T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The University o f Texas at Austin Sixteen Pages Vol. 78. No 148 C o p yrig h t 1979 Texas S tu d e n t P u b lica tio n s, an rights reserved (U SPS 146-440) Austin. Texas Tuesday May 1, 1979 Fifteen Cents News and Editorial 471-4 5 9 1 Display Advertising 471 1865 i d C lassified 471 5244 Q if'c e Business Court inwftrs standard x i ^ 8 *0 M i d i v a p ui'iTjoJr*T W w ere on .m \ir P ran ce jet hijacked to Uganda in rescued in the Israeli com m ando raid on E ntebbe WASHINGTON (U P I) definitely to a m ental reasonable d o ubt” that Court ruled 8-0 Monday That is the stan d ard a jury m ust use in convicting som eone or a crim e, and about a dozen sta te s, by sta tu te or court inter pr e ta tion, have chosen to apply it also to involuntary com m it m ent to a m ental hospital But the high court ruled Monday the Constitution p erm its a m ore lenient m e a su re of proof to be used in civil com m itm ent cases What is required is " c le a r and convincing proof,” Chief Ju stic e W arren B urger w rote for the court He said that in term ed iate stan d ard , now used by 20 sta te s, " s trik e s a fair balance betw een the rig h ts of the individual and the leg itim ate concerns of the s ta te ” But he said an even less re stric tiv e stan d ard , adopted by sta tu te in M ississippi and by court ruling in Texas, does not do enough to protect the individual s rights not to bo deprived of life liberty or p ro p erty without "d u e process of law ." TH E HIGH COURT, in other actions before recessing public sessions for two w eeks • O verturned 8-1 a C alifornia p ro perty tax on foreign-owned cargo containers, saying that am ounted to unconstitutional mul tiple taxation of foreign com m erce • G ave a legal avenue for Lew isburg P e n ite n tia ry inm ate H erb ert G Wilkins Sr., who w rote the ju stic e s saying his court appointed law yer deceived him by prom ising to file an appeal on his behalf but never actually doing so • Refused to rev ive a money d am ag e suit filed in Chicago by ruling on the standard of proof for civil conv iim m .... . ... m nieii from a fe x a s case filed by Frank O 'N eal Addington who was placed indefinitely in Austin S tate H ospital a t his m o th e r's request A G alveston County jury found on the basis of " c le a r, une­ quivocal and convincing evidence” that he was m entally ill and required hospitalization I AWYERS FOR ADDINGTON argued the s tric te r sta n d a rd applied in crim inal cases should have been used But the T exas Suprem e Court ruled that a lower standard, " a preponderance of evidence, was all the Constitution required The unique standard of proof used in crim in al cases was designed to m inim ize the risk that an individual m ight w rongly be jailed, even if that m eans som e guilty people wind up going free, B urger said Monday. He recognized civil com m itm ent, like jail, constitutes | significant deprivation of libertv and may put a " s tig m a ” on the person involved But B urger said this does not involve punishm ent and th e re a re m ore frequent opportunities to c o rre c t an e rro r when som eone is co m m itted to a m ental hospital than when he is sent to prison The crim inal stan d ard of proof also is "inappropriate in civil co m m itm en t proceedings because, given the uncertainties of p sychiatric diagnosis, it m ay im pose a burden the sta te cannot m< et and thereby e re c t an unreasonable b a rrie r to needed m edical tre a tm e n t, ’ B urger w rote Canadian nuke reports leak TORONTO (U P I) A m ysterio us radioactive two nuclear leak bathed plant w orkers with m ore than a y e a r's w orth of radiation in the la te st of th ree accid ents a t an O ntario nuclear pow er plant, officials say. s t a f f . "T h e re is no hazard to the public or to o u r s a id B r u c e W ilso n , spokesm an for O ntario Hydro, which owns the plant on the Bruce Peninsula that se p a ra te s G eorgian Bay from Lake Huron "W hat we a re doing now is taking radiation m e a su re m e n ts to d eterm in e w here the source of the radiation is com ing from w ithin the containm ent sy s te m ,” Wilson said Sunday. told Wilson th at badges re p o rte rs worn by the two unidentified men to m easu re radiation showed one received 5 5 rem s and the o th er 8 rem s - both above the recom m ended annual lim it of 5 rem s Dr Don Watson, the firm s m anager of safety serv ices, said th ere was little cau se for concern about the w orkers because they w ere exposed to no m ore radiation than " a person who takes a barium swallow prior to an X-ray " TH E ACCIDENT CAME in the wake of allegations that an o th er Bruce re a l­ tor suffered a hydrogen gas bubble ex­ that plosion th reaten ed the T hree Mile Island plant outside H arrisburg , Pa , last month in early 1978 like one O ntario Hydro officials said one a c c i­ dent at the B ruce plant oocurn*d April 9 when w orkers tried to rem ove a spent bundle by rem ote control, but the bundle becam e stuck The real tor was then shut down Wilson said the latest accident ap parently in c u rre d late Saturday as the m en w ere working to m anually rem ove the stuck fuel bundh- from the p lan t's 1 nit 1 re a c to r He said ( a n a d a ’s Atomic Energy Con­ trol Hoard, whose officials w ere already at the plant investigating the April 9 shutdown, w ere notified of the accident. <»N FR ID A Y , ONTARIO L ib e ra l L ead er Stuart Sm ith said seven re p o rts from a m an calling him self "M Shultz” revealed that a bubble of d eu teriu m —* in the p la n t's U nit heav v hydrogen' 2 reactor exploded in M arch 1978, the Hydro officials cal Uni re p o rts inflam m ato ry ’ and said no one w as in­ jured or endangered by the high ra d ia ­ tion levels released in the explosion a t tin reacto r, which at the tim e was in a shutdown sta te A spokesm an for the Atomic E nergy Control Hoard said any defects in the Bruce plant had been co rrected and described the d eu teriu m explosion as a m ere "th u m p ." A U.S. House subcommittee voted Monday to require registration of 18-year-old males for possible military service after the 1980 elections, sparking protest from young people. Related story, Page 3. Draft resisters — UPI Telephoto Union official charges lending institutions with collusion By JANN SNELL Dally Texan Staff lending AFL-CIO P re sid e n t H arry H ubbard Monday ch a rg e d T ex as the F e d e ra l N atio n a l M o rtg a g e A sso c ia tio n of colluding ag ain st the people of T exas and filed a form al com plaint with A ttorney G eneral G riffin Bell.’ in s titu tio n s and The m o rtg ag e association announced la te last week it would no longer finance V eterans Ad­ m inistration and F ed eral Housing A dm inistration loans in Texas if they w ent over the s ta te ’s legislated 10 percen t in te re st ceiling. The association — nicknam ed F annie M ae — is a federal lending institution which finances the s ta te ’s loans. Fannie M ae’s decision m eans th e re will be v ir­ tually no VA or FHA loans in the s ta te because the federal in te re st ra te has alread y been se t a t 10 in­ p ercent and m ost of stitutions work under a point sy stem or a fee the s ta te ’s lending Sent to committee system m aking loans clo ser to an 11 p e rc e n t in­ te re s t ra te . FA N N IE M A E’S ANNOUNCEM ENT ca m e one week a fte r a decision by Gov. Bill C lem ents th at he would veto any proposal to ra ise the s ta te ’s in­ te re s t ceiling above 10 p ercen t. The g o v ern o r’s announcem ent effectively killed proposed leg isla­ tion to ra is e the ceiling to 12 p ercen t. I have very good evidence of collusion betw een Fannie M ae and the lending in stitu tio n s," Hub­ bard said, although he a d m itte d th a t m uch of his evidence is circu m stan tial. F annie Mae is trying to “ fo rce the L eg islature to adopt the higher ceiling ... And I w ant to m ake sure th a t the people of Texas know how th eir legislato rs w ere hoodwinked into th a t decision (if they pass the higher in te re st r a te ) ," H ubbard said. Savings and loan in stitutions and o th e r lenders have lobbied the L eg islatu re saying T exas is un­ able to com pete on th e national m oney m a rk e t because of the s ta te ’s in te re st ceiling. B ecause of the s ta te ’s ceiling, Sen Bill M eier, I)-E u le s s , and R ep. J e r r y D o n a ld so n , D- G atesville, have each subm itted proposals to the Senate and House, respectively, to raise the c e il­ ing to 12 percent. Donaldson said he was not surprised by F annie Mae s action, but " I did not an ticip ate this to happen a s quick as it has happened." TH E R EPR E SE N T A T IV E re fe rred to a speech given e a rlie r by Fannie Mae P resid ent Oakley H unter which w arned of T ex as’ position in com ­ petition for federal loan funds "W e saw a significant decline in FNMA co m ­ m itm en t (w ithin the southw estern region w here Texas has the larg est volum e of lending) activity beginning in N ovem ber. 1978,” Oakley said in F e b ru a ry before a legislative com m ittee. O akley then predicted th at availab le m ortgage funds for hom es and housing construction would continue to drop substantially. And " th e im pact of the 10 percent m axim um in­ local m ortgage m arket te re st ceiling on b e c o m e s p a r tic u la r ly s ig n if ic a n t to m an y m ortgage lenders seeking to obtain funds through the FNMA free m ark et sy ste m ,” Oakley said the that HUBBARD CHARGED this p a rtic u la r speech by O akley was an obvious lobbying effort, although O akley did not re g iste r as a lobbyist And. he said the p re sid e n t’s presentation is p a rt of his collusion evidence E very tim e the bill (to raise the in terest ceil ing) gets in trouble Fannie Mae com es in to help it o u t." H ubbard said Hubbard said according to ex p erts in the field the federal in te re st ceilings would go below 10 percent by 1980. and that lending institutions and l*anme Mae «ire using the unusually high ceilings now as a sc a re tactic to raise the s ta te ’s ceiling "They (lending institutions and Fannie M ae) hope to get this legislation passed, and then when the in te re st com es back down, th e y ’ll have the ceiling w here they want it," H ubbard said However, Donaldson said his ex p e rts believe the in terest ceiling will only continue to rise and will not get below the 10 percent in te re st rate any t im e six»n BOTH DONALDSON AND Hubbard have people out on the s tre e ts without a h o m e." Donaldson said people with pending VA or FHA loans have been unable to close out th eir loans and that one m an c a m e to him "w ith alm ost te a rs in his eyes over the situ a tio n ." H uhb.ud said if in terest ra te s a re raised people will sim ply t>e unable to afford a house The situation is not contrived And now in- stead of looking down the road a t the situation we can look tt it over our shoulder to m ake our decision Donaldson said Donaldson added that p assage of the higher in­ ter cst ceiling still depended on the g overnor’s stand on the issue Bills question tenure By JOHN R. VALDEZ Dally Texan Staff Tw o b ills th a t w ould s u b s titu te renew able c o n tra c ts the s ta te ’s tenure system of prom oting faculty m em b ers w ere heard and re fe rre d to a subcom m ittee by the House H igher Education C om m ittee Monday. for th a t Rep. R.C. G aston, D -D allas, sponsor of the bills, testified before the com ­ m ittee legislation the proposed serves as an a lte rn a tiv e to the ten u re system he said had evolved "in to a gu arantee for a lifetim e job, but one that stifled c reativ ity , opportunity and innovation ” House Bills 145 and 1387 would abolish the tenure system in favor of 5- and 7- year co n tracts, respectively, which would com e under periodic and m an ­ datory review in line w ith a faculty m e m b e r’s perform ance. th e sa m e “ The bill p ro v id e s for p r o te c tio n of a c a d e m ic fre e d o m s perceived under the lifetim e c o n tra c ts tenure by specifically relying on of w ritten evaluations and a c le a r set of pro ced u res...” G aston said U N D ER T H E pro p o sed c o n tr a c t a g r e e m e n t, incom ing faculty m em b ers would be asked to p re p a re a w ritten statem en t outlining goals they expect to accom plish over the c o n tra c t period. The attain m en t of such goals — annual­ ly review ed by a screening co m m ittee — would establish grounds for the ex­ tension of a faculty m em b er s c o n tra c t There is no a re a of the profession be excused from this type of th at I rev iew ," G aston said, adding this plan establishes a new sy stem of accoun­ tability and com m unication. At one point, Rep. W ilhelmina Delco, D-Austin, questioned the m ethod of evaluation for g ran ting tenure to faculty m em bers and said the c u rre n t sy stem is at tim es based too heavily on re se a rc h and publication reco rd ra th e r than p e r­ form ance in the classroom . "W e m ust m ake sure the pendulum w on’t swing too fa r the o ther direction and be based m o re on a popularity basis ra th e r than on publication ," Rep. R E. G reen, D-Houston, said te r m e d Opponents of the bills, am ong them U niversity E nglish professor W illiam le g is la tio n R. K e a s t, th e "irre sp o n sib le ” and said the move would hav e n e g a tiv e co n se q u e n c e s, ra th e r the p re s e n t im p ro v in g system of ten ure th an "T H E R E SHOULD be som e effo rt to a sc e rta in w hether the c o n tra c t system s we now have have in fact yielded the benefits th a t a re ab scribed to them . If not, to do so (passing the legislation) seem s to be a m is ta k e ," K east said. John M cCain, represen tin g the T exas Junior College T eachers A ssociation, said the abolishm ent of ten ure would un­ derm ine faculty m e m b e rs’ em ploym ent security. “ H ouse B ill 1137 w ould n o t only seriously dim inish em ploym ent se c u ri­ ty but would also in fact elim in ate the form al system of ten u re and reduce our academ ic freed om s m uch to th e d e tri­ in m e n t of s tu d e n ts a n d s o c ie ty g e n e ra l," McCain said. Cloudy... Austin skies will be partly cloudy and temperatures warm Tuesday and Wednesday with a 30 percent chance of rain Tuesday and Wednesday night. The high Tuesday will be in the upper 70s with the low Tues­ day night in the mid 60s. Wednesday's high will be in the mid 80s. Winds will be from the southeast at 10 to 15 mph. fa v I iif Farmworkers union member arrested By JAY ALLEN Daily Taxan Staff A m e m b e r of the T ex as F a rm w o rk e rs Union was a rre ste d in R aym ondville M onday, provoking m ore c rie s of p ro te st and d iscrim in atio n from union m em b ers m th at town. A w a rra n t for the a rre s t of Ma da lena Villabos on a ch arg e of c n rp in a i tre sp a ss w as issued two w eeks ago in connection with her p articip atio n in a p ro te st of w ages paid to onion pickers, R aym ondville Sheriff O scar C orrea said M onday. C orrea said Villabos w as one of sev eral protesting farm w o rk ers who w as a rre s te d during ti» p ro te st for crim in al tre sp a ss She w as not charged a t th at tim e. “ They w ere pro testing in the fields and som e of them tresp assed onto the fields and prevented som e of the w orkers from doing th e ir w o rk ," C orrea said BUT JUANITA VALDEZ, who worked with Villabos ¡n the onion fields, said Villabos was denied due process of law during the a r re s t Monday. They ca m e and got h er a t hom e and took her to the police station She didn t get to talk with a law yer or nothing,” Valdez said. M anuel T orres, a m e m b e r of the Texas F a rm w o rk e rs Union h e a d q u a rte rs in Hidalgo, said Villabos w a s not the only union w orker a rre s te d M onday. "T h ey m ay have said they a rre s te d one. but they a rre s te d fo u r," he said C orrea denied these charg es, saying Villabos cam e to the police station voluntarily and in her own autom obile He said Villabos was the only union m em b er a rre ste d Monday Onion pickers went on strik e April 4 in R aym ondville a fte r ow ner C harles W estegrove failed to recognize the T exas F a rm w o rk e rs Union or sign a c o n tra c t for the w orkers labor W orkers w anted $1 f or every sack of onions they pick­ ed and b e tte r working conditions, such as drinking w ater and sanitation facilities, Valdez said SINCE TH E STR IK E, onion pickers have been given higher w ages and drinking w ater and sa n ita ry facilities have been provided But the w orkers a re still operating w ithout a co n tract. Valdez said the strik e tem p o rarily froze R aym ond larg e Chicano m ajo rity , ap­ viUe, a prox im ately 20 m iles north of H arlingen town with a “ Everybody was behind us, the whole tow n," Valdez said "N obody was working When w orkers from M exico w ere brought in to break the strik e , union m e m b e rs picketed the fields w here the onions w ere being picked, Valdez said. C orrea said he brought in help from the D epartm en t of Public Safety to a ssist in m aintaining o rd er during the strik e C orrea said th e re w ere approxim ately 40 un­ ion w o rkers particip atin g in the strik e. EU*ven union m em bers w ere a rre ste d during the protest, including Valdez. We re not supposed to c a re about our w ages o r cocer plain Valdez said "W e re just supposed to be slaves. They don t c a re w hat you think They > Di*S officers) w ere using th eir túg sticks And a rrestin g people for stepping on wild flow ers and thing* she continued. When they a rre ste d m e they like that pulled .it m e and grabbed a t m e and threw m e around 1 m four m onths pregnant and I finally said, 'O .K ., I ’ll stop but don 't touch m e .'" i'o rre a said V aldez’ description of her a rre s t is in­ co rrect. She ra n through a line of DPS officers and d ie resisti-d as th e y tried to stop h e r." C orrea said "N o one w as hurt and w e’ve got film of the whole thing. That girl is a friend of m ine and she just likes to play things up so m e tim e s," he said. A pre trial hearing for Valdez and the 16 other m em bers a rre ste d during the p ro te st will be held at the Willacy County C ourthouse in Raymondville Tuesdsy m orning While the hearing is going cm, members of the will hold a p ro test m arch outside th e courthouse, Vaktns said " I t all kind of settled down for awhile but now th ey ’re startin g to a rre s t people, there's no telling when i t’s going t e n d ," Valdez said. Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, May 1, 1979 77ti 77n 77 n 7771 77n 777 CAMP COUNSELORS NEEDED Camp Young Judaoa Hill Country Jowish Camp located in Wimberley Job Openings For: W ater Safety Instructor M ale Bunk Counselors Camp Director Stanley Horn Will Hold Interviews Tuesday, M ay 1 , 1 - 4 p.m . Call For Appointment or Information Hillel Campus Jewish Center 2105 San Antonio 476-0125, 7771 7771 7771 7771 7771 7771 7771 Bill approved Gasohol loans passed Reporter's Notebook- some form of initiative and referendum The referendum measure by Rep Bill Clark, D-Tyler, was greatly amended on several close votes before it passed its second reading, 87-45 The proposal must pass a third reading Taxpayers would be given the right of referendum only if tax increases exceed 5 per­ cent per year in their area and if 25 percent of the registered voters sign petitions de mandmg a vote on the tax. C L A R K S A ID the bill would give Texas voters their first opportunity to block large property tax increases Kubiak and Rep Bill Keese. D-Sommerville, were the House orchestrators of the gasohol legislation. The gas­ ohol lobby has held numerous press conferences and has even filled the governor's car with the substance. Some r e pr es en ta ti ves questioned the feasibility of gasohol if loans were needed to get plants started. Others asked why private enterprise would not be interested in developing the substance. Kubiak countered by saying there were at least two private corporations in ­ terested in gasohol, and the and p r i v a t e businessmen he has spoken with have said capital was only needed to get plants go­ ing and afterward the projects would be financially soluble. f a r m e r s By J A N N S N E L L Daily Toxan Staff The House M o n d a y demonstrated overwhelming support for the concept of gas­ ohol by passing, 126-1, legisla­ tion to allow manufacture of the gasoline substitute The House also tentatively passed, 99-32. another bill which would set up a state loan program for farmers and businessmen wishing to begin gasohol enterprises. Hep Dan Kubi ak, D- Rockdale, who sponsored the gasohol loan program, main­ tained that gasohol is not an experiment but a proved sub­ stitute for gasoline The program would allow for 20-year loans, which Kubiak said are necessary to get gasohol under way in the state. GOV. B IL L C L E M E N T S has voiced support for gas­ ohol, which can be made from organic substances ranging from corn to watermelons, but he also maintains it is not an immediate solution to energy needs On another issue, the House lent initial support to a referendum measure which would give taxpayers the right to overturn excessive proper­ ty taxes. Clements has supported the concept of r e f e r e n d u m legislation since his inaugura­ tion. adding that he would call a special session if the Legislature does not adopt correction By T E R R Y H A G E R T Y In covering the University student beat. I have been asked by a few persons why some items make it to print and others do not. My answer is as unspecific as it is un­ romantic The question arises what exactly is news? And again, it depends. i t depends One doesn t have to be a journalist to recognize the stories with news impact A disastrous plane crash, a $500 robbery at Jester and the sniper s actions at the San Antonio Fiesta parade most probably will make the paper But other stories tread the murky bound­ ary of news versus unexciting but useful information, particularly on a student beat A primer for those unfamiliar with a newsroom but curious why one story swims while the other sinks might go something like this: Advertising space sold basically deter­ mines the number of newspaper pages. And news space is still limited after that. Excluding the wire and editorial pages, some ads occupy as much as 75 percent of page space. In the remaining news holes, the hard news stories, as cited above, usually have precedence In a budget meeting the opinions of the editor and managing editor on what con­ stitutes a newsworthy event, coupled with other editors' opinions, filter out the pool of submitted stories for a particular news day. Communication between the reporter and an issue editor is very important. The issue editor usually is the second most knowledgeable person about the content of a reporter's storv and that editor presents the pool of stories in the budget meeting. A good story can miss the paper simply because the reporter did not adequately explain his story to the issue editor Chance plays its part. Editors may have personal biases against the person who is the subject of an article This might make it easier for the editor to use another arti­ cle. A last minute wire story may kill a less exciting story. And lastly the influence of money. Although yellow journalism supposedly reached its heyday around 1900, newspapers still reach for the exciting story. The paper is a business first and stories are selected with an eye for selling more papers. Most people seem to prefer excitement to information and this fact of life influences the choice of stories. campus capsules-------- ROTC to march in review The University's Army and Air Force R O T C c a d e t s al o ng w i t h N a v y midshipmen will march in the annual presidential review at noon Tuesday in Memorial Stadium. University President Lorene Rogers and Mayor Carole McClellan will be present to review the 300 to 400 marching cadets and midshipmen Four ROTC students will receive commendations, said Maj. Roger Poulin, assistant professor of military science. The Air Force Band of the Southwest will provide the marching accompani­ ment. The ceremony is open to the public and will be moved to Gregory Gym if threatened by inclement weather. Schick accepts position Dr Dennis Schick, assistant professor of advertising, has accepted a position as executive director of the Arkansas Press Association. Schick has been a member of the University faculty for five years and has been associated with newspapers and press associations for 20 years. Schick’s new job will include serving newspapers statewide by conducting con- ventions, organizing short courses and information and clinics, providing materials concerning better and more effective newspaper operation and run­ ning a clipping and advertising service. Schick's resignation is effective May 31. Academia panel planned ‘How to Survive in Academia,” a panel discussion geared to graduate students who plan to teach in a college or universi­ ty. will meet at 2 p.m. Tuesday in Educa­ tion Building 238. The open class is spon­ sored by the department of educational psychology. Discussion topics include the “ publish or perish” doctrine, preparing and ob­ taining tenure, interviewing for a teaching job, salary information, winning teaching awards, women in academics and how un­ iversities deal with minorities and tokenism. Panel participants are Dr. Willian L. Hays, vice president for academic affairs; Dr. Lorrin G. Kennamer, dean of the College of Education; Dr. Michael G. Hall, chairman of the department of history; Dr. Patricia Prewitt, assistant professor at Baylor University; and Dr. Christine Anderson, associate professor of educational psychology. W e ’ve been in Austin longer th.in you can remember N o rth e rn s* M a ll 2525 W AndeiMsn I me Austin, Texas 4A1-7517 Downtown 611 Con grew A u s tin , Te'xa* 478-2595 In a story published Friday about the attempted capital mu r d e r t r i a l of S h e i l a Meinert, the Texan mistaken­ ly reported that Meinert al l eged ly threw a hand grenade at Austin police of­ ficers May 18. She has never been accused of throwing a grenade. The D aily Texiin • student new spaper a t The U niversity of T esas a t AusUn ui Bihshed by Tesas Student Publication* Draw er D, University Station Austin Tes I I The Daily Texan is published Monday. Tuesday Wednesday Thursday and Frt day except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin Tex News contributions will be accepted by telephone '471*5#! I, at the editorial office tT e ia s Student Publications Building I 1331 or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 136> Inquine* concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in T S P Building 3 MO 1471-5244» and display advertising in T S P Budding 3 110 1471 IMS i The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and - - - - St* Advertising Services to Students. 