ac h and can be c a s t a t th e West Mall booth, any M r G a tti’s P izza o r the T ex a s S ociety for Autistic C itizens office P eople m ay vo te a s often a s they like Immigration to be subject of lecture The P o p u la tio n R e se a rc h C e n te r w ill sponsor a lec ture or r “ A m e ric an A g ric u ltu re, Illegal W orkers and Im m ig r a tio n ( tro l" a t noon F rid a y in B urdine Hall 436 P hillip M a rtin , a sso c ia te p ro fesso r of a g ric u ltu r a l e < numi< a t the U n iv e rsity of C alifornia a t Davis, will present the 1 >< ture. Speaker to focus on exchange rates A r e s e a r c h e r in theo re tic al international finan public le c tu re s F ri d a y and T ues d ay concernin g his n in the field of econom ics. u • \v ’ r S< t ■ J a m e s Anderson. pro fesso r of e co nom ics from B lege, will sp eak at 1 30 p m . F r id a y in G r d u a te Business Building 4 ¡38 on Optim al Kxchang R i a \ndor» der Fix t e r nal and In tern a l D istu rb a n ce s s Bui! ture at 11 a m T u esd ay in Business 1 conom “ Q uantity U n c e r ta in ty : proach the Dual In s t a n e . n r A nd e rson 's le c tu re s art sponsored rn t h e U n u r L ec tu re s C o m m itte e , the D e p artm t nt of mar\ > Sym posium of the G r a d u a t e School of B u s i n e r Palestine-Lebanon forum to be The N o v e m b e r 29th Coalition will spons r tine and Lebanon a t 7 p m T hursday in tht Auditorium \ ■ S tu a rt Schaar, a s s o c i a t e pro fes so r at Brooklyn College, will >peak m l S and a f te r the invasion of Lebanon Davt a c tiv itist will speak on his re c e n t tr > Bank , : n r >t1 th> t Midd • : r ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ WM HER HOB Büt' ¿fee 1 C H A N I K A M e n o r a h s and ( andlcs ■ 1 1 e i i ¡CIIABAD I Je w ish student -101 N u eces « ('enter 472*3900 H A P P Y C H A M KAJ --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Keep the life of the party alive i ! FREE Dial-A-Ride 474 SiEK A G ift of Austin Travis Ak not C< • - W EEKEN D S DEC 17 THRU JAN 2 •' Shoe Shop Rugs S H E E P S K I N C O W & CALF ★ S A D D L E S * E N G LIS H W ESTERN 1 6 1 4 L a v a c a Capitol Saddlery A u * f:n T « x a i 4 7 8 5 IMMIGRATION LAW Qualified representador a t reasonable rates Jim B. Cloudt 3 8 1 0 Medical Parkway No 731 Austin, Tx 7 8 7 5 6 L ic e n s e d b y t h e T e xa s S u p r e m e Co w ;neo t . dt :npany • , A com pany executive will b e Interview ing In Austin In January, it vc ' p lea se mail your resu m e a - d >r letter in tere st im m ed ia tely to the a d d re ss t t , so that we m ay co n ta ct yc » fc set l-i a p p o in tm en t m A u stm No p h o n e calls will be accepted a C F Airfreight, Inc Attn: V.P Administration 1933 Landings Drive M ountain View. CA 94043 An eq u a l o p p ortunity em p , e RirFreight Qt'i Bun-Back Time in 7exaaf December 13-21 is the best time to sell Textbooks & get extra $ $ $ in time for C hristm as. You will also get a special Bonus Discount Coupon! For each *10“° w orth of books you sell us, you will receive a coupon w orth 50c off any Co-Op purchase! 'This coupon expires December 31,1982) DISCOUNT COLTON -Jt. i ^ S e ll B ack *•' 120-30 $40-50 C oupons ‘ : (!,■: 2 , 3 >;■■!4 W orth ^ ^ A l l Books requested for the $ su $100; $130 $ 2.5 0 1 , Spring Sem ester will be purchased t p for ^ 2 of the New Price! (As long As stock is Needed.) r» • n So H urry in December 13-21 ! Regardless of the Season, the U niversity Co-Op A L WA YS has the best Buy-Back policy in town! Happy Holidays! TEX TBO OK S l o w e r le v e l iT'ítUvC'lúiUf & c Y\ \.r LEVI'S TWILL BAGGIES $12.95 SUGGESTED RETAIL $31.00 VELVETEEN JACKETS and BLAZERS IN 7 COLORS $29.95 SUGGESTED RETAIL $60.00-$72.00 HALF PRICE SWEATER SALE BUY ONE SWEATER AT REGULAR PRICE A N D SELECT ANOTHER OF EQUAL OR LOWER PRICE AND YOU ONLY PAY Vz PRICE ives& Sharpening Stones Our Brand knives are handcrafted of hammer forged steel, with exceptional Old World craftsmansh ip We have the largest selection of quality knives, including 25 styles of Victorinox Official Swiss Army Knives, also G e rb e r, Pum a, K ershaw ,and many more-all excellent Christmas g ifts . Or select from f in e natural Arkansas sharpening stones in polished cedar boxes Free pocket sharpening stone with every knife purchased (except k itc h e n or k n if e b la n k s .) WHOLE LARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2 4 1 0 S a n A n t o m o 4 7 8 - 1 5 7 7 8 8 6 8 R e s e a r c h 4 5 8 1 MX T E X A S S A L E Good looking cold weather JACKETS all with TEXAS on the back to show your spirit! Reg. White Windbreaker, Orange T E X A S ........................................ 29 95 White Baseball J a c k e t..................................................................... 42.00 Children’s Jackets w /steer or helmet em blem ........................ 24 00 Sale 19.95 34.95 16.95 Work out TEXAS-Style in these great mix n match sweatwear com ­ binations! Grey Crewneck, Orange TEXAS s t e e r ................................. 12.50 Grey & Burnt Orange S w e a tp a n ts ......................................... 11.95 Reg. Sale 9.95 8.95 Warm up some orange-blooded Texan’s heart with one of these great sweaters! White Cardigan, 100% orlon acrylic.................. Burnt Orange V-neck, 100% orlon acrylic . . Reg. ..................31 95 ..................30.00 Sale 19.95 19.95 Other great gift ideas for an Orange & White Christmas! Texas Bedspreads Full...................... .............. Twin U.T. T elephones................................................ .................. 63.00 .................. 59.95 ................130.00 11.95 9.95 59.95 Reg. Sale Orange & White Christmas Balls Sale 1.99 Reg. 3.95 26th AT GUADALUPE (PARKING ON SAN ANTONIO) MOPAC at ANDERSON 464-5156 In Longhorn Country — first level < NOT ALL SIZES AVAILABLE QUANTITIES LIMITED) FOODS - D R U G S H.E.B. and TJV.P. Your Food Friends in Texas! H E B is ftidM d to bring you lint foods produced by Texas farmers and ranchers. It's hard to beat flavor and nutrition of 'T a n s Agriculture Products". TAP the goodness of Tens grown meat and produce and anjoy good eating. For Free Recipes and Information on T en s Agriculture Products. Write: Texas Department of Agriculture - Reagan V. Brown, Commissioner P.O Box 12847 - Austin. Texas 78711 The Daily Texan/Thurtday, Dacambar 9,1982/page 11 TEXAS RUBY RED 8 Grapefruit * 99c: TEXAS, SWEET, J UI CY 5-LB CELLO BAG DISPOSABLE DIAPERS :j ELASTIC LEG, 4 4 M ED , BOX OF 48 i LG . BOX OF 32 3 ROLL GIFT WRAP PAPER OR FOIL 26 " PAPER 25 SQ FT FOIL 15 SQ FT 20" HI-RISE BICYCLE FOUR M O D EL S TO CHOOSE FROM 5 0 0 9 9 Grapefruit T E X A S RUBY RED T E y AS S W E E T JUI CY 4 FOR$ l ^ Oranges T b s $ 0 0 1 I FOR Grapefruit $ 2 9 9 TEXAS, RUBY RED 18 LB BAG Oranges T E X A S S WE E T JUI CY 18 LB BAG $*189 \ J EA Tangerines 49c U S »1 S WE E T LB WOMENS & TEENS FASHION KNEE SOCKS FOUR STYLES A S S T D COLORS SIZES 9 11 $-|49 r a HAIR SPRAY V05 AEROSOL CAN $J69 7 OZ AGREE ASSTDFORMULAS SHAMPOO CONDITIONER 4D OFF LABEL 8 OZ BTl $ 4 ^ g S IMS* .Oil PIONEER CHOICE S ' b h o e WOMEN'S COZY VELOUR SLIPPERS s i z e s s m l x l p r SATIN SHEER ORNAMENTS 2 IN BAG OF 20 2 .-IN BAG OF 18 YOUR 3-IN -BAG OF 12 PUNCH BOWL SET JEANFTTE 18 PIECE WHEATON CHRISTMAS JAR GALLON SIZE DELUXE CHEESE BOARD WITH GLASS DOME BRITE STAR TREE LIGHT SETS 50 LIGH r 3 WAY FLASH ’2 99 DECOR NOEL TINSEL GARLAND 3 X 20 2 PLY CHOICE OF COLORS 100 LIGHT 3 WAY FLASH SNOW SPRAY “ . YOU NAME IT PLUSH STOCKING is inch SILVER ICICLES BOX OF 2000 S T R A N D S • BEAUTIFUL PLANTS * FLOWERS • POINSETTIAS $ 5 9 9 $ 7 " y 6 I N C H 2 B L O O M 6 I N C H 3 B L O O M 8 I N C H 5 - B L O O M 6 I N C H M U L T I B L O O M $ 7 9 9 > X < O * C 4 - I N C H S I N G L E B L O O M $ 2 4 9 Christm as Cactus IN BUD ANO BLOOM $979 Decorated Pine Trees 6 -POT $ 8 " 10" Norfolk P in e iS rcHB,ST"AS$1999 6 FANCY CUTTINGS MICRO CORN POPPER ANCHOR . 0 0 128 PREMADE BAG OF BOWS 7 9 9 12 - PC LG SIZE 25 PC REG SIZE YOUR CHOICE 49c 10% EXTRA DISCOUNT ITEMS* HOG HEADS f O R Y O U R T A M A L E S HAM PATTIES AGAR HOT LINKS M A D E W IT H C H IC K E N 1 . LB P K G T A L M A D G E F A R M L8 59° $ 1 9 7 $ 1 2 9 69c $ £ 1 9 12 0 2 P K G c o l b y c h e e s e ;:.: Franks or Bologna T A IM A O G E C H IC K E N Strawberry Preserves MASA TRIGO Q U A K E R Cinnamon Danish M A N O R t j 0 2 TU B E 80 I 0 2 CO O T 53 SOUR CREAM M A IO 4 L S B A G * 1 • 1 34 ” i« m 94' Chocolate Eclairs S'crum"^* »oz*1^® Salisbury Steak S T - “ S 02 80* * 0 7 8 Golden Crinkles °*oñ» Buttermilk Waffles ^ : mAK( POTATOES LA RRY S F R O Z EN 5 LO 12 02 7 9 ° 10 02 6 2 c 10 02 60C Pie Shells Concentrate Shampoo Baby Corn Starch J O H N S O N S 14 02 S H A K E N Baby Washcloths Instant Conditioner t?yo S J O H N S O N S P N E l l 3 0 2 T U B * M 4 3 1 * 2 2 4 $ 1 9 2 $ 1 34 CARAVELLE, PINK. LEMON OR LIME f * S ' Liquid Dish Detergentm'Oa PILLSBURY ■ ■ FLOUR SEMI SWEET MORSELS b a g $199 NESTLES , „ n , B E n Y CROCKER A SS T 0 CAKE S UPE R MOIST MIXES 18' 2-OZ BOX B E n Y CROCKER. READY TO SPRE AD FROSTING 16 5 OZ CANS VILLAGE PARK VEGETABLE OIL 48-OZ BTL MAZOLA CORN OIL 48 OZ BTL CENTER CUT. GRAIN FED PORK CHOPS L O I N C H O P S S i 9 8 LB RIB CHOPS $ 1 8 8 LB DECKERS. SLICED SLAB BACON $ COUNTRY STYLE LB 1 4 9 P O M ^ T E A I ^ i 2 9 BUTT CUTT LB FRESH ASSOR TED PORK CHOPS $1 5 9 CFNTER & FIRST CUT LB ■ # STEAKHOUSE BEEF, CRY-O-VAC CUTS* FLOUR 25-LB BAG BUY ONE GET ONE FREE CORN CRUNCHIES WISF 10 OZ BAG '! V, ') ’) V V V; ') 'J i V ' j V ó V o V ü ' o É ' B J r l V; V. V V. V; Vj Vj 'J V \ S / V o o V ' j V o V ' j '' • GENERIC BAKING HOLIDAY NEEDS* Boneless Strip 10-12 lb a v g R f l M P I P Q Q TOP SIRLOIN 1 0 1 2 lb a v g BO NE LES S RIB EYE, TIP ON 10-12 LB AVG FRESH, M E D IU M 3-5 LB AVG PORK SPARERIBS $ 3 9 9 ¡J99 $ 99 9 LB LB LB $ *J 2 9 LB $ 0 9 9 B O NE LES S $ 1 2 9 1 LOIN OF P O R K C E N T E R C U T LB $ 3 9 9 S-|99 $099 $099 5 0 99 5499 89° 79c 99c 59c $088 $099 1 1 " $3" *5" GENERIC SHORTENING 42 OZ CAN ............................................. . GENERIC „ Brownie Mix ie oz pkg _ GENERIC WHITE. YELLOW Cake mix DEVILS FOOD 16 5 OZ PKG . FLOUR GENERIC. 5-LB BAG « . ■ Chocolate Chips 12 oz bag GENERIC a ■ , GENERIC 0 S a l t PLAIN OR IODIZED 26 OZ CONT i - n j Baking Soda ie oz cont g e n e r i c « <® l — J J MARGARINE I LB CTN margar ine 79c 59c 79* 99c 22* 42 c 49° . . PILLSBURY HUNGRY JACK. FLUFFY o $ a n n D l S C U I t S SW EE TMI LK BUTTERMILK 10 OZ TUBEdL FOR I PILLSBURY. CHOCOLATE CHIP OATMEAL SUGAR COOKIES PEANUT BUTTER PILLSBURY ALL READY 9 INCH PIE CRUSTS i s o z b ox 15 OZ PKG $ 1 3 9 $ 1 2 5 BICENTENNIAL 'J BREAD H E B 24-OZ LOAF Bran & Wheat Buns PKG OF 69c $100 FOR SHERBET ROYAL ■ ■ 1 i n ASSORTED M A I U f l a v o r s S d 49 . Vi GALLON. .. VILLAGE PARK MEAT P I E BANQUET COOKIN BAGS FROZEN 5 OZ TREESWEET cnrm iy GRAPEFRUIT JUICE i"o: MRS SMITHS PECAN P I E f r z n , 24-OZ DOVER FARMS WHIPPED TOPPING f r z n b oz El CHARRITO BEEF ENCHILADAS 7 oz FROZEN S 35c 39° 69° 99c $239 87c 79c [0 C E L E S T E J CELESTE PIZZA FROZEN 8 OZ CHRISTMAS CARDS BY AMERICAN dBwGREETINGS M llj&GREET * < This yuar. m«ki aka someones Christmas mnrnnr! The right card for that special parson - i f * 'k H E B RANCH COUNTRY (BEEF .‘2 09 LB ) SMOKED SAUSAGE MEAT LB $ 1 9 9 CDCCU PORK SAUSAGE MARKET # U.S.D.A. CHOICE, STEAKHOUSE BEEF# MADE $ 1 3 9 CENTER CUT 7-BONE SHOULDER ROUND BONE Chuck Steak Arm Roast Rib Steak Ground Beef Boneless Brisket T R IM M E D LEAN. COMPARE THE QUALITY BONE IN LB $]59 $ 1 7 9 I LB LB $239 68 FRESH PORK COUNTRY STYLE RIBS LEAN & MEATY B O NE LE SS ROUND TIP U S D A CHOICE S TEA KH Ou SE Roast or Steak BEEF CAP ON LB $ 2 4 9 L$B 1 7 9 $<1 6 9 LB I LB LB LB LB $ 3 1 9 $289 *149 99c S I 4 9 S I 59 LB LB LB LB $2 49 $-|59 $ 3 4 9 ^ 7 9 39* B O NE LE SS B U n E R F L Y PORK CHOPS CENTER CUT U S 0 A CHOICE STEAKHOUSE BEEF CUBE STEAK CHICKEN FRY U S O A CHOICE STEAKHOUSE BEEF BAR B.Q. R I B S r 8 U S D A CHOICE. STEAKHOUSE BEEF SHORT RIBS COOKOUT WHOLE PORK LOIN FRESH PORK ROAST lo in END FRESH PORK CUBE STEAK CHICKEN FRY REGULAR CHORIZO JIMENEZ 2 oz p kg U S 0 A CHOICE STEAKHOUSE BEEF FLANK STEAK SW ISS DECKERS. CRACKER SIZE BOLOGNA OR CERVELAT MENUDO BEEF TRIPE H - E - B FO O D S • D R U G S PRICES GOOD THURS THRU WED DEC 9-15 IN A U S T IN EXTRA PRINTS AND IT WE CAN PRODUCE "AND WE NOT ONLY OEVELOP PH O T O PHOTO PLACE J, ; * I LACE__T0 URI____ f f COLOR PRINTS P N O T O P L A C E P H O T O F IN IS H IN G G U A R A N T E E ENLARGEMENTS SO ™ CES ARE EAS¥ YOU CAN SHARE THE M EMORIES * SO BRING YOUR KOOAK DISC FILM TO US í a s . EACH l J I .‘-.-i ^ ^ ■ G E N E R I C A S S T D FLA V O R S SANDWICH H H H C R EA M 21 oz f t f t | 3 c o o k ie s h g z9 9 GIVE A REALLY NITTY GIFTY AVAtLABLf AT N 1 1 FOOD ST O W S OR CALL OUR GIFT CERTIFICA Tf DEPT (S12) M I-1 1 8 8 NE W AT H. E. B. PARK LA N E MAXI SHIELDS BOX O F 3fl $ 2 4 9 « VALUIS OF •I I*. •» « . *7 f t ' I I W •ti aa • » « * t i m OR YOU CAR SPECIFY A PARTICULAR a m o u r t page 12/Th# Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9,1982 pm m j Enj oy y o u r favorite FM music any whe re with the 881 stereo f rom Dyer. Perfect to give or get! Cassette A great per sonal cassette player, the MX -7 has slide volume c o n tro l, a u to ­ stop, and m in i headphones included. A GREAT ^ STOCKING STUFFFR! Personal Cassette wiW^y Auto-Rev. & AM-FM The ultim ate p e rs on a l s te re o 1 Record A M -F M rig h t o ff the air, auto-reverse for c o n tin u o u s tape play. Deluxe hea d ­ phones included. M o d e l HSJ-02 Aiwa. Blank Cassettes S t u f f s t o c k i n g s w i t h t h e t o p t a p e at t h e l o w b s t p r i c e . U D - X L - 2 C - 9 0 m a x e l l M r o w Blank 1-120 VHS Videotapes RKO TAPE CORP E n / o y a n y w h e r e o r p l u g i n t o a s t e r e o a n d u s e as s t a n d a r d h e a d p h o n e s M o d e l H S - R 0 1 . portable ) with AM-FM & 2-way Speakers D e t a c h a b l e 2 - w a y b o x speakers f o r s uperb stereo s o un d Four band radio, LED metering, separate tone controls. LPC-81. m m ^ Cassette Stereo E n j o y r a d i o a n d cassette 'apes in stereo at a super Dye r Deal p r i c e 1 The TRC-909 has variable m o n i t o r system. DYER PEAL fT a n c re d il 60-watt Booster! E ‘lizer Lightweight Headphones Record Cleaner discwasher Metal Cassette Deck t o m e t a l M o v e u p t a p e c a p a b i l i t y a t a D y e r D e a l p r i c e 1 T h e D E -11 c a n ' t be b e a r © H I T A C H I Plenty o f p o w e r plus 7-band e qualizer so yo u get the s o u n d you like best. The TE-70 has LED p o w e r meters and fader control. O FAS INDUSTRIES Electronic June Digital Cassette M i c r o - c o m p u t e r c o nt r o l l e d tuner with 12-station memory, seek and scan, separate tone controls, 8-wpc, two year warranty. M o de l D - 1 . I * R OAD STTAJR 1 AM-FM Cassette S te m The 2 6 4 7 deal at this price! is a super car stereo Stereo with Cassette and Rack S y s t e m i n c l u d e s 2 5 - w p c a m p . s t e r e o t un e r , t u r n t a b l e w i t h c a r t r i d g e , m e t a l c a s s e t t e d e c k , s p e a k e r s , a n d d e l u x e r a c k . SHARP é NIKKO AUDIO f ' n Q~ BO-wpc Digital — — 1 Receiver A c c u r a t e q u a r t z t u n i n g w i t h m e m o r y p r e s et s , c i r c u i t b r e a k e r s , 3 - y e a r w a r r a n t y . M o d e l 5 2 0 . AUOtO f t t T A I l t M 617 West 29th 478-8288 NEW STORE 3201 Bee Caves Rd. Suite 2 327-3530 9012 Research at Burnet fin the House & Home Center) 4 5 14 0 11 1915N . IH-35 4 5 14 2 1» Reagan urged to sign treaty on law of sea MONTEGO BAY, Jam aica (U PI) — A m erica’s form er delegate to the Law of the Sea conference Wednesday said the Reagan administration’s op position to the treaty will the United b a c k f ir e S ta te s “ e v e n tu a lly ” w ill have to sign it. an d “ R e a g a n a d m i n i s t r a t i o n id eolo gu es f r u s tr a te d the a t­ t e m p ts ” of A m e ric a n o fficia ls to m a k e th e t r e a t y w o rk a b le , said E llio t R ic h a rd s o n , who w as re m o v e d by th e R e a g a n a d m in is tra tio n a s h ead of th e U . S . d e le g a tio n to th e talk s. “ I th in k t h e U . S . will e v e n ­ c h a n g e i ts to tu a l ly h a v e m i n d " an d sign th e 194-p age d o c u m e n t , w h ic h h a s been e ig h t y e a r s in t h e m a k i n g . He s a id to do so f a i l u r e would d e n y th e U n i te d S t a t e s b e n e f i t s o f th e t r e a t y in su c h a r e a s a s n a v i g a t io n T h e R e a g a n a d m i n i s t r a t i o n r e fu s e d to si gn th e t r e a t y b e ­ c a u s e it o ppose d c r e a t i o n of a s u p r a n a t i o n a l s e a - b e d a u t h o r ­ ity e m p o w e r e d to d e t e r m i n e i n t e r n a t i o n a l who c a n m i n e w a t e r s , to s e t q u o t a s and f e e s and to d e m a n d th e t r a n s f e r of e x c l u s i v e p r i v a t e f i r m s t e c h n o l o g i e s f r o m R i c h a r d s o n sa id fe w c o m ­ p a n i e s would p a r t i c i p a t e in lu­ c r a t i v e s e a - b e d m in in g p r o j ­ e c t s fo r t e a r th e y m i g h t lose t h e i r c l a i m s w ith o u t a c l e a r r e c o g n i z e d in te r n a tio n a lly ti t le to t h e i r fin ds He a l s o note d th a t a D e ­ p a r t m e n t of C o m m e r c e st udy at th e end of 1981 p r e d i c t e d it would b e c o m m e r c i a lly i m ­ p o ssib le f o r th e U n ite d S t a t e s to p a r t i c i p a t e in d e e p -s e a bed m in in g w ithout t r e a t y sign ing th e R i c h a r d s o n f o r m e r a t t o r - ney g e n e r a l un d e r P r e s i d e n t Nixon an d on e t i m e a m b a s s a ­ sa id W a s h i n g ­ dor to B r i t a i n ton would tail in it< a t t e m p t s to p e r s u a d e a m a j o r i t y of th e w o r l d 's i n d u s t r i a l i z e d n a ti o n s to s e t t l e d e e p - s e a bed m in in g c o n f l i c t s o u tsid e th e tr ea ty R i c h a r d ' o n , m h i ' c a p a c i t y i ' h ead nt th e I n it ed N a ti o n s th e U n ite d of A s s o c i a t i o n S t a t e s a r r i v e d W e d n e s d a y to o b s e r v e t h e sign ing c e r e m o n y In a r e l a t e d d e v e l o p m e n t . s a i d J a p a n e s e W ed ne sd ay t h e i r g o v e r n m e n t su ppo rt^ the L a w of th e S e a , s o u r c e s but h a ' c h a n g e d its m ind and t r e a t y be- will not th e th e c a u s i ot p r e s s u r e f r o m 'igr , R e a g a n a d m i n i s t r a t i o n T h e s o u r c e s sai d J a p a n will p ro b a b is sign th e t r e a t y a f t e r P r i m e M i n i s t e r N a k a s o n e v i s ­ its P r e s i d e n t R e a g a n in W a s h ­ ington it will not e m b a r r a s s the a d m i n ­ J a n u a r y when in i s tr a ti o n W e s t G e r m a n y B r i t a i n . J a ­ pan and B e l g i u m a r e a m o n g t h e w h i c h S t a t e s i n d U ' t r i a l i z e d n a t i o n s t h e U n i t e d th ey an n o u n c i n g j o i n e d in would not ra t if % when it is on F r id a y t r e a t y th e ip en ed fo r si gn ing Decision bars disclosure requirement W A S H I N G T O N - T h e S u p r e m e C ou rt. in a 9-0 d e c i s i o n W e d n e s d a y b a r r e d U P I s t a t e s f r o m r e q u i r i n g p u b lic d i s c l o s u r e of c o n t r i b u t o r s to third -p art y c a m ­ p a ign s p o l i t i c a l P r o h i b i t i n g s u c h d i s c l o s u r e , in a c a s e involvin g th e S o c i a l ­ ist W o r k e r s P a r t y of Ohio, f r o m s h i e l d s o r t h r e a t s , h a r a s s m e n t c o n t r i b u t o r s r e p r i s a l s fo r a c t i n g on t h e i r p o l i ti c a l c o u r t said b e l i e f s , th e At i s s u e w a s a n Ohio l aw re q u i ri n g c a m p a i g n c o m m i t ­ t e e s to r e p o r t th e n a m e and a d d r e s s of e a c h p e r s o n e i t h e r c o n t r i b u t in g m o r e th an $25 to the gr oup or r e c e i v i n g c a m ­ paign funds f r o m it A l o w e r c o u r t s t r u c k down th e r e q u i r e m e n t b e c a u s e of " s u b s t a n t i a l of e v i d e n c e " to w a r d an d h a r a s s ­ h o s t i l i t y m e n t of c o n t r i b u t o r s T h e Su­ p r e m e C ou rt up held th e d e c i ­ sion T h e F i r s t A m en d m en t p r o h i b i ts a s t a t e f r o m c o m ­ pelling d i s c l o s u r e s b y a m in o r p a r t y th a t will s u b je c t th o se p e r s o n s id e n t if i e d to th e r e a ­ s o n a b le p r o b a b i l i t y of th r e a ts , r e p r is a ls ,” or h a r a s s m e n t J u s t i c e T h u rg o o d M a rsh a ll w r o te f o r th e c o u r t " S u c h d i s c l o s u r e s would i n f r i n g e t h e F i r s t A m en d m en t its r i g h t s of th e p a r t y and m e m b e r s an d s u p p o r te r s .” T he " s u b s t a n t i a l e v id e n ce of p a s t a n d p re s e n t h o stility f ro m p r iv a te p e rs o n s and gov­ e rn m e n t o f f i c i a ls " a g a in s t the S o c i a l i s t W o r k e r s P a r ty th a t O hio could not show ed it s c o n s ti tu t io n a lly c a m p a ig n d is c lo s u re require­ m e n ts to th e p a r ty , th e court held a p p ly sports page 1 3 / The Daily Texan/Thureday, December 9y 1982/ UT hosts Vols in orange duel By NANCY GAY Daily Texan Staff this season One of the biggest games on the schedule for the Texas women's basketball team gets under way at 8 p.m Thursday in the Frank Erwin Center. I t ’s the g a m e everyone in the UT w om en's program has been w aiting for — the battle of the basketball powers, and a battle of orange suprem acy. When the 10th-ranked Texas w om en's basketball team takes the floor against fifth-ranked T ennessee, big things are bound to happen "N o doubt, it's a big game for u s," Texas head coach Jody Conradt said It has required a lot of m ental as well as physical preparation This will be a real battle for us ” F or Conradt and the Longhorns, the real b attle has been a week-long one Texas ( l-l i is still reeling from last S at­ urday s 78-68 upset loss to N ebraska in the final of the N ebraska Invitational The loss, which snapped a string of 24 consecutive regular-season wins sent the Horns back home without a cham ­ pionship trophy and back to the draw ing board You know we re not ust*d to los­ ing, Conradt said reflecting back on the N ebraska gam e Maybe we started reading the papers and thinking it (win­ ning) was easy. We found out the hard way it isn’t. ‘‘I feel added urgency going into the game with Tennessee because we didn't play well (against Nebraska). We had planned to go into this undefeated, for Tennessee to be undefeated and have a shootout," Condradt said "But it didn't work out that way. The Lady Vols, ranked second in preseason polls, dropped a Nov. 30 game to Old Dominion. 78-72 in over­ time, and last Monday's gam e against No. 1 USC. 81-71 So, for the Longhorns, this past week has been spent healing wounds and working on the sore spots — rebounding and defense. The main w eakness for Texas now is defense, som ething that Conradt was highly displeased with in the N ebraska tournam ent "W e lost the gam e because of de­ fense she said simply We just didn't get a fter it Our rebounding was re a IIv weak We've got to work on that Junior guard Terri Mackev agrees We ve been playing against each other so long, it seem ed like we w ere just going to spots and defensing there, in­ stead of guarding people in our p re s s )." she said We need to get back in the real world and start playing our man tougher." Tennessee plays the sam e kind of man-to-man defense as the Horns. The Vols’ main strength, however, lies with a powerful inside attack. Forward Mary Ostrowski. a 6-2 junior (14 points per gam e), 6-2 junior Tanya Haave (18 6 ppg) and 6-1 junior center Paula Towns (15.2 ppg) a re the main weapons in head coach P at S u m m itt’s offensive attack All three are shooting 53 percent or better Guard Lea Henry, who leads the Lady Vol offense, is shooting 56 per­ cent and averaging 4 3 assists per game. T ennessee's defense is no slouch ei­ ther P rior last M onday’s gam e against USC. the Vols w ere averaging their opponents' 66.2. 85 2 points to to Their added height (four players are at least 6-0) m akes extrem ely threatening to an opponent's offense. them Clearly, this gam e will be a bdttle of wits Texas' run-and-gun offense vs. T ennessee's run-and-gun offense. Con­ radt. however, knows w hat is necessary to break the pattern W e're going to have to run the b all,” she said. "It it gets into a half-court gam e, we re in trouble We ca n 't allow our opponents to get us into that type of gam e w here they can set up and shoot.' NFL players accept pact with owners WASHINGTON (UPI) - More than 75 percent of the NFL players voted Wednesday to ratify the collective bar­ gaining agreement with the league own­ ers that settled the 57-day football strike more than three weeks ago. Ed Garvey, executive director of the NFL Players Association, announced the vote Wednesday night and said the ‘‘better than union members voted three-to-one favor of the agree­ m en t.” A majority vote was needed for ratification. in the The agreem ent was announced Nov. 16. ending first regular-season strike in NFL history, but several de­ tails were worked out since Garvey and chief NFL negotiator Jack Donlan m et several tim es in the last three weeks and completed the final details last Friday. G arvey announced the vote without hearing from the Atlanta Falcons and said the Miami Dolphins will not vote until Thursday. “We don't have all the votes in, but we can make the announcement without them, he said. "The Dolphins did not receive their ballots until too late to vote (Wednesday)." Sampson stuffs shot V irg in ia 's R a lp h S a m p s o n (5 0 ) s c o re d 36 p o in ts W e d n e s d a y n ig h t in th e C a v a lie rs ’ 104-91 v ic to r y o v e r D u ke . No. 1 V irg in ia ra llie d fro m a 1 2 -p o in t d e fic it to d e fe a t th e B lu e D e v ils a n d ru n its re c o rd to 5-0. TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS...CALL471-5244...8 to 5 DIAMONDS Pre-Christmas M U a h h her eves sparkle w h e n s he u n w r a p s a brilliant, u n i q u e D i a m o n d Ch ri st mas gift', t h r e e D i a m o n d \ e c k l a c e (> pts. 1 6 0. 00, 2 Drop Earrings, 8 pts. 125.00. 3 Drop Earrings. 21 pts. 2 8 0 . 0 0 S o m e o f o u r g i f t s to R e m e m b e r . ATTITUDES-STREET LEVEL 25% OFFR eg. 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BICYCLES SA L E E X T E N D E D until 12-11-82 Miyata 210 (1981) 710 (1981) Centurion W E R E 240,# 375*' NOW 195*° 325°° Le M ans (1981) E lite Super E lite Nishiki In ternational l ltra Tour Com p II U ltim a t e *11 I *m p*ti»olo Motobecane G rand R e c o r d 270*® 375®° 455®* 410*® 500°° 555°® 995®° 199,s 315'® 375'"' 320 ° 425®' 475° 825°' 475°° 375 M a n y o t h e r m o d e l s on s a le , all a t l o w s a l e p r i c e s ! 2404 San Gabriel 477-6789 G ive Y o u r s e lf C red it T h is Y ear For C h r istin a s 3 H o u r s C o lle g e C red it In O n ly 9 D a y s D u rin g C h r istm a s H o lid a y s - r i M idwinter S e s s io n D ec . 2 8 . 1 9 8 2 • Jan . 7. 198 3 (N e w Y e a r's D a y H o lid a y ) Early R egistration Through D ec . 9 Or R eg ister First C la ss D ay In R egistrar’s O ffice S tu d en t Union B uilding S e le c t From T h ese C o u rses holo g y 220! n g h sh 1312 n g lis h 2310 n g iis fi 2320 ie og ra p hy 2302 io v e rn m e m 2301 io v e m m e n t 2302 liSIO fy 2301 lis lo c y 2302 l a t h 1341 tiy s ic a f E d u c a tio n 1178 p a m sh 1311 M a ' 'ie E colog y C o m p o s n on a nd L ite ra tu re M a ste rp ie c e s o f the W e ste rn W o rld I M a s te rp ie c e s o t the W e ste rn W o rld II P rin c ip le s o f G eo g ra p h y S la te and Federa* G o ve rn m e n t S ta te and Fe de ra l G o ve rn m e n t U n ite d S ta te s H is to ry to 1877 U n ite d S ta tes H is to ry fro m 1877 C o lle g e A lgebra S k iin g C o n v e rs a tio n a l S p a n ish t For D etails C all 335-6433 or 335-6434 (7 £ Odessa college You re ready1 For the biggest and the best that life has to offer And for the college ring that will speak vol­ umes about you— and your achieve­ ments—-for years to come What's m ore— you can afford it! Because now, for a limited time you can order from the entire ArtCarved collection of 14K gold college rings and save $25 Come and see the exquisitely crafted styles— from the PLUS! 20” Off All Siladium Now - through 12/10/82 This is your LAST CHANCE for 1982 prices. Ooly '35" holds the ring of your choice. cla ssic to the co n te m p o ra ry And choose the ring and custom options that most eloquently express you. Now is your time to get what you deserve And remember—nothing else feels like real gold. /IRK7IRVED V . CL ASS RINGS INC ^ Check out our SPECIAL Centennial Design Class R ings s tre e t lev el U T Class Ring Headquarters since 1926 m a rte n s sin c e 1926 * A Most Timely Gift 1 he new lo ok in Timex, hut at th e same p o p u la r values that m ake Timex th e best gift to g iv e and receive. From 2 8 .9 5 to 5 9.95 A T T IT U D E S - STREET LEVEL page 14/The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9f 1982 sportswire By United Pre ss International w as reported W ednesday. Jets’ Blinka suspended for one game NEW Y O R K — L in eb ack er Stan Blinka of the New Y ork J e t s w as suspended for one g a m e by N F L C om m ission er P ete R ozelle W ednesday for “ a flagran t personal fo u l” com m itted ag ain st receiver John Je ffe rso n of the G reen B a y P a c k e rs. ‘ ‘The film and tape evidence shows an illeg al blow with a right fo rearm head-on to the face of Je ffe rso n a s he w as run­ ning a p a ss ro u te,” R ozelle said. ‘ The hit w as delivered before the ball had been thrown by the Green B ay qu arterb ack . ‘ ‘ In my opinion,” added R ozelle, ‘ ‘the foul ran ks with the w orst infractions I h ave w itnessed in an N F L g a m e .” Rozel'.s also fined Leonard Thompson of the D etroit Lions $1.000 lor an infraction a g a in st the New Y ork G ian ts' Leon B righ t while Bright w as attem p tin g to field a punt during the G ian ts-L ion s Thanksgiving D ay gam e. Sloan hired as new Blue Devil coach O X FO R D . M iss. — M ississip p i football coach Steve Sloan accepted a job offer to be the new coach at Duke U n iversity, it 70. The leading can d id ate s m entioned a s Slo a n ’s p o ssib le su c c e s­ so r include L ou isian a Tech coach B illy B rew er and SM U coach Bobby Collins. Kemp expected to sign with Yankees HONOLULU — Steve K em p, a key elem ent in G eorge Stein bren n er’s 1983 plan s, is about to take his p la c e in the fourth spot in the Y a n k e e s’ lineup, between D ave W infield and Don Baylor. According to those o ffic ia ls of the B altim o re O rioles who had also been trying to sign K em p a s a free agen t, the Y an kees reached ag re e m e n t with K em p W ednesday. Houston overpowers Auburn, 77-65 HOUSTON — M ichael Young pow ered in 22 points to lead the 10th-ranked Houston C ou gars to a 77-65 victory over Auburn U niversity a t Hofheinz Pavilion. The C ou gars a r e now 5-0 and off to their best sta rt sin ce 1969- SEMESTER FINALS RECREATION CENTER HOLIDAY SPECIALS 75' 75 B o w l One Get One Free Sun-T hurs 9am -closing Fri-Sat 9 a m -6 p m C o u p o n e xp ire s D e c 2 2 n d ¡ I j 7 5 '___________________________ 75JI THE BOSS WANTED US TO WORK LONGA HOURS. t onight, all night, 75r beer, $I hi-balls, and $1 Margaritas (fresh-squeezed limes) at the bar “ r 4013 Guadalupe RESTAURANT BAR & 5 0 ‘ discount with one hour paid table rental Su n-T hu rs 9am -c/osing Fri-Sat 9 a m -6p m U n it e d W a y JQ* C o u p o n e xp ire s D e c 2 2 n d 50‘ POOL so" thanks sportsrecord C hicago 111, Milwaukee 101 New York 120, Detroit 109 Danas 110, Seattle 94 S a n Antonio 102. K ansas City 101 (OT) Utah 101. Houston 93 P ho e n u at L o s Angeles, night N CAA basketball W ednesday» Co llege Baakatball Raaulta B y Unltad Praaa Intarnalional Eaat B( 'or Coll 102 Brown 75 Gf‘i >rgelowft 99 Alabama St. 76 H. . C ro ss 61, Harvard 59 lam es M adison S3, Maine 53 M r ■ man 52, Seton Hall 51 (OT; i ■ ■" 73 S> Methodist 61 to St s; i Sane 82 86, C a n , s . 73 s 87. f airleigh Dickenson 65 : 84 Mavericks shock SuperSonics, 110-94 D A LLA S — R olando B lack m an scored a gam e-high 26 points and M ark A guirre added 22 to lift the D a lla s M a v e rick s to a 110-94 victory over the S e a ttle SuperSonics. The M averick s evened their record a t 9-9 w hile the Sonics su ffered only their fourth lo ss in 20 g a m e s. Penn hands SM U 2nd straight loss P H IL A D E L P H IA — M ichael Brow n sco red 16 points to lead P enn sylvan ia to a 73-61 victory over SM U. Brow n scored 12 points in the fir s t h alf to sp a rk the Q uakers, 2-1, to a 33-26 h alf tim e lead. L a r ry D av is sco red 23 points, 14 in the second half, to p a c e the M u stan gs, 3-2. Carter paces LSU over Aggies, 88-70 NEW O R L E A N S — H ow ard C a rte r sc o re d 27 points on short ju m p e rs and fla w le ss foul shooting to lead L o u isian a S ta te to an 88-70 victory over T e x a s A&M. No. 1 Virginia rallies past Blue Devils DURH AM , N.C. P ace d by R alph S a m p so n ’s 36 points and R ick C a r lisle ’s 24, top-ranked V irginia rallied from a 12-point deficit to down Duke 104-91 in an A tlan tic C o ast C onference g a m e Sam pson , the 7-4 tw o-tim e P la y e r of the Y e ar, scored at will in the second half, hitting 22 points a s V irginia im proved its record to 5-0. NBA N A T IO N A L B A S K E T B A L L A S S O C . B y United Praaa Intarnalional (W aat C oaat G a m a Not Included) Eastern Conference Atlantic Division Philadelph la Boston New Jerse y W ashingto n New York M.iwaukee Atlanta Ind'a na C hica go Cleveland W L Pet. 3 17 850 800 4 16 571 12 9 474 9 10 300 6 14 Control D ivisio n 8 . . 13 12 8 9 10 8 12 8 13 3 17 619 600 474 400 381 150 W e stern Con fe re n ce M id w e st D ivisio n W L 9 14 7 10 3 9 8 11 Pet. 609 588 500 421 Sar> Anton Kar . is City Dallas G B 1 514 7 Vi 11 3 4 ''2 5 9 4 G B 1 4 5 16 158 9 Pacific D ivisio n 11 8 57 9 4 3 12 400 8 W e d n e sd a y r .«suits Great Service Affordable Prices ■ Motf repair* take 2-3 day*. Yeur cemplete Service «tere. eclipse kirtland tour «i! pak For the month of December: All Kirtland & Eclipse Touring P a c k s and G ear 15% off Also: Krvptonite5 K4 Lock ith ( arr\ tn¡> B ra c k e t R e g u la r!) $32.45 F or D ecem ber $24.95 2404 San Gabriel 477-6S46 LUNCHWITH THE COACH U:30am-lpm Have lunch with Coach Fred Akers every Thursday and discuss the Longhorn season Enter through the Ballroom Lunch, select your lunch, then proceed to the Q uadrangle Room to eat and enjoy the gndiron comments oí Coach Akers The Ballroom and Quadrangle Room are located on the thud .eve. : 'he Texas non Sponsored by the Texas Union Programming Committees. W » NOW IS THE BEST TIME TO SELL YOUR USED TEXTBOOKS TOP PRICES BEING PAID TRY US! WE THINK YOU WILL LIKE US. WE OFFER FAIR, PLUS QUICK CASH FOR YOUR NO LONGER NEEDED TEXTBOOKS. AFTER ALL, WHAT HAVE YOU GOT TO LOSE? umuflca You Book Store, and More Store 2244 GUADALUPE OPEN 9-6 MON.