0330 N Pulaski The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press Internal Daily — Chicago. ( e m s lionai and New York Times the member of the Associated Collegiate Press the Texas Daily Newspaper Association Assoc! News Service The Texan is Southwest Journalism Congress Am erican Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1979 Texas Student Publications O N E S E M E S T E R ( F A L L OR S P R IN G > 1978 79 T H E D A IL Y T E X A N S U B S C R IP T IO N R A T E S Picked up on campus basic student fee Picked up on campus U T faculty staff Picked up on campus general public By mad in Texas .......................................... ............ ......... S m all outside Tesay within I S A.............................. ........... S E M E S T E R S ( F A L L A N D S P R IN G » 197*7* ............... ......... ....... Picked up .in campus U T faculty staff picked up on campus general public .......... .............................. By mad in Tesa* .................................... ............ ............ ............ B y m ail, outside Texas within U S A t 65 1 66 7 SO 14 50 15 50 ( 330 15 00 26 50 U 50 S U M M E R S E S S IO N 1979 Picked up on campus U T students faculty staff Picked up on campus general public By mad in Texas By mail outside Texas within U SA Send orders and address c I 1 00 400 950 10 00 to T E X A S S T U D E N T P U B L IC A T IO N S P O Box Building. C3 M0 ..................................................................... hanae* to T S P D. 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I hu Super Seal is manufactured only in Austin. Texas and only by the Registered Jewelers at L harles I eutw \ U r Jew elers. Its d istint tive style sets it ap art fro m a ll other t lass rings an d eat h d iam o n d v\ ill be s h o w n to the i ustem er under a mic rose opt I M t\ er\ time on The Super S j I i s guaranteed to be no w o re than two weeks It »t is not reads to Ix*delivered a lti *r tw o weeks 5 “* ot the t ost w ill be dedut let! tor eat h dav late Men’s $147.00 !*!»•* 4 Nar "xpr* *<■»! Ih a wMiiui V mkm*. Women's $83.00 I I » . U w Sprvull IXmbm hI katwr. C harles L e u tw y le r ievvelers 2SK? Guoooaid, that’s just a lot of baloney. Everybody knows that decontrol is mandated in the present law." Carter said, referring to the fact that the controls automatically expire June 1 unless he had asked Congress to continue them ■ This is not a decision that I made." Carter said I am complying with an existing law As for the windfall profits tax. Carter said. "I'm always amenable to proposals made by Sen Kenneds laws fairer or more stringent to make the HE SAID, HOWEVER, that he would oppose anv congressional attempts to weaken the tax Kennedy said later that Carter s "baloney response to his criticism was the president s best effort to defend an energy policy 1 find in defensible Carter also made a strong plea for con­ gressional support of his standby gasoline ration­ ing plan, say ing the m easure vumld be used only in an em ergent v shortage situation but nevertheless is "imperative for our nation s preparedness HE SAID IT would take six or seven months to put such a plan together On other subjects. Carter said • He favors giving most favored nation status to both Russia and China, a move that would allow the communist nations trading terms as good as the United States gives its best trade partners Carter said he favored the move if it could be taken in compliance with existing law, which allows top trade status only to countries that let their citizens immigrate intention • He is not holding off on a SALT treaty for 1 political purposes until the 1980 election year have e \e r \ the SALT negotiations at the earliest possible m o m ent." he said, adding that CIA Director Stansfield Turner is basically in favor of the treaty despite his statement that it would be harder to verify now that \m e n c a has no intelligence bases in Iran to conclude We do not face any ot these contingencies now but we must be prepared for the worst he said • While Israel knows he disapproves of new settlements in occupied territory, there is "a limit to what we can do to impose our will on sovereign nations.” • J a m e s F a llo w s , form er W hite House speech w riter who wrote a critical magazine arti cle on the president, 'a fine young man,” is despite the article • It took six months to negotiate the release of five Soviet political prisoners in exchange for two Russian spies He said the United States has not forgotten about other human rights activists jn the Soviet Union • While a d m in is tr a tio n e ffo rts to monitor whethei companies are complying with the wage price guidelines are not perfect "we re doing the I think we re making a great deal best we can of progress " • \tte r Rhodesia its new black run installs government, he will decide whether it deserves American support Committee rejects gas shutdowns WASHINGTON (U PI) - The Senate Energy Committee Monday rejected a proposal that gasoline stations be closed on weekends to save energy. The com m ittee voted 12-5 to elim inate the option of weekend closings from a com prom ise energy conservation bill proposed as a substitute for one of President Carter’s standby em ergency conservation programs. The compromise bill, by Sens. Pete D om enici, R -N.M ., and J. Bennett Johnston. D-La., would let states set up t h e ir ow n e n e r g y c o n s e r v a t io n program s. The program s would be designed to m eet whatever energy- saving target the president sets. States that fell short would have to accept a mandatory federal plan. THE AMENDMENT by Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J., adopted Monday would specify the federal plan could not in­ clude weekend closings. Bradley said the president has many other ways to conserve gasoline, including the “odd- even system ” by which motorists could buy gas only on certain days according to their license plate numbers. The com m ittee set a vote on the com ­ promise bill for Tuesday. The bill was drawn up as an alter­ native to a plan Carter submitted to Congress specifying weekend station closings under certain severe gasoline shortages. So far, the House Commerce Committee has rejected that proposal and the Senate Energy Committee was pursuing the Johnston-Domenici sub­ stitute. DOMENICI SAID his and Johnston’s bill “ would give the president far greater authority to face the em ergency than he has ever had before. We will h a v e s tr e n g th e n e d th e a u th o r ity dram atically, as I see it.” The president would have many choices for mandatory conservation, even without the power to order stations to close on weekends, Domenici said. Carter sent Congress four energy con­ servation programs that would have to be approved May 12 or they die. Three were for the fairly im m ediate shor­ tages: restricting advertising lights, controlling non-residential therm ostat settings and closing service stations on weekends. A FOURTH WAS for the direst of em ergencies: gasoline rationing with a coupon system rem iniscent of World War II. So far. House and Senate com m ittees have approved the therm ostat proposal and rejected the advertising proposal. The House Comm erce Committee re­ jected rationing and the Senate Energy it. The House Committee approved com m ittee rejected the weekend clos­ ing idea and the Senate com m ittee seem ed headed in that direction. Registration plan of military service moves in House WASHINGTON (UPI) A House sub com m ittee Monday voted to reinstate military registration for 18-year old men alter the 1980 elections, sparking protests from young people gathered at the Capitol. The House armed services military personnel subcom m ittee took its action by unanimous voice vote after rejecting another proposal to draft up to 100,000 young men a year for the federal reserves THE REGISTRATION plan must be approval by the full com m ittee before It requires the House floor debate president to start registering all males who becom e 18 on or after Jan I, 1981, and calls to tell Congress whether he wants standby authority to impose actual callups for military ser vice for him Several hundred young people, waving Vietnam-era signs depicting draft card burnings, greeted news of the subcom m ittee vote with chants of "Hell, no. we w on’t go ” Their rally outside the Capitol was one of 70 scheduled across the nation this week They cheered as a series of speakers, including several mem bers of Congress, condemned the registration plan as 'a fraudulent and cowardly act " "We want a full blown debate on this before they take any of us away again," said the Rev Barry Lynn, head of the Committee Against Registration and the Draft o f 100 M O R E T H A N th e demonstrators, led by Ron Kovic, 32, of Los Angeles, who was wounded in the Vietnam war in 1988, later jammed a h a llw a y o u t s id e R ep P a u l W McCloskey 9 office and chanted, "Hell, no. we won t go," and debated noisily with the congressman "If you recall I marched with you in 87 said McCloskey, K Calif., who m 1972 entered several GOP prim aries against President Nixon presenting him self os an anti war candidate McCloskey has introduced a hill, with 14 co sponsors that would require all (xsiple to register with the government within Id da vs after their 17th birthdays The m easure offers options of serving various lengths of tim e m military or civilian jobs THE LAST DRAFT callup was in 1972 as American tif rapid urban growth. The city and the whole county are the laving a nervous breakdow n,” •eport said. “ The rapid growth and pop- ilation boom our area has experienced, combined wi th o th er fa c to r s , has jroduced a serious and m easurable rend of social disintegration "U nless the com m unity and our Dublic officials act on som e of these jrgent recommendations, the problems #e are facing now in mental health will ¡ o o n b e c o m e c o m p l e t e l y u n ­ manageable." THE ASSO C IA TIO N c i t e d 1978 statistics: 25,876 m arriages versus 25 - )86 lawsuits for divorce; 2,100 new child support cases monthly; an estim ated 100,000 alcoholics; 16,090 arrests for irunken driving; 60.099 calls to Crisis Hotline. Approximately 130,000 persons in a -ounty population of 2.2 million sought m enu I health aid from public agencies and the report said the number "is only the tip of the iceberg." By 1980, the report estim ated 350,000 — approximately 15 percent of the pop­ ulation — will require som e kind of m enU l health care. The rep ort sai d Harri s County facilities are inadequate. It listed 10 psychiatric em ergency hospiUl beds, 44 public hospiUl beds for com m itm ent evaluation, a waiting list of two to six weeks for psychiatric evaluation. In 1978. the report said, the county’s turned awa y ap ­ public hos pi t al s proximately 60 children in need of em ergency psychiatric care because none of the 54 beds was especially allocated for children THE REPORT SAID the county needs 37 more public psychiatric hospital beds annually through 1985 and, by 1985, 15 more beds for children 13 and under and 49 beds for youths 13 to 20 years old "The single m ost urgent need is for public and private inpatient beds for children." the report said. ‘‘Our figures show that the fam ily unit is u n d e r u n ­ in H a r r i s C o u n t y precedented str e ss. Our figu res in various categories ... show the symp­ toms of this stress among the adult pop­ ulation," the report said. "But the most disturbing aspect of increasing social disintegration is the effect on our children. this “Our figures ... show that our children are the chief victim s of our own inabili­ ty to cope with the stress that is in­ herent in our fast-paced lifestyles ami are the ones for whom only minimal facilities, or in som e cases no facilities, exist " news capsules From <*■ m Texan New* Service* Iran savers diplomatic ties with Egypt TEHRAN, Iran - Iran Monda; broke off diplomatic relation* with Egypt, the first nation to harbor the exiled shah, and source* predicted Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini would soon exchange ambassadors with hard-line Ubya. Egypt accused Iran of bowing to pressures from Arab states opposed to the Egyptian-Israeli treaty, expressed regret at its action, and said Cairo would break its relations with Tehran. Israeli ship sails through Suez Canal CAIRO - An Israeli cargo ship sailed op the Suez Canal Monday in the first tangible benefit of the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty which officially went into effect five days ago. The freighter Ashdod entered the southern end of the 100-mile-long canal at 8 25 a.m. as part ot a convoy of 32 ships from various nations. The Ashdod was the first ship flying the Israeli flag to past through the canal since Israel became a state hi 1948. Talmadge denies financial wrongdoing WASHINGTON - Sen. Herman Talmadge, conceding only he had been negligent in overseeing his finances, said Monday the Senate Ethics Com­ mittee’s charges against him were based on evidence from a former aide he called a “ proven liar, cheat and embezzler.” The long-time Georgia senator, in an opening statement before the Senate's first formal ethics proceeding against a member is a dozen years, said he himself had initiated financial investigations which were the basas of the five allegations against him. Talmadge said three of the five allegations were so trivial they Mwuki be dropped and the two more serious charges actually involved wrongdo­ ing by former aide D ssh l Minchew. Bush to announce presidential candidacy WASHINGTON - The Republican presidential hat dance increased tempo Monday with Senate GOP Leader Howard Baker disclosing he has collected enough money to t w fer president and George Bmh announcing he will make his candidacy official Tuesday. Bush s campaign committee said the former CIA director “will an­ nounce he is a Republican candidate for president on Tuesday" at a Washington news conference before tafcfageli on a 18-city tour of Comeo* tjcut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, Florida and Alabama. Oklahoma House rejects asexualization bill OKLAHOMA CITY - The Oklahoma Home Monday narrowly defeated a MU calling for “asexualization’1 of some sex offenders despite sup­ porters’ ciatos the memore would warn rapists to stay out of Oklahoma, The vote was 4M8, wtth 31 votes needed for passage The House last week had voted to bring up the bill. But legislators Monday Mded with arguments summed up by Rep. Bill Wiseman, R-Tulaa, who said: “This is sot Irán. This is not H itlers Gei* mam* This hi Oklahoma." The bill provided for “incapacitation of the external male genitalia" lor persons convicted of first-degree rape or «ral sodomy, under certain con­ ditions, by cutting n am e to the penis. Stocks decline for third straight session NEW YORK - Stocks gave ground grudgingly for the third straight session in vestors M onday as weighed mixed news con- ceromg Federal Reserve credit tightening, inflation and the economy Trading was slow. SOW 1081$ AVI RACE 39 lades trials closed at 854.90 The Dew Jonoi average, down more than 9 p o in ts s t th * outset, stUlloet 1.74 to ®4 90 The Dow dropped 4*3$ points Friday. Page 4 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N O Tuesday. May 1. 1979 our people make us number one Since 1962, Electronic Data S ystem s has marketed computer ser­ vices to financial, insurance and retail companies. to offer a wide range of Our continued growth enables us professional and data processing career positions plus excellent health and life insurance benefits. Our people have made us number one in our industry! We are currently seeking graduates with a high level of academ ic performance within the following curricula: • Business Adm inistration • Com puter Science • M athem atics E xcellent communication skills and a record of demonstrated leadership abilities are requisites for consideration. These positions are located primarily in the Southwest and Midwest of the United States. Pleate subm it your resum e to: Electronic D ata System s 7 80 0 Sh oal Creek Blvd., Suite 100-E 787 57 Austin, Texas Attention: Pat Johnson fqwaí Opfxnt u n ity fmptvymi M f ALL LEVI S BELLS, B IG BELLS, SADDLEMAN BOOT CUT, AND 501 . SH RINK tTO’EIT , JEANS .. - - . 1 / - '* V Reg. 14.50 - NOW ONLY X w/UTID / . THRIFT A CENTER 2735 E. 7th :'A- .• *"n . ’ •* • v I .fc. firing line Tribute In memory of Michael Eakin and his editorial assistant, the late Ken McHam, I prom ise to give %20 a month (for as long as I am fmancially able), to organizations such as the following: Solar Loby. Solar Action. Ecology Action, Texas Mobilization for Survival, Austin Citizens for Economical Energy, Trees Limited, Sierra Club, Environmental Action, Friends of the Earth, Planned Parenthood — World Population, Union of Concerned Scientists, Natural Resources Defense Council, The Humane Society and Zero Population Growth Michael and Ken thought that there's a better way to run a world Marin Hicks Ecology Action Eulogy to Eakin I didn t always agree with him; I didn't always think him right; but I thought him a man who served the University with integrity. Michael Eakin. to those of you who didn’t know him, was a political activist and controversial Daily Texan editor in the early .Seventies. He may have been the most radical editor in the paper’s history He constantly protested what he felt was wrong He strongly resisted what he thought were restraints on a free student press He was fiercely loyal to what he thought was right and what he thought was in the best interest of students He worked hard and devoted all of his energy to pur­ suing the truth however unpopular his path or his conclusion might be. A good many did not like or approve of Eakin, but no one could say honestly that Eakin's interest was in himself or his own advancement He sought out what he thought was meaningful to his fellows, and he tried with all of his ability to point it out to us and help us. That that be the eulogy for each and every one of us — we would have a far, far better world I remember his doleful face and the change that would come about in it in lighthearted moments. The full sm ile and rich laughter It saddens me that that will be no more I can only hope that his mquisitve spirit, his selfless nature, and his desire for a more humane world live on in the rest of us Sandy Kraaa Washington, D.C. The game Campus tickets, m erely pieces in the game. The odds are stacked against the prey, the attacker has unquestioned, licens­ ed authority. The UTPD issues many tickets after midnight and in the dead morning hours, the tim es when I like to prowl. While one studies in the library, their large objects outside may be collecting $15 penalties. Unfair! Unjust! University traffic laws should facilitate smooth circulation and make University facilities easily accessible. It’s tim e to disrupt the carefree habitual actions in this un­ forgiving sport When every piece of bait set on a windshield wiper yields a catch, the task is too easy. It’s tim e to throw in a little drama. New Rule: Sly student displaces all tickets on cars Game Hours: 10 p.m, - 6 a.m Goal Relieve student from ticket. Backlog ticketing process. Arouse UTPD instinctual hunting patterns Mr. Policeman, catch me if you can! Ready? Go!!! Rob Jonot Architecture Stay informed Whether intentional or not, the front page artcle in The Daily Texan (April 23), equates campus homosexuality with Gay Blue Jean Day. The real crux of the matter lies buried in the third column, where the president of the Lesbian-Gay Alliance, Wen­ dy Wipperman, says that the “m a j o r p r o b l e m is that for gay students, there are (no) facilities or regular social functions on campus. ” The Texan, following the lead of all organized m ass media, chooses to focus instead on those gay activities which make good copy, i.e., homosexual assault, gay bar scene, disco dan­ cing, drag shows and Gay Blue Jean Day. In no way do I wish to cast those last four activities in a bad light — when political m ovements begin to deny all forms of play, they quickly become organized into political parties But, what bothers me is that these are just about the only things that are ever reported It might surprise the Texan to learn that in the year since the last celebration of Gay Blue Jean Day local residents have successfully organized the Austin Lesbian-Gay Political Caucus and contributed significantly to the human rights lobbying e f­ fort at the state Capitol. There are also plans under way to hold a state-wide convention here in June. If the gay student population at this university indeed ap­ proaches 10 percent — as is reported in Monday's article — then it seem s the Texan is turning its back on a significant segm ent of its readership. Perhaps it is too much to ask that the Texan present the facets and the problems of local gay experience in a thoughtful and critical manner than focus on the silliness of past years. While it is unquestionably the responsibility of the press to in­ form. it is also the p ress’s responsibility to s t a y informed. Gary N. Raaaa Madia coordinator Gay Community Sorvieoa tW R E CAfiHCN EWDERf Palestinian view ignored By M oham m ad Haaaan It is really a pity that in a newspaper that is supposed to represent facts and reflect realities you find this kind of domination of reactionary at­ titudes We know that some people w ill sa y that the letters, that were sent to ex­ press the writers’ lack of sup­ port for the PLO and the P a le stin ia n Arab student movement here; are written by people from the public. But let us tell you. that all what people who write these things think is due to the historic and i m ­ l o n g h e g e m o n y of perialism. Zionism and Arab reaction over the media is f o r th e t i m e The time has com e for the American people to hear the factual opposite point of view. It t h e American students to listen to real facts. From that respect, we talk to you believing in the inevitable solidarity between the Arab and the American p r o g r e s s i v e s t u d e n t m o vem en ts. It is due to different circum stances that we are students in the U S A., but that should help in reflec­ ting a certain sector of the Arab m asses (the students) positions and stands on the d i f f e r e n t p o l i t i c a l and e c o n o m i c a l t hat currently are due in the Mid­ dle East i s s u e s Who said that because of our support for freedom and p r o g r e ss w e shoul d “ go hom e?’’ We realize better than those who shout at us in our demonstrations and say “Go hom e,’ that we should be really struggling beside our revolting m asses But that does not mean that during our stay in the U S A we cannot express our solidarity with our people and with the struggling people of the world t h e A nd by Palestinians have been robbed of their homeland t h e w a y , So it is our duty to tell the American people because we need their support, and even­ tually they will need ours, that the “State of Israel’’ is not the “ an gel” reflected by U.S. media. What The m ere existance of the Z ionist occupation w as a crim e in itself because it up­ rooted most of the Palestinian people out of their homeland and subjected the remaining people to mass suppression and oppression The m ere ex­ istence of the Zionist entity in Palestine means the practice of racism against both Arab Eastern jews and Arabs of di f f erent rel i gi ons ( Jew, Moslem and Christian). The mere existence of the Zionist occupier means Deir Yassin m assacre where 250 women, children and men were killed. The mere existence of the Zionist entity means the con­ tinuous bombing and shelling of refugee camps in Lebanon. is “ retaliation for terrorism?” It only means the suppression and oppression of the revolution of the people that are seeking freedom , pr o g r e s s , l i be r at i on and peace. It only means the sup­ pression and oppression of the people who are revol t i ng against racism and exploita­ tion. It only means securing imperialist. Zionist and Arab reaction's interests in having m asses to exploit, markets to sell goods and an outflow of oil and petrodollars to the hands of a limited small minority in the societies. The m ere ex­ istence of the Zionist occupier will only mean the whole d e t e r mi n a t i o n of all o p­ p r e s s e d m a s s e s w i t h i n Pal est i ne, in the refu g ee camps and all over the Arab world, to continue struggling until they achieve total libera­ tion. Our student organization not only supports the struggle against occupation, oppres­ sion and racism in Palestine, but s uppor t s too all the s t r u g g l e wa g e d by Arab m a sse s agai nst the r e a c ­ tionary Arab regim es who practice oppression and ally them selves to the rest of the p e o p l e ' s e n e m y c a m p represented by imperialism. Zionism and reaction T h e P a l e s t i n i a n Ar ab m asses have not waged their armed revolution because they love blood, but it has been a logical resultant of op­ pr es s i on. m a s s a c r e s and racism t he m to w a g e to por t r a y j e t - f i g h t e r s It is both ridiculous and non- the r e a l i s t i c p e o p l e ' s r e v o l u t i o n a s terrorist because the revolu­ tion with its m a sse s has realized that the nature of the i t s Z i o n i s t e n t i t y a n d dependence upon its military machine makes it inevitable for t hei r revolutionary violence. They announced that the area is in a state of war. If three or four people get killed by guerrilla attacks, look at the hundreds that have been killed by “ I s r a e l i ” in Karameh-Jordan. Look at the thousands that have been kill­ ed by the Zionist tanks, bombs in the South of and shells Lebanon. Thirty thousand Palestinian and Jordanian masses were killed by the reactionary regime of Jordan that is an ally of imperialism. Tens of thousands of P alesti­ nian and Lebanese people have be e n ki l l ed by the Lebanese Fascists supported by “ Israel.” The number of political prisoners in “ Israel” is 6,000; about five per 1,000 of the Palestinians living under occupation. If compared to the popula­ tion of this country, the figure will be over one mi l l i on political prisoners. Just ask yourself one simple question; Why do the “Israelis” shoot the Palestinian people who demonstrate within the oc­ cupied land against racism, oppression and in support of their armed revolution? After all. can a whole people be terrorists? The Organization of Arab Students, learning that it is taking the stand of its m asses, will never be discouraged by the Zionist and reactionary threats of bombing the places its activities. This has of h a p p e n e d t w i c e and. of course, was ignored by our students' newspaper. The Dai­ ly T exan!!! l í a s s a n is a m e m b e r o f the O rg a n i z a t i o n o f A r a b S t u d e n t s . (EVERYTHING GOES) PIERRE C A R D IN • FAD ED GLORY • J E A N S • BELTS • KN ITS THE SHOP FOR MEN AND WOMEN IMAGES Bob Elliotts Your Apartment Is Behind The Times. Apartments are for people who like to spend their spare time working. At the Castilian we provide maid service. We have meals right here. And we’ve arranged to have the Univer­ sity only one half block away. Besides that, we offer you several leases... all designed for the student. Isn’t it time to make your move to The Castilian? f o t \.e ® Sort1 The Castilian a privately owned coed residence hall in the heart of the student community 10-5:30, 2426 GUADALUPE On th« Drag 2323 San Antonio 478-9811 THRU FINALS! Peopie are fanatics when it comes to the* W ot ftaaor Point pons. They're reluctant to give them 14). And when someone borrows one. what happens is inevitable First, they kwe the way ft writes Realty smooth and extra-fine They go wtíü over its clever metal coBar that helps Keep the point from go ng squish Naturatty they 'fo rge t' to give it back, although ft's only 79c This can be very em barrassing when they'-e caught sn the act. Others have pocketed Riot s Rnekner pen. The one with the slightly less delicate stroke, it s only 69c So if you borrow someone's fiaaor Pomt or Rne&ner pen you'd better be prepared to pay the consequences But. for much less than a dotiar you'd be sm art to buy your own fhelne marker pens m * samefrxng to write wrth Move The grading system is not yet dead, but it's not at all well. The illness is reflected wherever one looks. The pages of The Chronicle of Higher Education, a publication read by c o lle g e a d m i n i s t r a t o r s and by p ro f e s s o rs who w an t to be a d ­ m inistrators, has included a livley con­ troversy over whether the system might be revived by many more or fewer plus and minus grades Should aspirin be used to treat ter­ minal cancer? Science magazine, one of the world’s m ost im portant scientific journals, recently published an editorial calling for professors of science to assume leadership in saving western civilization by giving more C’s and D’s. But one doesn't have to look at the prestigious journals, one needs only to talk with students who are feeling less terror in their hearts at the threat of low grades They are feeling less vulnerable to the w him s and fan cies and a r b itr a r y judgm ents of their professors. One can hope that the grading system will continue to weaken and that it will eventually die a peaceful death. As it passes away, there will be new freedom fo r s tu d e n ts th e ir own educational decisions and for teachers really to be teachers instead of op­ ponents in the fam iliar grading games to m ak e There has been a long-term trend of inflation in grades. The average grade has been getting higher. I t’s now easier to get an A or' B-plus, and so these grades are generally perceived to mean less, just like the inflated dollar is worth less. (No article has been published in Science vet that blames our economic Grades: educational barrier By Dr. Richard Meisler problems on grade inflation, but I ex­ pect one will appear soon.) Many professors have come to see grading as a barrier to good education rather than as an aid. Since grades are This Learning World thought to affect students' chances of future employment or admission to graduate schools, the grading process contam inates the educational process. Teachers and students are alm ost in­ in c o m p le x e v ita b ly c a u g h t up strategies of deception, trickery and vigilance Teachers become policemen instead of educators Communication is flawed because one always wonders about ulterior motives Many professors have responded by trying to defuse the problem by being easy graders. “ You’ll get an A or a B.” they say, “ now let’s get on with business.’’ Some politically radical teachers see the educational system as being in the la r g e r c a p it a li s t s e r v ic e of th e economic system. The traditional job of the schools they believe, is to sort out and tram people to be obedient servants of the ruling class. These teachers too may essentially stop grading or become easy graders as their way of refusing to cooperate with the system Whatever the reason, the m essage has penetrated into the outside world. Two professors at the School of Business at the University of Connecticut asked ex­ ecutives of large industrial companies th e ir h irin g p ra c tic e s . The about responses showed that these employers thought that the ability to wrrite and speak well, poise and self-confidence were all m ore the grades of job applicants They also felt that the type of degree was particularly important. im portant than The alleged necessity for employers and graduate schools to have grades has been a powerful argum ent used for years by the advocates of stringent grading systems The force of the argu­ ment is fading as the facts show that schools and em ployers are capable of finding o th er w ays of ev a lu a tin g applicants. People who exercise power, in this case teachers, will always find reasons to justify their privileged posi­ tion. and their argum ents will alm ost always appeal to the service that is be­ ing done for the powerless. The argum ents, however, are appear­ ing m ore transparent, and grades are on their way out We are getting closer to the ideal situation described by Maria Montessori when she said that the job of a teacher is to teach, not to judge. M eisler i t a freela n ce w riter bas­ ed in Michigan. T H E A C A D E M I A W A L T Z B Y B E R K S * : B R E A T H E D uCOtr I FEEL RlDlCl/COUS.. & uhycadtueact 'f o r ñ ADULT A m DO urmcDT TH/C ST OFT. E E Í W E T f\ c u e T H A T H Á S £ VEHYTHWE TO LOSE..THM5 UHY. \ W i t 's ñ Y HONOR AT STAKE UHED!DEM THAT / EVER TOUCHED YOU. I :o HMerrm OffrseA m l LOOK... YOU DO YOU FEEL ABOUTUEMIÑE DON T k/AVE THESE m/JDTf UE5US... TH05E ARocND... DO MX COM IH cm Mil? l'ft ITT HfllL I DOY7 EXIST... \ Law restricting FBI flagrant audacity By Mark Magae In the past few years I have witnessed increasing attacks on the American ideals of freedom and democracy, but the recently passed law concerning in­ telligence agencies is an unprecedented danger. This law restricts the actions of the agencies in their m ortal struggle against evil, communism and excessive non-conformity. The'intelligence agen­ cies, as their nam e im plies, know everything there is to know about what is im portant to national security. And because of this supreme intelligence, this in­ this unsurpassed knowledge, finite wisdom, the m ost qualified people to make any and every decision relating to national security. they a re Look at the record The agencies are always on the first line of defense, out on the forefront of world affairs The CIA’s Bay of Pigs operation, the the “ Vietnam E ra .” and the revolution in Iran show how lucid is their view of the world, and how thoroughly they unders­ tand the sentim ents of a people with a different culture. This empathy is also apparent in the way they handle domestic affairs. They have been able to infiltrate and disrupt dangerous and subversive cults. The FBI recognized the danger in people like Martin Luther King going around and talking about “ brotherly love.’’ The next thing you know they'll want in­ terracial m arriage. The FBI was also active in infiltrating dangerous long­ haired drug cults that were trying to back out of their obligation to defend America. Perhaps you saw Fr iendl y F i r e , and saw how the FBI uses its finesse to get information about un- American radicals, like farm ers from Iowa. Tapping phones, intimidating people and lying are all part of the job When you're defending freedom you can ’t give the enemy any concessions. The intelligence agencies were also able to give the president discretionary power to defend the most imperial of­ fice from attacks. Since the president s goals truly reflect the will of the people, he should have all the power necessary to reach his goals. Nixon is the perfect example of an executive who used his resources to the fullest. He used his power to discredit un-American types such as Daniel Ellsberg and George McGovern. to law -an d -o rd e r judge How can these agencies be expected to carry out their im portant tasks if they must submit the whims of capricious judges? I’m sure that an up­ stan ding like Berger won’t restrict the agencies in their vital work, but judges come and go. And we can’t count on Nixon s legacy forever. What if a bunch of them go and die9 They’re pretty old, you know What kind of bleeding heart nin­ nies do you think C arter will put in ’ Judges who know nothing about the real world and the dangers of subversives to r e s t r i c t th e p o w e r w ill have operations that are vital to national security There the values of the judges will lie, but we all know what the values of the intelligence agencies are These agencies are dedicated to making the world safe for American Ideals, and they’re doing a dam n good in ­ terference We can only hope that the agencies will continue to take the in­ itiative to ignore any repressive laws restricting their freedom is no guarantee where jo b w ith o u t any M a g e e is an el ectrical e n g i n e e r ­ ing s t udent e d it o r ia ls T H K D A IL Y T K X \ N P a g e 5 T u e s d a y . Mav 1. 1 9 7 9 Our apologies to Byron Whited S o m e tim e s you get little ste a k and so m e tim e s you h av e to e a t a little crow Let’s just say th a t to d ay w e ’r e picking fe a th e rs fro m our teeth to e a t a I^ast w eek w hen O fficer B yron W hited b ran d ish ed his re v o lv e r w hile try in g to co n tro l a group of C o n fe d e ra te -c la d K appa A lphas p artic ip a U n g in th e ir an n u a l L ittle field b a p tism , we fe lt W hited had gro ssly ab u se d his a u th o rity and a d v o c a te d th at he be fired. At th e tim e we penned o u r e d ito ria l o u r position w as b ased on in fo rm atio n g iven re p o rte rs by p e r ­ If W hited pulled sons w ho w itn essed the in cid en t his gun b e c a u se he slipped o r w as pu sh ed into the fountain, a s we w ere told, then we said he should be fired W e have co m e to le a rn , ho w ev er, th a t not only w as W hited pushed into th e fou n tain by a m e m b e r of th e KAs, but he w as dunked and held un­ d e r w a te r by a t le a st five ind iv id u als T he KAs told the T exan th a t W hited “ slipped and fe ll” into th e fountain, su g g estin g th a t W h ited ’s a c ­ tions w e re m o tiv a te d by e m b a r ra s s m e n t r a th e r than a ju s tifia b le cau se. W hited w as u n a v a ila b le for co m m e n t th a t evening. T he sto ry we p rin ted p ro m p te d th re e p erso n s, to c o m e fo rw a rd and to who w itn e sse d the ev en t, re n d e r W hited’s supposed “ ir r a tio n a l’ behavior. th e ir versio n of th e e v e n ts th a t led Bill P u rs e , a s s is ta n t U n iv ersity police chief. suspended Whited on the m erit of the Texan ac­ count, feeling that “ there was an indication that maybe he (Whited) hadn’t acted in the proper m anner.” Ih irse , however, told the Texan, Monday, that testimony from the three witnesses caused him to re v e rs e his decision and lift the suspension. Accor­ ding to their testimony, Whited did not slip, but was pushed in the fountain and held underwater. W h ited 's g lasses were broken, he lost a ring and he receiv ed abrasions to his knee and arm when he w a s m a u le d ” bv KAs. the testimony disclosed V erbally mocking an officer is one thing, but se v e ra l m e m b e rs of the KA fraternity stepped over th e line when th ey placed just one finger on the of- fice r No p e a c e officer should be subjected to ph y sical a b u se of any kind while trying to perform his duty To officer Whited we apologize for making a prem ature editorial judgm ent; his actions, in our opinion, were justified. He was being manhandled by a group of supposedly intoxicated individuals, who fa ile d to d ra w the line between having fun and a ssa u ltin g a police officer. To th e KAs w e hope the dean of students office ta k e s a long, hard look at the police report on the in­ c id e n t and th en takes swift action Under the cir­ c u m sta n c e s , suspension would not be too harsh a p u n ish m en t Faulk versus the FBI John H e n ry F aulk, who is “ fixing to su e th e th e cra w lin g hell out of th e F B I ,” filed su it in fe d e ra l co u rt A pril 23. And w ell he should h av e F au lk , 65, h u m o rist, telev isio n p e rso n a lity and fo rm e r U n iv e rsity E nglish in s tru c to r, hopes th e c o u rts will ru le th a t th e F B I is illegally w ithholding filed in fo rm a tio n su b je c t to th e F re e d o m of In fo r­ m a tio n Act F a u lk ’s p a rtic ip a tio n in civ il rig h ts o rg a n iz a tio n s in A ustin in th e 1940s (he w as a m e m b e r of th e NAA CP an d alleg ed ly f irs t a ttr a c te d in v e stig a tiv e a tte n tio n w hile studying ‘‘N egro F o lk lo re ” on a led to his being R o sen w ald F ello w sh ip in 1943) b ra n d ed a co m m u n ist by a p riv a te group. A w are, Inc. A w are, Inc., had a s th e ir a tto rn e y -o f-re c o rd Roy Cohn, w ho w as also a se n io r leg al counsel to th e la te Sen. J o e M cC arthy, R-W is. In 1955 F au lk , along w ith m a n y o th e r civil rig h ts a d v o c a te s (including J . F ra n k D o b ie), w as b la c k liste d fro m b ro a d c a stin g th e p aran o id a tm o s p h e re p ro m p te d by M c C a rth y ’s h y s te ric a l “ re d t h r e a t ” ca m p a ig n finally subsided, F au lk sued A w are for “ co n sp ira c y to d e f a m e ’’ and w as a w a rd e d $3 5 m illion (la te r re d u ced to $500,000) in 1962 O nce U n d e r th e au sp ice s of A w a re ’s conclusion th a t F au lk w as a c o m m u n ist sy m p a th iz e r, J . E d g a r H oover d ire c te d his ag en cy to in v e s tig a te F au lk . His n a m e w as s m e a re d and his su cc essfu l sp ira lin g c a r e e r w as a r re s te d . In 1955 th e FBI g av e a copy of Faulk’s file to then- Sen Lyndon Johnson. Comeidently, LBJ, who had hired F au lk to fill a high-level position in his broad­ cast business, suddenly reneged on the contract. in te rm s of dollars. But, being The d a m a g e h as been done. No am ount of p e c u n ia ry c o m p e n sa tio n can amend the injustices su ffe re d by F au lk a t the m ercy of the FBI in the n a m e of “ A m e ric a n freedom .” Emotional and pysch o lo g ical su fferin g and dam age can never be the m e a s u re d re so u rc e fu l and intelligent man that he is, Faulk, did not le t in ju stic e and ignorance keep him down. F aulk is not seeking money. He merely wants his c o n stitu tio n a l rights recognized. More than anyone, he d e s e rv e s to see information the FBI still has on him , th e d e le tio n s that have been made on the infor­ m atio n he has re c e iv e d and particularly he should h av e a c c e s s to a 1964 memo from the F B I’s St. Louis o ffic e to Hoover David B erg, F a u lk 's attorney, says the govern­ ment insists there is “ nothing m uch” in the memo. Assuredly, the government would have responded with sim ilar words if asked what was in F aulk’s If there is in fact “ nothing m uch” in files in 1955 the memo, then why is it being withheld? Faulk was victim of a contagious national disease which was thankfully wiped out. But the contagion still exists within the files of the FBI. Facts, fallacies and radioactivity I B y J e r r y C h a m k t » J I should be very interested to learn more specific details of the gross m is­ representations of facts by the anti nuclear forces detected by Mr. P arker Perhaps he can offer an explanation for the following “ facts” provided by two of th e s t a n c h i o n s of p r o - n u c l e a r leadership • “ F a c t” “ Uranium is dug out of the ground, concentrated and placed inside a reac­ tor, thus most of the radioactivity in the uranium is exhausted inside of a closed environment in a short period of tim e Most of the remaining products are much less radioactive than the original uranium, therefore the nuclear industry is reducing the total amount of radioac­ tivity mankind is faced with ” (Herb W oodson te s t i m o n y 66th T e x a s Legislature hearings i • “ R eality” “ Uranium fuel elem ents, before they have been placed in a reactor are nearly harm less and may be held in a bare hand After undergoing a slow, con­ trolled chain reaction in the reactor for several months, however, the sam e fuel elem ent becomes the most hazardous object, short of an atomic bomb, known to man It can only be transported in in enormous lead and steel casks weighing many it enough radioactivity, if distributed, to poison whole cities This enormous the violently hazard d eriv es radioactive fragm ents of split atom s, tons, and contains within from fission products ( T h e C a r e l e s s A to m . Sheldon N ovick, Houghton Mifflin, 1969.) • “ Fact “ Dr Woodson also pointed out that every person on Earth is radioactive A person is exposed to m ore radioactivity when standing next to another person than when standing next to a power plant Therefore, Dr. Woodson conclud­ ed, nuclar power is safer than sex (Herb Woodson testimony 66th Texas Legislature hearings.) tim e s • R ea lity ” While radium in the “ normal human skeleton” provides a daily dose of from 2 10 th e c o s m ic t h a t of background the principal emission is of alpha particles and therefore not detec­ table o u t s i d e the body. The following gam m a radiation m easurem ents were made at the San Onofre (California — M U ’ rates as one of the best) plant on June 4 1976 Ten miles south of plant, 5,000 counts per minute Same location, detector em braced by body, 5,000 cpm At plant security fence, 7,500 cpm At road on northbound plant a c c e ss freew ay , 8,500 cpm . (2 * N a l(T b ) scintillator Kberline model SPA2) • “ F a c t” If fuel reprocessing and the breeder reactor are both eliminated, the present resources of uranium ore are com ­ parable to the present reserves of oil and gas in this country However, U235, the only naturally occurm g fissile m aterial constitutes less than 1 percent If the of naturally occurring uranium breeder reactor and reprocessing a r t utilized, then the other 99 percent of natural uranium. U238, can be used to produce fuel Thus, the breeder reactor combined with fuel reprocessing would effectively m ultiply this co u n try ’s nuclear fuel resources by a factor of 200. Under these conditions, nuclear energy could be regarded as a solution to the energy crisis, since the fuel supply would be virtually (Herb W oodson t e s t i m o n y 66th T e x a s Legislature hearings.) infinite.” • “ R eality” The qualifier “ virtually” was edited into the testimony to soften the impact. Even so, one times 200 isn’t any kind of infinity • “ Fact” If the anti-nuclear people are so con­ cerned about a little low-ievel radiation, they should discontinue the use of natural gas in the home, as it brings Tadon intimately into the environment. (John Gordon, adviser tot the Texas Energy Advisory Council at the ACC nuclear forum an on KLBJ-AM ) • “ R eality” Radon is an alpha em itter whose longest lived isotope has a half-life of 3 6 days The m easured alpha activity of South Austin residential natural gas is 1 to ta l co sm ic to 2 p e rc e n t of background Note that Woodson s group has just been awarded $80,000 by the Texas Legislature to study the radioac- tivity in c o a l__________________ ____ i s a n e l e c t r i c a l ( h a m k i t the e ng i ne e r T h e Da il y T e x a n ...................................... Editor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editors Assistant to the Editor bleats Editor............................. Sports E d itor....................... 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Lucian Perkins Copyright !«7» Texas Student PmMjcuUom Kepr xfc* two oí My part at thi» pubUcut** » proMMed without the e*pr*»* permuaioc oí the Daily Teaan editor n p r n i n j .a The DaUy T«*an ar* Uwae of the editor or the writer at the article uta are not neretsanly those oí the Caieeraity or admianOatK* the Board at Kegenu or the Tea as Student PubireUom Board at Operating Trust**» On letters On columns Editorial columns should ; Firing line letters should • be typed and triple spaced • be 30 lines or less, 60 characters per line • address issues, not personalties • include name, address, and phone number of contributor* • all letters become property of The Daily Texan Mail letters to The Firing Line, The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Texas, 78712, or bring letters to the Texan office in basement of the TSP building The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit letters to the editor for proper length and clarity. • • be typed and triple space • be 80 lines or less, 60 characters per line • include name, address and phone number of contributor. • ail columns become property of The Daily Texan. Mail columns to Editorial D epartm ent. The Daily Texan, Drawer D, UT Station, Austin, Texas, 78712, or bring columna lo the Texan office m the basement of the TSP building. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit ail columns for proper length and clarity Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday. May 1. 1979 U.T. Employees Union General Meeting Su m m e r Is Here, A n d To Start It Righ t BY G EO RG E Is H a v in g a STOREWIDE SALE 1 0 % -5 0 % off 5 0 % off Calvin Kleins Tuesday, M ay 1 7:30 p.m. SRH 3.111 (LBJ School, first floor) All U.T. 