-SAT V/SA arts & entertainment page 16/The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9,1982 Hurt’s ‘Death-Ray’ brings joy A FUNNV THING HWtrCD THE. OTHER NIGHT.. I LAk SITTING AT HOME stucmng. ..ANDIGO! A CALL ON THE IT LAS MY STEPMOTHER SHE AND MY DAD L£Rt ON VAtPNON IN TAHITI. SHE’D CALLED ALL THAT (JPfí JIST TO SAY HI! A ..GHAT DO wait for every person who visits you to read it through, twice It ’s worth it’ Sam Hurt made my Christmas by publishing “ Death R a y "; why not let him make vours. as w ell0 Handel’s ‘Messiah’ digital mastery of the golden age B y JO H N S T O K E S “ M e ssia h ." Richard W estenburg, m u ­ sic director i R ( \ Red Seal D ig it a l1 Tis the season once more, ind >nce again that venerable w a r h m s e Hun is being dusted off for del s ‘Messiah performances professional and <>; pro fessional alike \nd it just wouldn t he Christmas without a new recording of this work i which like Goethe s 1 uist everyone knows but nobody has actual- ly gotten through This year s offering is from R C A ’s Red Seal digital and if you never really cared much tor Han del s magnum opus this just m ay be the version for you “ Messiah is per h a p s t! . Handel gets my sote as th« composer who n o w a d a x s receives the east re sped most of his wot ks colled dust on shelves while the others ire placed to death id dost victim is performed the work umpteen times every December from Portland Me to Portland On though seldom in its full form (Part Three is Its considerable saved for Easter length 1 shy of three hours requires, a dramatic interpretation to maintain its power and beauty not to mention audi ence interest ', vet the music is rather in mood, and the non-narrative light texts deprive it of the dramatu force inherent Performers an therefore challenged to renew tin vigoi and freshness ot the piece to give it dramatic impetus and at the samt turn j avoid bombast by usim too la id an or chestra and chorus a common malady in performances, both the and record­ ed.) in opera It is just thi> balance of ideas which | distinguishes the new R< \ recording for starters, conductor Richard Wosten I burg s Música Miera consists of less than °o instrumentalists and onl\ 29 singers Compared to a larger group, the smaller forces are more nimble and pre< ist ind the different timbres more discernible One might think that depth is lost with size but this is not the case partlv as a result of the record s engineering This set at dist - makes } convincing ar Robert Westenburg gunu nt tor the p o t e n t i a l s of the digital en< kIuu process, even though one stiil has ! . problems of analog decoding ¡'he sound is lull rich and warm with the musicians sounding as if they are double in number while the dynamic rang»' is broad h urthermore. t h i s is one of tiu cleanest pressings to have em­ erged s i;., tht golden age of high- fniel11\ ended ir the late Sixties The .M<>us aspect is that the chorus onK sounds more resonant than the orches­ tra. giving the former a more distant, cooler quality The soloists are generally excellent, most notably Judith Blegen. whose lovely voice is matched by usually clear enunciation Katherine Ciesinski dis­ plays a warm contralto, though her ari­ a s tend to be less dynamic than those for the soprano Tenor John Aler is a bit thin in places (particularly in the open­ ing recitative) and bassist John ( Leek seems to have trouble with the lower registers in both arias No But Who May Abide md the lengthy No 48 ne\ er- theless both men turn in credibl* ex­ citing performances The Trumpet Shall Sound to crystal clear The chorus is also very good their supple, balanced sound never becoming sluggish Then diction is a hit err itic, \nd He Shall ranging from muddied For I nto Purify I s \s for the orchestra Westenburg places emphasis on the strings and woodwinds lending the lightness, so necessary for this n assive work The lengthx pauses between arias choruses and recitatives have fxm considerably shortened giving the oratorio a sense of dramatic urgenc y and emphasizing the operatic orientation o¡ the work and its composer While this may not be a pern < ! inter pretation of Messiah and to my knowledge nene exists ui is likely to), its merits are numerous and it is one of the few recordings which treats the piece with the respect it so richly de­ serves It is an engaging exciting rendi­ tion which takes its subjec i matter to heart If you still can t figure out what to give your audiophile uncle Stanley for Christmas this year tins recording is heaven sent The Jpy of Secs. / THE KBS NDJHuy^/ NO CoLLS&E , u<£ m iPL£ se c ¿p y c jjifrj WOULD yvveucwTTHE b e c o m p l e t e \ J ; ( ila s srs N o C over S A T U R O VY N O C O Y E R ' Hi U rly p m ■ D r in k Sp e cia ls 9 P M < 0*1 in; HIGHLAND MALL • BARTON CREEK MALL • NOHTHCROB8 MALL imported Imported Moosehead, Canada’s Prem ium Beer. A ll B ra n d Im p o r te r s Inc i.a k f S uccess N o w Y< WEEK EXTRA It's bigger than Good news for young drivers: Criterion takes the hassle out of car insurance. You’ve got enough hassles — you don’t need one with your car insurance. So join the Criterion Crowd and enjoy these benefits: • Low down-payment and drive. • Stretch your payments out over 9 months. • Money-saving deductibles and discounts. • Fast-action 24- hour claim service throughout the U.S. • Famous Criterion service and dependability. • Free rate quote right over the phone. Call: 444-2488 1505 Town Creek Drive Austin (Just off East Riverside Drive) Criterion INSURANCE COMPANY U U AH about.. ★ Sports ★ Austin Entertainment ★ TV Schedules for Exam W eek ★ Comics ★ Gift Ideas ★ And all kinds of Interesting Stuff ■ ICUP & SAVEI ■ ■ ■ ■ Find it in Texan Boxes beginning next M onday! page 18/The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9f 1982 Private Lives look to the top By CATHY RAGLAND Daily Texan Staff to According local band P rivate L ives, hard work and determ ination are the two key ingredients to su cc e ss in this town. The band has been working together for a little over a year, and after having gone through som e chang­ e s, they’ve released a single on their own record label. And in c a se you h a ­ ven't noticed their song “ When The World Com es Crashing T h ro u g h ’’ has been receiving a great deal of a irp la y f ro m radio station KHFI a s well as be­ ing added to the playlists of so m e s t a ­ tions outside of T exas. Recently the sin­ gle w as r e c o m m e n d e d in the Nov. 20 issue of B i l l b o a r d M a g a z i n e . P rivate L ives is now in the studio working on their LP which should be released in late January. “ We re doing everything ourselves, Ron R ogers (songw riter/keyboardist) does the m ix­ ing and engineering and w e re spending our own m oney and making our own de­ cisions on the L P ,” explains the fresh- looking vocalist Deborah G iles. Work­ ing in the studio alm ost every day takes a lot of tim e and dedication, which she believes is im portant if you're serious about your m usic. “ We are all expected to be in the studio or at reh earsals on tim e because m ost of us have other jobs also. S om etim es we have to decide what is m ore im portant and m ake som e sa c r ifice s — but it's all worth it .” Aside from working on the L P , these last few days have been full of reh ears­ als and preperations, for the band has been chosen to open the Kenny Loggins show at the Erwin Center on Sunday. Their perform ance w ill m ark the first tim e a local band on an independent la­ bel has ever played at the E rw in Cen­ ter. A lso the show will be broadcast live by S tarfleet/S ou rce radio network across the nation. For P rivate Lives it looks like all that hard work is about to pay off. Their sin­ gle is slow ly getting picked up by m ore and m ore radio stations, and the son g’s pop flavor and catchy lyrics are hooking listen ers here as w ell. All th at’s left now is a topnotch LP for the band, and I have a feelin g that that dream is not so far aw ay now. Dream your fave star naked P rivate lives jpi r " ^ % By STEVE DAVIS : V'.:\ “ Screen D re a m s : The Hollywood by Tony C raw ley; Deliah P in u p ” ; Books; $9.95. When B etty G ra b le looked over her shoulder to show off h e r sh apely g a m s and boost A m e ric an so ld ie r s’ m o r a l e during World War II, the pinup p o s t e r ’s s ta tu s changed fro m novelty to c ultural phenomenon. F r o m F a r r a h ’s toothy sm ile to Kinski's p a s de d e u x with a python, the c elebrity pinup is a million- dolla r industry today th a t s e e m s p r i m a ­ rily g e a re d Its roots, however, lie in the publicity m a ­ c hines of Hollywood that m a n u fa c tu r e d s t a r d o m by c rankin g out countless pinup stills to s a t ia t e the p u b lic ’s lust for celeb rity “ Screen D r e a m s : The Hollywood P i n u p ” collates 175 of these stills, and the re su lt is a slick and c a m ­ tow ard gross sales. py piece of nostalgia on the h e yday of the Hollywood studio system . B ritish film buff Tony C ra w ley th r e a d s to g eth e r these photograp hs with a w itty and insightful c o m m e n t a r y a cc o m p a n y in g each entry. F o r e x a m ­ ple, C ra w ley explains the tw o poodles t h at a p p e a r in a publicity photo of a ruby-lipped J o a n C ra w ford in a “ s t a r ” pose w e r e “ not n a m e d C h ristina and Chris, but Cliquot and C a m i l le . ” C r a w ­ le y ’s sense of h u m o r e x te n ds to the c a ­ tegorizatio n of the stills in this c o m p ila ­ tion. He e n title s a section “ The T iger and the P u s s y c a t ” in which “ i t ” (sex a p p e a l » ta k e s form in variou s a c t r e s s e s posing in leopard sw im su its or lounging on lion skins. An even m o r e e so teric (and hilarious) section e n title d “ The Wild B u n c h ” shows s t a r l e t s posing in ridiculous c o s t u m e s which b izarrely run the g a m u t from an unknown a c t r e s s sporting a larg e sty ro fo a m octopus on her d r e ss to Dorothy L a m o u r w e arin g nothing but w ra p-aroun d ferns. “ Screen D r e a m s ” o ffers not only c he e se c a k e but be efc ake a s well. E r r o l Flynn, Jo hn Derek and Tony C urtis a p ­ p e a r in vario us s t a t e s of m as cu lin e musing. This section points out the in­ tere stin g censorship p ro b le m of the hairy chest, showing before and a f te r pictures of W illiam H old en’s bout with the r a z o r ’s edge. I t ’s these and o th er “ Screen idiosyncrasies D r e a m s ' so e n te rta in in g , even for p e r ­ sons who d o n ’t a ckno w ledge th em se lv es as m ovie buffs. Besides, is th e r e a n y ­ w he re else you can find a pose of a p r e ­ blim p Shelley W in ters w e arin g fishnet stockin gs and sitting in a giant boxing glove? The odds a r e slim. th a t m a k e Central Texas’ Finest Country Western Night Club It might be better with Void T H E * T E X A S H I6 H B IB E H S 91 02 Burnet Rd. A ustin, Texas A dvance Ticket Info. Doors opon a t 7 : 0 0 p .m . 8 3 7 -5 9 2 4 O’ Sahara: Algerian paradise seafood, s te a k s — th a t type of thing Anyway. I figured you w e re t ir e d of reading it. so th is w eek I was d e t e r ­ mined to try so m e th in g uniquely off the wall. My s e a rc h led m e to one of A ustin's newest r e s t a u r a n ts . O' Sahara a t 607 San J a c in t o St You'll have to a g r e e that by serving Algerian cuisine this place is — a t le a s t as fa r as Austin goes — unique. couscous The dinner m e n u contains one e n tr e e pronounced koos-koos), for $9 95 It's one of these inclusive deals in which you h a v e a choice be tween soup or salad, followed bv your e ntree, topped off with a d e sse rt of red wine sorbet C offc t and when they get their liquor license i wine a re included with the meal The disn itself con sists of chicken, celery c a n o t s . turnip s zucchini yel all se rv ed low squash and c hickpeas over the a ctu al co uscous which is a c rac k ed wheat and flour com bination that ends up so m e th in g like a c r o ss be tween ri c e and g r i ts The serving s a re im m ense, and th e food is delicious different, but delicious As f a r as a t m o s h e r e goes well 1 hat*1 to be re du ndant but you guessed it it's unique The r e s t a u r a n t is sm all and a little o v e rcrow de d with its own red and white c h e c k e re d tables, and t h e r e ’s a r a th e r obtru sive air-conditioning duct protruding from the ceiling, but besides this it's a fairly c o m f o r t a b l e place The rough c e d a r w alls a r e d e co ra te d with anim al skins and a few b r a s s utensils, along with se v e ra l p ictu res of w h a t I assu m e d to be c o m m o n sights in A l g e r ­ ia They striv e for a u th e n tic ity in th e ir background m usic so b e w a re it’s a fa r the easy-listening m i s h ­ sight m ash y o u 're a c c u s t o m e d to from Service-wise 1 had nothing to c o m ­ plain about I w a s se a te d im m e dia tely and cordially w a ite d upon throughout the meal The w a i t e r was knowledge able about the fd and the p roper way to serve it a side from being i n f o r m a ­ tive as to the fcxxi s p r e p a r a tio n along with the d iffe re n c e b e tw e e n Algerian couscous found in other regions of Afri­ ca F rankly it w a s very im p re ss iv e \.>u So the next tim< !e< ide you re fed up With the no pun intended sa m e old stuff give 0 S a h a ra a try Believe m e c o m p a r e d to the n o r m a l d a i h bread th ere s m uch m o re life in the Algerian d e se rt One thing 1 forgot to tell sou until they get th eir liquor license, you a re p e r m i t te d to bring y o u r own wme into the restau r mt * ** i By EVIL PICKENS F a r e thee well, little bluebird of n o r­ m ality . for I h a v e at last su c c u m b e d to the siren of uniqueness No longer do I have to a d h e r e to the n o rm s of society, (m a y they fo r e v e r rot on the floor of the c oliseum b a th ro o m i for I do not re c o g ­ nize th e ir e x is te n c e Now I 'm looking for so m e thin g d iffe re n t so m e th in g that is honest unto itself no m a t t e r how out of plac e it m a y be This is the kind of rebellious m ood I was in when 1 set out to find so m e th in g to e at 1 guess 1 w as just tired of w riting about the s a m e old thing You know Mexican food, Italian food b a rb eq u e , By CATHY RAGLAND Daily Texan StaT since Although the "S an F r a n c is c o s o u n d ” has changed the significantly Haight .Ashbury days of the l a t e 1960s co unte r c u ltu r e the m usic that c o m e s out of the c ity still r e m a in s a viable p a rt in the w orld of p ro g re s siv e rock m usic With a l a rg e n u m b e r of p e r f o r m ­ e rs continuing to c o m e out of San F r a n ­ cisco s Art In stitu te, many quickly fall in the c ategory of the typically heavy, a r t school bands One of th e s e so-called a r t rock bands, Rom eo Void a t t e m p t s to defy this c l a s ­ sification through m u sic that looks a t the world realistically and not through m y th s and d r e a m s c r e a te d b\ o t h e r a r t ­ ists The band is known by club-goers for their dance hit N e v er Say N e v e r ’ with Debora lyall b rutally chanting I m ight like you b e tte r it we slept to g e t h ­ e r The band h a s re c e n tly r e le a s e d an L P a s a follow up to the successful E P N e v er Say N e v e r which put^ t h e m neatly into the spotlight of the r e c o r d buying public and brings them to Aus tin s Club Foot on Sunday The a lb u m is a c eleb ra tio n of shaded im ages through psy chedelia It is e m o ­ tionally a g g r e s s i v e as should be then p e rfo r m a n c e you 11 n e v e r look a t the world the s a m e way again Benefactor Opening the shew will be a n o th e r San F r a n c i s strong ingredient ,n new co sound This band. T ra n s la to r, is set on proving that good writing c om bine d with a v a rie d a m o u n t of ideas can m a k e a difference The acoustic >ound and polished h a rm o n i e s a r e r e m in is c e n t of the I960:- folk band- but thundery g u i­ t a r s and abrupt te m p o c h a n g e s r e m i n d us that this is very m u ch a 1980s band ' t í « r ,.;-¡d - d e H e a r t b e a t s ar d Trigger - but L P proves that the country is ready for m u ­ sic that is honest and sin c ere not loud and deceiving It you m isse d thC band s last a p p e a ra n c e a couple of m on ths ago like I did now s your chance The recent sue t » ~ - The p ro sp e ct of both bands playin g back to back is an intriguing one and should prove to be one of the best -h< w s Flub Foot has seen all y e a r Adm ission price is only $6 >0 so now th e r e - r e a l ly no reason to mi s . s it CACTUS IS READY AN YTIM E YOU ARE! T h e 1982 C a c t u s is w a i t i n g f o r y o u S u b s c r b e ^ s m a y pick u p t h e i r y e a r b o o k s a t t h e T S P b u s i n e s s o f f i c e b y s h o w n g p h o t o i d e n t i f i c a t i o n H o u r s 8 a m ' t i l 4 : 3 0 p . m d a i l y TSP Building, 2 5 th a n d W hitis Keep the life of the party alive, j FREE Dial-A-Ride 474-RIDE Shop the Texan for Christmas gift idoasl i A Gift of Austin-Travis Alcohol Counseling Services WEEKENDS • DEC. 17 THRU JAN.2 • 9 P M -3 A .M . $ 1 0 0 # # /C \ «AaTO 1 V 2 3 3 0 W a t t h e c o r n e r o f H a n c o c k a n d " l o r t h l o o p " l o f t h l o o p Fonda San Miguel APPEARING TONIGHT MIKE VANCE JIMMY PINEAPPLE STEVE KAUAF coiWDy WOtKSHOP 302 W 15th at Lavaca 473-2300 Showtimes 8:30 Wed Thurs Sun 8:30 y 11:00 Fri y Sot open stage for beginner comics week nights after show ************** * Now Open « J «The University* Arcade O / / Sun-Thurs 10 a .m .-l 1 p.m. Fri-Sat 10 a .m .-l a.m. V o<* Mt. PacMan Next to Conan's 607 W. 29th * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ************** ft* 0 - ■ A e . ^ e r w - o P S o ' T t o » a* e a \ 0,0 \ N C t e \1H * . f < c C A ny tim e's a wild tim e w h en y o u ad d the great taste o f Two F ingers an d this wild Two F ingers T-shirt! To get yours, se n d your nam e, ad d re ss, style p reference an d size (m en s style S .M .L o r w o m en s F rench cut S, M.L) along w ith $6 95, to. Two F in gers T shirt Offer. 19168 A lbion Rd.. Strongsville, O hio 44136 P lease allow 6 w eek s for delivery Two Fingers: is all it takes. 