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Assures trade-in value VM*c in University Keepsake Diamond Center Blum reviews peace treaty Ambassador says Arabs want success By P H ILIP B R A S H E R Daily Texan Staff Although most Arab m em bers of the United Nations officially oppose the recently com pleted Israeli-Egyptian peace agree­ ment. the Israeli U N. ambassador said Monday he thinks many privately hope the treaty succeeds. Yehuda Z Blum, a former University visiting professor, told a University School of Law audience that official Arab positions opposing the agreement are well-knowr, but “ their represen­ tatives ( UN. am bassadors) in private would be much more lenient.” Even so, Blum said he expected no United Nations help against P alestinian te rro ris m resulting from the treaty. If the Arab delegation stood and said that the world was flat they would automatically be assured of 80-90 votes,” Blum said. • More or less half the membership is com m itted to their point of view Israel does not expect help from non-democratic nations, Blum added “ Only about one-fifth of the United Nations (coun­ tries) a re p a rlia m e n ta ry dem ocracies,” he said “ That’s the kind of world we live in.” MONDAY’S QUESTION-AND-ANSWER session at the law school was Blum's first visit to Austin and the University in eight y e a rs Israeli UN ambassador since 1978, Blum taught in­ ternational law at the University in 1971 as a visiting professor. E a rlie r Monday, Gov Bill Clements named both Blum and his wife honorary Texas citizens. Iran has joined the Arab nations in denouncing the peace agreement reached in March, but Blum said he does not expect Ayatollah Khomeini’s new Iranian government to actively op­ pose it. It’s obvious the new regime is considerably more radical on said the Israeli-Egyptian conflict than was its predecessor, Blum, citing Khomeini’s steps to sever relations with Israel. However, he added. “ I do not believe Iran would want to take an active part in the campaign against the peace process. An April speech at the University by Egyptian U.N. Am­ bassador A. E sm at Abdel Meguid was repeatedly interrupted by heckling There w ere no protests, however, during B lum 's one-hour v isit, alth ough Organization of Arab Students rep resen tativ es passed out literature denouncing the treaty. EGYPT ITSELF HAS BEEN severely criticized by its Arab neighbors for signing the treaty with Israel. Nevertheless, Blum said Arab sanctions against Eg.vpt would not stop Egyp­ tian P resid ent Anwar Sadat from completing the peace agree­ m ent. “ Don’t overem phasize E g y p t’s isolation from the Arab w orld,” Blum said, noting that Egypt’s population com prises one-third of the Arab world Sadat is determ ined to see the treaty terms com pleted, Blum added. He has clearly showed the Arab world how they failed with the tre a ty .” Editor requisites reduced Being elected editor of the Daily Tex­ an will be a less stringent process in the future if a decision m ade Monday by the Texas Student Publications Board of O perating T rustees is approved by U niversity P residen t Lorene Rogers. The board voted 6-2 to e lim in ate c e r­ tain journalism qualifications “ which virtually dem and that a stu dent be a journalism student in o rd er to run for Texan e d ito r,” TSP P re sid e n t Glenn K arisch said. The qualifications will now read that a student need only take two jo u r­ nalism courses — one being m edia law and the o ther a beginning course — to run for editor, instead of the form er qualifications of a t least 9 hours of journalism including five specific jo u r­ nalism courses. O ther qualifications will still include being a bona fide student a t the U niver­ sity, having a m inim um GPA of 2.25. service on the edito rial staff and at least two s e m e s te rs ’ service on the Texan staff. K arisch and Vice P resid en t Kathy T a lly p o in te d o u t th e new qualifications would allow a person to run for editor a fte r one year of plan­ ning to m eet the qualifications. t h a t “ It looks like any political hack, if he w anted it bad enough, could do it and b e c o m e e d i t o r . ” o b j e c t e d T S P m em ber-elect Sarah Holcomb. T h e m o t i o n “ I'm not so sure that we shouldn’t let any political hack run for editor if he fits o u r q u a lif ic a tio n s ,” K a ris c h countered. “ (The editor position) is by- and-large a political position anyw ay.” t o m a k e e d i t o r qualifications less strin g en t followed a proposal — which w as defeated 4-4 — to allow any bona fide student with a GPA of 2.25 to run for editor and win if he could collect 200 sig n atu res before the filing deadline. f o r Tally com m ented th at reducing the e d i t o r ’ s r e q u i r e m e n t s qualifications was the le a st the board could do to m ake the e d ito r’s ra c e m ore accessible to all m em b ers of the stu ­ dent body. Austin’s cost of living lowest By S T E V E D ILLO N A typical fam ily will spend less m oney to m aintain a m id­ dle level standard of living in Austin than in any other m a ­ jor city in the United S tates, according to an annual U.S. D ep artm en t of Labor report. Austin has been ranked as the c h e a p e s t m e tro p o lita n city in the United S tates to live in since the labor d e p a rt­ m ent began publishing the report 12 y ears ago. The rep ort is based on the cost of living for a fam ily of four, which includes a hus­ band, wife and two children. T h e l a b o r d e p a r t m e n t m easures the costs of goods in c a te g o r ie s w h ic h in c lu d e housing, food and tra n sp o rta ­ tion a c ro s s la rg e s t cities in the U nited States. th e 40 The study lists the lowest in­ com e required to sustain a low. m iddle and high standard of living level. The national av e ra g e for a low level standard of living w as $11,546; for a m id d le level, $18.622; and for a high level. $27.420 In Austin, according to the report, a low level stan d ard of living required $10,288, 11 p e r­ cent lower than the national av erag e; a m iddle level, $16,- 211. 13 percent low er than the national av erag e; and a high le v e l. $23,822, 14 p e r c e n t t h e n a t i o n a l lo w e r t h a n average The labor d e p a rtm e n t also indexed each of the categories surveyed, using the national average for the costs of all item s in th a t category as a base of 100. Austin scored 75 in the hous­ ing category, which included the utility costs. However, s t u d y a s s u m e s a p e r s o n bought his house six y e a rs ago a t the in te re st ra te s p rev ail­ ing a t th a t tim e. 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Suite 407 Dallas, Tx. 75243 214-750-0317 c m o S - We've Been Called A Lot of Names: Super Sleuth Problem Solver Defender of Student Rights Trouble Shooter O m batm an For Help With University Hassles Call The U niv e rsit y O m b u d s m a n d e a lin g w ith stu d e n ts' U n iv e rsity -re la te d c o m p la in t s a n d q u e stio n s Student S e r v ic e s B u ild in g R o o m 7 471-3825 1914 Guadalupe 476-1215 Les Amis Sidewalk f a ir 2 l l h & Sail \ n t o n i o í Á r r I nr«ri N o h o t air, J u s t h o t-to -tro t h a irsty le s. 3004 Cua4nlup» n e x t d o o r to E n g lis h t 476-6960 10% off all cosmetics Revlon, Max Factor, etc. etc. etc. with your I.D. and this ad b rin g your friends an d get gorgeous! Don’t forgot Horn! Nay We ve got lots of interesting g ift ideas 1 I S A SdaMteri'hurge Dobio M a ll m m h h 477-9443 Upper Level M |W i t 5 4 * 7 9 U U L I Í C C n *> t * ! hr. Parking’ m, nnnm m m IW|„ ,„„|inininiinti nun tin m iiim iiin nm iiim iiiiim iiiiiiin iiiiiim m m iiiin itiim im iiniiin r T H E R E AS A D IF F E R E N C E ! e g g Meinert witness testifies By JIM LEFKO Daily Texan Staff Testim ony ended Monday in the trial of Sheila M einert, t h e is a c c u s e d o f w h o attem p ted capital m urder of an Austin police officer. M einert. who is being tried in 167th D istrict Court for to a l l e g e d l y a t t e m p t i n g m urder Joe V illegas on May 18. did not testify in her own behalf as attorneys called only one defense witness. th a t Mary Jo De La Cerda, a lifelong friend of M einert’s. th e n a m e s te s tifie d • D avid” and “ D ave” in a le tte r M e in e rt w ro te h e r before the May 18 incident referred to David Lee Powell and M e in e r t’s b o y frie n d , Dave Fricke, respectively. M e i n e r t ’ s l e t t e r a l s o referred to ‘‘two visits in two days by A ustin c o n sta b le s searching for D avid.” is no place 'F o r people like D avid, th e re to g o ,” M einert w rote. “ H e’s outside society. I see him as a black sheep, not as a sacrificial lam b .” POWELL HAS been con­ victed and sentenced to death for m urdering Austin police officer Ralph Ablanedo May 18. M o n d a y ' s t e s t i m o n y centered around P ow ell’s ac­ quisition of a m achine gun and f r o m two h and g r e n a d e s Donald G raham . G raham , who is serving a tw o-year sentence for posses­ sion of m e th a m p h e ta m in e , said he bought the drug, also known as speed, from Powell in F e b ru a ry 1978 G ra h a m testified he la te r argued with Powell about the quality of the speed G raham also testified he agreed to sell Powell an AK-47 m achine gun he obtained from his father. G raham and his father w ere offered im m unity from charges related to the il­ legal gun sale for G ra h a m 's testim ony in the M einert trial G raham said he originally asked $550 for the gun. but he th e p ric e when in c re a se d Powell failed to pay at the agreed time. i w as looking for David because he owed m e m oney,' G raham said He testified he found Powell and M einert in Killeen “ I TOLD HIM I didn’t think it was rig h t,” G raham said ‘ The quality of the speed was bad ami he owed m e money G raham said he sold the two grenades to Powell several weeks before the m achine gun te stifie d he had sale He gotten the grenades from a friend stationed at Ft. Hood Another Killeen resident, Kenny Lee. testified he saw the m achine gun case twice ‘ The first tu n e it contained m etham phetam ine and the se­ cond ti me it had the AK-47 and two hand grenades, he said ‘ The last ti me I saw it was at IXinald G rah am s in Killeen Final a r g u m e n ts and in­ structions to the jury will be presented Tuesday. HRC position to be filled U n i v e r s i t y P r e s i d e n t Lorene R ogers said Monday she hopes to appoint a perm a- n e n t d i r e c t o r t h e H um anities R esearch C enter before the se m e ste r ends. f o r C arlton Lake has served as acting d ire c to r since la s t fall. L ongtim e d ire c to r W arren R oberts took an early re tire ­ m ent la st spring following ac­ cusations of m ism an agem ent and im proprieties. An internal U niversity audit revealed num erous exam ples te rm e d poor of w hat w ere m a n a g e m e n t and q u e stio n ­ able business p ractices R ogers said e a rlie r this sp r­ ing th a t she expected to fill the position during M arch or April When asked w hat had caused the delay. R ogers said. ‘ Me and t irne — not enough tim e to interview all the c a n ­ d id a te s.” I>ake. a F rench lite ra tu re scholar, reportedly is a prim e c a n d i d a t e j o b . f o r although he has repeatedly said he is not in terested in retaining his post t h e Humane Society More funds allocated The $2.800 m onthly funding will be used for T ravis County com m issioners Monday ap­ proved a plan which will give the H um ane Society the $45,000 in funds it originally re ­ quested in a 1979 budget session. The so ciety ’s an im al sh elter will receive $3,750 a m onth, $950 from the county road and bridge fund and $2,800 from a general fund. To receive the funding, the sh e lte r agreed in a W ednesday session to use the road and bridge m onies only for the pickup of s tra y and dead anim als. custodial expenditures. The decision to provide the funds, which H um ane Society coo rd inato r Doyle Nordyke has called “the pure bone of the op eratio n .” brought to an end a four-m onth w rangling betw een the sh elter and com m issioners The sh elter received $4,787 in county funds for Ja n u a ry through M arch, $1,150 less a m onth than it requested. ■campus news in brief. ( Exam review sessions offereda An E xam C enter, sponsored by RASSL Learning Services t h e C o u n s e l i n g - a n d P s y c h o l o g i c a l S e r v i c e s Center, begins Tuesday in the T e x a s U n i o n B u i l d i n g . T u e s d a y ’s a c tiv itie s a r e : ‘The P ros and Cons of C ram ­ m i n g , ” a t n o o n t h e Eastw oods Room; R elaxation E xercises, a t noon in West Mall Office Building 4.110. R e v i e w S e s s io n s wi l l b e offered for: C hem istry 302, a t 6 p.m. in J e s te r C enter A307, S tatistics 309, at 7 p.m . in J e s t e r C e n t e r A 3 0 5 , M athem atics 603B, a t 7 p.m. in J e s te r C enter A303. in S tud ents m ay en ro ll for RASSL G R E p r e p a r a tio n classes to be offered May 21 through June 1, at the E xam Center from 10 a.m . to 5 p.m. and in J e s te r C enter A332. The classes a re open to ail UT students and a re free. ANNOUNCEMENTS DEPARTMENT OP PHYSICS will present ttie Sonic Circus of Physics, an hour of live d e m o n s tra tio n of p h y s ic a l phenomena associated with waves, vibrations, sound, noise and music the physics of sound and the sound of physics. This event will be at 8 p.m. Tues­ day in Painter Hall 248 S T U D E N T S FO R A L IB E R T A R IA N SOCIETY will hold a draft protest rally at noon Tuesday on the West Mall. Speakers include John Duncan, Texas director of the American Civil Liberties Union, Mike Grossberg, chairman of the Libe rta ria n Party of Texas, Ken Carpenter, of American Friends Service Committee, and Laurel Freeman, of the Association of Libertarian Feminists For information, call 451-1145 HILLEL FOUNDATION will have a career counselor available tor consultation with students from 11 a m. to 1 p m Tuesday at 2105 San Antonio St UT FILM COMMITTEE will present "Roman Holiday” at 3 and 9 30 p.m. Tuesday in the Union Theater Admission is $1 25 with UT ID “ Love Affair, or the Case of the Missing Switchboard Operator" will be shown at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Union Theater Admission ts $1 50 with UT ID TEXAS TAVERN will feature a demonstration by the UT International Folk Dance Club from noon to 1 p m. Tuesday UT ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE will feature Salsa night from 8:30 to 11 30 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas Tavern. Ad­ mission is free MEETINGS NATURAL SCIENCES COUNCIL will meet at 7 30 p.m. Tuesday at Schoiz's Beer Garten for old and new members to meet each other AMERICAN MARKETING ASSOCIATION will meet from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at Hansel and Gretel's for elections for the fail semester All members are en couraged to attend UNIVERSITY MOBILIZATION FOR SUR­ VIVAL will meet at 7 p m Tuesday in Sut to discuss the June 2 ton Hall 101 d em onstration at the South Texas Nuclear Protect. This is the last meeting of the semester UNIVERSITY REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 30 p m Tuesday in Busmesa-Econo- mics Buildmg 155 for oft» ar elections LECTURES DEPARTMENT OF SPANISH ANO POR TUGUESE will sponsor a lecture by Griseida Gambaro, Argentine playwright, on 'L a D ra m a tu rg ia F am mi na en Latinoamérica'' at 4 p m Tuesday in Graduate School of Business Building 1 216 Graduate students of the Latin American theater course will offer a dramatic reading of "Los Siameses" at 1 p n Tuesday in Ur»on Building 3 128 DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGICAL SCIEN­ CES will sponsor a lecture by Nell Tyner, masters degree candidate, on "Field Geology and Petrology of the Sullivan Buttes Latite, Chino Valley, Arizona" at 1 p.m Tuesday in Geology Building 100 I fdeus FLEXIBLE ACC OU N T I Tuesday, May 1. 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 Europe 20 Day Tour H o lland • G erm a n y A ustria • France Ita ly • S w itzerlan d $1619 July 12 - Aug. 1 819 W. 24th 474-6660 Travel St or e Xxxt tintt wui'n in \h xint. stop by ami i'istt th* Cnvtm fohtiai in PqittUe Since 1795 we”ve welcome* 1 our guests wit h our best. A traditional taste of Cuervo Gold. Visitors to (bo nxt haw altrays I»* n greeted in a special tray. They're met at tin gates a m i m in ted in sid i to expert* ence the unique taste o f Cue r iv (iold. T his is the way tec'n sa id bet leona ' f a r mow than 1st) years. A n d it is as tra d itio n a l as ( 'at m> (¡old i t self f b r this dedication to tradition is w hat m akes ( 'uereo (¡old t r u l y special. N eat, on tlu rocks, with a splash of soda, in a perfect S u n r is e or M a r g a r ita, ( ia rw> Gold null bring g| you bark to a tim e when q uality ruled the imrld. * Cuervo. The Gold standard since 1795. CUf RVO tS P { (IA | x 110U U A BfiPROOf IMPORT I D AND BO ‘«r,s Hi UBI ( IN ‘N( mAHTM >1 over the rainbow.. a fole/s charge card waits Ah, the wonderful wizardry of a foley's charge. Taking car© of temporary fund- lessness. Putting an end to a creditless history. And the best news of all...you don't have to wait for graduation to get your foley's charge card. Just let us know if you're a junior, senior or gradu­ ate student and we'H open the doors to the Emerald City just for you. Simply fill in the attached form today and return it to us and as fast as a wing­ ed monkey we'll send you your own charge card. And believe us, that's a whole lot better than going home to Kansas! And remember, we're bringing all the m a g ic of Foiey's to Austin, opening soon in Highland Mall. Send mis ippllcation to Folwy's Credit D e p t, P O Bo* 1971, Houston, Texas 77001 First name Local address C i t y Home address Initial last name _ State Zip_ City __ Age State _ Married Spouse s name Single Separated i Phone number Zip Major subject Class status Jr ! University/college Parent, guardian or nearest relative Sr Grad Name Phone number Number and Street .. . _ Bank at City State Zip Checking Savings Loan I Have you or your spouse ever had a Foiey’s account? __________ If yes, account number or Name Date .......... .Signature __ $ v Vwww vi vvvv O 0 ¿S Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, May 1, 1979 Outdoor Program Continues Throughout The Summer and includes equipment and transportation to San Marcos wilderness with them. by Mike Hauty instruction, to The Outdoor Program has sever»! ways lor the zealous student to take the stiffness out of his neck and the bleariness out of his eyes Take a break, trade in that yellow felt-tip m arker for a canoe paddle or a mask and fins and take to the water A three session snorkeling clinic begins today and one day canoe trips are being offered on the next two Saturdays, in a fortnight, two groups will journey out-of-state to sample the in Sangre de C r is to m o u n ta in s Colorado and the Buffalo River in Arkansas. is intended The clinic on snorkeling and un­ derw ater natural science is a unique offering by the Austin PARD Natural Science Center and Rec Sports The first session teach snorkeling technique, and will be held in the Anna Hiss Gym pool from 6 30- 8:30 p m. Then the group will con­ verge at the Natural Science Center for a lecture on underw ater natural science and will utilize the city's collection of exhibits. to Finally, at 10 a m Saturday, the group will journey to the San Marcos River for a field trip in clear, spring- fed waters Fee for the clinic is $12 There art two remaining one-day canoe trips this se m e ste r On Satur­ day May 5 and Saturday. May 12, the Rec Sports flotilla will paddle the San Marcos River and a section of the Upper Guadalupe, respectively. F’ee for either outing is $12 and includes all expenses except lunch The rivers have been running at op­ timum levels and all outings have been filled this spring. I t’s an un­ paralleled chance for relaxation, ex­ citement and co m rad arie, so don’t delay. Spaces are limited, sign up soon’ An extended wilderness outing is arguably the finest method of relaxa­ tion available following a period of prolonged indoor work or study. Many elements combine the aw areness of each participant. Most obvious is the close communion with the natural world to heighten In the event of a storm , the option to escape into an insulated sheltered environment simply doesn’t exist The storm m ust be dealt with on its own term s The elem ents of com ­ promise and safety a re limited to the collective ingenuity of the group and the resources thev have taken into the the The sm all group d y n a m ic s are fascinating in these collections of 12- 16 strangers with a common mission fifth or sixth day out. After perceptions are altered The tug of is the civilized, electrified world strong, but can be appreciated in more fundamental, objective term s thanks to a well-planned outing. in Two fine outings are being offered from May lb 24 the first is a beginning mountaineering the Sierra trip Blanca Massif of the Sangre de Cristo range in Southeastern Colorado. Ac­ tivities include backpacking, day hikes, fly fishing, climbing and moun­ taineering, and photography. Skills will be taught via a mixture of clinics and less-structured day hikes Home, during the stay will be a Colorado Mountain Club cabin high in the mountains Fee for the trip is $165 The second offering is a float trip down the Buffalo River National Waterway in Arkansas. Seven days will be spent paddling this excep­ tionally scenic. 75-mile stretch of river, as it traverses the southern reaches of the Ozark Mountains. While not possessing white w ater rapids com parable the western wild rivers, the Buffalo has numerous fast water bends and eddies to delight the aspiring canoeist. Spectacular scenery and isolated gravel bars for the nightly cam psites add the mystique of the river. Fee for the Buffalo River trip is $170. to trip If you'd ra th e r unwind for a few weeks before tackling the wilds, a two-week to the W em inuche Wilderness in southwestern Colorado is scheduled for June 3-17. Twelve days will be spent n ear the Continen­ tal Divide at altitudes from 10,500 to 12,000 feet. N a tu r a lis t stud ies, b ackpacking skills, clim bing, m o u n ta in e e rin g , fishing and resting will all be topics and activities of concern. It's your chance to really get the su m m e r off to an exciting s ta r t Fee will be $210. Numerous one-day canoe trips and nature hikes will be offered during the sum m er sessions. Keep an eye on the Campus Briefs of the Daily Texan for exact dates. For detailed write-ups of all trips and sign-ups, stop by the outdoor of­ fice in Bellmont 104 or call 471-1093. Happy trails._______________ photo by M arcia Ewell lie Rec S p o rts R e v ie w Representing The Division of Recreational Sports TRACK CHAMPIONSHIP RESULTS In the overall track championships last week, SUMMER'S EVE won the crown in the m en’s divisional competition; while SLOW MOTION captured the women's divisional crown. The following names and team s are a list of the winners in the various events; 110 Meter Low Hardies Name Men................................... ..........John Hood Women.............................. ..........Robin Jones 400 Meter Run M en................................... ..........Ruben Gonzales Women.............................. ..........Terri Swanzy 1500 Meter Run Men.................................. Women............................ 400 Meter Relay ..........Larry Nettles ..........Joan Pennington Wow Grad Striders Team Sum m er’s Eve Chi Omega Lightning Pointless Sisters Team Black Lightning Slow Motion M en................................ Women............................ M0 Meter Relay M en.................................. Women............................. 80 Meter Run Men.................................. Women............................ 200 Meter Dash M en.................................. Women............................. 1100 Meter Relay Men.................................. Women............................ 100 Meter Dash ..........Sum m er’s Eve ..........Pointless Sisters 1:30.8 2:00.4 Name ..........John Reed ..........Linn Grieb Team Sigma Alpha Epsilon IPSA ..........Jeff Linhart ..........Retha Swindell Summer’s Eve Slow Motion Team Sum m er’s Eve 3’s Company Name Men................................... ........... Bill Hutchinson Women............................. ........... Linn Greib Softball Throw Team Sigma Alpha Epsilon IPSA Team Name M en.................................. ........... Brian Bessellieu Pi Kappa Alpha Women............................. ........... Ellen Wallace Broad Jump M en................................. Women............................. ........... Hattie Browning Slow Motion High Jump M en.................................. ........... Gregg Lambdin Shot Put Men................................... ........... Kelly Brooks Mark Underwood Simkins Beta Theta Pi Unattached Track Too Time 13 95 18.00 50.9 1:08.9 4:01.5 5:00 9 Time 42 8 54.35 Time 2:022 2:22.3 21.9 27 0 Time 3:32 9 4:58 1 Time 11 92 13 65 Distance 3215’ 204’9 22’3‘V ’ 16 ‘ 4 1 * 6 5 55 9*2 1979 SUMMER INTRAMURALS SCHEDULE Activities for all m eo students include: 1. S o ftb a ll............................................ Entries due Thurs., June 7, 5 p.m., 2. 3-Man B asketball.................. .....E n tr ie s due Thurs., June 7, 5 p.m., 3. Table Tennis S in g le s...................Entries due Tues., June 12, 5 p m., 4. Tennis S in g les................................Entries due Tues , June 12, 5 p.m., 5. Racquetball S in gles......................Entries due Tues., June 12. 5 p.m., 6. Handball S in gles........................... Entries due Tues., June 12. 5 p.m.. Activities for women students are: 1. Tennis S in g le s............................... Entries due Tues., June 12, 5 p.m., 2. Racquetball Sin gles......................Entries due Tues., June 12, 5 p.m.. Activities for m ea, women, and nil University Faculty/Staff are: 1. Coed Softball.................................. Entries due Thurs., June 7, 5 p.m., 2. Tennis D oubles..............................Entries due Tues., June 12, 5 p.m ., VERY IMPORTANT INFORMATION: 11. Gregory Gym 33 has information on all tournaments (471-3116). 2. Softball umpires are needed (will be paid). Winners of each tournament will receive official IM T-shirts. in GRE 33 in GRE 33 in GRE 33 in GRE 33 in GRE 33 in GRE 33 in GRE 33 in GRE 33. in GRE 33 in GRE 33 ' \ ^ - t v - ■ v * ^ photo by Kwong Hui Softball Championships The IM Softball Championships will bo decided the divisions, except the m e n ’s C division. tonight among all which was scheduled to be decided last night Due to the preponderance of rain and T h e R e v i e w 's deadline. the exact team s in this year s c h a m ­ pionships were not available at the time of this writing. SUMMER OPEN REC SCHEDULE The schedule for su m m er open recreation will be available June 6 in Gregory Gym 33 Gregory Gym. Bellmont and the tennis courts willl be available at their regular hours between spring s e m e s t e r a n d s u m m e r s c h o o l. However, Anna Hiss Gym and the Texas Swim t enter will not be open during this period 1979 Spring IM Championship Winners HANDBALL SINGLES “ B ” (m en) - Jack Levy, Independent. BILLIARDS (m en) - R obert Q uesada. (w o m en ) — Jo Anne BADMINTON Tam ayo. Boroski. FREE THROW (w om en) — M ichelle TABLE TENNIS DOUBLES (m en) - Jeff Z akarin and Mike Tinned. BOWLING (m en) — Alva Bush, novice; F ra n k E la m , open; S teve F re d e r ic k , In term ed iate. GOLF CLOSEST TO THE PIN (m en) - Ric Jones, Sigm a Alpha Mu. TENNIS SINGLES (w om en) - Cindy Hopson, Pi B eta Phi. BOWLING (w om en) — H annah Jeanes. RACQUETBALL DOUBLES (w om en) — M arianne Hopper and Shelley Horwitz. TABLE TENNIS DOUBLES (w o m e n ) - Jo Anne T am avo and Ju lie H offm an. BADMINTON, (coed) - L am ar E vans and Jo Anne Tam ayo. BOWLIf.G. (coed) — M ichael M cG arry and K aren Sunbury. TABLE TENNIS (coed) - Jeff Zakarin and C arolina C ardw ell. BASKETBALL (coed) - Foul Play. BASKETBALL (w om en) — Pointless Sisters. Beagles. ma D elta. BASK ETBALL (la w - g ra d ) - E m BASKETBALL (m en ’s A) — Jocks. BASKETBALL (m en ’s B) - Phi G am ­ BASKETBALL (m e n ’s C) - F ubar. FR E E THROW (m en) - Tod H am ­ mond, APO. WATER BASKETBALL (m en) - Spit HANDBALL SINGLES “ A ” (m en) - Manuel R aym ond, Independent. HOME RUN DERBY (m en) - Ron P eterson , Sigm a Alpha Epsilon. IM Council The Intram u ral Program of the Division of R ecreational Sports would like to thank the following people who served on the Intramural Council during the year: Mary Wilkerson Walt Keep Logan Irvin Neil Bishkin J e r r y Smith Bryan Roach Susie Baker Robert Winkler David Jones Judy Sinclair Jo Anne Tamayo Mary McKmght Mary Beth Williford Looking to next year, nominations for membership to the 1979-60 Intramural Coun­ cil a re now being accepted. If you or someone you know has an interest in in­ tramurals and would like to serve on the council, please turn in a nomination to the Intramural Office, Gregory Gym 33. Council activities include ruling on protests and eligibility, and acting in an advisory capacity to the Intramural Staff. Members of the next year’s council will be selected in the Fall. The Rec Sports Re v ie w is produced by the D ivisi o n of Recreati onal Sports. E d it o r is F r a n k H a r r i s ; A s s o c i a t e E d it o r is M i k e M c F a r l a n d and Ph otograph er is Kw o ng Hui This full page ad ver t i se me nl is printed weekly on Tuesday. Letters or questi ons reg ardin g Rec reatio nal Sports m a y be sent to G r e g o r y G y m 33. I f A \ JL é ; : H M w M0 GOOD SUMMER SEE Y A ’LL NEXT FALL 9 9 Texas back where belongs By BOB GENNARELLI Dally Texan Staff The l i s t of S o u t h w e s t Conference baseball cham­ pions reads like a Texas biography. Texas has cap­ tured 52 of the conference’s 65 titles since 1914. and on the s u rfa ce , the 1979 Texas Longhorns did not really ac­ complish anything out of the o r d i n a r y . W i n n i n g the S o u t h w e s t C o n f e r e n c e baseball championship is old hat. after last year's club did not even qualify for the SWC post­ season tournament. 1979 holds something special. Texas won the title with the same team that finished fifth in 1978 But this year's version has been compared to the 1975 Texas Longhorns, the team that brought Texas its only n atio nal b aseball c h a m ­ pionship That team ran off 23 victories in conference play before losing the last game of the season Y e t . a f t e r a tw o -y e a r absence from the top spot, and IN TH AT one area the com­ parison might just be valid. This year's Longhorns have won 20 straight since losing the conference opener to Arkansas, with just three con­ ference games remaining, those with Texas A&M But analysis that’s as far as the similarity between the two goes. The 1979 Texas Longhorns do not possess the power of that ‘75 club, and Texas coach Cliff Gustafson readily admits it. sports THK DAILY TKXAN Page 9 Tuesday. May 1. 1979 Unheralded Haas won’t let reputation bother him World-famous Fred Haas had such a repututation that he didn’t even make it into the Legends of Golf “ Spectator's Handbook ” Yet Byron Nelson still cringes at his mention World-famous Fred Haas had such a reputation that ga lle ries at Onion Creek following didn t even start him and his partner, world- famous Dick Mayer, until the two golfers rolled up a huge lead that was enviable, but not insurmountable Yet LSU will never see a better golfer World-famous Fred Haas had such a reputation that it took a last-minute withdrawal from Jim Ferrier to get him into the tournament YET ROBERTO DeVicenzo and Julius Boros looked to the rainy heavens and smiled late making a mockery of the back nine, world-famous Fred Haas and Dick Mayer quietly divid­ ed $30,000 They fim'shed a shameful third FH F F IN IS H was exciting, hut not a good one Boros has won three majors and he is the William Shakespeare of golf instruction books His partner, DeVieenro, has won 130 tournaments all over the world, including a British Open Pommy Bolt won the 1958 1 S Open and his temper has made him famous And \rt Wall has one Masters and 35 I holes in one to his credit would like to have that many birdies Fame, although fleeting, is fun and Haas and M aver could use some To many. Haas is nothing more than the punch line to a trivia question After a collegiate career at LSU. he stopped Byron Nelson’s 11- tournament winning streak with a victory in the 1945 Memphis Open “ AH I got for winning that Memphis Open was a $50 w ar bond," he recalled He also got a perma nent berth in the Trivia Hall of Fame J a y ^ e 4 1 1 e i\. Sunday afternoon, for they knew they were the lucky ones. For two days and 14 holes, world-famous Fred Haas and Dick Mayer were the best Legends They shot 63-65 F ri­ day and Saturday and led by four strokes After Saturday's round, H a a s o m in o u s ly predicted it would take 67 or better for his team to collect the $70,000 first prize. They shot 70 Their lead became a tie Sun­ day when they bogeyed 15, their first bogey of the tourna­ ment Haas had a 10-foot putt on 18 that would have forced the tournament into a three- way playoff, but it fell inches short While Boros-DeVicenzo and Tommy Bolt-Art Wall were H A AS W O N 125 amateur championships before joining the professional tour in 1945 Now he spends his time work­ ing on an all-sport synthetic turf which could bring him a fortune, but probably no fame Mayer grabbed fame for a moment, in 1957 when he won the I S Open in a playoff with Cary Middlecoff, hut then lost it when tendon trouble and a broken elbow unsweetened his sw ¡ng Mayer was the leading money winner on the tour in 1957 when he won $65,835 He estimated his career earnings at approximately $225,000 To­ day Mayer is a teaching pro in Palm Springs When I quit the tour I was sixth or seventh on the all- time earnings list,” Mayer said before Sunday’s final round “ Now I'm 600th “ HELL, I just came out here to have some fun It ’s beautiful I wish they had one every w eekend “ “ They're two completely different ball clubs,” Gustaf­ son said following the Horns title-clinching win over Texas Tech Saturday. “ The two are built differently The 1975 club had fly ball, power-type hitters. “ I came here (to Disch- Falk Field from Clark Field» and found out wrhat type of ball park this was. It wasn’t suited for the power-type hitter." G U ST A FSO N 'S statement has been a recurring theme for Texas this season, with many of Texas’ opponents echoing those same thoughts “ It doesn't look at all like past Texas teams,” Texas Lutheran coach Hay Katt said earlier “ They this season really don't show the offen­ sive punch teams in the past have. These guys Texas has right now are line drive type hitters who can run the base paths They don't have the raw power Texas teams have had in the past, but they have much more speed “ They’re tailored for this ball park With the carpet (AstroTurf) you need players with speed And Texas has got some guys who can really go get the ball,” Katt added Gustafson wholeheartedly agrees with K a tt’s assess­ ment. ‘‘I F E E L T H IS team, as far as this ball park, is built for it But I think we’ve got enough talent and balance to where we can play well in any park.” he said While the 1975 team is its best rem em bered for power, the 1979 squad will be remembered for its pitching. As SM U coach Steve Adair commented after watching Texas sweep his Mustangs, “ They have the best pitching in this part of the nation. Their pitching staff keeps (See LONGHO RNS, Page 11.) Nurl Villbona, Dally Taxan Staff Haas sheepishly asks officials If penalty stroke for missing putt is one or two strokes. He had just thrown down club after missing 10-foot putt on hole 18 Sun­ day that would have tied for first. On the course, Mayer is a Missouri gambler His clothes always match, his blonde hair is always combed and he always drags on a cigarette before a putt He is confident He l«H»ks pleased even with hh bad shots From a distance he looks like a 25 year-old From up close, he plays lik< one (See HAAS, Page 11.) Texas’ Scott Soden steals second base in first game of doubleheader with SMU last week. Les Amis snlrw ilk I ,ilc S a i l \ ti I o n i o 2 11 li 1914 Guadalupe 476-1215 ZZü 22H » n » n » r f » n » n Join Us in C eleb ra tin g Israel Independence Day Rally On U.T. West M all 12 :00 Noon W ednesday, M ay 2 Entertainm ent, Food, Song, Dance Everyone Welcome! Hillel Campus Jewish Center [2105 San Antonio 476-0125 ^iiiliUUUlimuiiiiitm^i|i|jiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiuiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiH RICE UNIVERSITY I ¡ COMPUTER CENTER 5 daVL positions. interested = Rice University offers good benefits including educational = S opportunities for persons in the following = S = COMPUTER OPERATOR II: Two plus years experience in 5 S IB M 360/370 (or com parable) environment (w ith O S/VS = = and H A S P experience preferred). Must be able to handle I s quarterly rotating shift work (4 day work week - 10 hour = = = s PROGRAMMER ANALYST: Several positions requiring 5 a varying levels of experience. BA or equivalent experience = js in field related to computer science plus work experience = a ranging from a basic knowledge or experience with Data — I Processing preferably In an IB M System 370 to one-three i a years experience in applications programm ing (with in- = 5 term ediate skill in C O BO L and knowledge of J C L under s a = H SYSTEMS PROGRAMMER: (Tw o positions) Assist users Ü S with use of facilities and documentation of services. = = Define and evaluate services on installation running SVS, a s h a s p 4, TSO. B A or equivalent experience in Math, Com § S puter Science or related field. P ra c tic a l experience with 5 S s C O BO L Experience with |5 a 1 IB M , SVS, M V S, or M V T = = r I s tanguages, p referab ly PL/1, F o rtran , and I operating systems highly desirable. IB M system 370 running O S/V S). C ontact: Jan G riffin (7 1 3 ) 5 2 7 -4 0 7 4 or M a il Rotum o To: Rico U n iv o rtit P.O. Box 2 6 6 6 Toxas Houston, Toxas » n » n > ’? n r ? n » n A / A = E.O.E s c.vs.c. TniiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiíiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 77001 7 7 001 ARMY ROTC PAYING CAMPERS! THAT'S RIGHT! ATTEND OUR 5V4 WEEK CAM P A N D WE WILL PAY YOU *450 PLUS ROOM A N D BOARD. WE W ILL ALSO PAY FOR YOUR TRANSPO RTATIO N TO A N D FROM CAM P. TH IS GREAT OPPO RTUNITY IS YOURS W IT H NO M ILITA R Y O BLIG ATIO N FOR MERELY TRYING A R M Y ROTC TH IS S U M M E R . CALL NO W ! 4 7 1 -5 9 1 9 University Credit Union’s GOLDEN SUMMER ACCOUNT works year- round to provide faculty with summer income Through monthly paycheck deductions, you accumulate a “sum” for summer living The golden feature is the interest earned by the deductions It s higher than rates on comparable accounts elsewhere! If you want more than seasonal income, inquire today and let us secure your next summer with a GOLDEN SUMMER ACCOUNT UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION West 30th and Cedar Streets 476-4676 Serving University Faculty and Staff <2 NCUA a s s s » Seattle, Phoenix begin series battle By United Presa International The Phoenix Suns are riding high on the crest of a surprisingly easv series victory over the Kansas City Kings which Friday propelled them into the NBA Western Conference finals against the Seattle SuperSonics They are playing good basketball and they are confident But Suns Coach John McLeod is already issuing a warning signal the Seattle SuperSonics, defending Western champions who pushed the Washington Bullets to a seventh game before yielding last year’s NBA title, may be a bit tougher than Kansas City. “Seattle is the kind of team that gives us trouble,” said McLeod “ We aren’t real physical and big, strong team s have had success against us in the past.” INDEED, THE Sonics, who eliminated the Los Angeles Lakers 4-1 in the conference sem ifinals beat the Suns in three of their four regular season meetings The best-of-seven cham­ pionship series with Phoenix begins Tuesday night in Seattle. “ It's no accident that Seattle has the best defensive statistics in the league. They’re so big and strong inside, it’s tough to penetrate and score from close range,” explained McLeod. The Suns hope to capitalize on their fast break and highly developed running gam e inside dominance. But at least one Seattle player isn’t too worried about that. to overcom e S e a ttle ’s “Sure they can run,” said Sonics forward Paul Silas, “providing they get the rebounds.” “THE SONICS can run as well as anybody, but then I think we can run as well as anybody too,” agreed Seattle Coach Lenny Wilkens. “ I’m not afraid of running with them. Not at a ll.” Meanwhile, in the Eastern Conference, all attention is focus­ ed on the incredible Philadelphia 76ers. The Bullets overcame the Atlanta Hawks’ gutsy effort to wrap up their best-of-seven semifinal series, 4-3, Sunday with a 100-94 victory and now they are waiting to see whether the Sixers, who edged the San An­ tonio Spurs 92-90 Sunday, can continue their stunning comeback from a 3-1 series deficit. The 76ers, given up for near-dead midway through the regular season, cam e from 13 points down in the fourth quarter Sunday to nip the Spurs and even their series at 3-3. The showdown takes place Wednesday night in San Antonio. THE BULLETS m eet the survivor Friday night at Capital Centre in the opening gam e of the Eastern Conference cham­ pionship series. “That series isn’t over,” said Bullets forward Elvin Hayes, when asked what he thought about playing the 76ers in a repeat of last year’s Eastern Conference final. “ I’m not going to say a word about that game. I’m just glad w e’re there.” Page 10 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Tuesday, May 1, 1979 DeVicenzo finally finds funny putter that works the ti* As the putt dropped, he shook his finger at Bolt in obvious delight Tommy do this to m e on 18. DeVicenzo explained in hi^ broken English “ Before I putt on 15. I say. Make it, I want to do this to Tom m y.’” ON 16, DeVicenzo finally ended the tournament by sink­ ing a 10-footer for yet another birdie after Bolt was short from 25 and Wall missed from 45 It was his first “pressure- free putt as it only won the tournament, rather than keep him and Boros in it And if DeV icenzo was under any pressure when putting, he didn't show it. “ If the other guy make a birdie, you got to make a bir­ die,' he said, using simple logic. “ We played for much money, but it was fun ” T o g e th e r w ith B o r o s , indeed split DeVicenzo did much money $70,000 worth for the team, $35,000 apiece the H ow ever, largest check he had ever picked up it w as not “ AT NATIONALS (Argen­ tina s ), I m ake a m illion pesos “ That's about $1,200,” in­ terjected Boros “ I make a big chock, but little m oney,” DeVicenzo agreed, a sm ile breaking on his face. F r o m O ru on C r e e k , DeVicenzo will go to Houston, where he’ll com pete in this weekend’s Houston Open And if his putting holds out, who knows? As DeVicenzo said, “ I like Texan m oney.” By TOM KLECKNER Daily Texan Staff R o b e r t o D e V i c e n z o , perhaps best known for blow­ ing the 1968 M asters by put- ting his signature on an inac­ cu ra te sc o r e c a r d , is also known on the professional golf tour for his ever-present sense of humor. For instance, there was the tim e $10,000 was offered to anyone who could score a hole-in-one on a par ticular hole. Noting the hole was 240 yards long and into the teeth of a wind somewhat near a hurricane, DeVicenzo said, “ I give $100,000 for anyone who can drive the green.” This sam e sense of humor is what has enabled DeVicenzo to downgrade his putting, which admittedly isn’t all that good Despite the handicap, he has won more than 130 tour­ naments ail over the world, including the 1967 British Open over som eone named Jack Nickiaus. in T he n e x t y e a r th e Masters, he shot a final day 65 for 277 total. However, his bir­ die three on 17 had been scored as a four, and when s i g n e d h is D e V i c e n z o scorecard, it had to stand. DeVicenzo had to take a 278 and Bob Goalby later cam e in with a 277 to take the green jacket. DEVICENZO made no such m istakes Sunday, team ing with Julius Boros to win the second Legends of Golf in a six-hole sudden death playoff with Tommy Bolt and Art Wall. And DeVicenzo got most of the credit with his putting, rolling in birdie putts on six of the last eight holes and the la s t th e clincher on the final hole. in c lu d in g f i v e , fortu n e But Maybe it was the new putter D eV icenzo used which a c­ counted for his sudden change in then, he ‘ hanges putters after every round he plays ‘‘I can't say I’m not a good putter, I have to say my putter is no good,” he explained “ Every funny putter you can find. I try it.” Sunday, DeVicenzo used a bulls-eye putter, which he tried after talking with Satur­ day s putter I can't feel it I speak to him in Spanish, but he no want to work today.” LUCKILY, HIS new putter did work, surprising not only DeVicenzo but Art Wall After the 56-year-old from Argen­ tina had rolled in yet another putt on the fourth playoff hole, Wall stepped over to him and said, “ You re a good putter only on television. On the other holes, you’re lousy ” If Wall’s good-natured jibe wasn't enough. Bolt also bir- died the hole and shook a finger at DeVicenzo in a ‘ beat - that - if - you - can gesture He shouldn’t have done that When the groups went back to 15, Bolt birdied from 12 feet, but DeVicenzo rolled in a 13-footer of his own to keep ✓ATTENTIONn Co-Op MEMBERS If you a r e leaving Austin this month: To be eligib le for a patronage dividend (if one is paid) for the fiscal year ending 6/30/79, your Co-Op cash register receip ts m ust be turned in to the Co-Op by that date. You can use the m ails, but you m ay find it m ore convenient to drop them by the ticket window on the second level of the Main Store or the Co-Op E ast before you leave Austin for the sum m er. Your I f you 're teavin# ■GOOD NEWS FOR GRADUATING SENIORS ■ From the Ex-Students' Association, who tea at registration, ■ brought you free th e ■ s c h o l a r s h i p s , c a r e e r c o n t a c t s , Washington Internship Program, and more: I I I DON'T SEND MONEY I | Support those programs, and get many more ¡benefits, JUST BY T R A N S F E R R I N G YOUR $10 UT ■ P R O P E R T Y D E P O S IT TO T H E E X - S T U D E N T 'S ■ A S S O C IA T IO N . Stop by the Alum ni Center to ■ aumurize me iransTer, ana your authorize the transfer, and your property deposit Swill be applied for O N E Y E A R 'S M E M B E R S H I P n ■ the Association.★ In o rd e r fo r you to q u a lify fo r fo o tb a ll tic k e t ■ Special note: ■ p rio rity , w e m u s t re ce ive yo u r a u th o riz a tio n fo rm by June 1 I and the T ic k e t O ffic e m u s t have yo u r tic k e t o rd e r by June 4. ★ Y o u r m em b ers h ip w ill a c tu a lly b egin at the tim e that the prop erty d ep o sit is I tra n s fe rre d ... a p p ro x im a te ly 90 days a fte r you le a v e school | | L STOP BY THE ALUMNI CENTER AND JOIN US FOR A “ FREE” YEARI Have a Great S u m m e r m See You in the Fall 3 2 n d & G u a d a lu p e 4 5 2 - 5 0 1 0 1608 Lavaca 4 7 8 - 3 2 8 1 201 E. Riverside 4 4 1 - 5 3 3 1 DeVicenzo sinks fifth consecutive birdie putt to clinch Legends of Golf Tournament Sunday on sixth hole of sudden-death playoff. Nuri Vallbona, Daily Texan Staff McEnroe protests WCT match day change DALLAS ( DPI i John M cEnroe is unhap­ py because his first m atch in the WCT Finals at Dallas will be Tuesday instead of W ednes­ day, shifted because Jim m y Connors has an infection on his left hand, but WCT officials said Monday Me En ro e’s com plaints will not affect a thing Connors, who is left handed, broke a callous on the little finger of his left hand in Las Vegas last week On the advice of his doctor, he asked the WCT officials to shift his open­ ing m atch against Gene M ayer from Tuesday to Wednesday and his wish was granted. 3 LOCATIONS / T HUNDE RCL OUD S U B S The B es t S a n d w i c h In T o w n " K Ü ¡-* - — 1 4. To accom odate Connors, WCT officials moved McP]nroe’s m atch against John Alex­ ander to Tuesday. M cEnroe said he was not going to m ake a public issue about it but his father, a New York law yer who also serves as M cEnroe s m anager and agent, would call World C ham pionship T ennis o ffic ia ls to protest. “ I CAME H E R E p r e p a rin g to p la y Wednesday, M cEnroe said at a news con­ ference Monday “ Now they tell m e I'm p lay ­ ing Tuesday It m akes a difference because I’ve played a lot of tournam ents I'm tired lately I was looking forw ard to getting that extra day of rest. “ You asked m e if I'm happy about it. Well, I ’m unhappy. Why should I be the one to change?” L ater he said, “ If I play Tuesday, I hope it doesn t affect m y g am e.' R eporters a sk k i w hether his use of the word “ if” m eant he m ight not play. M cEnroe then said he was not protesting directly but that his fath er would talk by phone the switch tournam ent officials about to WCT E xecutive D irector Mike Davies said, “ W e've switched the m atch and th a t’s the official schedule now. T here won’t be any other switches. “ If the sam e thing should happen to John — if John gets injured som e tim e and calls me, I ’ll do my best to accom odate h im .” Alexander said the sw itch in the first-round schedule m ade no difference to him. All m atches a re best-of-five sets. The winner will take home $100,000, one of the largest purses on the tennis tour. The runner- up gets $40,000. Wilt credits Philadelphia for success SPR IN G FIELD , Mass. (U P Ii — Wilt Cham berlain paid tribute to his roots, and D eP au l’s Ray M eyer credited G eorge Mikan for helping him m ake it as a coach, a t M onday’s 12th an- D IS C O V E R R e S i o m a t o Q u a lity Ita lia n F ood 1601 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 6 7 2 0 2 IQ TEST THE AUSTIN TEST CENTRE offers for a lim ited tim e free intelligence and personality tests Your IQ, personality and aptitude determ ine your future. Know them. No obligations. 2804 Rio Grande • Austin, Texas Sponsored by the i.hurvh o f Scientology j j ¡ijjr I i FREE OUR FEE PAID BY OWNERS APARTMENT )UST MAKE ONE CALL • FREE TRANSPORTATION • NO CHARGE TO YOU • OPEN SUNDAYS AUSTIN'S OLDEST "WE HAVE THE APARTMENT FOR YOU" FURNISHED UNFURNISHED * DUPLEXES • TOWN HOU SES « EFFICIENCIES * HOME RENTALS * PROPEÑTY M A N A G E M E N T OmtiT H a ll’s Apartment tLnratnrs 324 S. CONGRESS AUSTIN. TEXAS 78704 Sarvingr AuLifi/i Sine* I9€8 b S b CALL DAY OR NIGHT 4 7 2 -7 2 0 1 A y s o c - A T I O N nual N ational Basketball Hall of F am e inductions. C ham berlain and M eyer w ere am ong seven inductees honored at the shrine on the cam pus of Springfield College. O thers in­ ducted included four fo rm er college coaches and basketball w riter and referee Ja m e s Enright. Looking back on it, I ’m glad I cam e from Philadelphia. It was the m ecca of basketball back th e n ,” said C ham berlain, regarded by m any as the g re a te st offensive p erfo rm er in the g am e's history. “ I FEEL I wouldn’t have been a g re a t basketball player if I hadn't been brought up in P hiladelphia,” C ham berlain “said. Others inducted Monday included the late Justin “ S am ” B arry, a fo rm er coach at Southern C alifornia; E dgar Hickey, form er coach at Creighton, St. Louis M arquette; form er coach John McLendon, and P e te Neweil, coach of 1959 NCAA cham ­ pion C alifornia and la te r general m anager of the Los Angeles Lakers. 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Come over and sell your books and then tell your friends about how much you got for your books. Don't forget to come and buy your books from us this summer or next fall. We w a n t to th a n k those of you w ho have been de a lin g w ith T E X A S T E X T B O O K S ; we know you w ill be back, b u t re m e m b e r to te ll y o u r frie n d s ab ou t us. T hanks again. ________________ 2 4 th z TEXAS TEXTBOOKS, INC. 478-9933 1st Floor Castilian Cornor of 24th & San Antonio St. ™ 4/1> > 5A £ TEXTBOOKS 5 TEXAS 4/1 > £ -< I I I I I Yae c m save a l i t * by be­ ing a blood plasma donor. ' ■ It only takas 111 boors, Í ond you can donata a vary 72 boors. You will receive $1.00 tar | I your first donation and $10.00 for a second dona ban in the same week. | | H you brinq this ad in witfi ■ you. you will receive a • $1.00 bonus after your f 510 West 29th one line three days one dollar Texan Unclassifieds | first donaban workl I Simple, Dignified Funerals $300. PlusTransportation REWXEY MEMORIAL SERVICES Stni¡ilc FnncmK \in \nl< .SViWMl ViiMiii I it k «ritual Uni t i i A i r 172-1 tl 11 I i I I K i n tei— o o .u j AUSTIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, INC I p h o n e 4 7 7 - 3 7 3 5 | A Tlwc» I a.m.-4'JO p.m. Taos.. Wad. A I r i I e.m .