1 * 0 f i n g e , ' i- f o o * * r > « m e 8u» n g jm * !.# ,• W IL D - CRA ZY 1st OZTOTL EXTRAVA G A N ZA H ELP S A VE TEXAS CA VES FRI. DEC. 10 AT THE S H A D Y S P R IN G S PARTY BA RN (BEN W HITE A N D B A ST R O P HWY. 71) TICKET PRICE IN C L U D E S FREE HOT BAR-B-Q U E A N D COLD Are You Playing Games With Us? For eight years the Back Room has been know n for bringing you the best in live music every night But we have also quietly main­ tained the finest game ro o m in tow n All o u r machines are the latest m o d e ls, a n d kept in top shape. If you d id n 't k n ow , c o m e o n in. If you forgot, come o n b ack Su per Pac M a n , M ilip ed e Quert, Liberator Turbo, Galaxian, Qix, Tampast, Frogger, M oon Patrol (2), Galaga (3), Omega Race, Centipede (3), Me. Pacman (3), Dig Dug, Donkey Kong, Donkey Kong Jr., Alpine Ski, Jungle King (2), Zaxxon (2), Tron (3), Stargate, Robotron, Joust P IN B A LL : Medusa, Xenon, Speak Easy Foosball-4, Pool-5 T ICK E T S AT IN N ER S A N C T U M W IL D BILL B A R B QUE, A C C B O O K S T O R E (RIO G R A N D E ) THE PARTY B A R N A N D C A L L A H A N ' S G E N E R A L S T O R E 2015 E. RIVERSIDE Produced and marketed by Space Games • = ■ : M e m b e r s of the TSP Board N o w H o ld in g Office Hours; Times a n d Locations Posted TSP Lobby The Cactus Showcase HAPPYMGHTS ARE HERE AGAM LONE STAR BEER FEATURING: RUSTY WEIR Presents D a r d e n S m it h • B U T C H H A N C O C K & J I M M I I G IL M O R E • T o n i g h t S2 UT S 3 public w a t c h f or c o m i n g a t t r a c t i o n s Friday D a r k M e sa Saturday Jeff, A n d y , & D o n l o c a t e d in the Tenas U n i o n , m a i n lev e l A L HELZBERG’S CHRISTMAS SALE The Daily Texan/Thurtday, December 9f 1982/page 19 _ _ Introducing “Warp O ut”, an exciting new board game I hoi put. in command of your own tnftuuh apace ohipi. Complete with full ( i vinyl apace viata and all f You ’ll love the actum and tlx «o lye the fret to yet your "!l a .. The perfect gift. / Introduced exclusively by "The Game Peddle! . Soon to be in fine toy and gar > stores in Austin and Hcu^r.o | f | l 5 .. :§C 11; I G :: TONITE: N E W Y O R K R O C K E R BENEFIT A -*.€5 THE S K U N K S and S T A N D IN G W A V E S THE LIFT and JOE E L Y 'S GUITA» D O O R S O P E N AT 8:00 SHOW STARTS Ar !- T O M O R R O W ; T H E J IT T E R S SAT: D -D A Y S U N D A Y : R O M E O V O I D and T R A N S I # * ^ x A S AT L A M nn rycmno wi Tuesday n ig h t is 50’s n ig h t at The Rose. And th a t m eans m ore th a n 50’s music. That m eans 50 ’s prices. So, like, be cool, cat. Make the scene in 5 0 ’s costum e and get your first d rin k free. And after th a t ( no m atter w hat you’re dressed like), enjoy $ 1 bar drinks, draft beer, and wine all nigh t long. Check ya later, alligator. On Tuesday. At The Rose. 5 0 ’s M USIC. 5 0 ’s PRICES. T U E SD A Y AT TH E ROSE. The San Antonio Rose 0 : Groat N T thern. lust £f Mopac at A nderson Lane CA CTU S IS READY A N Y T IM E YOU ARE! TSP Building 25th and Whitis There are lots o f gifts you could give that will make her happy, and many others that she could probably use. But when you want to be sure this C h r is t m a s will always be re­ membered, give her a lasting gift of love from Hel/berg Diamonds. Hel/berg \s has a wide selection o f beautiful, dazzling diamond gifts on sale now ! The Hel/berg Diamonds Christmas sale— when you want to be sure this Christmas will be remembered forever! HELZBERG When vou want to be sure d ia m o n d s d ia m o n d s d ia m o n d s Diamond Pendant, 14 karat gold Reg $46? Sale $375 O th e r d ia m o n d p e n d a n ts sale p ric e d fro m S i 29 Diamond Earrings. 14 karat gold Reg $350 Sale $300 O th e r d ia m o n d e a rrin g s sale p ric e d fro m $ 9 9 Snowflake Pendant, 14 karat gold 37 diam onds Reg $1,400 Sale $1,205 O th e r d ia m o n d p e n d a n ts sale p ric e d fro m $129 Ladies Diamond and Ruby Fancy Ring, 14 karat gold 8 diam onds, rub> center Reg $450 Sale $400 Other fancy rings sale priced from $229 Diam ond Solitaire, 14 karat gold 1/4 carat diamond Reg $489 Sale $450 O th e r s e le c te d s o lita ire s sale p ric e d fro m $17 0 Barton Creek Square Ant onef8 Serving Lunch & Dinner Thurs. LOTIONS F ii. a S o t . JOHNNY COPELAND 2 9 1 5 G u a d a l u p e 4 7 4 - 5 3 1 4J H E C O ltl) I M A X G I S PRESENTS AN ALL LABEL BLOW OUT! ALL $8.98 List IP's, every label! page 20/ f ne Daily Taxan/Thursday, December 9,1982 BHB^T é O i m i a * r o w s Á u ü swwbks HIGHLAND M A L L ^ t f * 4 5 1- 7 3 2 6 H I G H L A N D M A I L BLVD IONSIGNOR1 THE LAST R ^ 8tl}ttle I Whorehouse „ UNICORN B l/ l TeXOS (R) 1:15-3:00-4:45 H i SHOW ONLY 10:00 5.M.1 6:30-5:15(0) 7 4s Í :0 0Ó , * ? / 4 > -io -0O(4) B i l S U M M E R H EAT 2 : 0 0 - 4 : 0 0 - 6 : 0 0 8 : 0 0 - 10:00 | R ) THE 11 CHOSEN po I f ^ R I T E § 9 Y h l A K ( P G ) i f 12:40-2 30-4:20 6:10-8:00-9:50 1:20-3:30-5:40 7 50-10 00 s a H For the ride of your life... A ll you need for Christm as are your tw o front seats! STARTS T O M O R R O W AT THE m FOX T R I P L E X ) — — w — — :u Q Q MANN WESTGATE 3] 460P WE b TGATE BLVD 892-2775 Starring ' S T IN G " 0 B R IM S T O N I reier i ooie M y Favorite Year I I M4m M J aV 4Í4 jdiMMulk*. TIM E < BANDITS Su san G e o rge SUMMER HEAT 5 :5 0 - I I 7 :5 0 -9 :5 0 RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5689 7:45-10 00 AUSTIN 6 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml. S OF MONTOPOLIS PHONE: 385-5328 24 H O UR A D U LT TH EA T RE C O M PLEX VID EO TAPE RENTALS & SA LES LARGEST SELECTION - LOW EST P R IC E S SE E U P TO 6 M O V I E S UN S E P A R A T E S C R E E N S FOR THE P R IC E OF ONE VIRGIN DREAMS SILK GAME BALL JO Y ALL MALE CAST DISCOUNT MILITARY • STUDENT • SENIORS • COUPLES GETTING R £ 8 £ L Drioe-ln x 6 9 0 2 Burleson Road Radio Sound System 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 Privacy of Your Auto X X X O rigin alU n cu t . .. M BY BOB AIX.l'STUS X SUPER-HOT ENTERTAINMENT. O P E N S 6 3 0 - S T A R T S 7 0 0 Special (“very T h u rsd a y from 8-10 p.m. L A D IE S O N L Y C l : nk Doors open for men at 10 ■ Sta\ and l*art\ till 2 :00 727 VNcsi 21rd S tre e t 479-8X88 ¿ m e TH EA T R ES TIMES SHOWN FOR TODA Y ONL Y \ r I C d k A A ^ X — M O N -SAT . mm L IU IT E O TO S E A T IN G . ALL S N O W S B E F O N E 6 OO PM le t SH O W ONLY SU ND AY AND H O L ID A Y S T W I- L IT E P R IC E S . C / h A A Mm ] ■ ^ Hn o r t h c r o s s 6 M r AKA KiA7 N 0 8 T M C R 0 S S M A L L A N D E R SO N A B U P N E T THE M ISSIO N A R Y R (1:45-3:45-5:45/$2.00(-7:45-9:30 THE SENDER Í R ] (1 J0 3:45 $ 2.00 '-4 *0 4 :3 0 E. T. |PG) (7:30-5 00 $2.001-7:15-9:30 JIM M Y THE K ID H E ID I’S S O N G j g (1:15-3:15-5:15 $2.00)-7:1S-9:15 SACRILEGE [P G ] (1J0/$2.00) [ R (3 JO-5 JO $2.001-7:30-9:15 LAST U N ICO R N p (5:15/$2.00)-7:l 5-9:1 S 4 4 3 2 2 2 ” i I O FFIC ER & A G EN T LEM A N ■ ,so° — [ g ] <5:00/$2.001-7:30-9:45 EMPIRE STRIKES BACK SACRILEGE (4:45/$2.00F7:15-9:45 ( R (5:30/$2.00F7:30-9:30 1 g r f T r r ^ r r r ^ j n f ' 453-6641« — «co««. ULTIMATE IN SIGHT k SOUND RE RECORDED IN DIGITAL STEREO E A M T A S I A "A i "VI H 9 IN ,1 !,” »' J s . — .................* g I LYXfT*! • W ' « 4 2 - 2 3 3 3 1 423 W S E N W H IT E $ 4 0 0 A L L M O V IE S $ 4 0 0 1 EX C LU D IN G MIDNIGHT SH O W S ■ CON AN THE BARBA RIAN 7*0-9:30 [R j POLTERGEIST 1 1 H 7:,5-*« H B ie | SCItCCNS AWESOME,TOTALLY AWESOME! Members of the TSP Board N o w Holding Office Hours. Times and Locations Posted TSP Lobby - S IA R T IV E K J L V W T H KHAT1 5 : 4 0 - 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 2 0 I E All Sh o w s $ 2 \ ------------------------- F ro m the Producer o f S T A R W A R S com ing this Christm as**D a rk C ry s ta l” Friday - •: R E C F V .3) U T presents THE S K U N K S $1.50 UT, $2.50 public Saturday B u tch H an cock A the Lucky T ige rs Sunday F o o tb a ll on B ig Screen T V T H E V A R S IT Y 2402 G U A D ALU PE 474-4351 > p S ta WINNER f a ACADEMY AWARD Iflj BEST FOREIGN Fl¡ M ¡ y : ip 9 40______ j d o w n s t a i r s - L AS T N I G H T La Vie Continue 7 00 9 30 mann Show' b e iw ic > St t a'e 52 SO FOX TRIPLEX 4 5 4 2 71 1 6 7 5 7 A R P O R T B L V D A A (U fT 'IC £ K AMD A GEMTLEMAM ® A PABAMC N T e JTurn 5 05-7 30 9 45 CPEEPSHOW; 5 15-7 4 0 -9 55 S P E C : A L . (N W T E D E V A C .: M E \ ' A l h « B U W a tOtt' CfNTuttr T U IMS k 4 55-7 2 0 -9 40 S h o w v b efore 6 are $2 5 0 MANN 3 892 2775 4608 WESTGATE Bi EX t h e E x t r a T e r r e s t r i a l 12 4 5 -2 50-5 0 0 -7 2 0 -9 40 ALL NEW A PANAM UNT PlCTüRf 12 :4 5-2 4 5 -4 4 5 -6 4 5 -8 :4 5 The Warning THE IN C U B U S (R 1 0 0 -4 3 0 -8 0 0 He has the p ow er 1 "THE S E N D E R (R) 2 4 5 -6 15-9 45 r# U n it e d W U g i i m m m Thurs Call Club Fri David Joe A the Gigolos 31 5 E 6 (h 4 7 4 - 8 3 4 8 r ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ f t Not Too Blue Burlesque b y G e o r g e W i l k e r s o n & M a r g a r e t W ile y Dec. 1-18, 2 9 - J a n . 8 Wed Sat 8 p m S6-S7 F ri 8. Sat 11pm $5 50- discount f o r students C a p it o l C ity P l a y h o u s e 214 W 4th St 4 7 2 - 1 8 5 5 TONIGHT AT 91 DECEMBER FOLLIES HOUDAYFUN & MUSICAL MERRYMAKING ON SIXTH STREET 515 E. 6th 474 9382 TOP 100 IP 's HOTTEST SELLERS IN AMERICA, GREAT GIFTS! IMPORTS! ; CONSTANCE M ON tY — |£ HAVIN.JOHN LtSLIt X . M •JAMl(GltLlS P L U S . F E M A L E A T H L E T E S X ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ A W on d erfu l M o v ie ! LATE SHOWS LATE SH O W S SSoOTVfiffeei cn ■ *■; - ; ; (JO R O M M N Q M M U Z S S O f u r u o h s . ~~bÍHÍStt CftflnT ’ *■'? *. -A s. . . ** r - . L ' > The most fun money can buy t tuctnt xJitUTf nÓtMQP 7 W lfOO TODAY et 2, 5:45 A 4:15 p.m. Union Theatre 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Nen-U.T Tomorrow: Ridley Scott's Bladerunner < m n u r m i onw ertum comwm « trunte ^ O R Í O M Tetfimcolor® Ttwu waanea anos O * commu Vá-V'xi A TODAY ot 11:15 p-m. 1.50 U.T. Unten Then tro 2.00 Nen-U.T “rib A cracking f v comedy” v' - J U D IT H CR IS T. T O D A Y S H O W TODAY nt 4 4 7:30 p.m. 1.50 U.T. Unten Thentre 2.00 Nen-U.T, MOOOVtUEN s "TAKE THE MONEY AND RUN" tT *' ot s e a t e d at 9053 R e s e a r c h B i v d or c a i 836 6752 a s k fo r m f - m a t n ab I >6 O w n e r s )t K e y NO •e e p h o n e 444 8063. RO CCO 54495 M ay be seen or 978 ! D e i s 'of lo-'afed a t 9053 R e W h e e s i sea ) I 836 6752 A sk fo r in 'c 'm a t i o n a b o u t k e y N o A 21 O w n e r s ■«, PD n-me, 444 8063 - 8 .4 O' V J S T SS , , e n‘ o n d itto n 0580 a fte r 6 p m 966 F i a t S p y d e r E:< e v e r y lo w m ie a g e 454 968 V W K h a r m a n n G h ia G o o d c o n d ! ’ ¡on C a r e ' j H y m aintained '266 wnpr ¿15 3251 )64 a f te 'S i» second 478 8079 Í P A 50 97 * R J M P H Spiff re Red 75 000 -- es • a - w e' '78 45 69 J a r s ?, - i i r ' 1 ued 5200c ’ 7 74 I402 m g h ts Stereo-For Sale V C R B O S E s p e a k e r s , T e c h n ic s c o m p o ­ n e n ts. M u s t s ell, g r e a t p ric e s . 443-5743 A l P I N E 3000 g r a p h ic e q u a liz e r T o p of ,p n e v e r u sed 5120. 478-1829 Musical-For Sale F R E N < *• H O R N i C o nn s in g le h o rn . G o o d co n ,: tio n u s e d o n ly in h ig h sch ool *300 or b e s t - “ e r Susa- 473-8634. K e e p t r y m g H A Y N E S F L U T E C lo se d hole s ilv e r , m e a t 2117 n d ¡‘ 0 51950 459 4421 o r 477 _____________ W A S H B U R N M A N D O L I N w ith h a r d ­ ase L i k e n e w A s k in g 5250 452- s h e ll K ;N G T R O M B O N E 2 B S t e r lin g s ilv e r b e ll s 1500 r« e lie n t c o n d itio n 477-9348 e v e n in g s A s k fo r B o b A R I A E t E C .T R 1 C g .n t a r a n d c a s e G o o d o n d itio n 560. C a ll D a v e e v e n in g s , ph H A N D M A D E V t O L l N S p r u c e top, c u r ly m a p le b a ' * G o o d ton e Se e to a p p re c i- a te A ft e r 6 p m a ll 453-4807 P É A V Y C O M B Ó m s s a m p lif ie r w a t ts R M S 15 B W s p e a k e r, e x c e lle n t. 130 G U I T A R S A N D A M P S Austin's irgest selection of new and uspd equipment in all G U IT A R R E S U R R E C T I O N 478-0095 444-3814 Homes-For S a le Bicyde-For Sale l o t i a o e C a ne M a n y e< es 345 6850 E x c e lle n t ■o te a rin g A a * ab e 444 3 Z E TT CONDOS FOR SALE 901 W. 24 4 7 6 - 2 6 7 3 * Campus Area 505 Bellview No 9 Approx 991 sq ft Studio 1 bci 1 . ba $93 500 3400 Speedway No 109 $69 950 Central Austin VILLAS ON TOWN LAKE No 211 & 212 2208 Enfield No 106 2 bd 1 ba $5 1 000 NORTH AUSTIN Dry Creek Condos No 1 14 2 bd 2 ba $68 950 ' E R S Stereo-For Sale STEREO BLO W O U T W E BUY FACTORY 0 !R EC r CALL FOR PRICE INFORM ATION j — 4 5 1 - 9 4 1 2 e h h m Croix Condotnitt For L ease One Bedroom Unit For i wo $600.00 per month p! js electric 4 7 8 -7 7 46 Immediate Occupancy 1 0 % % Financing F*riv iti garage u opener Panoramic view of Shoai ( reek split level hot tubs Fireplace Mu rowaves < * «•.1ftTTT"...' CONDOMINIUMS 26 1 2 San Pedro MODEL NOW OPEN 10-6 DAILY 1 & 2 Bedroms $67,950-$ 120,950 ONLY 6 Block* from Campus Condominium» u ith the luxury you 're accustomed to. K > T f t C A B L E S 4 * M LK & Rio G ra n d e UrMWrvty of T# MODEL OPEN DAILY on / > 111 h ¡I N o o n tit I Jrthn I, Gould ( I 173-2031 B u tH d g e o An exclusive condemn «.-oninHinitv 301 1 FRUI M 10% Financing 1 st year 1 2 & 3 B ed ro o m * from th * 70 » to th * 120 * la r g e c lo s e ts a n d a d oubii b e a u t ifu l u n its — go e a s t < * S p iu l Staircases ★ Washer Drver ★ Security ★ 2 Car Garages The perfect home for you and the best investment for Mom & Dad In the heart of the in ’ area With Excel­ lent Financing Available these units are priced at *4i,95tí, and are ready for occupancy ONLY 2 UNITS LIFT1 _ _1 M I.......... • W ALK TO CAM PUS • NO CO M M O N WALLS • PRE WIRED SECURITY • MINI-BUNDS • FIREPLACES • W A SH ER DRYER • DECORATOR PA CKA G ES • JA C U Z Z I SPA • M IC R O W A V ES FOR SALE Tickets-For S a le J B A R R Y M A N I L O W , T o m P e t t y , K e n n y L o g g in s F i r s t f iv e ro w s , b est s e a ts , b est p ric e s C r a ig 472-7896 K E N N Y L O G G I N S tic k e ts F o u r t h ro w , e x c e lle n t s e a ts C a ll K a r e n 345 8536 K E N N Y L O G G I N S r o w s 2, 5 c e n t e r L O W E S T p r i c e s 1 A ls o T o m P e t t y - g r e a t flo o r s e a ts . C a ll a n y t im e 467 8542 B A R R Y M A N I L O W . 3rd. 4th r o w s c e n ­ te r T O M P E T T Y 12-14. 18 ro w s c e n te r 445 3304 a f t e r 11 30 a m T odd K E N N Y L O G G I N S t ic k e ts , fr o n t r o w 1 A ls o o th e r good flo o r s e a ts , g r e a t p ric e s , v e r y n e g o tia b le 447-5130 K E N N Y L O G G I N S f ir s t th ro u g h ten th r o w s fr o m s tag e , in c e n t e r B e s t p ric e s C a ll 445-3304 B A R R Y M A N I L O W . T O M P E T T Y fir s t t h ro u g h te n th ro w s e a ts fr o m s ta g e A s k ‘o r P a t 445-3304 C O T T O N B O W L t ic k e ts G o a l lin e u p p e r d e c k F o u r t ic k e ts fo r S20 e a c h C a ll la c k 454-1942 T O M P E T Í Y a n d B a r r y M a m lo w t ic k ­ ets 1st 5 r o w s G r e a t C h r is t m a s g ifts C a ll 480 0757 v E N N Y L O G G I N S * c k e ts one p a ir R o w o n e C a ll G r e y 258-3470 B A R R Y M A N I L O W , K e n n y L o g y m s , ‘¿ e t * . t ic k e ts a v a ila b le F r o n t flo o r ar d ar e n a . B e s t p r ic e s $25-560 e a c h 445 428! M a r io . Miscellaneous-For Sale - N E S T I n d ia n S O U T H W E S T E R N e w e ir y p lu s e x c e lle n t s e le c tio n g ifts 8. a r d s N e ls o n 's G if t s , 4502 S C o n g re s s , S K I B O O T S . W o m e n 's s ize 7N V A A ) er 7 p (A A - W o r n o n c e 550 C a ll 474-8147 af- F . C L U B S A fu ll s e t o f W ils o n n a r k s s till in box M a k e m e a n o ffe r 5-9779 O R T V . 1 y e a r old , 13 in c h e s 5205 i no. 471-3127. i l l r a n N i C A E n c y c lo p e d ia Sys- E l e g a n t m in t c o n d itio n H e ir lo o m n y U p to d a te 1981 e d itio n p lu s book R e t a -s fo r S1200 A b a r y a m 150. A la s tin g g ift. C a ll J i m a t 454- Ue level E v e ry five v e a n after that the rau neadjuxG to the Kunnie Mae level S o negative anwjfiU^atKjn is invtilved '('« in e rt Kaniae Mae level is U N the x n u n l 1J THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN Financing 6% Below FNMA Rate UNIVERSITY AREA 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Condominiums P r i c e . , f o 9 5 c j i S 7 9 .5 C 0 - S 8 5 .7 5 0 F i n a n c i n g ( F N M A 6-4*2) 454-1755 477-0099 Condom inium s 2706 SALADO C O M E LOOK US OVER ! M A K E THE RIGHT MOVE W e have something new to offer pendent lifestyle with all trie com forts ; A f hom e e □ 4 Sp acio u s Floor Plans □ Fully Equipped K itchens □ W a lk in Closets O Swim m ing □ Exercise Floor Pa-t r and much. nuich more APARTMENTS vi- ^ ■ SOI W 24th St • \uní 512 476-'76T6 Your Home from Home Profe.stonmHy » - r’ - equmi opportunity Hoi, sing [IH :m fra* [M- foil li= - f® Igj 1: i page 22/The Daily Texan/Thursday, December 9,1982 FURNISHED APARTMENTS | FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES ROOMS ROOMMATES D O W N T O W N W E S T 1211 W . 8 t h . S h u t ­ t l e b u s , w a t e r - g a s - c a b l e p a i d . F u l l k i t c h ­ I B R e n L a u n d r y Q i i e t e f f i c i e n c y a n d J A N - J U N E I B R $ 3 0 0 3 b lo c k s f r o m G u a d a l u p e . In c l u d e s w a t e r / p a r k i n g . 4 7 8 - 19 29 _______________________ L A R G E 2 B R . T a r r y t o w n . P o o l, l a u n d r y , s h u t t le $ 4 0 0 p lu s E A v a i l a b l e D e c e m ­ b e r 1. 26 0 6 E n f i e l d . 4 7 4 - 5 9 3 0 N E A R S H U T T L E . 2 -2 , c a r p e t , d r a p e s , k i t c h e n a p p l i a n c e s . N o p e t s $ 3 9 0 . 19 00 A V a l l e y H i l l C i r c l e . 