-2;Ji ¡un Rangers soak up rain, runs Two-run homer in ninth rallies Astros ®y United Press International KANSAS CITY — E rro rs by third basem an G eorge B rett a n d U .L . s h o r t s t o p W ashington allow ed the Texas H angers to score two unearn­ ed runs in the sixth inning M onday night, in a gam e twice by rain, and delayed d efeated the K ansas City Royals, 8-7, the Jim Sundberg opened sixth with a ground ball to B rett, who threw it low to first basem an P e te LaCock for an e rro r. Sundberg took second on a sacrifice bunt and scored on a single by Bump Wills to snap a 6-6 tie and hand reliever Steve Busby a loss in his first decision of the year. Wills then stole second and took third when W ashington to h a n d le c a t c h e r f a ile d D a r r e l l P o r t e r 's th ro w . Nelson N orm an delivered a perfect suicide squeeze bunt down the first b ase line to en­ sure reliever J im K ern his th ird v ic to r y in a s m a n y decisions. Texas scored its firs t run in the opening inning on a single by Bill Sam ple, a stolen base Haas... (Continued from P age 11.)) H aas is tall and lanky and on the greens he is a demon. It w as he who c a rrie d the team for m ost of the th re e rounds. in fact, com m ented M ayer, a f t e r S a t u r d a y ’s s e c o n d round, “ I have so m uch con­ fidence in him I felt like I could have left the course to have a Coke and we still would and a single by A1 O liver and added five m ore runs during a t h i r d - i n n i n g o u t b u r s t , highlighted by R ichie Zisk's two-run single. ★ ★ ★ ST LOUIS — T erry P uhl's two-run hom er capped a four- run ninth inning Monday night th a t c a r r ie d th e H o u sto n A stros to a 6-5 victory o ver the St Louis C ardinals. in 12 1-3 The C ardinals led 4-2 e n te r­ ing the ninth and turned things o v e r to T om B ru n o , who hadn t been scored upon this ye a r innings. But Bruno didn’t have it and was tagged for a leadoff double by Enos Cabell and successive singles by Bob W atson and Art Howe Buddy Schultz relieved and gave up a gam e-tying sacrifice fly to Je ff Leonard before Puhl hit his second hom er in as m any gam es. Joe Sam bito, 2-0. picked up the victory in relief Ken R eitz broke a 2-2 tie with a leadoff hom er in the fifth off Houston s ta rte r and loser Vern Ruhle, 1-4. and the C ardinals m ade it 4-2 in the tr ip le by Lou eig h th on a have been all rig h t.” The dem on ran in an im ­ possible 60-foot birdie putt on 14 Saturday, back when the tournam ent was theirs. But when he needed it m ost, on the final hole, the dem on m issed a 10-footer. He really shouldn’t have. A final lam ent for the frogs whose jum ps to becom e kings fell inches short. Longhorns... Brock and a single by G eorge Hendrick M ets 4, P ad res 3 N E W Y O R K - D o u g Flynn s single to ce n te r in the inning scored Joel seventh Youngblood with the winning run Monday night and led the New York Mets to a 4-3 vic­ to ry o v e r th e San D iego P ad res behind the com bined e ig h t-h it p itch in g of C raig Swan and Skip Lockwood. Expos 8, Dodgers 4 MONTREAL — Andre Daw­ son sm ashed a two-run hom er and G ary C a rte r drove in two runs with a hom er and a dou­ ble M onday to back Steve sev en -h it p itch in g R ogers th e M ontreal E xpos when d e fe a te d th e Los A ngeles Dodgers. 8-4 B rew ers 8, Indians 0 CLEV ELA N D — Jim Slaton fired a tw o-hitter, to rrid G or­ m an T hom as belted a three- run hom er and Ben Oglivie drove in th re e runs with a pair of home runs Monday night, t h e M i l w a u k e e p a c i n g B rew ers to an 8-0 victory o ver the C leveland Indians UT men golfers finish twelfth Texas m e n ’s golf team finished 12th with a score of 910 in a field of 24 team s at the Southern In terco lleg iate Golf T ourna­ m ent in Athens. Ga Saturday to cap a m ediocre (for Texas) golf season. G eorgia won the tou rn am en t on its hom e course, shooting 874. followed bv O klahom a S tate (876) and O ral R oberts (880». "W e d id n't play well, not bad or good, ju st like we have all year long Two p layers played resp ectab ly, and the other three played poorly for th em No four played real well a t one tim e to g e th e r.’’ Coach G eorge Hannon said. Bob Tway of O klahom a S tate won the to u rn ey ’s individual title, firing a 211 G eo rg ia’s G rif Moody ca m e up two shots behind Tway and finished second w ith 212, and O klahom a S ta te ’s R afael Alacon took third with a sco re of 214. Law rence Field w as low m an for Texas, shooting 223, followed by Jim Spagnolo (225) and th re e g olfers with 231 - Phil Vescovo, Tom C ornelia and Brian W illiamson. Its depressing, ” Spagnolo said in sum m ing up the season “ We just c a n ’t get good sco res on the board, we re playing catch-up golf, and although we generally play a good front nine, we shoot higher on the back, and then w e ’re out of it. W e’ve got the players, but nobody plays real well. Its been a disappointm ent —- like a y e a r long slu m p .” (Continued from P age 9.) them in every gam e. If the h it­ ting com es late, th e ir pitching will hold you until the h itte rs c o m e ‘ ‘T h e i r a r o u n d . ” pitching is ou tstan d in g ,” Tex­ as Tech coach Kal S egrist said ‘‘T exas m ay last weekend. have the best pitching staff in the nation. T here a re guys on th e s ta ff down th a t a r e n ’t playing th a t could be A ll-C o n fe re n c e c a n d id a te s som ew here e lse .” th e re FROM TOP TO bottom of the 1975 lineup, e v ery b a tte r the potential pow er to had h u rt you with the long ball. This y e a r’s squad has its long t h a n n o t, ball h itte rs — th ree, T erry Salazar, Keith W alker and Scott Soden, — but, m o re o f t e n th e 1979 Longhorns hit for an a v erag e and patiently won ball gam es. Their hits com e in bunches, using the speed of a Joe Bruno (31 steals, a season reco rd ) or a R o n n ie G a r d e n h ir e (21 ste a ls), to c re a te scoring op­ portunities on the base paths. On m ore than one occassion T exas has scored in an inning w ithout benefit of a hit. A g o o d e x a m p le c a m e against T exas Tech S aturday when Soden led off the second inning w ith a walk, stole se­ cond, took third on a pitch in the d irt and sc o re d on a ground ball. "W e re winning and w e ’re not even hitting th a t good,” B runo said th e talent, now w e ’re ju st putting it all to g e th e r.” "W e had AS HOUSTON coach Rolan Walton phrased it, "T he p ast intim idated you with team s their bats, but this te a m has you shaking an y tim e som eone gets on base. " "T his team is g re a t in th e ir own w a y ,” G ustafson said. "T h e y ’ve played a s well with the ability they have than any I'v e had I w as confident of If y o u ’ll t hi s bal l c l u b , rem em ber, I w as confident of them last y e a r " S a tis f a c tio n - w is e , th is ranks as m uch as any ch am ­ I ’m p a rtic u la rly pionship. proud of the players, com ing from back last year. This te a m is c e n te r e d a ro u n d defense and pitching A good exam ple w as the g am es this weekend They play for one ru n .” And obvio usly, w ith the this season, te a m ’s success that s all it takes to win a gam e. The Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Association presents the MICHELOB COLLEGIATE TENNIS CHAMPIONSHIP WORLD OF TENNIS RESORT May 10-13 VIP Box Seats, General Admission and Student Tickets available. The best 16 m en’s collegiate tennis players in the country from the All-American roster will com pete in this invitational tournam ent. Come see some exciting tennis and support (JT tennis. Ticket Proceeds Donated to University of Texas Tennis Program. Call 471-7695 for ticket inform ation. Tuesday, May 1, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 11 most The student m agazine of The University of Texas THE MAY ISSUE IS ON SALE TODAY ALL OVER CAMPUS What do Earl Campbell. Eli W allach and Fess Parker have in common? They're all Texas Exes. By now you've pro b a b ly heard that W a l t e r C r o n k i t e a n d F a r r a h F a w c e tt-M a io rs spent some tim e at The U n iv e rs ity of Texas But th a t's just the beginning M a n y of today's biggest names in public service, society, athletics, g o v e rn ­ m ent and e n te rta in m e n t at one tim e were UT students F in d out in whose footsteps you are fo llo w in g by reading " T e x a s F x e s " in the M a y issue of U T m ost m agazine and d on't m iss the special in t e r ­ view w ith our m ost recent fam ous Texas Ex, E a r l C am pbell W hen It C o m es To Traveling S om e Folks A re A ll Thum bs .i rid** H lteh in it s mor** than a c h e a p w ay to g et iro m fxnnt A to point H H itchh ik in g is an ad v en tu re a high risk e s c a p a d e in both s e n s e s of the word trip It le ts you g lim p s e into th*- liv e s the truck d r iv e r s of re a l p eop le g iv e its b a se and tr a v elin g sa le s m e n who A m e r ita its t o a r s e te x tu r e its a b ility to laugh at itself go o d n ess In the M ay issu e of U T m ost m a g a z in e w e ll h ear w hy tw o clea n cu t m id d le < la ss la s t !<>od md c o lle g e kids g a v e up TV suburbia for life on the road H ead H itchtn in the May issu e <»f U T m ost m a g i /m e most THE MAY ISSUE OF UTmost MAGAZINE is on SALE Today At THE UNION MALL Watch for the fam iliar Orange booth. (In com of rain , fho booth w ill bo a t th# Acadomic Center) UTmost is also available at your favorite newstand Tf* Toxas Studont Publications Anothor Publication of 48* 48* {Love Affair’: Yugoslav film mixes sex, politics, violence “ Love Affair, or the Case of the Missing Switchboard Operator” (1W7); directed by Dusan Makavejev; 7 p.m. Tuesday, Texas Union Theatre; last film in the Soviet Film Series. By ETTA WARMAN “ Love Affair, or the Case of the Missing Switchboard O perator” is a Yugoslav film which encompasses many subjects; sex, politics, violence, the alienation of modern society, and through it all runs a continuous essay on the attraction between the sexes. The title comes from the dual aspects of the film, it is about a love af­ fair. but it is also a film about violent death the question of The chief characters are Ahmed, a Slav Moslem, and Isabela, a beautiful blond • Hungarian She is a switchboard operator, he is a rat exterm inator. He is a party m em ber, sombre, steadfast and conservative; Isabela is the product of his convictions, a “ modem woman" who enjoys her freedoms and denies her traditional role I hey m eet, go to bed and then develop a relationship, a private island in the world around them. Members of the sam e society, yet radically •different, Ahmed and Isabel can share only a Tfew things Food, sex and music are prim ary ‘ among these, and the development of their relationship is traced through a number of „ deeply erotic scenes. Some of the shots, such as a black cat against Isabela’s nude white . body, are visually stunning, and the energy ?and enthusiasm of the cooking scenes are not - to be believed As the romance develops, it is ';refleeted in the physical surroundings, until an atm osphere of lush contentm ent is reach­ ed. THERE IS ALSO GREAT humor in this picture When Isabela lures Ahmed into her bedroom, “ to watch an interesting television •program ,” it turns out to be “ The Fall of the -Rorfianoffs .” “ Isn’t it more intim ate this !w ay?” Isabel asks as bands of banner- 2carrying workers m arch icross the set. The dynasty tails, the Revolution looms, and within the desecration of a couple of the seduction is complete. In a churches later scene, Ahmed brings home some new records from “ our friends in East Ger­ m any.” He is the picture of domestic pride and contentm ent, a man at peace with himself as the lyrics of “ Crush to Death the Rotten Vermin” fill the afternoon air. Intercut with these scenes is the accom ­ panying story of violent death In a stunning shot, flaming torches are thrown down a deep well, preceding recovery of the body at the bottom As the love tale unfolds, so does the other story, the story of the recovery and ex­ amination of the meticulous the corpse, butchery of autopsy, the crim inologist’s dron­ ing lecture and all the apparatus of official in­ vestigation THE EDITING AND CUTTING of the film are brillant, for the balance between the two aspects is carefully maintained and each is engrossing They mesh in the end to reveal a pitiful and touching story of individuals in a huge city, the personal against the societal, the failure of the integration of cultures. Dusan Makavejec has won critical acclaim for this picture as well as for his “ M ysteries of the O rganism .” Nonetheless, his work has been severely criticized by the authorities in Yugoslavia and he was “ publicly disgraced.” Whether this is attributable to something pre­ sent or absent in the film or merely another example of the communist tendency to en­ through public force p riv a te h u m ility humiliation is not known. Born in 1938, Makavejec is the outstanding figure in contem porary Yugoslav cinem a, and his work “ integrates culturally subjec­ tive concerns with them es that transcend national boundaries.” “ Love Affair, or the Case of the Missing Switchboard O p e rato r” is a film with sex, politics and violence — to everything make it palatable to American audiences, yet it rem ains a strange and foreign product. Fourth & Brazos 4 7 8 -4 1 7 5 SALOON O a m « R oom o p o n a t 2 O o i y H o u f 2 -7 p m (2 ♦*» I U < o H ou r W a d i - p p m (2 to , 1) A ir- io n d ltio n « d to» y o u , co m to rt Tues, May 1 T-GOSNEY BAND , '■ W»To - 0—1 mm' ITT XT ^ ísiííx 6 . fu»* IXTRKM I HI A T w ed GARY P. NUNN and I N B Y HRtOGIR thurt-fri-tal A L IX H A R V IY RESTAURANT-BAR 403 E. SIXTH 4 7 8 -2 9 1 2 a & e arts & entertainment T i l l : DAI LY T K X A N Page 12 Tuesday May 1, 1979 Tonight on the tube ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ *★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ By PUNCH SHAW You don’t really need a calendar to tell what day this is. A glimpse at the schedule makes it clear that this is “ Day One of the Sweeps” (or May 1 to normal folks.) The viewing ratings taken during the next four weeks will d eter­ mine advertising rates for months to come at both the local and network level. The last “ sweeps” period was in February and you rem em ber the flood of great program ­ ming we got during those weeks. Tuesday night the program m ers are pulling out the stops and the result is an lineup of films, outstanding with a sprinkling of sports, docum entary and music. It’s one of the best nights of view­ ing we've seen in months. 7 p.m. Ch. 9 — Dickran Ata- mian in Concert — This highly acclaimed young pianist is featured in a concert taped at KLRN’s studios last June. His program includes works by Brahms, Falla and Luis Jorge Gonzalez. th e in cid en t 7 p.m CH. 7 (CBS) - CBS Reports — “ F allout From Three Mile Island” takes a look a t th a t alm ost m ade P ennsylvania look like a scoop of ice cream on a hot sidewalk It will no doubt include some footage shot in Austin during our re­ cent nuke election. 8 p.m Ch. 7 - “ Fraternity Row” — This is a film this campus, more than others, should see. This ain’t (CBS) A n im a l H o u s e .” E v e n though it was shot mostly by stu d e n ts on a sh o e strin g this is a well con­ budget, thought provoking structed. t h i s c a m p u s , a n d , NECESSARY the right people would watch and u n d ersta n d th is film , we might see a m ass burning of Izods, T opsiders and beer mugs tomorrow film f o r If in 8 p.m. Ch. 36 (NBC) - “Stay Hungry” — Shot on th e d ec a d e n t lo catio n w ealth of M ountainbrook, Ala , this funky little movie is about pumping iron and most anything else you want it to be. N arratively and technical­ this Bob Rafelson film ly, th a t d ire c te d (sa m e guy “ Five Easy P ieces” ) is an utter m ess but Beau Bridges and Sally Fields are a lot of fun to watch in the leads. Not an aw ard winner but pleasant viewing. 8 p.m. Ch. 6 (Temple) — Baseball — The Rangers take on the Royals a t Kansas City. (Joined in progress.) 10:15 p.m Ch. 11 (F t. W orth) — “ The Marcus- Nelson Murders” — This 1973 film was the pilot for the “ Kojak” series. It is based on the famous Miranda case and is generally considered to be the highest achievem ent of this long-running cop series. 10:30 p.m. Ch. 24 — “Junior Bonner” — A re a so n a b ly realistic look at the world of rodeo. Steve McQueen stars under the direction of Sam Peckinpah. ★ ★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Í Soap Creek Saloon REGGAE TONIGHT THE LOTIONS COM ING SUNDAY ASLEEP AT THI WHEEL team boati Springs | 836-9915 N. Lamar \ 11306 ---------aA_ * tv t-w m d THE LOTIONS thun-fti~*ot RAIN w ith a tr ib u te to th e “H e a tle e ” ~ s: r ~ M o n T h u n N iflht» ™ • « .IOBABMNMKS X f La Promenade Center | n i S 8wm»t Rd. 459-43 ISi illllltilllliiilililllllllllllllllllllllillllllllri i — — w Tuesday Wednesday Night Special Catfish & Boiled Shrimp AUL YOU CAN EAT! 5-10 PM —- i RRpR - *5 ” I Served With Salad Bar, Beans, French Fries A Hush Fuppies N o w Serving Cocktails! THE BRANDING IRON I • 6 to M iles P a*t O a k H ill on H w y . 71 W est iiiiqf»N ■ i f i R 2 6 3 - 2 8 2 7 qt * m Norman’s nemesis Jill Johnston is one of a panel of feminists who confront Norman Mailer in ‘‘Town Bloody Hall,’’ a D.A. Pennebaker film which will show at 8 p.m. Tuesday at Batts Hall. The critically acclaimed documentary is being shown for the first time in Austin. Leftover Beatles Fab Four’s giveaways on new LP “ The Songs Lennon and McCartney Gave Away” ; by the original artists; EMI Records (Import). By CHAS RAY For years. I have heard, heard of and seen music of many songs penned by John Lennon and Paul McCartney of which there were no versions performed by The Beatles. EMI in England has gotten on the stick and (with the work of Colin Miles) has compiled an LP of most of the notorious works as performed by other artists. All the ones that count are here — the ones by Badfinger, Mary Hopkin and the likes are not included. What are included are prim arily the ones from 1963 and 1964 written for other groups managed by The B eatles’ manager, Brian Epstein, at his request Billy J K ram er and the Dakotas’ four Lennon-McCartney tunes, as well as the four of Peter and Gordon, are here, as could be ex­ pected. BUT AS WELL, there are all the little known songs, the one-shots from British bands which didn't make it to America in the first place: “ One & One is Two” by the Strangers with Mike Shannon, “ Tip of My Tongue” by Tommy Quickly. “ I ’m In Love” and “ Hello Little G irl” by the Fourmost, “ That Means a Lot” by P J Probv and “ Like Dream ers Do” by the Applejacks. Cilia Black's three, “ Love of the Loved,” “ It’s For You” and “ Step Inside Love” are also included. Two elusive Paul McCartney give aways are worth extra scrutiny — a 1967 band com­ position for the Chris Barber Band “ Cat Call” (which has McCartney cat-calling in the background), and “ P en in a” (1969), written for the Portuguese singer Carlos Mendes. The one tune that seems superfluous is “ I ’m the G reatest,” the Lennon composition for Ringo S ta rr’s 1973 LP “ Ringo” ; evidently it was included to balance out the McCartney solo donations. Count ’em — there are 20 songs on this LP. Some are not of Beatles quality, but they are all certainly at least worthy of the Beatles collector. And to make it better, the imported record costs less than the average domestic LP of today. All the tunes are from the m aster recor­ dings, so they a re n ’t scratched beyond recognition, and they are in stereo wherever available. CRAZY TUESDAY I / T UfRJHBRSITK O f TDC4S 4T 4USTIN 1 M fc SPECIAL EKEtiTS CENTER Seven Performances May 9-13 Tickets on sale at door. Call 477-6060 Doors open at 7:00 PM \ OFF ANY HOT DELICIOUS 2 ITEM OR MORE 16" PIZZA AND A QUART OF COKE. TUESDAY ONLY ONE COUPON PER PIZZA. HOURS: Sun-Thurs: 4p.m.-1a.m. Fri-Sat: 4p.m.-2a.m. 30 min Free Delivery. We reserve the right to lim it our delivery area. Check phone book for the Dom ino s nearest you. Name .. . ____________________ e x p i r e s s - i -79 I T M u s ic D e p a r t m e n t TUESDAY EVENING CONCERT O f Electronic Music Feat ur in g works composed by electronic music students at The Un iv er si ty of Texas and The U n i v e r s i t y of Tennessee E l e c t r o n i c M u s i c Studios. To validate coupon Ml out above inform ation Barton M cLean, D ire c to r > o z < a> .2 Ü9P* N o s Q AM M b &L Q o o J Reed Holmes, C oordinator Tonight 8 p.m. UT E le c tro n ic M usic Studio Educational Annex Bldg. — 20th & San Jacinto Free Admission % L a u g h a n d b e t e r r i f i e d P h an tasm ; directed, w ritten, edited and photographed by Don C ascare!li; with M ichael Baldwin, Bill Thornbury. Reggie B annister and Angus S crim m ; a t the Southside and N orthcross 6 T h eatres. By LOUIS BLACK It starts in this graveyard with a woman and a man making love After the culmination of coitus, the woman knifes the man who is, appropriately enough, buried in the sam e graveyard isn t because this super-strong undertaker Only he really singlehandedly lifts the coffin back into the hearse The hero of the film . 15-year-old Michael Baldwin, is watching this action through binoculars as it is a friend of his older brother who is in the coffin Phantasm is a straight ahead shriek, laugh, hide your eyes and prepare for nightmares horror film. It takes off from this beginning and goes full steam for the next 90 minutes The plot is minimal involving som e very strange goings on at the local funeral parlor which involve two recently orphaned brothers One is Michael and the other is his older brother. Bill Thorn­ bury. who used to plav in a trio (now reduced to a duo) with the deceased; the other member being Reggie Banister, who is an ice cream man in his spare time. ALONG TH E WAY there is the deadly flying sphere, a small m etallic ball that flies around the funeral home and sucks blood from people, a lot of strange dwarfs, a m ystical Gvpsy grand­ mother and her strange blonde granddaughter. The leader of the forces of evil is the “Tall Man” ; the previously mentioned undertaker who menacingly walks through the* plot. This character is wonderfully played, in the best Hollywood horror film manner, by Angus Scrimm. The film is not out to make sense or to portray reality, it is grounded in no logic but its own. It pays little attention to the outside world as we know it, with police, schools and temporal logic. Instead it is a spooky, funny, scare film. People watch horror film s for radically different reasons than they view m ost other genric forms. The cathartic, roman­ tic resolutions of most forms are lacking. The logical extension of the horror film, instead of heroics or love, is bodily harm done to the spectator. In a way, they can never really be very satisfying because you survive the experience. The best horror film s, however, make this survival as dif­ ficult as possible. Ideally the viewer watches much of the film from the fetal position with his hands over or close to his eyes. “ Phantasm doesn’t quite make it into the very inner circle of these film s, but it com es close. It is a painful/pleasurable ex­ perience to make it through the film and there are numerous mom ents of excruciating tension. TH E FILM is unusally effective in that it has a minimal linear plot It is a string of clearly connected actions, though the logic is somewhat inconsistent and difficult to figure The trou­ ble is not that the plot developments go unexplained; almost every action is eventually given a logical cause It is that none of these actions mesh into any kind of realistic mosaic So instead of worrying about these developments we are allowed the pleasure of leaning back and watching a cornucopia of blood, pump shotguns, car wrecks, moving disembodied fingers bleeding yellow blood, driverless hearses, dead dwarfs in flying killer-insects which metamorphose out of disembodied fingers and more In fact there is a lot more, but 1 don't want to give too much of this complex and convoluted canvas away. trucks, bizarre ice cream P h an tasm w as m a ste r m in d e d , w r itte n , d ir e c te d , photographed and edited by Don Coscarelli This 25-year-old filmmaker, with two other featured film s to his credit, financed this film on his own to avoid studio interference and then sold distribution rights to Avco-Embassv The film has become quite successful which means we can be expecting more from this talented young director who already has two other projects in the works. As with most film s of this type the acting is of secondary im­ portance which is fortunate because outside of Baldwin it isn’t very good But it doesn't m atter because the bizarre events are thrown at the audience rapidly, making it is neccesary to stay on top of the film all the way just to figure out what is going on laughs, shrieks, tensions, terrors and all The ride is worth it Rock films set "Keep on Rockin’,” a D A Pennebaker film, will show at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Batts Auditorium The film was made at the Toronto Peace Festival in 1969 and features perform ances by Chuck Berry, Bo Diddley, Little Richard Penniman. Jerry Lee Lewis and others. Also on the bill with “ Keep on Rockin’," according to sponsor Kirby McDaniel, are “ a few sur­ prises ’ — including a rare film of Jim i Hendrix and Jams Joplin in concert together. The film s are being shown under the aegis of.Rock of Ages, KUT-FM’s Sunday night rock ‘n ’ roll program Tuesday, May 1, 1979 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 13 showtown uso NWV 1*1 K CAMtROm SO HIR 8 SM J S o m h s i d t *\ T 1 0 t 6*« Whitt . 6 4 0 7 2 » $ ^ Box Office Opon 7:15 H flO O V « «... "THE EXORCIST*' pL t "THI DEMON 10VIR" S h o w t o w n W o t l itr o o n Southcid o N o rth"THtDARK" ntvc "THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU V I N K I T Y ñor Pooto PotolM's a a M t e Bated en the Greek tárame by funpedet a n d H a n MARIA CAUAS fue*** m I*(AM US**— presents TONIGHT ONLY! A Rogar Corman N*w World Pictur* Directed by JONATHAN KAPLAN STUDENT TEACHERS It do«sn t ta k o lo n g for thro# stu d e n t teache rs to f in d «sit w h a t h ig h school is really Ilk *! In Jester Aud. at 7 A 9 p.m. $1.25 o o o o t o l \1 M 1.3.» & HIV K K S IIIK u s t i n , r\. 1 1 1-36 i I H A P P T 1101 R I P M - 8 P M " S I R P R I S E D R I N K S P E C I A L S ” y y II \ \ K I I M J I O H IHNNKH IN OI II I OI V . l IIO R S D’O E I VRKS i p m .i t i ’ m I R E C O M M E N D “ A G r e a t R e s t a u r a n t C h o i c e " T h e ^ R e B ^ b m a t o Q u a l i t y I t a l i a n F o o d I <*01 G u * d * l u | i r I 7h 7202 I MINI rats 3 22 E a s t 6th S t 474 9351 •«at U ■ • V V ' . “ Y O U N G S T A I L I O N S " & “ F U N B U N S ' i f 4 Privar* CMi t*r Heedemee «ver I I / p 1 * ■ \ \ LIBERTY LUNCH 405 W . Second at G u a d a lu p e Tuesday, May 1 Fried Pork presents BEBOP, BALLADS & BOSSAS w ith SKILES & SKUMPANY fe a t u rin g Dude “ Beto " Skile», piano Vicho Vicencio, reeds Bob Reynolds, reeds Spencer Starnes, bass Jerry Storm, drum s 9 :3 0 p.m. plu.l m *oly tub. v*ggi« moHaUltot tloppy nacho, to up. A .atad. KITCHÉN OPSN TOR IUNCH A DINNER I I AM-MIONIOMT i r P R E S I D I O T H E A T R E S 1 C A P I T A L P L A Z A 452-7646 I M 35 NORTH FIATURIS AT 12:15-2:40-545-7:30 9:55 A n e ro /ic i d e a l ." Jack Knoll, N ew iw eeh I n n o c e n t . 12:45-3:00-5:15-7:35 9:55 ■ M urder by D e c r e e ! m 12:45-3:00-5:20-7:4010‘00 W-VI I I 4 f N I > m i l . i * w I^ e d k n c b s and O ro c v m tic k s H( V m c ' 7 l m c , 'N e x t l,\ e a r " ’” v i l l a g e a n 2700 A N D ER SO N . 451-8352 e c a a e / H I G H L A N D M A L L I M 35 AT KOCNtG IN 451-7336 I JO 1 M $ » t J0 * M JU S T O N C I *•* to tie * «ti « m i' ^ H I G H L A N D M A L L I H 35 AT KOtNtO IN 451-7376 \ 145-3:45-5:45 745-945 P < ; THE PROMISE SALLY FIELD 5:20-7 35-9 50 IN T H E 2 5 t h C E N T U R Y - 3 M ore Daysf A SUPER JOHN I j You Or HOLMES O O U B I E 1 1 2 ¡2 J L ¿ 2 1 FEATURE! I PWW1 CFW ... e o u e i TH£ CHINA * Starring — John Holm*» Kyoto r HMI ÍVIR (» I II V HI IN 1 .9011.\ I . H O L M E S G I O I K G I W S I» F I V I \ rite jkpe P U S S y C A T H r y u g n \ o u n k l^ b m e n p i n J* u JOY RIDERa C i N ÍM A W É s T W ill iff? M l IM ---- i f f r w v ,v ,v.A W a r n u n i TOWMt *T $ M ' W • M J.{(i MAAEN intAINH MANN WESTGATE Jl YtVAVnVnVt _____________ H M U M H M I MM ffM I (M I Iff. .v I f w - m h V h m h f m m m < m (((m m M u Y iV iY iY ii. DEER HUNTER mm ut $im i m « «sos FOX TRIPLEX *117 »t*ro»> it *f> • o * i mm i m i • Mm* tn t «(Ml* H .— H L {| i i ★ WEDNESDAY, MAY 2 ★ J O E J A C K S O N ! ! STANDING WAVES ★ THUR. & FRI , MAY 3 & 4 ★ D O C & M E R L E W A T S O N MARY McCASLIN & JIM RINGER ★ SATURDAY. MAY 5 ★ F O O L S ROCKIN’ DEVILS ★ MONDAY, MAY 7 ★ S P I R I T HORSLIPS 5ZSVX B A R T O N S P R I N G S R D . 4 7 7 - 9 7 * * Student* 4 V Cctrnm «4W M«C C P l w tlfck doily listiaqs for thow NOB T HCNOI* Mill ANOIWSON l*N> A BUWNH f ng*g**»*r>i* I «ciudad H (TIS *Í014.10 rr ^ The m ore you love "The greatest suspense him ever made.' THE EXORCIST f l ion voiGHi m m m | RICKY SCHRODER CHAMP ■ ‘TIS S 10.4 30 I OC 100 ■ Showing on Two Screens iftkbow (TIS 1.9014:10 l O fflCMRD , - J t PR90R : une— wap nvi uvhfviici (US S.101-7 15 0*00 v .." : TRANS TEXAS THEATRES f C "i ■ET!i!m BIE33I!3MÍ ACADEMY AWARD WINNER $2.00 til 6 PM Features 2:15-4:05 5:35-7:45-9:35 J J H *4J 5111 1421 » It* mmn SOUTHWOOD 1l? * * A Ftaromount Picture $2.00 til 6:15 If this one doesn't score you You're Already Dead! John Bolushi . . . . Ur** Donald Sutherland N A T I O N A L L A M P * * * , ANIMAL UOUtC ■ AQ UAR IUS-4 44A iin m Afáue» tmu to $200 Til j TODAY :•* j- i u:uv 1:05-3:20-5:30-7:45-10:00 Let th e su n shine in! u*"**»** HAIRC e x c l u s i v e F x r i i i Q i u p (SU ^ 1 :0 5 -2 :5 0 - 4 :4 0 - 6 :3 0 - 8 :1 5 - 1 0 :0 5 F? / T e a c h i n g " " 145-3:45-5.45 745 sm! 945 (PG) ■HE CAMEl Ih o m e forI HALLOWEENi t i i (■) — "'"HI R I V E R S I D E l o m o i v i o c i n c . a a i u q q 5 : 4 6 - 7 3 0 9 : REDUCED P R IC E S UNTIL 6:00 • MON. THRU FRI. '■ V ■”»' """ *,- .T .*D, S 3 I M M I E | S C R E E N S V'J, !> ' ’ ■ f: .♦ ■ I! A riilJlf ^ ‘ *'• * * • ** •' f; < jt [Sill'jLHnyfiS • ' •' h :: ,ff « tim e * 14 E t c h w o rd 3 tim e * J 32 E a c h w ord 5 tim e* $ 39 E t c h w ord 10 tim e * t 64 Student rate t t c h tim e » *0 1 col * t m ch o n * t ím * M 3* 13 9* 1 col « 1 inch 2 9 tim e * 1 col i I inch 10 or m ore timet 13 25 M A D U N t SCMSOUU 7 00 p m ManXuy Texan Friday Tx«»4«y Tasen Manday 11 00 o m I I 00 a m Wednesday Tesen Tuesday Thursday Tesen Wednesday 11 00 mm It 00 a m Friday Tesen Thursday "In the even! mi errers wade in an advertisement, immediate netke must he f iven as the puttie tiers see rsipanilWe ter enty 0644 meerrect mserrien At Harms far ed|wstments shewU be made net later than N days after pubhcetten." S T U D E N T / P A C U L T Y / S T A F F R A T E S 15 word m inim u m , e tch d t y 1 90 E a c h additional w ord each d a y ! 06 I col * 1 inch each d ay 13.15 "U n c la t tt fie d » '' 1 Hn« 3 d a y * .11 00 (P r*p a id . N o R e fu n d *) Student*, faculty and *taff m u *t pre- **n t a cu rre nt I D end pay in a d ­ vance In T S P Bldfl 3 200 ( 25th 8. W hlti») from l a m to 4 30 p.m M o n d a y through F r id a y AUTO S FOR SALE , 1971 F O R D Fiesta, 15,000 miles, ca sh , and paym ents, 4786989. 472 7159 ' v a ry citan, 1970 P O N T IA C C A T A L IN A , one-owner, s u rp ris in g ly econom ical _______ 8525 472 7482 ____ Í977 B M W 3201, e x tra o rd in a ry car, 22.000 m ile s Auto, AC, roof, togs, A M / F M cassette C all P B before 9 am or attar 5 pm, 928-1724 1966 R A M B L E R A M E R I C A N R eliab le ' low mileage, 1395 or best otter M u s t sail q uick ly 443-0478, eve nin g* 1972, 1973 V E G A S , for p arts or sa lv a ge - M l k # M cG lone, 474 8674, 476-1533, 474- . 1197 '2 4 C A P R I 60,000 m ile * A C N a w M lch a tin ra d ia l* Sunroof, auto, brow n Interior/ exterior *1800 444-3815 C H E C K E R M A R A T H O N PS. P B . AT. AC, rough body, need* paint 1250. C all B a rry, 926-8552 453 7866 M U S T “ s E L L now m i la a g a , g o o d c o n d it io n N ago tte M * 472 4299 1974 M a i da L o w 1 1 2 0 0 1970 F IA T 124 sport convertidla. E x * callen» condition throughout except for m ino r body w o rk *1,750 474 7552 1986 M E R C E D E S 230, 6 cy i, AT, AC, A M F M , good co n d itio n , new tun e up battery, good tires *2400 837 6938 1973 C H R Y S L E R N E W P O R T F o u r door AC, power, radio, vin yl Interior E x c ellent co n d ition 1850 441-8223 '78 T H U N D C R B I R D ' O r a n g e 'w h ite , loaded, low m ileage, excellent condition 16,795 or best otter 258-3707 E c o n o m ic a l sla n t 6 1971 V A L I A N T en gin e A M / F M cassette stereo 1850 C a ll B ob , 385-4266__ _____ ____________ 1970 P O N T IA C C A T A L IN A 4 door, P S a u t o m a t ic t r a n » m l * » io n , a ir c o n ­ ditioning, P B C all Seth, 471-7531, 478 4174 1974 M G M I D G E T co nve rtib le A M - F M G o o d tire* G ood body, fir#*. Interior C a ll Kevin. 477 9222 1973 G R A N T O R IN O A C P S W ell kept R u n t excellent 15 m p g on re gu la r g a t P au l, 477 2880 L E A V I N G C O U N T R Y , m u tt se ll 4- cytin d ar '75 C h e v y M o n z a G ood g a t m i l a a g a . g o o d c o n d i t i o n 1 2 ,0 0 0 , n op otiaw e 478-4945. 1974 " N O V A H A T C H B A C K . P S . A C , A M / F M , p re m iu m M ic h e iir tira* G ood condition L o w m ile age 11,975 451 2762, S a n d ra 1974 M G B 53,000 m iles Exc e lle n t c o n d i­ tion 17800, negotiable M ik e or M a rk , 431*1039, attar 9 pm bast 1977 F O R D V A N E 150 with chateau pa ck a ge P B , PS, A M - F M S-track S ilv e r Interior and exterior C a ll 235-0275. M W H O N D a ! C V C C . 5-*peed A C A M F M ; utat re g u la r g a t 12000 or best otter N o b id * accepted attar 5/9/79. C all 443-3956 after 5 pm 19*4 M G B C O N V E R T I B L E , new paint, en gine overhauled, new top, m a n y sp a re p a rt* 11500 474-0080 4- 1978 M O N Z A H A T C H B A C K , V-6, speed AC, P S L all op tion* Im m a c u la te speed AC, PS, all o 14500 Greg. 451-104 1970 F O R D T O R I N O co nve rtib le C la it ic 351 V-8 Autom atic. In axcallan t c o n d i­ ___ tion C all 444-8773 '73 M U S T A N G , 6 cyl., auto 1 ow ner 11375 Call Susan. 476-6526 ext. 50 FOR SALE Motoftyda-Fw Solo 7 7 B A T A V U S M O P E D P ra c t ic a lly ! 1475 476-1356 1971 H O N D A C L175 N aw battery, e le c­ tric start T w o h elm et* G ood condition K yle. 472-4830 _ B L A C K 1978 Y a m a h a 650 V e ry low m ile a ge with w in d ja m m e r and c ra t h b a r * Cali attar 5 00 pm 345-5561. B L U E / C H R O M E 1978 B ia n ch i M oped, tw o h e lm e t* 60’ g a t/ 2 w e e k * 1300 A lice: 471-4368. *47-4361 1974 S U Z U K I GT380. E x c e lle n t co n d i­ tion. 1650 negotiable 459-1439 1978 H A W K II, u n d * ™ i0 0 m ile*. IÍ2 0 0 L o tt job, m u tt sell. 451-4459 early w e e k ­ d a y m ornin gs. m aintained Super SI.3S0 447-9065 H O N D A 350 Exc e lle n t condition. N ew tune up. tire, bettery. L o w m ile age *43- 7175. I k y d o - f o r S o I b 2 3 " M E N 'S 10-speed with light, good con- ditlon, 165. 478Í-0532 a fter 6 p m.___ 2 6 " F U J I 10-ipeed 2 w e ek* old Light, lock, coble, toe- ctlp*. 1140 B u y , 4746096 after 9 pm sponge h and le b ar*, Steree-Fpr Sola C I R C L E S T E R E O b u y * and sell* use d Stereo equ ip m en t P ro te **io n a l au dio vid eo ter vice • p a rt* and a cc e sso rie s 1211 R e d R iv e r - 476-0947 M A R A T H O N S P E A K E R s a le " F r e e sp e a ke r w ire w ith 2 targe E C I sp e ake rs 112$. 478-97S3 K E N W O O O R E C E I V E R & I C F o r ­ m u la IV spe ake r*, phono, I-tra c k p laye r- re c ord ar S p e a k e rs alone retail 1320 A s k in g 1385 D e v id 4726993 4 6 pm H A R M A N - K A R D O N R E C E I V E R , G a r r a r d tu rn tab le . H it a c h i c a s s e tte recorder, sp e ake rs Together 1360 or ta p a ro te C a ll Bob, 385626* T E A C 33405 r e e l-t o -r e t i « c h a n n e l stereo with sim u l-tyn c E x c e lle n t condt Hen N ew 11595 S a c r ifice 1700 385-16*0 C A R S T E R E O , P io ne er Sopertwner, 20 o i m a g n e t D u a l - c o n e s p e a k e r s , F M / c a ss e tte 2 y e a rs old Sounds like new 4526729 S T E R E O S Y S T E M S A N D C O M P O N E N T S O e sig a d F o r Y o u r U n iq u e N eeds U sin g T h e F in e s t B r a n d s A v a ila b le A L L A T R E A A A R K A B L E L O W P R I C E S C e ll F o r A p p o in tm en t or In fo rm atio n T H E A U D I O F I L E * 443-9395 M m*k o t - f f S a b ____ u A S S t C A L G U I T A R le sson s C lassical, kmenco and p o p u la r m u sic . G u tte rs to a t T y la w m a n , 472 2 B * * _________ E N T U R E 15 F O O T s lo o p r ig g e d M am aran N e w roiier. re e fin g jib. g o o d a g a in , w traile r *41 1228 M u s i c o l - F o r S o l e L E A R N T O p l a y gu ita r B eginn er and advanced 47* 04SC D re w Thotf.**urt H a ve a nice day F E N D E R B A S S M A N g u i t a r " b a s s am p lifier and 2 sp e ake rs Good shape W m j a c r if lc # tor M 50 444 3*15 U N I V O X E L E C T R O N I C p ian o h a rp sich ord / clavic h o rd Separate b ass tre bi# controls W ith stand, m icrop h azar S325 472 7973, Hal D U L C I M E R K IT in clud es all m ate rials and In structions for potentially beautiful in strum ent *35 Call 458 5755 Y A M A H A GUITAR am p lifier 50-watt with reverb, trem olo and distortion I yr old B ra n d new shape 1275 or best otter 443 249 ____________________ 1 1971 F E N D E R P r e c is io n , s u n b u r s t finish, rosew ood neck Great p laying b ass *350 or best otter 443 89V; W A N T E D E L E C T R I C piano t h a n T iñ need of repa.r will p ay cash 444 2712 or 441 2164 D a vid. P H o t o g r o p h y - f o r S a i d F O R C O L L E C T O R S Leica m odel 3F I 2 lens, r# c o n ­ 1955, C oo ke A m o ta l ditioned in perfect shape, with case, flash attachm ent, 4307 *175 471 8537, 478 C A N O N F Tb with 50m m f 1 4 lens and c a r r y in g c a s e 1200 453-9669, afternoons E xcellen t condition P d t s - F o r S o l d F R E E K I t t e n s , cuta! S ix waaks. 4SÍ- 5615 H a m « i - F o r S a l a • I N V E S T W H I L E at U T W a lkin g dis tance. duplex, 155,000 C all Libby, Bill Sm ith & A ssociates or hom e 476 6440 W A N T TO B U Y sm a ll house near U T ca m p u s D a n n y Kelly, 474-6617, H O U S E W A N T E O to b uy P ro fe ss o r 's fa m ily of four seeks large house con- ven ent to cam pus, in good school dis trict Ideal size 3B R , study, studio 978 247i F o r S a l e - G a r a g d M i t c d l l a n e o u t - F o r S a l * N E L S O N S G IF T S . E sta b lish e d 1945 L a rg e st Indian lew elry 4502 South C o n g re ss 444-3814 C losed M o n d a y s re se rv a tio n selection A A R O N S B O O K S T O R E 320 C o n gre ss (d o w n to w n ), 478 6940 W e buy, sell, trad e P lay b o ys, pap erb acks, records, tapes and c o m ic s ' A lso lew elry, posters, head shop, notary se rvice Joe Bates ow ner Q u e e n s i z e bed, d resser, night stand, two lam ps A ll *85 After 6 00 636 2774 i t w i n B E D S S45 each. C o rn e r bed g ro u p 1125. 476 4183 W e b u y j e w e l r y , e s t a t e jewelry, diam onds, and old gold H ig h e st c a sh prices paid C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N L a m a r FURNISHED APARTMENTS 2505 E N F I E L D on Shuttle 1 B R & E ffic ie n c y , pool, laund ry. M g r . No. 1. 478- 2775. S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E N o w leasing for su m m e r and fall New carpet, new drapes, fre sh ly painted, on shuttle route 1 B R 1220, fu rnishe d or u n ­ fu rnishe d 46/3* A u p A 458-5301 (N e w M a n a g e m e n t) C A Y W O O D P R O P E R T I E S A V A I L A B L E J U N E I 1717 E N F I E L D on Shuttle L u x u r y I B R 8. E ffic ie n cy 478 9767, 327- 0064 105 E. 31st W a lk to U T, large Etf 1145 mo. plus E G a s heat, co okin g pa>d. laundry M g s No 103 477 4005 5 B L O C K S W E ST OF C A M P U S F u ll carpeted G a s (stove), water, cable in clud ed P an e lle d livin g room W alk In «.iuiut S u m m e r rates 1150 and 1155 A lso s m a ll efficiencies 1132 2104 San G a b rie l R E D O A K A P T S . 477-5514 476-7916 M A R K T W A I N ^ i4 1106 W. 22nd Quiet, m od ern apt w alk to ca m p u s Su m m e r rates S 1 9 0 - S 2 4 0 Jack - 452*9559 W.E. & Associates E N G L I S H A I R E A P T S . R e n tin g for S u m m e r Effic ie n cie s, 1, 2. and studio ap t* , f u r ­ n ish e d and u n fu rn ish e d W ater trash, sew er cable T V p ro vid ed on shuttle 2 s w im m in g pools 2 h an d b all racquefball courts, 2 ce ntral laundries, lighted ten­ n is courts, near R iv e rsid e and Oitort, of­ fice hou rs 9-6 M on-Set, 12-6 S u n d a y 1919 Burton Dr. 444-1846 W E ' V E G O T ' E M Houses, duplexes and apts. Free - Caywood Locators 458 5301, 345-5003 V I P APTS. S U M M E R R A T E S i n d u l g e y o u r s e l f i n l u x u r i o u s l i v i n g O n e one, o r three bdrm -2ba Tw o le v * ' studio, new cerpet cable gas, end water paid Suitab le tor m atu re students shuttle at door F o r appoint m ent 4764363 or c o n '* site fu r n is h in g * pool S P E E D W A Y A T 33RO 3 B L K S TO L A W SCH. S U M M E R R A T E S $ 2 0 0 plus E • 2BR Apts. • 40 ft. pool • covered parking • sm all complex L A C A S IT A A P T S . 2900 Cole 472*3318 Long Haven Apts. — Su m m er Hatet — • 1 BR Fum. 5165 • 2 BR Fum. $200 • Walk to Campus 9 1 6 W. 23rd 4 7 2-597 4 M ARK V — Su m m er Rate — • 1 BR Fum. $170 • Nice Pool - Patio • Shuttle Comer • Fall Preleaslng Too 3 9 1 4 Ave. D 4 5 2 -3 5 1 1 Su Roca Apts. Summer Special 1 BR Fum. $ 1 7 0 W alk to C a m p u s Nice Pool - Law n Fall Leasing Alto 2400 Longview 4 7 2 -1 5 9 8 CHEZ JACQUES — Su m m e r Rate — • 1 BR Furn. $ 1 8 0 • W alk to C am pus • Nice Pool - Patio 1302 W. 24 478*4517 MARK XX - Su m m er Special - • 1 BR Furn. $ 1 7 0 • 2 BR Furn. $ 2 0 0 • Shuttle 2 Blks. • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 3 8 15 G uadalupe 4 5 9 -5 7 7 5 El Dorado Su m m er Special • 1 BR Fiim. $150-$145 • Shuttle Front Door • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Tool 3501 Sp e e d w ay 47 2-4893 VILLA SOLANO APTS. - Su m m e r Special - ► 1 BR Fum. $170 > 2 BR Fum. $200 1 Shuttle Comer 1 Intramural Reid Across Street 51st I Guadalupe 454-3270 JR., SR. & G R A D S . C o m p l e x fo r u p p e r d i v i s i o n g ra d u a te students O H shuttle gre at su m m e r p arties a n d pool A lso 9to W 26th Cut# efficiency 472 302 W. 38th 453-4002 6589 108 P L A C E L A R G E E F F I C I E N C Y A P T S . • D>shw asher d isp osa l • S w im m in g pool • P a tio ber be-que • in d iv id u a l sto rage • B o o ksh e lv e s • • C ab le t v • L a u n d ry facilitie s • R esid en ! m a n a g e ' block to shuttle b us L e a s in g tor S u m m e r $150 mo & E 108 W 45th 4*2 i4)9 453 277) W A L K T O L A W Schoo- L B J lib ra r* Ib r t. su m m e r *145 plus E On shuttle 1 Wfc f a s t of R ed R »e< on 2*tn Tower Vraw A p ts 47» 5105 S A V E 830 C hild re n pets 104 E Sp eed w ay D u v a l 478-692» 472*648 1149 w a ix g r n o 33rd Between i l Villa Arcos - Sum m er Special - • 1 BR Furn • Shuttle Front Door • Nice Pool-Patio • Fall Leasing Also 3 30 1 S p e e d w a y 4 7 4 -5 3 9 5 Hyde Park Apts. — Su m m e r Rates — Iff. Furn. $135 1 BR Fum. $150 2 BR Fum. $175 Shuttle Front Door City Tennis Courts & Pool Across Street 4 4 1 3 S p e e d w a y 4 5 8 -2 0 9 6 EL CAMPO Su m m e r Special • 1 BR Fum. $170 • 2 BR Furn. $200 • Fall Leasing Too 305 W. 39 452-8537 EL CID Student Special • 1 BR Furn. $ 1 6 5 • Shuttle Front Door • Fall Leasing Also 3 7 0 4 S p e e d w a y 45 2-151 2 ¡ e e e e e e • • • • • • • • • • • • Free Sorvice P a r k i n g Transportation HABITAT HUNTERS fre e a p t A s e r v / c e s p e c ia liz in g m c o m p l a n a s mrith a c c a s s to s h u t t la l o c a t o r Dobin Malt Suite IA 474-1532 S U M M E R L E A S I N G now R e se rv e your 11 2-1, or 2-2 now before we re fu ll1 No children, pets $149 478 6928 472 8648 MARK VII APTS. Su m m er Special 1 BR Fum. $170 Shuttle Front Door 2 Pools Foil Loosing Too 3 1 0 0 S p e e d w a y 477-4477, 472-0506 VILLA NORTH Su m m e r Special • Etf. Fum. $135-5140 « 1 BR Fum. $155-$16S • 2 BR Fum. $190-$200 • Fall leasing Tool 4 5 2 0 D uval 451-5641 La Canada Apts. — Sum m er Rates • All Bills Paid • 1 BR Furn. $200 • 2 BR Furn. $240 • Nice Pool - Patio • Walk to Campus 1300 W. 24 4 7 2 - 1 5 9 8 í u n í M VATES" Eft. & 1 Bdrm M 5 9 - M 7 9 104 E. 32nd (Walk or Shuttle) M onager No. 103 476-5940 4103-5 Speedway, M anager No. 203 458-4037 w m m a a J S M iS U l& a m a m ^ m l^ ^ ^ ALL BILLS PAID Leasing for su m m e r L a n ta n a Apt., 1802 W e st Ave. E fficie n cy , 1 and 2br, 1 a n d 2ba. Pool, p a r k in g , w a lk to U T , lim ite d n u m b e r A B P , C r e s a v a i l a b l e . R e altors, 474-6407. S u m m e r a n d F a ll P r e le a sin g El Chaparral Apts. 459-3538 4 0 5 W. 3 8 t h N o r th C a m p u s Su m m er a n d Fall Preleasing Viewpoint Apts. Call John at 476-2088 b e d r o o m efficiency a n d 2 a p a r t m e n t s a v a i l a b l e 25 18 Leon W. C a m p u s DON'T WAIT A few choice apartment locations are still available — but they are going fast. Aspenwood Apts. 4 5 3 9 G uadalupe 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 Su m m e r Rates 1 Bedroom Furnished 5170 2 Bedroom Furnished *2 0 0 Shuttle But at front door) Also tigning M l hoses now Intramural fields across street N O W L E A S I N G s u m m e r Shuttle UT, West A u stin 1-1, $149 N o pets, children, 700 H ern 476-0953 a v a ! l a b l e ” T ü ñ e 7 ~ w a ik ~ T j t T T l $149 no pets, ch ildre n 304 E 33rd 478 6928 472-8648 E F F I C I E N C Y A P T A il ut*Httes except electricity paid Now accepting a p p lication s for su m m e r and (a ¡se m e ste r V illa E s p e ra n z a m anag er, 109 459-8018 * 160 m o Park Place 4 3 0 6 A ve n u e A 2 BR Furn Apts - $ 2 0 0 & E. ________4 5 1 - 3 5 1 8 _____ Voyageurs 311 East 31 st Street ALL BILLS P A ID Furn. Private Room - $ 1 1 5 1 BR - $ 2 1 5 2 BR/2 Bath - $ 3 2 5 Pool & Laundry 4 7 8 - 6 7 7 6 Redwood North 5101 Evans Unfurn. Apts. Eff - $ 1 3 5 & E 1 BR - $ 1 5 5 & E ___________ 4 5 4 - 5 4 7 5 __________ The Elliott Systems 4 S 1 - 8 1 7 8 Continental Apts. F a nta stic Sum m er Rate 2 b e d ro o m fu rn ish e d . . $ 2 0 0 • S h u ttle C o rn e r • N ice Pool 91 0 E. 40 4 5 3-426 2 Tanglew ood Westside ■ I Apartments | Summer Special Run, d o n 't w a lk — tom orrow w ill be too late | | for these choice residences. l l l l l l l I l l l | 1403 N orw alk Ln. 1 Bedroom Furnished $140-$195 2 Bedroom Furnished $ 2 20-$2 30 G a s & w ater is p a id b y owner. T V . Cable TooI Shuttle buses at your front door S ign in g Fall Leases N o w I I 1 1 I 4 7 2 -9 6 1 4 ^ Avoid the Last Minute Rush — Prime Locations Available W illow creek Apts. 1911 Willowcreek SU PER S U M M E R SP E C IA LS 444-0010 4 4 4 -0 0 1 4 Unfurnished - Furnished Large Apartments 1 Bedroom Furn. $170 2 Bedroom 2 Bath Furn. $195-$215 2 Large Pools ‘140 Summer Special The Establishment Large efficiency, nice pool area. 4 4 0 0 A v e n u e B 4 5 1 - 4 5 8 4 The Retreat ‘ 1 4 0 / Summer Rate / Large furnished efficiency Nice Pool/Patio 4 4 0 0 A v e n u e A 4 5 1 -4 5 8 4 2 2 0 7 Leon Apts. • Su m m e r Specials ■ • 1 BR Fum. $170 • 2 BR Fum. $250 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool & Patio • Fall Leasing Too 2 2 0 7 Leon 47 2-597 4 LA PAZ APTS. Su m m er Specials • 1 BR Furn. $ 1 7 0 • 2 BR Furn. $ 2 0 0 • Shuttle 1 Blk • Nice Pool, Patio • Fall Leasing Too 401 W. 39 452-5491 E F F & 1 B R $139-$169 C lose to cam p us, beautifully panelled, fu lly carpeted, all built-in kitchen, C A C H W ater, gas. cable paid 4200 A ve A 451 6966. 451-6533. C en tral Properties, Inc. E F F . $170 A L L B I L L S P A I D L a rg e apts, pool, fu lly sh ag carpeted. C A CH, ail built-in kitchen, convenient to ca m p u s 4000 A ve A 451-1422 451-6533 C en tral Properties, Inc. 1 B R $175 W A L K T O C A M P U S L a rg e apts F u lly carpeted and draped Built-in kitchen, C A CH, pool E a c h apt h as own b alcon y or patio Water, gas, cable paid 3301 Red R iv e r 476-2486 451-6533 C en tral Properties, Inc. 1 B R $165 O n shuttle, pool screen doors, fully c a rp e te d . C A C H , b u ilt-in k itc h e n appliances, lots of g la ss W ater, cable paid 4209 Speedw ay 459-5742 451-6533 Central P rop erie s, Inc ALSO PRELEASING FOR FALL NOW len 1 B R $165 V e ry close to ca m p u s and shuttle bus B eau tifu lly panelled fully carpeted, all built-in kifchen, C A CH, built in book she lves v e ry la rge closets Water, gas. cable paid 4307 A v e A 459-1053 451-6533 C en tral Properties, Inc V i E F F . $170 A L L B I L L S P A I D C lose to c a m p u s B eau tifu lly panelled, a ll b uilt-in kitchen, fu lly c a rp e te d C A C H 4200 A v e A 451 6966 451-6533 C en tral Properties, inc. V E R Y L A R G E E F F . 32nd S T R E E T - $159 S h a g c a rp e t w a lk -m closet, b u ilt-in kitche n a p p lia n c e s Queen size bed, C A C H W ater cab ie paid 474 6380 202 E 32nd 451-6533 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T I E S , tNC S U M M E R R A T E S M a u n a Kai 405 E 31st W aik to c a m p u s shuttle and city bus Ettic.ene es S I5 4 50 2tor 2ba 1235 472-2147 S A V E E N E R G Y ! G E T O N S H U T T L E . R e se rv e d p a r k in g pool lau n drom at S u m m e r v a c a n c y ail b id s paid except E 1170 and up T H E S P A N I S H T R A I L 4520 B E N N E T T 451-3470 S U M M E R 4 F A L L ease s I B R ap t* N e a r U T Act V lt 4303 D u v a i 4S3 a m 345-8550 turn G A R A G E A P T T re es N e a r U T 443-6826 3 6 pm *1*0 S u m m e r Ra te s Fall Ra te s • 2 l i g h t e d te n n i s c ourts • p u t t i n g g r e e n s • s h u t tle b u s s t o p s • th re e p o o l* • ex ercise r o o m s s a u n a * • f u r n i s h e d u n f u r n i s h e d • free cable TV 2 1 0 1 Bu rton Dr. 4 4 7 - 4 1 3 0 r T A Ñ G T É W O O D "Ó R ~ H l APARTMENTS I II — Su m m er Specials — I Better Hurry! Tomorrow I Will Be Too Late — I I 1 Bedroom Furnished11 8 0-* 1 9 5 I 2 Bedroom Furnished l2 2 0 - ,2 4 0 I I I II — W e R a y Your Air C on d itio nin g — T V. C ab le Tool Shuttle Bus at your Front Door Also Signing Fall Lease* N ew 1020E. 4Sth I I I I I I I I I I L — — ¿ f t t t t f — J — UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS Tuesday, May 1, 1979 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Page 15 FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS Step into Eff. 158.00 1-1 179.00 2-1 199.00 2 - 2 2 1 0 . 0 0 M Eff. 180.00 1-1 215.00 2-1 240.00 2-2 275.00 Don't wait and pay high ront pricos. u s ! + G u e s s who's pro- loosing for Fall? X f * E F F . T H R U 4BR Moder n - Spacious On Shuttle S um me r and Fall Leasing Point South Apts. 2200 W i l l o w C r e e k 444-7536 S U M M E R RA TES S i 60-$ 180 !fcr f e ll y c a r p e t e d w a lk in l a r g e closets, cab le TV disposal w a te r and fu rn is h ed , w a lk in g gas s w im m m g pool distan ce to U T N o ch ild re n no pets F O U N T A I N T E R R A C E A P T S . 610 W 30th N o 134 M a n a g e r 477-M S I UNFURN. APARTMENTS S A T . 