4 4 2 - 8 3 77 , 2 8 2 -0 9 3 5 ___ A T T E N T I O N : S U B L E A S E W a lk s h u tt le p lu s u t il it ie s . C a ll 4 7 8 -4 2 4 1 a f t e r 5 p m I B R 1B A . $ 2 6 0 m o n t h c a m p u s to S tu d io a n d D E C E M B E R V A C A N C Y lu s h to w n h o m e a p ts S m a ll c o m p le x , la n d s c a p in g , N o r t h w e s t n e a r N o r t h - c r o s s M a ll. G a s , h e a t. N o r m a n d y A p ts . 2500 S te c k A v e 452-5178 M o n d a y - F r i d a y 1-6 p m 2B R 1 B A A v a ila b le J a n u a r y 1 N e a r U T F o r m o r e in f o r m a t io n , c a ll R ic a r d in C o 474-5981 I B R a p t U T a r e a . L A R G E I F s h u ttle , w a lk - in c lo s e t, p o o l, la u n d r y ro o m , c o v ­ e re d p a r k in g . $325 m o p lu s E . 453-8148 S M A L L 2-1 g a r a g e a p a r t m e n t b y p a r k U T $400 p lu s u t i l i t i e s F r a n k C a r r ic o . 454-9218 a f t e r 6 p m N I C E IB R c o n v e n ie n t ly lo c a t e d in q u ie t c o m p le x n e a r s h u t t le $255 p lu s E 441- 8365, 442-4076 N E A R L A W s c h o o l o n s h u t t le L a r g e I B R In s m a ll q u ie t c o m p le x A v a ila b le J a n u a r y 1 442-4076, 474- 1240 $275 p lu s E 2 B R 2 B A $600 m o n t h 2401 L e o n T h e W a t e r f o r d A p ts C a ll 473-2680 N E E D S O M E O N E le a s e 2 B R a p t F i r s t s to p R C s h u t t le N e w r a r p e t C a ll J a y e o r A n n e 447 5181. k e e p t r y in g t a k e o v e r to 1913 R IÓ G r a n d e 2 b lo c k s U T R e n o v a ' ed I B R , f u l l k it c h e n a n d s t u d y a r e a $385 p lu s b i lls A v a ila b le n o w 474 6205 478 6201. _____________________ L A R G E 4 B R 2 B A 2 n d s to p SR $130 b e d r o o m ($ 5 2 0 ) 447-6715 ro u te O N S H U T T L E P o o l, M a n a g e r E l l i o t S y s t e m I B R a v a il a b le 1 1-83 la u n d r y $275 p lu s b ills 476-0774 M U S T L E A S E 1 B e a u t if u l I B R on S peed w a y , s h u t t le , c e ilin g < ans $350 C a ll 451 6010 o r 459-4648 2 B R I B A a v a i'a b le J a n u a r y I R ig h t on RC s h u t t le G o o d m a n a g e m e n t m o n t h C a li 447-9783 K e e p t r y i n g $360 E F F I C I E N C Y W E S T c a m p u s W o o d f lo o r s M a n y w in d o w s R e fe r e n c e s yes p e ts no $200 A B P J a c k J e n n in g s 474 6897 C o n s o lid a te d R e a lt y $100 O F F 1st m o n t h 's to w n h o m e s N o r t h A p a r t m e n t s 909 R e ln l i 454 6697 r e n t 2 B R a n d S p a n is h V iii a a v a ila b l e FURNISHED HOUSES 6 B R p e r f e c t lo c a t io n B e a u t if u l h o u s e G e t y o u r g r o u p t o g e t h e r M u s t be q u ie t a n d s tu d io u s H o w e ll P r o p e r t ie s 477- 9925 L A D Y W A N T S g r a d s tu d e n t L u x u r y h o m e N o r th w e s t 1 w in g S h a r e k it c h e n , g a r a g e R e fe r e n c e s $ js c 346 2043 2 B R $180 m o . p lu s a llo w e d 2 a C a ll 467 8633. A v a il a b le im m e d ia t e i E C R s h u t t le p e ts la r g e y a r d s , n e a r C a p it a l P a UNFURNISHED HOUSES A V A I L A B L E N O W t w o a n d t h r e e b e d ­ r o o m o ld e r h o m e s , a p a r t m e n t s C a ll n o w t o r 24 n o u r in f o r m a t io n 452-5979 5 B L O C K S C A M P U S 3-1 r e m o d e le d i n ­ s u la te d V a u lt e d c e d in g , o a k f lo o r s f i r e ­ p la c e W D a n d s c a p e d , fe n c e d m a t u r e *re e s , g a r a g e $835 [ 476 4537 s u f r e m o d e le d 4B R . B A fo r s p r in g s9S0 m o n t h N o p e ts 3400 D U V A L 2 C a ll 454 6633 4 58-9000 L a r g e W A L K T O U T P r i v a t e w it h p e rs o n a -ty L a r g e 2 2 p lu s w a s h e r d r y e r 479-6153 $625 N o p e ts a p p l- a n c e s C A C H C E N T R A L L O C A T I O N 3-1 c u te V - to- r e f r i g e r a t o r n a n c o t t a g e C. e a n s to v e d is h w a s h e r $595 479-6153 te n ed y a r d s m a im m a c u - a t e cc»> S P A C IO U S O L D E R v e n ie n t U T f i r e ­ ro o m , p la c e 403 E 3 8 th C o n ic m o tio u s COupip S500 478 5739 472-2097 2 1 . ' D in i n g 9 T H N E A R R e d R ’ v e r 2-1 E x c e e n f c o n d it io n m o d e r n k it c h e n N o p e 's Q u ie ' t e n a n t $560. $200 d e p o s it 479 c 136 472 3224 h a r d w o o d f lo o r s L A R G E 3-1 h o u s e fe n c e d y a r d c a r p o r * a p p lia n c e s no p e ts s h u t t le 1423 B r i a r c l i f f $500 m o C A C H 452 9092 1 M I L E n o r t h o f c a m p u s 3 B R 2 B A 2 liv in g a re a s , 2 s t o r y h o u s e A p p r o x i m a t e ly 1300 sq. f t O a k f lo o r s r e m o d e le d n t e r io r $675 m o n t h C a ll D o u g a t 480 8273 A v a il a b le in J a n u a r y H Y D E P A R K 2 B R y a r d , s h u t t le 454 6951 a f t e r 5 OOp ” f e n c e d '2 b lo c k s n o r t h U T $365 la r g e g a s 2 H O U S E S c a m p u s a r e a c lo s e tc s h u t ­ 2 B A $750 m o t le H y d e P a r k B r o a d m o o r f ir e p la c e $500 e a v e m e s s a g e o r 346 m o n t h 835-0224 3770 L y n n T a y lo r 4 B R 2 B R 1 B A FURNISHED DUPLEXES I B R F U L L Y f u r r ¡ s h e d d u p le x C lo s e to 8 th a n d S h o a l C r e e k $500 458 1760 C L O S E T O U T B R 1 B A d u p le x W a x o r ta k e WC s h u t t le $250 m o n t h w a t e r p a id 477 9257 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES e a r t h t o n e c a r p e t s , B A B u r t o n D r a t E R iv e r s id e f i r e r o u t e W o o d b u r n i n g g a s a p p n 2 B R I O n s h u t t le p la c e s a n e e s w d c o n n e c t io n s g a r a g e 2 la r g e s u n d e c k s S h o w n b y a p p o in t m e n t C a C o n n ie C L R e e v e s R e a : E s ta te . 447 8303 $585 m o n t h W O O D L A N D a r e a s h u t t le , f ir e p la c e C A C H c a r p e t d r a p e s a l l a p p i'a n c e s L a r g e 2 2 g a r a g e , $470 le a v e n a m e a n d n u m b e r y a r d m a in t a in e d 3 2 $535 441 5574 it b e e p c a r p e t , L a r g e 4-2 2 3 N O R T H W E S T H I L L S e v e is C A C H g a r a g e d o o r o p e n e r d e c k a n d p a t io , g a s b a r b e q u e h r s id e ¡ a n d s c a p in g 6006 S h a d o w V a lle y C o v e $690 441 5574 if b e e p le a v e n a m e a n d n u m b e r C E N T R A L L Y L O C A T E D r e m o d e le d $250 D e e 472-7399, n ig h t 459-0990 A v a ila b le n o w I B R d u p le * N o p e ts L O C A T I O N R e m o d e le d C E N T R A L 2 B R 1 B A B a lc o n y , c e il in g fa n s r e f r i g e r a t o r s to v e g a r a g e 479 6153 N o p e ts $450 Leasing for Spring F U R N IS H E D E F F I C I E N C Y FOR L EA SE $285 plus E * d i s h w a s h e r , d is p o s a l ■ s w im m in g p o o l * p a tio , lo u n g e , b a r b e q u e ‘ in d iv id u a l s t o r a g e * b o o k s h e lv e s * ' i b lo c k s h u t tle * la u n d r y f a c i l i t i e s 108 W. 45th 452-1419 453-2771 H Y DE P A R K lu x u r y 1B R w it h c e ilin g S m a ll fa n s , e a r t h t o n e c a r p e t O n s h u t t le , S275 p lu s e l e c t r i c i t y L I N E L L E A P A R T M E N T S 4100 A v e A 452-7901 M g r N o 203 Q U I E T E F F I C I E N C Y S230 P L U S E W e a r e lo o k in g f o r a q u ie t , c o n s c ie n t io u s n o n - s m o k in g s t u d e n t in a a r g e e f f ic ie n c y . S m a ll q u ie t c o m p le x n e a r s h u t t le C A C H . l a u n d r y , d e a d ­ b o lts , no p e ts 458-2488 in t e r e s t e d 26T H ST. 910 W. 26th, on s h u t t l e , 1BR, g a s he at a n d c o o k in g paid. A v a i l a b l e D e c e m b e r G r e a t a p a r t m e n t N i c e s m a l l c o m ­ m u n i t y 477-2160 32ND AT IH-35 A V A L O N A P A R T M E N T S E f f i c i e n c y - $275 2B R 2B A - $395 E x t r a la r g e , e x t r a n ic e O n - s ite la u n d r y , w a lk c a m p u s 472-7604 T E L L U R I D E A P A R T M E N T S A q u ie t c o m p le x 'o c a t e d o n a t r e e im e d H y d e P a r k s t r e e t c lo s e t o s h u t t le A ll a p a r t m e n t s a r e a t t r a c t i v e l y fu r n is h e d n a v e d e lu x e a p p lia n c e s , a n d p r iv a t e ba c o m e s 1 b e d r o o m s s t a r t $325 p lu s E C o m e b y 4100 A v e C o r c a ii H u g h a t 459- 9592 UT E F F I C I E N C I E S 630 M a i d e n L a n e . $210 m o n th p lu s e l e c t r i c . 3001 D u v a l . $235 m o n t h plu s e l e c t r i c . H A R R I S O N - P E A R S O N ASSOC. 472-6201 B E E H I V E A P A R T M E N T S 4209 A V E . B L a r g e w e li- h t f u r n is h e d e f f i c ie n c y n e a r U T a n d s h u f f le D is n w a s h e r a n d w a lk - m ig f o r J a n u a r y 1. 451- io s e t P r e le a s ■ 586 453-0298 F L E U R DE LIS A P A R T M E N T S 404 E. 30th L a r g e J a n u a r y 1st O n ly 5 m in u t e s w a lk t b e d r o o m a p a r t m e n t a v a ila b le to c a m p u s W a te r g a s , c a b le p a id . $350 p lu s E If in t e r e s t e d p le a s e c a l l J e r o m e C o x , 472-6515 O L D M A i N A p a r t m e n t s , 2 5 th a n d P e a r l B R e ff ic ie n c ie s F o u r b lo c k s U T , s h u t- * ie p o o l 476-5109 N E A R U T I B R 1 B A p o o l a n d w a s h ­ r o o m S285 $305 p ;t>$ e l e c t r i c i t y 1007 W 2 6 th M g r N o 207 477 2696 S P R I N G O P E N I N G , M a r k T w a i n W a lk •3 r a m p i s S m a ll a t t r a c t i v e l y d e s ig n e d c o m p le x IB R I B A f ir e p la c e a n d d is h w a s h e r , $380 4 5 1 8 1 2 2 W e s t w o r id R e a l E s t a t e L a r g e $325 IB R I B A 1 b lo c k A V A I L A B L E J A N U A R Y 1 2 B R 2B A ' j r n i s h e d C A C H s t o p s w im m in g p o o l la u n d r y S m a ll q u ie t ( .o m p s - x S500 p lu s E G r e a t O a k A p a r t m e n t s 2900 S w is h e r 477-3388 D is h w a s h e r d s p o s a s u n d e c k la w s c h o o l, s h u tt le Q U I E T E F F IC I E N C I É S in a r e s id e n t ia l to s h u t t le d o w n - n e ig h b o r h o o d W a lk 'o w n a n c T o w n L a k e 474-9052 a f t e r 6 p m . 346-7233 D U V A L V I L L A h a s u n e x p e c t e d v a c a n :es f o r th e s p r in g s e m e s te - 2 B R 1B A , 2 B R 2 B A S t a r t in g a t $435 p 'J S E Spa o u s P o o r p la n s , p o o l, c o v e r e d p a r k in g , s n u t t le c it y b u s e s a n d s h o p p in g 4305 D u v a 451-2343 1 C e ih n g B R H Y D E P A R K a p t A v a il a b le n o w o r fa n s , p o o s n e w c a r p e t a n i " l v m y O n s h u t t le v a 'e r a n d c a b le o r jv it f e d N o p e ts S m a ü , q u ie t c o m e x $295 p lu s E C a h 451-9444 a f t e r 5 r r a n d on w e e k e n d s : SEQUOIA APTS. A v a i l a b l e N o w Luxury Eff. Furn. Only $265 Friendly Complex Water, Ga» Pd. By Owner 301 W. 38th 452-4965 r ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ TIMBERWOOD APARTMENTS Prelease for J an . I • Large Eff. $ 3 1 0 • Finest Location in UT Area • Shuttle or W a lk to Cam pus • BETTER HURRY! 26th & San Gabriel 478-1376 1 ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ > 4 CIRCLE VILLA APTS Pre leasing for Jan. I IBR Furn $315 • W ate r & Gas PAID By O w n e r • Shuttle 2323 Town Lake Circle 44 2-4 9 6 7 SU ROCA APTS. A vailab le Jan. I • 1 BR Furn. $325 • Water A Gat PAID • Walk to Campus 2400 longviaw 472-8502 f r o m $ 2 2 5 47 4-1 1U7 T R I - T O W E R S A p a r t m e n t s s p r i n g c o n ­ t r a c t f o r s a le $ 5 0 0 ( n e e d t o s e l l ) . C a l l L i n d a 4 7 9 -6 8 4 3 I B R a p a r t m e n t IF L A R G E s h u t t le w a lk - in c lo s e t, p o o l, la u n d r y r o o m , c o v e r e d p a r k in g $325 m o n th p lu s E 4 5 3 -8 U 8 U T a r e a , V I E W P O I N T A P A R T M E N T S L a r g e e f ­ f ic ie n c ie s , 2518 L e o n C lo s e to s h u t tle . F u r n is h e d . $290 p lu s E M a n a g e r N o 116, 476 7205 C L O S E H o w e ll P r o p e r t ie s , 477-9925 C A C H , U T IN $255 $435 I M U S T S E L L T r i- T o w e r s 2-2 b y J a n N ic e ly f u r n is h e d P r ic e n e g o tia b le ! C a ll 476-1915 __________________ E F F I C I E N C I E S A V A I L A B L E J a n u a r y 1 in C l a r k s v il le . E R , M S s h u t t le C A c h . $275 A B P 808 W in f lo 480-9732 L a r g e O N S H U T T L E a n d c it y bu s lin e s N e a r $250 U T p lu s E C a ll S a m C u n n in g h a m o w n e r ' b r o k e r 258 9083 f u r n is h e d e f f ic ie n c y W E H A V E e f f ic ie n c ie s a v a ila b le 1-1-83, P o o l a n d 478-6776 E l l i o t t S y s te m la u n d r y th r o u g h 2 B R s ju s t n o r t h o f c a m p u s s)85-$495 M a n a g e r O N E A N D 2 B R a p ts t o r r e n t F u r n is h e d a n d u n f u r n is h e d C o r n e r o f 3 2 n d 8. S p e e d w a y . C A C H d is h w a s h e r a n d c o v e r e d p a r k in g C a ll 477-3210 a n y t im e C a s tle A r m s A p ts G O O D D E A L N e e d to r e n t o n e b e d ro o m , o n e b a t h f o r s p r in g s e m e s te r a t T r i- T o w e r s C h e a p P le a s e c a ll 479-0444 S U B L E A S E E F F I C I E N C Y b y J a n u a r y 1st on W C w it h g r e a t v ie w $285 p lu s b ills . L is a 474-9760 __________ L A R G E C O Z Y f u r n is h e d o n e b e d r o o m w i t h s t u d y n o o k S285 p lu s e le c , a v a il a b le I m m e d 2812 N u e c e s N o 201 M ik e 476-5465 I B R L A R G E to U T A B P S400 2212 S a n G a b r ie l N o . 229 474-1837 tw o W a lk s h u t t le fo r M U S T S U B L E A S E T r i- T o w e r s s p r in g c o n t r a c t r o o m m a t e s . 2-2 s u it e N ic e P r ic e n e g o t ia b le C a ll P a u la 472-1376 L a r g e I B R a p a r t m e n t 43 R D A N D D u v a l D u v a l V illa A p a r t ­ m e n ts to s u b ­ le a s e f o r s p r in g P o o l, la u n d r y , c o v e r e d I F s h u tt le . U n f u r n is h e d to f u r - p a r k in g , ■>ished — S320-S340 m o p lu s e l e c t r i c i t y A v a ila b le J a n u a r y 83 C a ll P a t t i, 451- 2343. T R i T O W E R S s p r in g c o n t r a c t f o r s a le P r iv a t e b e d r o o m , n ic e ly ( ir m s h e d n k e r o o m m a t e s A b o u t $182 p e r m o n t h b u t p r ic e is n e g o tia b le C a ll 479-6183 o r 475 4172 A s k f o r G a y ly n n . W A L K T O c a m p u s . 1-1, A C , a p p lia n c e s , S235 p lu s E 451 8122 W e s tw o r id R e a l E s f a t e N IC E E F F I C I E N C I E S a n d IB R F i r e p la c e , c o v e r e d p a r k in g , s n u t tle , p o o l, S265-S335 C h im n e y S w e e p A p a r t m e n t s 105 W 3 8 ’ 2 . S te v e , 454-2339 o r 346-7230 N I C E 1 b e d r o o m a p t. f o r r e n t c lo s e to c a m p u s - o n ly t h r e e b lo c k s $375 A B P 478-3537 T R I T O W E R s M u s i s e ll s p r in g c o n t r a c t O n ly $575 C a ll R u th 472-6945 o r H o lly 442-5686. f t G a s a n d w a t e r 2 B R , 2 B A , 700 sq . p a id 405 E 3 H ’ F r o m $440 472-2147 451-5707. IB R $285 m o n t h 479 8175 2200 N u e c e s I m m e d i a t e m o v e - m F U R N I S H E D E F F I C I E N C Y A l l oiT ls p a id O n N R s h u t t le L a u n d r y f a c i l i t i e s M u s t s e m e s te r $330 m o n th A v a i la b le f o r J a n u a r y C a ll 445-3250 s u b le a s e s p r in g f o r W E S T C A M P U S , b e d r o o m , $325 C aH 474-1721 la r g e v e r y n ic e o n e G A R D E N G A T E lo o k in g f o r 1-2 g i r l s to s u b le a s e J a n - M n y $370 m o n t h C a ll S a lly o r S u s a n 474-1999, k e e p t r y i n g S t ill S U B L E A S E T a n g le w o o d W e s t 472-9614 I B R a p t . J a n - M a y $310 1315 N o r w a lk B 2 0 i H A L L M A R K A P A R T M E N T S P r e le a s - m g f o r J a n u a r y 1 L a r g e I B R f u r n is h e d $310 p lu s E 710 W 3 4 th 452-0561 o r 346- 7230 N E A R C A M P U S o n s h u t t l e E f f ic ie n c i e s a n d 1 b e d r o o m s $230 $285 p lu s E 451- 8532. 442-4076 T R I - T O W E R S s u b le a s e s p r in g c o n t r a c t , p r ic e v e r y n e g o t ia b le A v a ila b le J a r 10 2-2 n ic e ly f u r n is h e d M is s y 474-8534 I B R on s h u t t le L A R G E n e w c a r p e t C a ll S te v e o r B ia k e a f t e r 10 p m 445- 3201 IB R P r e - le a s in g F U R N I S H E D f o r s p r in g 4 5 th a n d D u v a l S p a n is h O a k s A p a r t m e n t s C A C H g a s a n d w a t e r p a id . O n s h u t t le a n d c i t y b u s $305 46? 0698 a f t e r 5 p m . a n d w e e k e n d s 447-9845 d a y s S K A N S E N A P A R T M E N T S A lp in e d e ­ fa n . 1-1, p a t io , b a lc o n y , c e ilin g s ig n S p r in g f r o m $305 $345 p lu s E 4205 S p e e d w a y 453-4784, le a v e m e s s a g e le a s in g 9 R O W N L E E E F F I C I E N C Y $225 A B P C lo s e to c a m p u s 478-1532 O N E B E D R O O M a p a r t m e n t a v a il a b le D e c 28 $315 m o n t h p lu s e l e c t r i c i t y ( g a s h e a tin g p a id ) F i r s t s to p I F r o u te 458 3640 e v e n m g s L A R G E 2-1 n o r t h o f c a m p u s n e a r IF s h u t t le G r a d u a t e s t u d e n t p r e f e r r e d . $250 m o n t h ¿ a p J e f f d a y s 478 9891, e v e n in g s 467 9209 I B R A P A R T M E N T in s m a ll c o m p le x in q u ie t H y d e P a r k n e ig h b o r h o o d $269 p lu s E $ ! 5 0 d e p c s ! 467-9864 a n y t im e A C R O S S F R O M , U n i v e r s i t y S tu d e n t e ' t ic ie n c y W a t e r ja s p a id $160 345-1552 a f t e r 6 p m M U S T S U B L E A S E 2 B R a p t J a n u a r y M a y 5 b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s . $380 C a ll 477 9647 a f t e r s ix W A N T T O im m e d i a t e ly s u b le a s e s p r in g s e m e s te r c o n t r a c t . 1 b e d r o o m a p * a t T r , - T o w e r s C a li a f t e r 5 00 p . m G lg i 477 7713 W n i b a r g a in y o o d p r ic e S U B L E A S E s te p S340 p lu s E A C p a id 467 2519 I B R , p o o 1, s h u t t le a t d o o r 454 4293 o r O n e T A R R Y T O W N O N E t e n a n t A B P C A C H N e a r b u s e s No p e ts . A v a i la b le J a n u a r y I s ' 476-8731 b e d r o o m M U S T S E L L T r ,- T o w e r s a p a r t m e n t s p r in g c o n t r a c t $650 t o r s p r in g s e r es t e r 472 3300 C o le tte E F F I C I E N C Y G R E A T L o c a t io n n e a r la w s c h o o l, m u s ic b u i ld in g $310 p e r m o n t h a l l b i l l s p a id C e n t u r y S ¡ u a r e A p ts C a ll 477 4546 p r e f e r a b ly a t n ig h t b e f o r e 1 1 30 b e d r o o m W A L K T O L a k e A u s t in Q u ie t a v a il a b le J a n u a r y I E n f ie ld , E R sh j t tie , w a t e r g a s p a id $290 m o n th 476-1559 a f t e r 4 1307 N o r w a lk B e t t e r < , r r y N IC E L A R G E G o o d o f f e r C a i 445 5734 e v e n in g s I B R f o r s u b le a s e on N R F R E E 2 m o n t h 's r e n t if yo u m o v e n by J a n u a r y 1 T w o -une b e d r o o m s a v a a b le 3501 S p e e d w a y O n i f 't i e $295 a n d $105 p lu s E C a ll 480-0583 •.» S P A C lO U S 2 B R 2 B A t u r n , s h e d a p ' n e a r tw o s h u t t le s o n B u r t o n D r i v e A v a ila b le J a n 1 $470 p lu s E 448 1103 L U C K Y Y O U S p le a s e m y 2 B R 'B A s t a r t in g J a n o m f o r t a b le S 4I0 3815 G u a d a lu p e . R e a g a n 451 0099 I C le a n , c lo s e M U S T S U B L E A S E L a r g e 1 B R o n s h u t ­ t le A C H T g a s p a id 2 J a n u a r y r e n t f r e e 1 C a ll 467 9174 F O R R E N T $265 m o n t h T h re e O a k s 409 W 3 8th 453-3383 454 8427 a n y t im e I B A I B R I B R A P T J a n . 1 $ 2 3 0 C a l l R o b 4 7 7 -1 7 9 4 , 4 7 6 - 0 0 7 9 a v a i la b l e - I m m e d i a t e l y o r 2 B R F O R r e n t J a n 1s t o c c u p a n c y . E n ­ f i e l d r o w a r e a . C a l l a f t e r 5 p m . 4 7 2 -2 3 2 0 . C L O S E T O c a m p u s 2 -2 , $ 4 2 5 p lu s E 1-1 , $325 p lu s E la u n d r y . L a n t a n a P o o l A p a r t m e n t s , 4 7 8 -7 5 9 8 UNFURN. APARTMENTS W A T E R W H E E L A P A R T M E N T S to g i v e you a M e r r y W a n t s C h r i s t m a s . V2 m o n t h ' s r e n t f r e e if y ou m o v e in b y J a n u ­ a r y 1. L a r g e e f f i c i e n c y . 451- 4868. LA V I L L I T A 1 an d 2 b e d r o o m s . O f f of 183 an d N. L a m a r S w i m m i n g pool, p l a y g r o u n d , l a u n d r y r o o m . C o n v e n i e n t to S h o p p in g 458-1847 F E E L C O M F O R T A B L E A t o u r lo v e ly 100 u n it c o m p le x . I a n d 2 b e d r o o m s p lu s E G a s H e a t in g a n d C o o k in g L a u n d r y a n d P o o l C o v e re d P a r k in g a n d C a b le S e c u r it y G u a r d C o n v e n ie n t to H ig h la n d M a l l S P A N I S H T R A C E A P A R T M E N T S 1212 W e s t h e lm e r 452-6047 N O R W O O D Spe nd y o u r h o li d a y s in a n e w ­ ly r e c o n d i t i o n e d a p a r t m e n t . E f f i c i e n c y an d l B R ' s . 5606 N L a m a r , 451-1917. F R E E LE AS I N G SERVI CE S tu d e n ts an d F a c u l t y - L e t us h e lp you f i n d an a p a r t m e n t , con do , d u p l e x or ho use w i t h i n y o u r b u d g e t. 346-4786 C H A P A R R A L R E A L T O R S H A B I T A T HU NTERS F re e L o c a tin g S e rv ic e 4 7 4 - 1 5 3 2 TH E H A M L E T li v i n g in N o r t h C o n v e n ie n t a n d q u ie t A u s t in T h e C R s h u t t le s to p s r i g h t in f r o n t ’ E n io y th e l u x u r y o f g a s h e a t in g , th e c o o k in g a n d h o t w a t e r p a id b y o w r e r 1 a n d 2 B R 's a v a il a b le C a ll n o w 452 3202 o r c o m e b y 1100 R e ln li T H E W A T E R F O R D U N E X P E C T E D VA C A N C Y L u x u r y 2 B R 2 B A a p p r o x im a t e l y 970 sq f t 2401 L e o n . J a n u a r y - J u ly 31 le a s e p e r io d 1983 2 p e o p le — $600 3 p e o p le — $660 P h o n e 473-8318 o r 477-3143 P AR K SI D E A P A R T M E N T S 4209 B u r n e t Rd. L a r g e 1 b e d r o o m - $275 L a r g e r 1 b e d r o o m w i t h p a ti o - $325 D e p o s it $150 W a t e r an d ga s p a id No pets L o c a te d 2 m ile s f r o m c a m p u s S e rio u s s t u d e n t s w e lc o m e A ll a p a r t m e n t s a r e in e x c e lle n t c o n d it io n J o g g in g , t e n n is a n d s w im m m y a c r o s s th e s t r e e t in b e a u t if u 1 R a m s e y P a r k T o see c a ll M r s T h o m p ­ son. 454-346? n r 454-3251 HA PPINESS IS... a 2 B R 1 B A a p a r t m e n t w i t h ga s pa id , 2 pools, r o u te . A v a i l a b l e J a n u a r y 1. $390 B r o w n s t o n e P a r k A p a r t ­ m e n t s 454-3496. IF CAMERON TRACE APTS. 1200 E. 52nd St. (1 b l o c k ea st of C a m e r o n R d . ) • C o m p l e t e r e n o v a t i o n • 2 b l o c k s to s h u t t l e • L a r g e I B R $280 • 2 B R / 1 B A $360 • W a l k to la r g e s h o p p i n g c e n t e r • Pool, L a u n d r y C a l l 480-9191, 453-6239 A s k f o r B r y a n E X C IT IN G NORTH A U ST IN ! Discover Br andywi ne S o p h is t ic a t e d 2 B R 2 B A c o n d o m in iu m t o - le a s e in p r im e lo c a t io n C o n v e n ie n t tc m a jo r s h o p p in g a n d e n t e r t a in m e n t a r e a s E n io y lu x u r io u s l i f e s t y le s w it h f a n s t h r o u g h o u t , w e t b a r w in .-'u in g d o w c o v e r in g s a n d I n v it in g k it c h e n s w i t h r e f r i g e r a t o r s a i f o r $¿35 C a ll f o r a p p o in t m e n t a t 928 3066 Enjoy Edgecliff Northwest T h is c a s s y 2 B R 11 jB A c o n d o m in iu m is lo c a t e d o n a b l u f f w it h a g r e a * v ie w o f t h e c i t y i. g h t s A u t o m a t ic s e c u r it y g a te a d d s t o th e p r iv a c y F e a t u r e s c o r n e r '¡ r e p la c e e r a r m e s k y lig h t s , a n d L a r g e s w i m m in g p o o . w it h c a b a n a a n o r e la x in g w h ir lp o o l fe n c e d p a t io f lo o r s t i l e m a k e f o r p le a s a n t s u r r o u n d in g s $600 m o n t h C a ll M o n - F n f o r a p p o in t m e n t a t 928 3066 N P C P r o p e r t y M a n a g e m e n t UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS Efficiencies, 1, 2, 3, & 4 Bedroom avail­ able for move in Today. Starting at $260. 4 swimming pools, 4 Laundries, 2 Shuttle Bus Routes, Convenient to Shopping A Entertainment and Cable T.V. is Optional. Open Mon-Fri 9-6 Sat 10-5 Sun 1-5 River Hitts Apts. 1601 Royal Crest Dr. 4 4 4 -7 7 9 7 T A R R Y T O W N . l a u n d r y , I B R . s h u f f l e $ 3 2 0 p lu s E . A v a i l a b l e J a n u a r y 1. 2 6 0 6 E n f i e l d 4 7 4 - 5 9 3 0 .______ P o o l, 1 B A d u p l e x U n f u r n i s h e d , y a r d . 2 B R N o t s u i t a b l e f o r p e t s o r c h i l d r e n $ 4 5 0 . 4 5 8 -1 7 6 0 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I B R u n f . a p t 3 8 th A N D G U A D A L U P E S 2 7 5 - S 3 0 0 'm o n t h A v a i l a b l e n o w S h o w n u n t i l 9 p . m 4 5 9 -3 5 3 8 I B R W A L K I N G d i s t a n c e U T . C A / C H , $ 3 5 0 / m o n t h 4 7 7 -9 9 2 5 , H o w e l l P r o p e r t i e s . 27 1 7 R I O G R A N D E U p s t a i r s 1 b e d r o o m e f f i c i e n c y $ 2 7 5 A B P . 4 7 2 -9 2 8 1 . I B R Í B A a v a i l a b l e J a n u a r y 1, L A R G E S m a l l c o m p l e x w i t h p o o l a n d l a u n d r y . 2 b lo c k s s h u t t le b u s $ 3 0 0 4 5 1 -3 9 4 1 o r 3 4 6 - 7235 Q U I E T Ó L d E R E n f i e l d a r e a u p s t a i r s d u p le x 2 -3 b e d , t i l e b a t h , o a k f lo o r s a n d l a r g e s u n d e c k , C A / C H , s h u t t le . s t a i r s , J a n - M a y s u b le a s e . $ 5 2 5 . 4 7 8 -6 6 4 7 2-1 D U P L E X o f f P e a s e P a r k O n s h u f f le C A / C H A v a i l a b l e J a n . 1. $ 4 4 0 . C a l l 4 7 4- 64 6 0 ________ D U P L E X F O R r e n t 2 - i 7 T y e a r o ld , 1305 M c K l e C o v e . N e a r R e a g a n H i g h . $ 4 25 . 9 2 8 -4 2 4 2 4 5 9 -1 4 8 2 T R A V I S H e T g h T s a b l e J a n I B R , 1B A A v a i l ­ 1s t $ 3 5 0 / m o n t h . R o la n d 4 4 3- S U B L E A S E S P L I T l e v e l o n e b e d r o o m $ 3 4 0 m o n t h p lu s E N o 11 44 16 33 R o y a l C r e s t 445-3454, k e e p t r y i n g . 49 37 . ROOMS I B R 2 B L O C K S $2 6 0 p lu s b i l l s P r iv a t e r o o m $ 1 6 0 A B P 4 8 0 -0 7 6 6 _________________ - fu r n is h e d f r o m U T P R I V A T E F U R N I S H E D d o r m r o o m s , k it c h e n p r iv ile g e s C o -e d S 1 75 -S 20 0 s e ­ c u r i t y $1 3 0 N e a r U T C a ll 4 7 7 -1 5 2 9 R E S P O N S I B L E G R A D f e m a l e S h a r e c l e a n , q u i e t , f u r n i s h e d h o m e C R s h u t ­ t l e . $ 2 0 0 p lu s u t i l i t i e s . C a r o l 9 2 8 -2 4 7 5 . H Y D E P A R K o n e b lo c k f r o m s h u t t l e T w o b e d r o o m s , b u i l t - i n s , n o n s m o k i n g , f a c u l t y o r g r a d u a t e p r e f e r r e d . 4 5 4 -9 0 7 1 C h r i s t i a n W A N T E D N O N S M O K I N G f e m a l e to s h a r e 3 b e d r o o m c o n d o in S W A u s t i n $ 1 5 0 p lu s ’ i u t i l i t i e s 4 4 3 -8 9 0 1 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D M - F , 4 -2 , C A C H , w o r t h . 8 3 7 -6 8 3 1 k e e p t r y i n g , f e n c e , f i r e p l a c e , c a b l e , s h a r e b ill s Q U I E T , N O N S M O K I N G f e m a l e w a n t e d to s h a r e N o r t h A u s t in f u r n i s h e d h o u s e t o U T C a l l S u s a n , 8 3 7 -9 3 2 9 C i t y b u s K e e p t r y i n g - l a t e e v e n i n g s O K . A v a i l ­ a b l e s p r i n g s e m e s t e r R O O M M A T E S T O s h a r e 2 B R 2 B A ~ f u r - n is h e d c o n d o $250 m o n t h p lu s E C lo s e to c a m p u s C a l l 477-5626 a f t e r 6 p m R E S P O N S I B L E F E M A L E f o r n ic e 2 B R 11 z B A a p a r t m e n t N o r th A u s t in - 10 m i n ­ te n n .s u te s g r e a t r o o m m a t e 1 $174 50 p lu s 2 E 837 6676, k e e p t r y in g to U T M ic r o w a v e , p o o l F E M A L E R O O M M A Í E w a n te d to s h a r e la r g e e f f ic ie n c y H y d e P a r k C R r o u te $165 a ll b ills p a id 451 0456 F E M A L E s p r in g w a s h e r $153 p lu s 4671 3 B R R O O M M A T E 'o r 2 B A h o u s e C R s h u t t le 1 b ills N ic e a r e a 459 n e e d e d I m m e d ia t e ly R O O M M A T E W A N T E D N o n s m o k e r 2 b e d b a t h o t t R iv e r s id e $189, m o n t h u t >11 tie s C a n 443-0720 a f t e r 2 0 0 p m s tu d io u s f e m a le M A L E F E M A L E n e e d e d tc s u b le t d o b le r o o m a t P ’ a / a 25 a t d is c o u n t r a t e C u r r e n t c o n t r a c t r a t e :S $850 f o r s p r ,'-¡ s e m e s t e r D is c o u n t r a t e ¡s $700 a " bt is p a id f o r e n t ir e s p r in g s e m e s te r K i t he T . r iu d e d , a n d o n 'y a b :o c k f r o m P e a s e P a r k Ca D e v o n a t 479 -0 '3 6 0100 t w o b lo c k s h o r n W C s h u t t le if no a n s w e r ca 472- ROOMMATES F E M A L E R O O M M A T E 2-1 n ic e o ld e r h o m e c o n v e n ie n t ly $200 p lu s b ills C o n t a c t A n n e o r J o h n 441-2031 lo c a t e d F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R 3-2 h o u se , w a s h e r d r y e r , fe n c e d y a r d . a ¡ r p u r if ie r . C A C H , no p e ts o r c h ild r e n . $195, Vj b ills 926 1664 F E M A L E f u r ­ N O N S M O K E R n is h e d , no p e ts , w a s h e r , m ic r o w a v e O i­ t o r f a r e a 444 7369 K r is t in . $230, d e p o s it 2 B R c a r M A L E R O O M M A T E 3 B R 2 8 A, N R , $120 m o . 1 ? e le c A v a ila b l e D e c 15th o r J a i' is * 44c 0353 to F E M A L E G R A D s t u d e n t o r o v e r 21 s h a re n ic e 2-1 a p t E R r o u te . P r e f e r s o m e o n e in lib e r a l a r t s , r e a s o n a b ly n e a t n o n s m o k e r P e n c h a n t f o r B r it is h h u m o r 472 5673 d e f in it e p lu s J e n n y $175 p lu s b : H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D 10 s h a re la r g e 4 -2 ,/3 N o r t h A u s t in h o m e . $ 1 " “ ' >/< u t i l i s e s N o n s m o k e r s om s h u t t le 928-1034 C R Ne to f o r s p r in g s e m e s te r R O O M M A T E W A N ! E D a p t s p e n d u p t o s /7 5 C a R- *¡ar c W ill 1 480 2 B R js t be N E E D F E M A L E r o o m m a t e s e m e s te r B e a u t if u l 2-2 d u p m s tu d io u s n e a * a n d e a s , g o i p lu s E A v a i la b le 12 19-82 443 R E S P O N S I B L E YE T t, n ?v ter * w c o ittr n u n lc a 'o n s st s ’ > * : c o* fre q u e n t C 1 o r e q u iv a le n t to sh a re 3-1 ho n eig h bo rh oo d ■ n g fa n s J a n ?708 A s k • , c ■ r ' I b i lls 45 I $250 p lu s L o r r e r d *p ' I M M O V I N G N e e d ' . fm d m y *w i: piex $150 plus E. A va ila b le i C a n 442 >604 s u p e r r o o m m a t e s G A V M A . • h e r d e d t ; >* F E M A L E T O s h a r e o n e b e d r o o m f u r n s h e d sn * t :e p o o ' $165 pi s h a '1 e le r t n c i t y W i l l $ u b ¡e a s e C a l ' T e r e s a 44? 4830 N O t 2BA P R O F E S S I O N A L W O M A N W ith yc ,n g d a u g h t e r w a n ts w o m a n 26 38 sh a ^ e 3 B R ' a p t N o r t h w e s t H- s 15 m in u t e s to U T $160 p lu s O n y b e d r o o m S m o k e r E v e n - n g s w e e k e n d s 3 4 6 -2 0 '5 ' u t tie s P o o : T e n n s f u r m t u r e n e e d e d C a t * I B E R A l r a t e to Si ba r a l e N O N Shar* I N G F E M / b e d r o o m u r $100 c 1 E ?edeo ed S 442 5 1 A v a a b le D e c 26 F e m a l e r o o k / • a s h e r d r y e r p r m g 8J $20 ’ •es 454 7867 A N H O U S E R B O Y S . W A L K I N G d i s t a n c e U T A B P . S190 -S 2 1 5 . H o w e l l P r o p e r t i e s . 4 7 7 -9 9 2 5 . _ G O O D A L L W O O T E N s p r i n g o p e n in g . M u s t s e ll f a s t . $ 1 6 5 / m o n t h . C a l l 4 7 8 -2 9 5 7 , k e e p t r y i n g E F F I C I E N C Y R O O M S a v a i l a b l e J a n u - a r y 1. A B P . N e a r U T F o r ' m o r e i n f o r ­ m a t i o n c a l l R i c a r d i n C o m p a n y , 4 7 4-5 98 1 S U B L E A S E D O B I E f o r s p r i n g a n d s a v e $ $ $ ! G r e a t v i e w , g o o d s e c u r i t y . C a l l n o w 4 7 9 -8 7 4 2 , 4 7 7 -7 0 2 7 , f u r n i s h e d W A L K T O c a m p u s . L a r g e r o o m , s h a r e d b a t h , A B P $ 1 3 5 . 4 5 1 -8 1 2 2 . W e s t w o r i d R e a l E s t a t e C O N T E S S A C O - E D d o r m . F e m a l e n e e d ­ e d to s u b l e a s e s p r i n g c o n t r a c t . W C s t o p in f r o n t . 4 7 7 - 3 8 6 9 l e a s i n g r o o m s P R I V A T E S I N G L E o c c u p a n c y n o w f o r s p r i n g s e m e s t e r U n i ­ v e r s i t y m e n / w o m e n , v e r y c lo s e , w e s t c a m p u s , k i t c h e n p r i v i l e g e s , c a r p e t e d , C A C H M a n a g e r 4 7 7 -1 5 2 9 o r l e a v e m e s ­ s a g e 3 4 6 -8 2 4 7 P R I V A T E R O O M f o r s u b le t s p r i n g s e ­ m e s t e r C lo s e to c a m p u s B e lo w c u r r e n t r a t e s . C a l l n i g h t s 4 7 8 -0 7 1 0 . le a s e . M u s t $ 7 0 0 o r b e s t o f f e r C a l l S c o tt 48 0- P L A Z A 25 A s s u m e s p r i n g s e ll 9504 ________ S A V E $150 on s u b le a s e $700 f o r s p r in g s e m e s te r a t P la z a 25 d o r m K it c h e n s , p o o f w d s, c o e d L e a v e p h c r e n u m b e r f o r D o n a t 346 4662 o r 472-0100 O P E N I N G A T C o n te s s a W e s t f e m a le d o r m i t o r y f o r s p r in g s e m e s te r C a ll S ta- c 479 8934 i m m e d ia t e ly P L A Z A 25 C o n s id e r a b le s a v in g s on s u b ­ le a s e $700 o r b e s t o f f e r C a ll J o c e ly n 473 0344 a f t e r 6 00 p .m Q U I E T H I L L c o u n t r y h o m e K it c h e n p r iv il e g e s s t u d e n t f a c u lt y p r e f e r r e d $125 p lu s 2 0 e l e c t r i c i t y 263 2928 o r 835 0440 e x t 2591 G r a d u a t e E X C L U S I V E TOWNHOUSE G r a d u a t e s t u d e n t h a s r o o m t o r r e n t a l A v a 'a b le n o w t h r o u g h M a y 83 A ll u ti tie s p a id s w im m in g p o o f e x e r c is e r o o m s a u n a w a s h e r d r y e r L o c a te d i h 15 a n d O it o r f S e r io u s in q u ir ie s o n ly B y a p p o in t m e n t o n ly CaM J a im e 445 5664 a f t e r 10 p . m FOR RENT F R O Z E N M A R G A R I T A a c h in e s f o r la r g e p a r t ie s M a r g a r ' a v i f e J a y B r m a t 454 9724 N ig h t s 837 0890 837 3904 c o c k t a il O F F I C E S U I T E N e a r c a m p u s P r o fe s S io n a d e c o r C o n v e n ie n t p a r k in g R ea s o n a b le r e n t C a li P r o f e s s o r C a d e n h e a d 340-1917 y.V'H’U ¡ e a s e a ' N E E D M A L E tc a s s u m e m y ' a th e C a s t' an n e w or f o r 'h e s p r in g sc m e $ t e r C a r 472-0283 x e e p t r y in g 479-8255 S A N D I A C O -O P B e a i ' f u 9 b e d r o o m h o u s e n e a * c a s t a m p u s s e ” a-- th e e w y e a r 473-8513 472 i.09 , o o p e r a t v e h o u s e m a te s f< r 474 139? /e g e t a * s e e k c W E H A V E M F o p e n in g s f o r th e s p r in g s e m e s t e r W e a r e lo o k g f r r e s p o n s P ie m d V id u a -s t o I 'v e m a s m o k e * r ee se h o id H o u s e o f C o m m o n s C o o p e r a t ve .610 R > I 'ld e 476 7905 A p p . h IW v e g e t e r ia n h< o o p e r a 'iv e c le a n CA SK - R E B A T E s p r in g s e m e s t e r w a t t in g s'S C a 1' 479 6520 T w o v a c a n c ie s 'o r in C a s t ' 'a n . A v o id N E E D M A L E to ass m e cas» a ' • ' »• o n t e s s * D o r m Ca k e - f h 479 649 M A . E N E E D E D to a s s u m e s p r in g c c t r a ■ 1 ir D o b c D o r m C a h 476 .'743 a m Q U I E T H I L L T O P r e s id e n t a 1 ne g h b o r i o p ha s open m er P e g -n n in g J a n u a ry F» e n d !. - k , ' e a ' v e g e 'a r a n m e a s Ca 478 088u o r c o m e b y '80S P e a r a v O I D W A s u b le a s e c o ' IN G ' r a í * a t C a s t an st$ N e e d *e ' a e • in c lu d e s 9 m e a o a n C o n ta c r M a n d y 474 8474 CO- OP L I V I N G A r e y o u t ir e d Ot d o r m i t o r y l i v i n g 7 o r is y o u r a p a r t m e n t g e t t ng *00 sm<3 T 9 h o m e o o p e r a 1 ve i>oxed m e a 's a * e e * v m g C o e g e H o u s e s o f f e r s y o u a c h o ic e o t s in g le o r doufc) e r o o m s t O ii c a t io n a a n o soc a p r o g r a m s a n d a <’ n g a n d w h o le ho se o t - w o rk n o t o g e t h e r C o r p e - s 'a x e p a r t th e d e m o c r a t ic r u n n in g o f t h e " " o u s e A p p fo r s p r m g s e m e s te r F o r m o r e n f e m - a ' on c a ' 476 5678 a ' o n s a r e n o w P e irig f r e n d s 'a k e n ' C A S T I L I A N y c - e , n a b e to r e s id e a ‘ , h e C a s ' s t a sem e s te r b e c a se o f a « o f o n t a c ' u s t o d a y so f t t* w e nna - r n a m e on o u r S p r i n g s e m e s te r is t S to p b y f o r a t o u r P h o n e I 478 T h e C a s * 7323 S a n A an W O M E N A R E A S S E T S TO CO-OPS T h e iC C n e e d s a fe w g o o d p e o p le t o ' s p r n g v a c a n c ie s W e n a v e 7 ho ses se to c a m p u s G o o d fo o d a n d w a r - ta rn ly a - e m e m b e r o w n e d a n d c o n t- . ed R e n t f r o m $240 $295 b 2 3 rd o r c a n 476 1957 In c lu d e s 'u o d a n a a s P le a s e c o m e b y o u r o f f 'c e a t 510 W a t m o s p h e r e h o u s e s A M A L E I in . E n d 1 s e m a t e w a - *ed 5 W ere right where | you want us. R i i e n a V ' s L i ; \ i i h t i n , f c v a v ' < ñ (5 1 2 ) 474-5659 p R 1/ O A M T e S UTILITIES P/4 ID QUI ET HALLS STUDY AREAS ACTIVITIES KITCHENS LAUNDRIES EASY LIVING EASY PAYMENT 6 BLOCKS WEST O f CAMPUS ON 25TH 2 5 0 5 LONGVIEW 5 1 2 / 4 7 2 - 0 1 0 0 Leasing for Spring Do uble o c c u p a n c y 5 2 10 mo. Co -e d do rm acros$ the street from cam pus 474-6905 j a o s IN THE D A R K A B O U T A PLACE TO LIVE??? N ew m an Hall Double & Single Rooms Available for Spring DOUBLE $ 1 7 5 5 per session SINGLE $ 2 0 4 8 per session 1 7 meals included WOME N ONLY 2 0 2 6 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 6 - 0 6 6 9 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD LOOK BEFORE YOU LEAP. Before you decide where you re going tc Use Lh.s spring we think you should know as much as possible about the various housing alte rnative s in Austin We do beoause we think it s the only way you can make an in te llig e n t dec i sion And because we think you 11 be im pressed when you com pare our en vironm ent to others you ve seen A fte r all what other residence hall has in door parking and sw im m in g a game room exercise room and dining room all under one roof ' Just v is it us we re a half block fro m cam pus on 24th Street or send for our it s up to free brochure you But at least you 11 know what you re getting into It s fun to read and it s in fo rm a tiv e A fter that I I I 1 I I I I I I I I L — ( T i p a n d m a i l to: T h e C a s t i l i a n , • > m Nan \ n t o n i u , t u s t i n , T X 78705 The Castilian For o n ce in m y life, I want to look b efore I leap send m e one of your brochures Name Address City ________________________________________________ State-----— S p — P le a s e R O O M M A TES R O O M M A T E S SERVICES HELP W A N T E D HELP W A N T E D F E M A L E R O O M M A TE over 21 wanted for South Austin condo. Fireplace, washer/dryer, pool, Spring '83. $180/month plus VS bills. 443- 5740 tennis courts W A N T E D OLD L IO N E L trains. Paying top prices Please call Ed 453-0907. _____ faculty R E S P O N S IB L E . M A T U R E member needs to rent or sublease apt, condo or garage apt from June 1983 to August 19Í4 835-1278 after 6 p m V IS IT IN G P R O F E S S O R desires hous­ ing for family including 3 children. P re ­ fer furnished Jan-June 453-8091 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES liberal hours! 80 page G R E A T p a y handbook "Successful Cocktail Wai- tressmg A-Z on waitressing $4 50 (in­ cludes $1 00 postage handling). V.L. Karp, P O Sox 18624-IT), Austin, TX 78760 Four weeks for delivery PERSONAL V E R Y A T T R A C T IV E coed m istress wanted. 18-22 Box 307. 4502 South Con­ gress, Austin, T X 78745 V O L U N T E E R S N E E D E D for research study of young (18-25 yrs / alcoholics in recovery. Req uires only 1 ¡-2 hours of vour tim e Anonym ous Call M r B e n ­ nett. R N 443-7811. E D G A R C A Y C E sludy group form ing •> nday night sessions Ser'ous appii- ants CAM after 5pm or on weekends, 146-1681 ___________ F E M A L E F A N S of the subtler aspects ot the S to ry of O and Venus in F u rs W rite the C^atea Society W e share the ’ pore at y 725 Congress No. 242. Aus- tin 78701 w i s h TO ""ee* hem grad student at with Arizonan H a w e y e 's S a t '■ i 8 00 sam e place js Nex* Sat B onde across table f$t f U N L O V IN G ‘. C U R A B L E rom antic - ' . a ' e it seeks t s thin, pretty lady iw e n e v ia r for datmg parties, athletics E r ha n je pic e num bers to P O Box 10998 ’.tin, 78766 - die w ndering ■ res pt N 622 MUSICAL INSTRUCTION P E R E N C E D P A N O G U T A R B eg in n ers advanced U T de- c teacher ire p A f’er y p o- 459 4082 TRAVEL C R E W a 52 sa boat B A H A M A S through the B a rlam as ja n 2nd-9th F iv e islands in seven days Only party experi- ence necessary 454 6983 or S325 467 0108 i T R A V E L I N G T O E u r ope next su m m e r? B u y your E u ra :ilpass now betore pnces go up Ja n I Passe s v a d 6 months after h s hiostel R a in b ow Tours a c 713- :ards ava. a r e a*so Ca 681-2733 N E E D R I D E t o F lo r da between De 17 22 Can B erthibid at 454 1017 Urgent* R I D E R TO Spr tngfiei d Mo or v • c ’ nTty C h ristm as breair 476- 198 2 town T ry j s C a '’ B E S T A I R F A R or com e by W aniderfu!i* T ravP 474 5566 2404 R ) G rand e F E M A L E G R A D student w ants to share ap artm ent or house with other grad. W illin g to m ove into your p lace or look for new place. Ask for Cher 471-6159. 346-2015. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted to share condo W a lk to cam pus. P a r t y a little - study too $250/month plus ''3 bills Rent neg C all K a th y 480-8344 F E M A L E N E E D E D to share 1BR IB A S R shuttle. Call 443-1765 after 5 p m $159 plus VS E . L O V E L Y C O Z Y C O N V E N IE N T . 2 B R , I'/ jB A duplex 2 miles to cam pus needs a nonsmoking scrupulous individual for 2nd bedroom by Ja n 1st. Theresa 444- 4340 W A N T E D : M / F Close to cam pus $200 month plus bills 467-8678 2BR IB A f e m a l e n o n s m o k e r , budget con­ scious, to share 2-2, ','3 E $147, shuttle, own bedroom and bathroom G in a 442- 1957 Peggy 448-1111. H O U S E M A T E Í S ; N IC E 4 d R 2BA near 45th on CR shuttle $137 50 plus x bills Fenced yard, screened porch, garage studio, cats welcom e C all Abby 467- 8626, Suzie 478-0817 M A L E S T U D E N T S Furnished rooms in house A v ailab le spring sem ester Open Ja n 1 N ear C R Cali Scott 926-2421 6408 Kenilw orth $150 month plus 4 utilities, deposit D I S C R E E T G A Y m ale for nice 2BR house Hyde P a rk $215 plus utilities Box 43939 Austin 7875) E A S Y G O 'N G fema e needed for 2-1 apt near shuttle own room gorgeous view $205 A B P 445 5506 Heidi Keep tryin g S P A C IO U S 4 2 AC CM shuttle smoking 467 2127 fans dryer, tem ale room m ate no pets no L I B E R A l M A L E ' B R apt Speedwav and E 13rd $120 ¡ E Tom day 478 8782 n.gh’ 476 4836 to share H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D 4 B R 2BA house n W est Cam pi s area. $147,25 . s bills Nonsmoking fem ale p-eferreo or mate 472 2113 M A T U R E F E M A L E t s n a re 3 B R h om e n N E Austin * S "■ i e part m o n th 10 p m J I 6Ü b ills 926 3356 a exa- ;■ a 6 t R O O M M A T E T O am enities reserved pa->< mg No shuttle. j E S te p h e n L e a v e m e s s a g e $225 p 327 0853 ir e 2 1 2 na A s BR apar pool, iacu, 478-0817 ¡ve in peaut g P, : e m a l e r o o m m a t e m er ’ • ocks •' : ,T v- z $275 per montt A 8 F . N O N S M O K I N G - E M a ’ N E ondC " , W D tjm .s n e d $200 , 1731 F E M A L E F O R iB R ap R verside area A p .a - tie r 443 7949 M A LT F O R 3 bed' $120 r " p s 473-28007\ Start here > J c t w o r / \ / > ou u*on t b* §orry Good for haii A Spring Semen tern 2*13 Rio Grande So.20$ LKunM \->u Austin fnr ot Ram and snow are expected Thursday across parts o< the lower Plains states, and some snow is expected for sections of the mid-Plains Fair weather is expected in most other areas except for possible showers in Florida A cold front is moving into the Atlantic states TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE W E D N E S D A Y S P U Z Z L E SO LV E D ACROSS 1 Record 5 Festive 9 Sut nequ> t y 4 Arab m gulf .7 5 Periods 1 6 F o r - s t loddess 17 Antas 19 Charged particle Wes’ Nothing Like — — 21 A rm y unit Abbr . 3 A Maxweii 24 Esteems 27 Garment 29 Dodged 31 Color 35 37 Arachnids 39 Channel 40 Discord goddess 42 Instruments 44 Forwarded 45 Hues 47 Whitened 49 Foot 50 More tense 5„ Sends money 54 Set down Pl€ t>2 Dog or cat 64 A Barrymore 65 Nurse Cavell 67 Lathe e g :ke1 71 Actor Sl> inner 72 Sole ' J Dakotas 74 Style 75 Enthusiasm DOWN 1 U p ------ 2 Ammonia compound 3 Talking 4 Hard surface 5 Prepare 6 Tobe part 7 Enrich 8 Holding 9 Oklahoma city 10 Music etc 2 WOrds 11 Plane area 12 Seth s son 13 Frog genus 18 Whey one 2 words 46 Water body 22 Peak 25 Emer d 48 Worse 26 Arrangement 51 Shred 53 Tell all 28 Gloomy — 55 Magazine 30 Forbid 32 Groton, for 57 Girl s name 58 Actress Terry 59 Remainder 60 Unemployed 61 Order 63 In — Wholly 66 Bird 68 Victory 33 Row 34 Chow 35 Bazaar 36 Waterless 38 Oregon city 41 Dagger 43 Kind of trailer 69 Comp pt F O R E V E R L A T E to work, class or re­ hearsals due to oversleeping? Try my telephone wake-up service Reasonable rates 441-2208. N E E D A P.O. Box? UT area. No waiting list. Call 477-1915. 504 W. 2 4 th ._________ LO N E STAR Moving and Packing. Large or small ¡obs. 7 days. Dependable and reasonable 476-6319 P R O F E S S IO N A L T E L E P H O N E ~ an­ swering 7 day service, unlimited calls. Pagers also available Casey's Answer­ ing Service, 600 W 28th, 480-8440 P R O O F R E A D IN G FO R papers, arti­ cles, theses, etc Professional writing and editing experience and Masters de­ gree Sue, 458-9473. 3' C O P IE S self-serve 5’ full service cop­ ies with an Alpha Graphics student/fac­ ulty discount card Get your free card at Alpha Graphics on 2000 Guadalupe. Hours 8 a m -8 p.m. M-F, 9 a.m .-5 p.m. Saturday, noon-5 p m Sunday Phone 473-8669 L E T A U ST IN 'S least expensive phone answering service answer your Import­ ant calls Don't miss out on selling your merchandise or your service 477-1915 10 30-5 30 G O IN G ON " S A B B A T I C A L " ? V e r y T in sponsible fem ale graduate student, over thirty, seeks tem p o rary H O U S E -S IT - T lN G or S U B L E T arran g em en t in com ­ fortab le home, for spring and possibly sum m er semesters 476-7193 E X E R C I S E A N D dance through the hol­ id ays Dec 20-Jan 27th U n iv e rsity Y, 2330 G uadalupe B a rb a ra 467-2887 STUDENTS Pass finals, instant recall. Im ­ prove retention and com­ prehension Please call 467- 8955. L e a v e m essage on recorder please HOUSESITTING P ro fe ssio n a l w ork ng w om an very resp onsib e w ill exp ertly m am tam your home n your ab ­ sence The v ery fmest of care R eferences mcluded 345-7340 TUTORING E N G L IS H T U T O R IN G $10 nr See typ ng ad 23 ye ars exper. proofreading. •• ’earning co ege En g s’ Maude C ard w e P- D 479-8909 T . T O P N G B Y e x p e rien ced m ath tea her spec a izing in M305G M403K M808A M808B Ca 837-7459 m a t h P H Y S ■ CS tjtor-ng E ig h t years tutor Greg. 454 • xpet e r :e as TA a ; 9945 N A T i . E S P E A K E R of F re n c h G re a t *i ■ r ,ng experience Reasonable flexi- ble 477-7057 M A T H T U T O R Over seven years of pro­ fessional service in helping U.T. students make the GRADE!!! Struggling! t Frustrated on tests ( Coll Of com* by tor appointment Moth Mo’ h M 302 3031 M S08A 8 M 403k M 316k t M 3I8K M 305 G M 427K L M 407 M-311 M-b08IA 8 Shy*K* Phy 301 Shy 302k I Phy 303k L Phy 327k I Ch*mnlry C horn-301 Ch.m 302 Cbom 610 A 8 Acc-311 312 Slat 309 Eco-302 303 Don t put this off until the night before an exam. It's too late then... • 2 blocks from compyt plus parking • V # r y reasonable rate* • Lots of patience ' • Also Htgh school courses m the a b o v e subjects UT Placement Test P r e p a r a tio n and SAT GRf Review i n language you H understand P a t l u c e y $ T u to r in g S e r v ic e 600 W 28th St. 458-5060 477-7003 Off. 103 MISCELLANEOUS re jrds st ■ N S T A \ T C ASH pa d for used books and thousands ot usea books n • p in anc see for .o u r se:t Co- d N orth D scount Boox Store 4101 Gua da ,pe 45j 303 s W A P M E E T Satu rd ays Sundays 210! B en W hite outside Gibsons Ben W hite F ea M a r ket 444 039 FA ST CASH W e ¡oan on most anything of value We buy, sell gold and silver 5134 Burnet Rd 454-0459 892-0019 HELP WANTED E s ta b ¡shed w e 11 xnown progress ve m a le des gner w rite r w shes to ne;D D g w th education costs of one or two needy super or acad em ic artistic studen’s n exchange *or c r e a tiv e chores and pa'd p articipation m A F iR M planned m u !’ ’ tiem ble •a.eted corporation Hours Pro m p t response re nterv ew Lig ht drm k ers tem a es cigarette smokers preterred Be open, sincere Send short 'e su m e w >h or w *hout photo to ’ 112 W ith S 're e t No 102, 78703 g ib in ’y R E S E A R C H S U B J E C T S Needed tc ate spee h sam ples for nte P r i . a t e -esearch com pany $3 JS hour plus paid holidays and atten dance bonus Work 12 nours week m ornm g sh.tt M W F Sam-noon or a fte r noon sh.tt M W F 1 5pm schedule not flex Die Pe rm an en t position must De E n g lish speaking a nd have good hear ng D Y N A S T AT INC 2704 Rio G rand e 476-4797 G R E E K 'S P IZ Z E R IA Full and part time help. We need sever­ al delivery people Hourly wages, plus percentage plus tips Waltpersons and experienced cook Apply in person at Greek's Pizzeria, 2814 Nueces S P R I N G R U S H '83 A T T H E U N I V E R S I T Y C O O P Now hiring for temporary jobs starting first week In January for our rush sea­ son. Apply now! Stop by the personnel office for schedules and applications EO E O PPO R T U N IT Y FOR SHARP, AM BITIOUS P E O P L E Looking for som ething more out of life 7 Set your own hours in a pleasant, d igni­ fied business E x ce lle n t earning poten­ tial (6 00-7 30 p rr . 471-2209 F o r appointment, call T E X A S C O M M E R C E B A N K - A U S T I N Needs a perm anent p art tim e teller 2 15-7 15pm M o n d ay- F rid ay 3 out of eve ry 4 Satu rd a ys 8am-4pm with one day off during the week High school P s 2 years bank, cash handling or pub­ ic contact ekperience Should be able to com m it for 1 ye ar and be able to begin em ploym ent by D ecem b er 20th. Call or come 'I 476-6611 ext 2506 E O E A A E 1 2 t i m e p o s i t i o n as Pro p erty In ven to ry O e r k in State Agency accounting d ep artm ent M ain tam p roperty record system and must be phys t a J y able to occasionally move ightweight furniture and equipment ideal for person n school that can work eifhen 8-12 or 1-5 each day S a la ry $417 month Can Personnel O ffice of T X Dept of M ental Hea th and M ental R e ­ t a r d a 'on at 465-461 i for appointment An eq ua: opportunity a ffirm a tiv e action em ployer D E S K C l E R K motei part tim e 9prr • 7am e ve ry other night Also 2pm-9pm 6 Ap p licant must De a v ailab le Ja y s through sum m er and fa semesters M ust be aersonable nea' appearing, some couege experience m qeanng with for law stu­ public, dependable dent Apply in person n o m in as West W nd Motei, ih-35 and A irp ort B 'v d Idea C H R S T M A S M O N E Y pius a sum m er healthier you C a ’ Heid ¿43-3541 A G R O W i N G firm needs some Dart tim e key personne to devote 10-15 hours week for rew ard ing s a la ry F o r appoint­ ment please call contact F a r shad before noon a* 480-9479 leave your nam e and phone number on 480- 7016 very q uickly If no answ er W A N T E D - F U L L or p art tim e help from N ovem ber thru D ecem ber 3! sa l­ ary open Contact Red Co eman s L i ­ quor a ' 214 363-5485 A D M I N I S T R A T I V E A S S IS T A N T Start s a a r . $4 hour M ornings 3-5 days week Ca 467*8340ever,mgs P E R S O N A L C A R E a ss's’ a ” ’ — ust be U T studen’ needed for m a e a sabied U T students and live In for so ' ” g Apply Student Health Ce-ter Room. 339 o rc e n Sher A en. 471-4955 ext 66 $7.00 P E R hour December 23-28 Deliv­ ery work, must be dependable P a rt tim e 476-5167. C O L L E G E ST U D E N T S! Jobs availabieT Start today. $300/week average earn­ ings for part time and full time employ­ ees. Be neat, car helpful. Apply in per­ son only, 8am-lpm Monday-Saturday at Electrolux, 1113 S Congress. TO K YO S T E A K House has Immediate openings for cashier and busperson. Call 453-7482 after 2:30 p.m. T E A C H E R S W O RK In the Austin area last 2 weeks in December and earn up to S1500 For more Information please call 1-622-3112 or write P.O Box 114, Somer­ set, TX 78069 _ _ in F E M A L E S OR couples evening babysitting 3 children Please call 327-1494 after 5 p.m. Interested L IV E - IN single house parent needed for small residential treatment center for children ages 4-12 years. Experience with emotionally disturbed children pre­ ferred App'ications or resumes accept­ ed until Dec 13 at 3804 Ave. B between 8am-5pm M-F. No calls please N E E D E D . P A R T time typist, minimum 70wpm, 1-6.15 p m. Monday-Friday each week Contact Jim Forbis 472-2681 for appl M A N A G E R FOR small student apart­ ment complex Must have experience in maintenance and leasing, and be a full or part time student. Must have car, no pets Call 346-7233 for interview Local references required. A R E Y O U friendly, enthusiastic, de­ pendable, and going to be in town over sem ester b re ak 7 Apply in person at The Red Tom ato and B an an as Restaurants A ccepting applications all positions G re a t work environm ent Apply be­ tween 4 30-5 30 at 1601 G uadalupe C H IN E S E R E S T A U R A N T S need h e lp a t various locations Apply In person at 2717 G uadalup e Eg g ro ll Stand P A R T T I M E retail help evenings, 5-10, on 6th St Phone Theresa, 479-0875 N E E D C H R IS T M A S m o n e y 7 SeM flo­ w ers through the holidays Cash paid d aily 288-1102. I N F A N T C A R E and light housekeeping m our home Hours and s a la ry negoti­ able Transportation required W estgate are a 44!-5702 after 5 00 p m energetic personality P H O N E R E C E P T I O N I S T with w arm , m a tu re Lig ht typing S ta rt Ja n u a r y Interest m fitness p referab le Jaz ze rcise classes M o n d ay- F rid ay 9-5 You pick 2 morn- ngs oft $3 50 hour you can study be­ tween ca lls Bobbie 345-7778 Cindy 327- 6645. F re e D O W N T O W N S A L A D bar needs full tim e soup and dessert cook W eekdays 8 - 3 30 W ill tram Ex perienced p referred 472-5600 W A N T E D M A R Y Poppins um b rella optiona to look after 2 girls 8 and 14 w hue parents worn Need for after- noo'ns M ust like children and have re li­ ab le transportation C om petitive salary. C a r 345-5572 m o rr ngs and evenings 346-7180 afternoons only Ask for Lee H O U S E K E E P E R P O S S I B I L I T Y oT b a­ bysitting. 2 fu r davs week, prefer T ues­ d ay and F n d a y . Need own tra n sp o rta­ d or dependable. Call 472-2799 afte r 4 p m tim e S T U D E N T N E E D E D dispatcher shift Satu rd a y Sunday 3pm- llp m Apply 4910 B u rn et Tues-Fri I0am-4pm for p art B R I D G E R S C R E E K needs kitchen help and n c’ wadpersons Ple ase apply Tuesday Wednesday. Thursd ay from 2- 4 30 p.m only. 414 B arto n Springs No phone calls please N E E D B A B Y S I T T E R M -F 900 30 class sprmg sem ester Hyde P a r k area De- ta s flexible Pau 'e tte 454-8862 m- - I m m MM P iZ Z a l~Hutl D E L I V E R RIGHT IN YOUR OWN NEIGHBORHOOD! PART TIME & FULL TIME America’s #1 pizza restaurant chain now delivers... and that means new and exciting positions for you. Whether you’re w or king your way through college or have a few extra hours to spare... and a reliable car, we can offer you: •U p to $3.50/hour + incentive •Flexible hours •Uniform s To set up an appointment, call or apply in person to: PIZZA HUT, INC. Steve Guerra (512) 476-0631 118 Guadalupe Austin, TX 78701 í I I Í I bI í m i # i; ;|ÍÍ|§ Í iíÍW»Í§X i i l i l l j « I i 111111 :i ¡ i l l y !■ ] ■ I M SW HKlH&OF V DO\u& A STRIP A A u r a D i n o s a u r 1 ' I 7 L 7 , ¡ v d p i n ^ I THAT ttMD Of ^ " H iN K / n ó W 6 A I T OUT With th e M Xk jü 'ÍCX 70 D U V t P f H i S l O ^ jo b anp m re FtDR we ? The Daily Texan/Thurtday, December 9f 1982/page 23 Economists propose tax increase WASHINGTON (U P I) - Four prominent conservative economists Wednesday criti­ cized President Reagan’s eco­ nomic course and called for higher taxes as “ the price we pay for survival. ’ Economists Herbert Stein, William Fellner, Rudolph Penner and Phillip Cagan, for years prominent advisers to “ supply Republicans until side’’ economics arrived with President Reagan, said an anti-tax attitude is damaging the country. In a joint statement, the four called for higher taxes to trim the deficit, saying: “ This is an unpleasant conclu­ sion. It can only be defended as superior to the alterna­ tives.” Continuing record deficits would eventually cause “ stag­ nation of private investment, risks to the national security or cuts in non-defense expend­ itures on a scale which nei­ ther the president nor any other responsible person has specified and supported,” the statement said. Stein dismissed as “ fringe arguments” the claims of supply-siders that higher tax­ es cut off incentives for eco­ nomic growth. “ Certain circles are suffer­ ing from a kind of taxapho- bia in which they think that all evils result from increas­ ing taxes,” he said. Stein, a chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers in the Nixon administration, works along with the other three men for the American Enterprise Institute, a moder­ ate Republican “ think tank.” Stein said that rather than following the Federal Re­ serve Board’s apparent deci­ sion to loosen up the money supply to spur economic re­ covery, it would be healthier if the nation withstood reces­ sion for another six months. Asked if the nation could take another six months of re­ cession, Stein replied, “ You could ask (British Prime Min­ ister Winston) Churchill whether they could have tak­ en another six months of bombing, but they did it. If the problem was explained, the American people will un­ derstand it.” Stein called high unemploy­ ment a “ tragedy” but never­ theless “ a necessary bypro­ duct of our past sins and errors.” Cave art discovered in Tennessee HELP WANTED TYPING TYPING WASHINGTON (U P I) - A spelunker exploring a cave in East Tennessee has discov­ ered a unique series of Indian ’ drawings expected to shed new light on the culture of pre-Columbian North Ameri­ ca, a team of scientists re­ ported Wednesday. "We have had no prehistor­ ic art in deep caves in this ; country before,” University of Tennessee anthropologist ; Charles Faulkner said. "A decorated cave like this is unique in North America so far, and it may be unique in the world. Faulkner, who leads the re­ the search team studying drawings, reported on the dis­ covery at a news conference at the headquarters of the Na­ tional Geographic Society. The society is helping to sup­ port work on the cave. Researchers declined to disclose the cave's location for fear of attracting vandals. They said only that it was dis­ covered within the last two years The crudely drawn wood­ peckers, turtles, weeping eyes, eagle warriors and an­ thropomorphic stick figures may date to the 12th century, before recorded history in North America. Researchers said the draw­ ings. called glyphs, apparent­ ly were carved in mud with a finger or a stick and. in a few P A R T t i m e now through spring sem es­ ter E rra n d s t0 stare agencies M ust have ca r Call M aru y n , 452-6167 6-9pm evem ngs ) 2-6 pm weekends A R T I S T W A N T E D for few sm all illus- trations to ad ve rtise book) C all Authur R a y Redwood 442 1311. TYPING M aster T y p is t The computerized TYPING STORE W E D O R U S H W O R K ! SAME DAY AND ONE DAY SE R V IC E E X P E R T WORD PRO CESSING SERV ICE THAT'S A FFO RD A BLE Term P apers, Dissertations, Theses Professional Reports (P R 's), & Law Briefs 472-0293 F R E E PA RK IN G ^ Dobie Mall #36 2021 Guadalupe University Resume Service O S o Resume Consulting Resume Planning Resume Tvping 472-4700 706 W M IK S u it* 9 A A u s tin TX 78701 T T . C . * . I n c T y p i n g S n r v l c * 4 4 3 - 4 4 3 3 Pickup d«ltv«ry point» 50 copy ro*um* pog« $18*“ Torm Pa port TKotot Ruth So.vico • D«**orta»ion» • Tochnkal typing • A» low at $1.50 1005 E. Sf. Elmo Rd. P°9 * cases, a heelprint was incor­ porated in a figure. Many ap­ pear to have been struck with the butt end of a club in an attempt to destroy the real object the drawing repre­ sents. Walter Merrell, a U.S. For­ est Service ranger who ex­ plores caves as a hobby, dis­ covered the drawings in a 96- yard-long passage deep in the cave, which he reached by climbing down a 3-foot-wide opening on a wooded hillside. Merrell, recognizing the fragility of the art, renorted it to a park service archeologist who, in turn, notified Faulk­ ner cam pus new s in brief THE D E A D LIN E FOR S U B M IT T IN G IT E M S TO C A M P U S N EW S IN B R IE F IS 1 P.M. THE DAY B E F O R E PU B LIC A T IO N NO E X C E P T IO N S W IL L B E MADE A N N O U N C EM EN T S The Department ot Muaic a present the New Music Ensemble al 8 p m Thuisaay in Bates Recita- Hall Recreational Sports j.gh is i- 7 th' < backpack g the Mesa de Ana,, a Big B e r t Natmrai Park Intramural» .. jr details call 47' 1093 or PAX 2055. or to by Be'lmont Han 104 , -its .s accep' g basxetbaii erme? Gregory Gym 30 Teams r i. enter Mor ¡ay through Friday from 8 30 a m ;o 5 p.m Entries close Jan 19 and the season begins Jan 23 1 7e eat a Texas Union •: A. es R emam opq¿, unt 3 a m for students next ¡ i. thr i ,jn Thursday. Campus Carts w be stationed at the Academic Center and and Eey -e’s wi v P e n . asteneda Library during the same schedule Dean ot Student» Office announces that all Welcome Program participants need to return their Welcome Progrj-1 evaluations before leaving for the holidays Plan II Student» wilt hold a Cactus photo session lor all Plan II students al 5 p m Thursday on the steps of the Mam Building. mittee L E C T U R E S College ol Education. Center forCognitive Science and University Public Lecture* Com­ Connect rs Between Home and a soea* ., eterrrr h j Reading Achievement Grades 2-7" at 10 30 a rr Thursday m Edu- ling 324 %■ d on The p o>e o’ Routines m . anguage Acau'Sitior a' ’ 30 p.m. in jtt is BuiU nq A4.128 itherine S i: , i ■ . . . . . . B University Student Atheist» . present Dr. Grayson Brown speaking on "Theism. Theocen- frism at J Religionism” at 7 p.m Wednesday in Texas Union Building 4 410 M E E T IN G S Japanese Conversation Club a -eel ‘or the as’ 'm e this .emester at r T' usdav • 'exas Union Building 2 400 Innervistons of Blackness Choir a eet for enea'sa T 6 30 t " T' j’Sday at r .ersity Presbyterian Church Red Ryder Preservation Society a Campus Crusade for Christ a pet T” , da. E : it Bun img 106 "net.- jwship will nave a Christmas theme. Christian Science Organization a eet at 6:30 p n Thj'sda • the Eastwoud “ " ot the • as' ’e owsh :: • r e semester at ' Thursday m American Meteorological Society a r 1983 " - • < : ns at 7 ; m " -da-, n Co- » Texas U , )n Building. e 9 228A The Navigators eet i ' . ' :a. -- Ed at'OfiB 370 7%2 * i* Ko < ^ 4 o f* * P R s • P a p e rs v ' m • Theses • Letters •2^ • L a w B rie fs EXPERT TYPING/ WORD PROCESSING + ---------- OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY 406 West 13th half block ofi Guadalupe 4 8 0 -0 0 4 0 Rush Service and Storage Available T Y P I N G E N G L I S H T U T O R I N G Maude Cardwell, Ph.D M any ye ars experience teaching college Eng lish and typmg Ele ctro n ic ty p e w r it­ er Cam pus pick up and delivery $1 35 page up 479 8909 C O M PU T Y PIN G U N L IM IT E D W O R D P R O C E S S IN G P L U S G R A N D O P E N IN G P R IC E S ' C H E C K W IT H US F IR S T ! W E 'R E B E T T E R ! C A L L 453-1872 N E E D A -ast accu rate typ ist? have a B A m En g lish a correcting Seie, t- and 12 ye ars se cre tarial e x o e n e "c e Can Ann at 447 5069 8-6 A ccurate P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P IS T service Theses d issertations professional reports etc B a rb a ra Tullos 453-5124 turn around fast I N T E L L I G E N T A C C U R A T E typ.ng word processing Customer m issp. nngs corrected Resum es with flair Rush service a v a ila b le C re ative S e ' - es 2420G uadalup e 478 3633 L IG H T N IN G Q U IC K T Y P IN G Themes legal Proofing dissertations, technical skills E n g lish B A IB M II B a rb a ra 476 7991 T R A N S C R IB I N G TOO W a le r C ’ eek types d issertato ns W ord theses P R s etc F ro m $1 25 page 454 4307 S e rv ice s L i n d a s T Y P I N G south F a s ' accu rate '’expensive 442 7465 a 'fe r 5 p m r e s e a r c h papers sta’ stical t y p i n g dissertations S eiectric pica elite w m proof Exper enced reasonable 44; 89J theses C o rree', ng K A T H E S Q U IC K Type d isse r'a ! ons theses e yai and professions Reterpnc es a v a u a b ie 15 years experience .SJ 6IJ9 T H E T Y P I S T Professional qualit» typ mg guaranteed I B M C o rre c’ mg Se ec tr i word processing Cam pus pick up d e liv e ry Helen 836 3562 T r P I N G B Y D E A N N E Specianz ng theses ga! able rates 447 7284 te rm pape’ s dissertations e B M C orrecting Sem ctric Reason C O M P U T E R IZ E D T v P l N G Fast a curate easy changes rev ew opy high q uality final copy Ca M arg aret 837 2440 T Y P I N G F A S T professional 10 vears Combined experience in engineering and accounting f ie ’ds S a sfm $1 page M illie 447 590* P R O F E S S I O N A L S e c r e ta r a T y p n g Services All work guaranteed UT B B A Spe ai student rates P , « 90- page route 10 a m 8 p m 477-5139 $1 10 page On shuffle E lit e T Y P I N G i n my home Northeast Aus tm -easonab'e ra 'e s no cans after 10 p m Can P a t 454 5924 tm 27th STREET Anti M B A 4 TYPING. PRINTING, BINDING The C o m p le te P r o fe ttio n a l FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 HEMPHILL PK P le n ty o f P a r k in g T Y P I N G F A S T a ccu rate reasonable E x c e >ent spelling g ra m m a r Resum e specialist Candy 45! 9596 Q u Ai T Y T Y P I N G Professional, e ffi­ cient and accurate Cotton paper IB M i ll P ic a 90 page E lite l 10 page M S 'ou te 10am 8pm 477-5139 E X C E L L E N T R e p o rts , dissertations resum es etc Correcting Seiectric 836-072L T Y P I N G _ _ _ T U T O R IN G TY P ! N G proofreading 10 years experience former college teacher M A in Eng lish See your grades go up 276-7771,258 2043 E X P E R I E N C E D T Y P I S T in North Aus- tin home W in type term papers con­ tracts eft 836-497! $1 25 T Y P IN G Care» proofing ;egai inc udes rush service form atting s thesis, IB M C orrecting » R m a l P a t r i c i a 467 0167 ..am ar 55th: T Y P I N G 476 6868 P e r page $1 50 No extra charges Till m idnight okay sure we DO typ« FRESHMAN THEMES wky nal start avt wit» |eei gradas 270 7 Hamphtll Jw*t North of 2 7th or Gwodolwpo 472 3210 472 7677 P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I N G S e rv ic e Ex ptfien,:ed academ ic typ ist Fas* turna round Reasonable a'es C all 255-7420 Nancv P A T s T Y P N G Q uick 24 H O U R S 45> 8354 P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P IN G $1 p e r p a g e ana up F re e de very one day service "oi P e 'e 345 8062 or ¿54 473! extension 6393 95- P A G E D» b ’e spaced 13 years ex oe- e e Dissertations theses also Call Donna 892 4220 noon 6pm p A T ’ v s W O R D P r o c e s s i n g T e r m p a pars professional-eports d-sser ta lo n s p,ck p • ish se rv , e 4269 m idnight 345- sA N O Y S P R O F E S S iO N A , Typ.ng Ser vice 8J7 6353 • O O P H E A P typ ny 90- per page Eng lish F re n e ’- Swedish P c x up de- ,ver 835-4562 t y p i n g a o r : p r o c e s s n g $t 25 F a , ’ accurate, m tabie D IT. by B erke Breathed tuef.flON'i ÍON ’ *VM WHk W O H0MÍ njurm wru s' IK 6 ru>u 1 UKi OhuORT ANT HO* POtS w w tm a to %¿¿P IN A KG0M HHfHN P0ti' 6>N 478-6720 F A S T A C C U R A T E typing overmgfi Le gal se cre ta ry exp er' p ro o tre aje ' ,. u--. p etitive r a 'e s Cat Metrotype 453 073’ PEA N U TS® by Charles M. Schulz g. . 5 8 ~ W O O D S T Y P I N G Se rv ice when you want it done right 472 6302, 2206 G , ada iupe side entrance D I Í C O U Í 1 T c e n t e r ; 24/The Daily Taxan/Thurtday, December 9,1982 A CUJTOm hi-fi D OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL P.M. m V E R Y T jjlN G ■ m u s t e o m w e n n tím Sony 19" dlag. R em ote Color tv I cable ready w ith w ireless rem ote KV 1947R Panasonic Rem ote Control Color TV 19 diagonal Featuring the exclusive Color P ilo t II tuning syste m ' Cable ready C T 9 07 Í 499 mi UfllTECH £ 899 95 BASF maxell [Panasonic P o rtab le IVIdeo Recorder [w ith w ireless rem ote 106 [channel tuner 14 days 4 [program tim e r PV 5500 Panasonic [M axell, p d M aganetlcs or BASP 2-4-6-Hour VMS vid eo ra p e Unbelievably clear re pro d u ction and really clean so un d ' T120 rj 49 ¿HO»ce |PuJI 2, 4, or 6 Hour v h s video Tope T 120 - I '• ’ 1 mpP o w m m l m vws y ilth ° $ 1 . 0 0 M O 11 XtX lim it 6 per household $095C u s to m Hi Fi s Pnc e | * 2 ° ° $ 7 9 5 Less Rebate F rom Fuji Your a c tu a l Cost CLOCK RANO Clock Radio w ith D ig ita l Display AM/PM w ith auto ind ica to rs p u sh b u tto n tor snooze and wake to m usic oi alarm | U nitach UTR 900 Q C ^ PORTABLES [Super Slim AM/PM stereo w ith Headphones w ith a b u ilt in Mylar speaker I tor Mono fcsaemg Unrtech IS119E 95 UniT€(H Mini Stereo and Headphones Portable FM radio w ith lig h tw e ig h t stereophones Unitec IS 114 s19<9SQ Scott a m /p m stereo Recleverf 20 w atts par channel.! 09%THD) 325R s I * S C O T T 95 CAR STEREO Kraco Nigh Perform ance Car Speakers "Turbo Series 6 '• 3 way speaker handles 60 100 w a tts ' Clean sound at power levels, unattainable by m ost car soeakers THP543 $ O Q 9 5 W ¥ pair KRACO AM/PM Cassette Car Stereo w ith auto stop and locking fast forward Unitech UC 401 Sanyo Auto-Reverse Cassette Car stereo AM/FM Indash w ith AMSS and locking FF'Rev FTC36 95 9 S AM VO iensen •v ," coaxial Car Speaker Two way speaker w ith 60 w atts handling to give you the clearlty at m axiurr volum n 60 w atts handling J1201 9 5 p °'r 95 u niitcH 0 f r j ^------ - Pocket Stereo Cassette Player w ith Headphones powered by battene*. lor com plete p o r t a b i l i t y Uniter * z,B S ■a Auto Reverse Cor Stereo Locking fast forward and nswmd. ^ e fade< tone balance tape e ie ct1 Kraco KID688B I9995 H i ■M49JI (R SSÁC5] JENSEN Auto Stop c a r Stereo AM/FM cassette Locking Isst forward tape eiect balance and tone controls Kraco KI0581 TURNTABLES Scott Semi-Automa tic Turntable Direct drive Up front c o ntro ls pushbutton speed change strobe pitch co ntro l $ B ñ 9 5 Vector Autom atic Turntable Single play bait drive auto return shutoH Up front co ntro ls VT160 95 88 UMTCCH -way Speaker w ith 12" w oofer 5 m drange 3 optim um rsion tweeter 55 watts JBZ 1253 • • $ 5 h o l d ?. 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AC/DC Black and W hite H a n lm e x E S m Mini stereo and Headphones Cassette player w ith FM Shoulder strap and case fast forward rewin,d phones Unitech IS 113F lig h tw e ig h t 6 9 » ! | SPEAKERS S-Woy Speaker I w ith 12" w oofer I Piezo eiectnc tw eeter re s e tta b le circu it bresxe' I EC t Profile 620 S-Way speaker w ith IS" w oofer 5 midrange Enjoy exciting U o u n d 1 JBZ 1000 189” 6-w ay Tower Spe« w ith 12" w oofers Ye* 2 big wooler* tor the I richest bass you ve ever heard1 2 midranges. 2 tweeters' ECl Image Xli *179 95ea TAfC PfCKS sharp M e ta l Tape Cassette D o lb y " Noise Reduction. | bias equalization controls LED display, automatic shutott RTtoo * S C O T T ™ Scott M e ta l Tape Deck D olb y'' Noise Reduction 628DM 95 UniTCCN stereo P o rtab le w ith S h o r t w a v e A V FM radio w i t h S h o r w a v e band and w orldw ide m u lti v o l t a g e Crown CSC850 w l 2 3 9 95 M a c ó m e •* U’* . v e ! 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