1 0 - 4 NOW LEASING FOR SUMMER & FALL RIVER HILLS APARTMENTS • eff., 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedroom opts. • 14 floor plans - 22 combinations. • Unfurnished. • On-site A /C m an. • Ind. heat & air. • On UT shuttle run. • 4 swimming pools. • Ample parking. All bills paid for summer. Plus electric for fall. 2 L e a s i n g O f f i c e s W A N T S O M E T H I N G D I F F E R E N T A N D W I T H S T Y L E ? B alco nies w n d o w s tree» an d lofts All i BR s H 8 4 s?75 plus E No pets sm all t h r e e f u r n is h e d on s h u tt le T h e s e f o r a p a r t m e n t s N o w p r e - t e a s m g s u m m er 32nd AT I -35 A V A L O N A P TS L a u n d ry room fa c ilitie s Pool W a lk in g d i s t a n t , UT St D a v id s f u r ­ nished 4 c a rp e te o F u lly 2BR 2 t i l t b aths w a ln u t panel $22$ p ‘us E S . G IB R S its plus E S. G E ffic ie n c ie s S'SO plus E 472 7*04 SKANSEN 4205 Speedway M E S Q U I T E T R E E 2410 Lo n g vie w 2100 N UEC ES APTS. 2100 Nueces 451-7821 477-3036 Summer Rates S135-S165 plus E. pool u t i l i t y 1BR r o o m 1007 W 26th - 477-2696 or 459-9147 s h u ttle UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS SPECIAL CONSTRUCTION RATES R id g e h n lla u i A N ALL ADULT OW NER M A N A G E D APARTMENT COMPLEX LOCATED IN BEAUTIFUL NORTHWEST HILLS EASILY ACCESSIBLE TO D O W N T O W N CO N VEN IEN T TO ALL OF NORTH AUSTIN S MAJOR SHOPPING AREAS, INCLUD IN G TW O LARGE MALLS A L S O A V A I L A B L E • TENNIS COURTS • CLUB RO O M • WASHER DRYER C O NN ECTIO N • LARGE BALCONIES & PATIOS W ITH STORAGE CLOSETS • FIREPLACES • S W IM M IN G POOL 1601 Royal Crest 4 4 4 - 7 7 9 7 1700 Burton Drive 4 4 1 - 1 7 4 6 FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS 1 FURNISHED APARTMENTS] 11 *— w ImOBMMC • *»OOP*Hk i _____ t = f ----------- 6805 Woodhollow 345-9315 A B P E f f i c i e n c i e s Sh uttle or w a l k U T M 49 2215 Leo n 474-7732 A B P 2211 L e o n 474-7732 A B P 2 B R C A C H s h u t tle or w a l k U T $190 l a r g e i p p h w a sh e r d is p o s a l sh u ttle or w a lk UT c a r p e t p c l |199 j i s - c A CH 2212 San Gabr Apt 110 4 t>io< ks w est of c a m p u s on la u n d ry paid $ 1 3 0 $ 140 P lu s E . S um m er rates. W e a r e looking fur q u iet, const lentlous students in te re s te d m a la rg e e ffic ie n c y 3 locations near cam p u s u i h , laun d ry , d eadbolts disposal 476 28)7 P R E L E A S I N G F O R S U M M E R & F A L L H a v e 2br-2ba, la r g e Ib i s re g u la r ibr s and e ffii lein y n p ’ » a v a ila b le J W k * fro m c am p u s C a ll b«-iween l i a d a ily or 7*07 W est com e by b etw een 2 6 p m A venue M a n a g e r N o 704 474 1712 S U M M E R L .t A S E S The B ro w n le e Stu dent e ffic ie n c ie s 2502 Nuecr*» <2 blocks fro m ca m p o s > Now ta k in g deposits and a p p licatio n s *100 deposit S !7 5 m o ren t i Aug 15 (so m e le a s e s a re fro m June possible e a r ly m o v e ins M a y >5) All bills re n o v a te d G ia d paid air student» p r e fe r r e d C a ll a tta r 5 p m M S 443 7288 lo u d ib o n e d 24 F L A T S A P A R T M E N T S R e n t in g for S u m m e r L a rg e e ffic ie n c y a p a rtm e n ts m a v e ry nice q u ie t ro m p te » D ish w ash e r dls i posai CA CH fo r b lock s u m m e r only or s ta rtin g in s u m m e r tor I yea? ( W l cab le to f r s h u ttle A v a ila b le la u n d ry ra»*> S u m m e r $14$ plus E FAll & Sping $165 plus E 'S IS P alm a P!d*a 4 8 *707b e f o r e • p m pleas ’ 2BR T O W N H O U S E N e a r H a n c o c k C e n t e r 8 . S H u t t l e S20C S?t. m v m f f «250 82*4 F a ll w ate r p aid r . ’ s P t . ne *78 >21* - Si pet s. ii m e i t an Si>«» ia l R ates S u m m it U T A re a disposal .’ HR spa» h is D ish w ash e r a n 'd f y t« i dities plenty C A pat king Q u ie t and co g eniat atm o s p h e re 478 .1303 472 S332 tHH L A R C .! K» M < it N t t s m a ll frie n d ly c o m p ita 5 bto» ks to cam p u s on shuttle la u n d ry *K ' w j » t r»«* ,’* ih A V A H A B I | c es A IB P laundry ,’ 5th 477 ?»)82 t OR lu m rn e i E f f M e n I MO to s> *5 plus E Pool landscaped 4 biks UT 40 fo r fa ll *1 *5 7 1 t»F t R io now leasing t ait ra te s < rati plus E * 7 ? S 7*0 S o c ia l S78Ú I ' *ISS |I* C 2 S2I0 t u f rushed c e n tra l ¡hhi| l?t.' R ed R iv e r sor t a ll 4 ?? ( a s a a n d Of l u m m r i i l H iim t if i d is io u h ts all phis E 2 I a n >1041 f o r S u m m e r * 1 4 0 , E F F I C I E N C Y laun spa» I'm s e p a ra te k itth e n pool d fy Pt» Shuttle S b k x k s U T *0* W 7*fh l o i . s H ines P ttperfy M anagem ent 477 708 * 478 >7 7* T 4 * 8 » 1 O W N p i n s e c iu d e d A v a ila b le M a y t . A R A i . f e fe AC I » I*» a B P 4 h *57! a p t Q u ie t S in g le only I A R ( .f h i l t II# SI 50 plus t 470* A v enue t» i blocks fo shut I f N O C an 45* J0>8 or co m e by ( i f N I A R ta ig e 7BR W a llin g 47 H a rd w o o d floors, c A i r< en tly i efur bishi d CM noe 7 76*8 Oi 45* *147 F I G R O U N D i amp» A ugust S is ' plus Jar k Jim 47 1 4705 4 5 1 866 5 ,tistar»'. e OR W a lk in g A ir 7 3 persons June or n ea re st otter i P R O F I SSOR s i f AN turnishevl or sem i tcrr rushed house to t ent sept 1*7* to M a y 1*80 W ill be on S a b b a tu a l le a v e w ith w ife , t h u d For re fe re n c e w rite D a v id M y e r s B o* 135 M o o rh e a d s ta le U ntv M o o rh e a d M in n 56560 I f f : I C I f N t I f s for s u m m e r N IC I O nly *149 Jo plus t Do uble bed G as f u l l kitc h en A ttr a c tiv e stove <805 Ave B 45* ’ 2 18 444 128* t i r a n IM M » O l A t t I V Spanish A V A I l AB t I 7BW Furnished V illa g e I a fie ld studio a p a rtm e n t * 2 t0 plus i O n shut fie 472 *170 7710 ta ll On# N O W L i A S iN G for sum m er and tw o bed ro om s *180 *180 1904 San G a b r ie l 472 *5 5 * S U B i f A s t A P A R T m i NT Tor sum m er 1 liloi ks Trom law si hoot 7HR A B P C a ll t Hen or la n 474 4 U)8 t O < A H O N you II fin d H A N D l i ST B lo c k t am pos pool qutaf e ffic ie n c y *180 or single room *150 All bills pant 205 W 20th (opposite D o b t* g a ra g e ) 453 4042 for appo q tm en t g r • a T U N I V E R S I T Y C A R R f i s IB R c a rp e te d lo catio n CA C H , c a b le d is p o s a l, study desk Shuttle Sl8*i t 2812 Nuece» 477 64*7 l a r g e cle a n F a R t a St Tc L O C A T IO N g u ie t t a r g e t l shag carp e r C A C H able sundae k *175 f G re a t O ak 7*00 Swisher pool 47 7 1 18* IT I m e 2BR 7BA a p a rtm e n t T H IS IS t a ll E « ca llen ! loca a v a ila b le sum m er tlon nice pool S u m m er ra t# |270 A E F a ll ra te s,’V0 A t 2«th H o W t a i l 471 w ee k d a y s or 472 7635 offset wise ( o m e by L# f onf, 801 l l / l 8 5 105 or I F A M N G a v a ila b le June I S U M M t R 2BR 2BA fu rn is h e d n p e rtm e n t *285 m o 2700 San G e b rte l 4 '* 4*02 4/4 07 16 474 4464 l A R G t E F F I C I E N C Y a p p lian ces V I47 Mi plus I ( an T f W ile y 1 o m p a n y 4/2 *728 A n k i k n e n I I 1 5 W 10th ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD L i v e in an a t m o s p h e r e of ACADEMIC HEDONISM T w e n t y - F i r s t S t r e e t C o l l e g e Ho u s e C o o p e r a t i v e 707 w. 21st St. 476-5678 SURVIVE impending the FLOOD & V * S o £ > & S U M M E R S U B L E T nice g a ra g e -fy p e *150 AB P« IF shuftk- a p a rtm e n t 452 3155 befo re 10 00 a m L a u ri IB R E N F i C l D A R E A a p a rt *1 *5 plus e le c tr ic ity Pool ctos* m e n * lose Shuttle 12’ 8 B aylo r 477 *1 5 * 476 4*9* a v a ila b le M a y t jt h one bed ro om 1218 Baylo r C O M P O R T A B L E o n e S U N N » b ed ro o m CA CM p a tio fu rn is h ed , un­ fu rn is h e d N o rth ea c* *175 plus e le c tr ic i­ ty *76 6**4 *26 ?V5 377 ■>**■» UNFURN. APARTMENTS Circle Villa Apts. Summer Spo€ial • 1 BR $150 & I • 2 BR $190 & E • Shuttle Bus • Fall Leasing Too 7323 Town lake Circle 444-5003 Un-Complexes u # house» co n v e rte d in to a p a rtm e n t» W est ol cam pu s A nti' p a t* su m * vacan lt»k> and 2BR SlkJ *175 C a ll w ith your needs f*i a fe r e n t e to m a t u l e student» w ith re t# i eru es a n d no pet» Ja» k Jennings 4/4 *8 *8 12 10 1 00 C o nsolid ated Ready I »tl< encies es T R A V I S H O U S E A P T 1600 R O Y A L C R E S T h om e M u m 4 ...... p la n * 1 * 2 1 » »,<• D is h w a s h e r p e fe d L A t M tw>. on Rc s h u ttle rot par * y k>, H Kt tl • »t »*op a m *1 *5 44 2 < 120 a »i ! s ( l l A C k i T O N f law s» hucil bookshelves 2 2 CA C H or g ra d student p te fe r re ,i R iv a l 47* 5*31 bloc k tro m larg e b u .it in desks and la w 2*|Q Red Ik X ) A 8 P I F H C i i N C . 1 1 5 I R I S H p a i n t e d C A C H t a r p e f w a llp a p e r east W4 n.11 Rq a v a ila b le i 474 5550 c l e a n , e m i t i n g ( k urn tsh ed 1 8 1 0 N U E C E V 1 B R t T r t p f a c e . 12' c e ilin g * 5(»e»tal»ate til S e pte m b er 462* 885* M Y O I F*AR k l a r g e quiet 51*5 m o d#iH»sit 478 0017 a lte r * p m 4100 A » a Ci Í8 W apr b ills p aid sfOO UNFURNISH9D D U P tlX IS TS5IÑZ------ BANANAS? W! «NT APARTMiNTS, DUPlfXfS, ANO NOMIS ALL 0V IR AUSTIN - PRI-LEASING NOW P A U L M t l S L i t t ' S RIAL WORLD PROPiRTIiS 442-W12 >45 A3$0 B t O C k RF D R iy a r 5 e a rs . y a rd S l*5 some b ilis su p lían . HS. pet» 1 5 477 4012 I I nl 3 7 S O U T H B a rto n M ilt» a re a CA C a i l a p p h a m a s W L> c o n n e c t io n sunder k S4M) m o plus b ills 17 m on lease m es» age ( a il 444 8648 eve ning s or lea 5 0 U T M J i t ir e p ia r f , g a ra g e W (3 t o ( a ( m shu ttle bus #K ap p lian ce n 447 1915 S P A c I O U 5 *170 trio W ill furnish W L iv e Oak 4 7* 0017 a lte r * p ,„ I B R a p t W a t e r pa< l a rg a y a rd *0. IA R G 1 2 bedroom 7 tu l! b a th du 5R R l shuttle e ia c frl 1*70 A V a lle y h ill 444 *104 s i n pty» dual* Ir ii ,1 2B R U N f U R N lS H t (> w ith s h u ttle w th tre e * k . u 477 ROOM AND BOARD S O M E T H I N G D I F F E RF NT Studmus g en tlem en s s u m m er c© op li n e w ly re n o v a te d post C iv il W a r er< in Business * hom e M o stly Jrs A Vrs f n g m e e rin g S u m m er p a rtie s 7 block .m p v s Do uble ro o m s 125. 5ingi< From *1*5 ( a l l í>an 478 7*70. alter 2 10 l A R G I room s good meats, I W O M F N block fro m 1 a m p in 1 pu re! House Co-Op 7812 G u a d a lu p e 4 /8 3 1 5 * 0 1 *78 0*70 D liU T S f MF 5 M A U * L u up We hav e O p e n in g* fur s p r in g and su m m e r D euiscr.es Maos is designad to g lvo In - *ei ested U T students a banco to pra< fu 8 G e rm a n and Spanish on an e r a r v day basis 4 7 ; a te 5 474 1 1*7 R O Y A L C O O F Shared labor o rg a m ie d c u n s u m a rl*!*' e ro lo g ic a i com m u n ity effectiven ess ,ete< t lo< ation e q u it y p r i n c i p l e s . .n q u n * *78 0880 Í N Í C Á HOU7«F l o op w il l h a » # pen m ys for women fur s u m m e r and F e m in is t e n v iro n m e n t good a t ­ t e ll m o sp h ere tor w ork or study 4 77 (722* ROOMS Near UT l a r g e p riv a te fu rn is h ed b ed ro o m «>1 in p r i v a t a h o r n * B e a u t t f s b a t h neighborhood k ih hen p riv ile g e s L a w * l* o m o F e m a l d ry g ra d student or w o rk in g lad y p raterre» A v a d e b ie M a y 15 478 *50* far ih ties A B P W At k iN G D i * T a n í F U T snag . a'p e> ( A C H , h d th e n p rivileg e» . |IQ *? m o U n iv e rs ity House 7716 Nuer e t 477 * 3 M 2 B l k S U T nicety fu rn is h e d room s, et f it it m . i«s and a p t* fro m t * 5 a n d up The k yfe House 7800 W h.t.y 4 '/ 7»58 O f UTSC HF 5 H A U S Cu op W e nav e fo r s p r in g a n d s u m m e r o p e n in g s Desdar hes *i» o s ,t designed fo g iv e in te rrs te d U T students e ch a n ce to pre* t r e G e rm a n end 5pam sh on an a v e ry * day basis *77 «ass 4/4 > 1*7 Q U IF f F»l AC F to study pips s m a ll com p e n s a ro n tof m a tu r e l i m n » g ra d u a te or rsursmg studen t n e * nan g a for lig h t nous#n<,id du ties t<-r eider iy lad y R e p ly B o * O -l. A ustin, 78712 F U R N IS H E D ru u m J blocs» F E M A L E fro m c am p u s Share bath kitc h en 1)78 for e n tire s u m m er A B P *72 2>80 U N F U R N I S H E D R O O M for re n t rsea- sh u ffle 1*6 plus share u ’ tifie s «St-682* w a l k U T C a rp e te d k.t<»>eo. betb sias John H o w tfi ow n #' broker 4 ye 1701 c a c h S hare FURNISHID DUPLEXES 7B R *2 *5 plus i C a C h Spacious, Ig g m d r y nea r U T 2761 S alad o Lou-s H iñ a s P r o p e r ly M a n a g e m e n t *77 7082 S M A L L M - e n orth u n .vyr» *» a n .m a ts 478 58S0 IB R a ir «o n d if m e d duple» * ! * 0 A B P No 12 B L O C K S north u S L » rg e .’ B R s AC. *712 plus u til f.ev R e s p o n s ib le C H a d u lts no pets 478 SIS0 L A R G E 2 8 R qu et older 4 pies 2 b lock» ca m p u s 7262A N u eces 1290 m g N o pets «n i T t f I B R D U P L E X S U B L E T M a y 26 Sept 1 *180 T re e s b a c k y a r d g a rd e n Close B a rto n Springs 6w28 Jessie 441 447* I I ' , k a n te d y a rd fis h p ool D U P L E X p>ano R e » -d » r tia i a r e a A v a il a b l e J u n e C a ll a lte r 5 453 11(7* apartm ent living in Houston!! can be fun, easy and inexpensive adult and family communities in southwest houston We have the “in-places.” Visit any of our seven sensational communities and you’ll lease your last apartment home first. Chadbourn (776-9720) 9445 concourse dr. (adult/from $198) Deerfield (774-7500) 10001 club creek dr. (adult/from $203) Clarendon Hills (981-8747) 9502 woodfair dr. (adult/from $198) Windmill Run (988-6550) 9475 roark rd (adult/from $198) Lakehurst (496-2316) 2310 crescent park dr (family-adult/from $225) o ^ ^ ■ b e n n o investments The Carriage House has the apartment you'll want to live in this SUMMER or FALL ROOM A N D BOARD • Gas paid by owner • Clubroom • Shuttle bus • Two pools • Water Volleyball • Pretty laundry roams • Eff., I, 2, A 4 BITs • Gameroom • Planned activities • Professional management 2 baths for th« price of 1 far Juno occupancy ' V ' i - — - x— 5 A m i 1 | " 1 Hn m 1 A tten din g the S u m m e r Session? W H Y N O T TRY THE BEST! ★ 5-D ay M aid Sarvict ★Sun Docks ★Shuttle Bus a t Front Door ★Tho Boit Food in Town ★Privato Pool* ★ Somi-privato, privato room* available Accopting contracto for oummor. Fow vacancies available for Fall. MADISON HOUSE ★Madi*on-Belloire Apts. lease c(^ (& jT ia g e cTJou&e D on't w a it! 709 W. 22nd St. 4 7 M B 9 1 4 7 1 4 9 1 4 Classifieds Continued On Next Page * Page 16 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Tuesday, May 1, 1979 R O O M M A T E S SER VIC E S BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP W A N T E D HELP WANTED T Y P IN G zrvu rrs JTrti ST8HT TYPING, PRIN TIN G , B IN D IN G Tke Com plete Professional FUUTIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3310 472-7477 2707 HCMPHIU PK. Plenty of Parking Econotype | Econocopy • Typing, Copying, Binding, • aina, Copying, Bindh • o Printing 2 IBM Cono€ting Selectrk J • Pental B Supplies • • N O R T H • g S7lh I • G w d k h p e 4S3-S452 • I . S O U T H * I I S . ft 1 4 . t f c » n f f v i n h l . 4 4 * e n e w h o u r s Mm.-TWs. IJM40 fri. IJO-SJO • ; • : ¡ J • • J Set. 9-5 Swl 1-5 g o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o Typing ':M Transcribing T yp e se ttin g T Y P I N G E H «WS*, ^ f u r S E R V IC E 474-8333 601 Brazos Mon.-Sat. 472-8936 Dobie Mall W O R D I I I N/n i hills! >, III “ " ¿ r i.'iitifit j h iH tf-rlin u d l Typm q T iansr npf ion It u s ... (t nti D,%sc f till ion • P'ootrecjcjm g A vcj lia b le O UALUY W O RK A! RfASONAfíLt RATFS y ^ O ^ A T IV E SERVICES • H K > m . u r n s Proofread, typed SI 00 page Tutoring, Analysis 15 00 up • aesuM fi Composed, typed SS 95 (Job Letters 12 95) Proofread, typed I? 50 page Down the block from Coop n 0 0 Queda*» » • Sub* 721 • 4714*33 WOODS T Y P IN G Service A ll work guaranteed, reasonable prices. Typing and typesetting 2200 Guadalupe, 472- 6J02 T Y P IN G TH ESES dissertations, term Bsers, reports, etc Experienced, IB M ectrlc Near Northcross M a ll. 458- *4*5 P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IS T w ith e . parlance and know how Dissertations, theses, professional reports, ate. B ar­ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ bara Tullo* 453 5124 G Ó O D C H EA P TY P IN G ,'’theses, reports, r e a s o n a b le , d is s e r t a t io n s , professional, Peggy, Susan, 451-34*3. f a s t , T Y P IN G rep o rts,"'d is se r­ tations. J Ttbbelt, South Austin, 447- 253* 192-0479 or 444 9419 TH E SE S T Y P IN G A N D proofreading 75' page Overnight or arrange Also do transcrib­ ing Elizabeth, 477 0225 afternoons E X P E R I E N C E D P R O F E S S IO N A L t y p i s t . T h e s e s , d i s s e r t a t i o n s , documents, etc Most reports St page C all Dottle, 327-0754 _______________ M B A / j Complete Typing Service TERM REPORTS, BRIEFS FRESHMAN THEMES 2707 Hemphill Juat Mart* ef 87t* at tteadelupe 471-311» 471-7*77 ty p e s e ttin g T E R R Y 'S T Y P IN G Service Typing, Theses, t ra n s c rib in g , resumes, all business and U niversity work. *05 B ratos, 474-4333, or Dobie M a ll, 472-493»_________ _ _ _ ________ T Y P IN G • R E A S O N A B LE rates, fast included C all service, p roo freadin g B arbara 9 a m -9 p m Mon -Sat., t3§- 0033 FOR Y O U R typing needs ceil Dee John­ In student son, 452 *312 Experienced typing D iE 'S T Y P IN G Service Why pey high price* W* seve you money by typing et home office 452-6317 Q U A L IT Y T Y P IN G ot any m a te ria l In 5 languages Prom pt attention to your work Copy-Rite 477-667! RESUMES with or without pictures 2 D a y S a r v k a 2 7 0 7 H a m p h H I P a r k Just North of 27th •« Guadalupe 472-3210 472-7677 F U R N IS H E D H O U S E S IBA, P A R T IA L L Y F U R N IS H E D 2BR, graduate students only Quiet, neer law school $*00 plus blits 47*.I177 S U M M E R ~S U B LE T~ 1 BR house 5 m in f u l ly fu r n is h e d w a lk to c a m p u s , * IQO/mo C all 477*692 TW O B E D R O O M S and Study M any tre a t H illy West-Austin street shuttle Eight weeks. $270 plus utilities *, security 478 3549 38R I'iB A . AC. tented a vailab le June to I-August 10 S34S mo 10 minutes U n iv e rsity Don, 454 79*6 I N E E D SOM EO NE to live in and look aftor m y house this sum mer 2 bedroom, near i m fields, mostly furnished, shade ’J»»*. AC 1200 mo plus bills 451-4719 S U M M E R SU B LET 2 8 » rear house Furnished Private 1 m ile to shuttle 9 2 1 -3 7 7 6 S 1 9 5 / m o , b i l l s tvenm gsi weekends UNFUR NISHED HOUSES A V E N U E G, 2-3 BR, IBA, appliances, A C carpet, large tree shaded y e m $290 ja c k 457 9559, 45» tease and deposit 10», w 1 4 Associate* N i c e L A R G E 3-l on iH 35 access read, ctese to campus 1250, lease references M ark Goodrich, weekdays 4 7 * * M A V A IL A B L E JU N E 7 N eer~U T 2 0 * I BA, C A /C H, garage $275 *B -9*42 smalt quaint cedar house F O R R E N T ie C larksvilie Japanese interior 1 per mm. m Students, s its plus bills 472-2201 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D Light, airy house Own bedroom and bath Modern kitchen bills. $135/mo 476 9658 P R O O F R E A D IN G T H E S E S disser fattens, professional papers Ruth 443- 5430 R O O M M A TE W A N T E D 3 6 R, SI40/m o 1/3 bills N ear Ramsey Perk 450-9370, 4S^«47. jpetMfer fo r la r g e F E M A L E R O O M M A T E beautiful house Fireplace, backyard. 4 41-7*0*_________ _____________________ F E M A L E SHARE 2BR 2BA furnished home, WD, AC, dishwasher, carport, shuttle »137 50. v tU 'fi** 452 4508 R E A D Y FOR coop living? We re look ing for e few caring responsible people interested in living In our vegetarian, non-smoking heme 476 7905 M A L E - R O O M M A T E share 2BR-2BA Grtm ent lor summer $97 5 0 / E RC Iff* Call David, 443-9441 large older R O O M M A T E TO Share home-circa (1920 s) Pease Park area Work 472 11*0 Home 472 2200._________ N E E D PER SO N to share beautiful 3 8 » 26A house South 2 stories Only % 145 443-297° liberal person needs 2 retiabfe j u n e i persons to share beautiful 3 story housa with 3BR, 2V?BA, 2 b lk i north of campus *175 plus '/5 bills Call Ruanne, 477 7019 or 471-3032 M A L E OR F E M A l E wanted to snare 7BR house n e a r N Loop w /m a le A vailable BR unfurnished Fenced yard, storage, garden s 105 rent and utilities I'm into media, film s, sports, politics Occupy today Rent due M ay 2nd Call Steve. 454 * 9236 H O U S E M A T E M A Y 1st 24 yi M ature 2BR house near IF $132 last month rent Ron, 459 >/> bill*. First, 9293 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ N E E D F E M A L E room m ate by June I $105 & E On IF shuttle G reat location 477 5431 after 6 00 s. old 50 plus C O N S I D E R A T E C O N G E N I A L housemate wanted to share spacious, peaceful horn* w ith thrae others of interests Some ethical or diversified spiritu al/relig ious philosophy helpful Plano, w asher-dryer, own room No drugs etc S I30 836 491». f R O O M M A T E W A N T E D , p re fe ra b ly with child, to share 3BR house in north Austin Call 451-63*9 evenings. H O U S E M A T E 38R 2BA m Barfon Hills S125/VJ bills Doug, 476-6611 ext 4M. after 5 447 930* _____________________ H O U SEM A TE W A N T E D JBR 11 jB a ' *1 10/mo . Vs bills 560B Shoalwood Call 451-550* after 5 M a le preferred. R E S P O N S IB LE . N EA T, non smoking fem ale wanted to share 2-2 spacious duplex beginning June I Graduate stu­ dent or w o rk in g person p r e fe r r e d *IS 0/m o , bills No pets 453 5746 after ______ six_ in modern 4B R TWO ROOM S open furnished, big 2'WBA. 2 story house, yard, near shuttle $130/mo p lu s '« b ills 92» 733JL______________________________ fem ale share nice 2BR M A LE OR duplex Pets O k *l2 0 /m o plus 1 j bills Available June I or can be arranged L I/, 442-6499________________________ R O O M M A TE F A LL , conservative non smoking m ale uradute student seeks same to discuss 2BR apartm ent on shut­ tle P r t f t r R iverside 471 2567 w a n t e d f e m a l e room m ate. M ust have car, grad or upper level preferred Non-smoker House S i50 plus Vj elec­ tricity 472 7011 8973)792 F E M A L E FOR summer 2BR duplex S Austin $125/Va E Good deal Nice area (W ork) 443 *5)8, 443 4005, attar 4 00 J u lia .________________________________ EA SY G O IN G progressive to share share fina large wood house $110 & ' j electric Call Jim , 442 7912 N E E D H O U S E M A T E through summer per Very nice, great San m onth plus half u tilitie s G abriel, 472 3351 before 6 pm, 258-0079 after *187 50 2834 location LO O K IN G FOR m ature reliable fem ale room m ate to share gorgeous 3BR house in B arto n H ills P r iv a te b a c k y a rd overlooking Barton Creak and Austin Hills Musi sign I yr lease starting June $1*0 plus >/3 bills Serious callers only 476 2 1 9 * , ___________________ R O O M M A TE W A N T E D to share 3BR housa 915 E 38Vj Need im m e d ia te ly 1 45* 2717. F U R N IS H E D HOUSE 2BR M ay 15- Augusl 30, *78. *73/m o ., 1BR M ay 15- June 30 S130 a, bills 447 3327.________ TWO TO share 3BR 3BA condominium Tenn is, s w im , q u ie t S e m i-llb e ra i students preferred, summer and/or fall *175-200 mo plus utilities Serious per son* Rick, 454 7366 F E M A L E G R A D S100, V> bills! M a ry , 476 6049 4 54 4 731 ext 6147 H O U SEM A TE W A N T E D Older house flo ors, d o s e to c im p u s H ardo od fireplace S lH 67 & ’ . bHts 477-2472 R E S P O N S IB l E F E M A L E to share lux urious furnished 3 2 house P riv a te room AC W /D Shuttle 5)75 & bills 472 __________ 3209 __________________ N E E D L IB E R A L non smoking room to share 3/2 house SlV) Call m ala Wayne, 443 2322 ■ ____________ M A I E W A N T E D Share furnished 2Br, 2BA apartm ent s u m m e r/fa ll Quiet loca­ tion Studious non-smoking *130 plus ' / E Rich, 444 *315 _____________________ fem ale to N E E D E D FALL, semester share quiet duplex Own room 7 m iles campus $100 plus Vj bills 447 5*74 W A N T E D M A L E non smoking room ­ m ate tor sum mer S70 plus E Close to campus 452-4729 H O U S E M A T E LA R G E turn.shed near Zllker P ark W aterbed garden, pets bills welcome Summer only *150, 441-1562 ___________________________ roommates to share TWO F E M A L E large 3 BR house West Austm near ER shuttle CA CH, washer, dryer, front, beck yard Lots of frees Pet» OK *125 apiece Bills paid Contact Tom m y 472- 177* A vailable M ay 15th N E E D H O U S E M A T E through sum mer for 4BR walking distance to campus 478-6177 Cheap Starts M ay 1* fu r H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D , 3BR nished house yard near Hancock Golf *120 mo plus ' / b ill* 507 E Course 39th 45* 3721__________________________ R O O M M A TE TO share 2BR duplex P riv a te yard, lots ot trees 5100 mo , I j bills $100 deposit required 340* B West Avenue 458-3413 N E A R C A M PU S Share 2BR AC fu r ­ nished apartm ent with grad, sum mer or longer No pets 478-7544 4TH HOUSE MA 7 1 wanted Old house west campus Avaiaible 5 15 S»5 Grad preferred 472 6429 after 6. ‘rant T A R R Y T O W N H O U S E M A T E . plus P refer d e a n non-smoker, 25 or older A vailable M ay 16 Call Lanny, 472 8848 FOR RENT __ ________ r - .... „ ..... 1 S O U T H C o n c reta block construction $12 50 up monthly 444 -2 4 1 1, W o o d la n d 's A A A M i n i Warehouse ONE M O B IL E home for rent Complete I 1 a Oaths ly furmshed err conditioned *225 mo plus b ills N ew c e r p e t A vailable around M ay 25th Call 385 5394 Ask tor Rick or Steve P A R K $20 mo 476-5*31 I B LO C K fro m la w school. W A N T E D CLASS R IN G S, gold lewelry. old pocket wetches. c u rre n c y stam ps w anted High prices paid Pioneer Com Com pany, 5555 North Lam ar Bidg C -II3 in Com m erce P a rk 451 3607 lewetry B U Y IN G W O R L D gold, gold scrap gold old corns, antiques pocket w atches P ay in g fa ir m a rk e t p n ce Capitol Com Co 3004 Guadalupe. 472- 1676 P hilip Nohra, owner LOST & F O U N D L O S T G l R L S G u ü d c r e t t w a tc h (b e tw e e n PCL and B E B p a r k in g ) R ew ard 477 543* G O L D W A T C H n u m b e rle s s around Batts Rew ard C all Elizabeth 443 9167 478 «5*6 brow n o c ta g o n al, fa c e G u ild c re s t Lost LOST R E W A R D W hite fem ale Huski# puppy Black spo? over right eye F lec k ­ ed on back H E L P 476-5485 M U S IC AL IN S TR U CTIO N JAZZ A N D pop piano lessons All levels and age* Flexib le M a tt H a m s . 454 9201. _________ L E A R N TO play guitar Beginner and advanced 478-0650 D rew Thomason H ev e a nice day P R IV A T E V O IC E , piano and m usic instruction Study classical or theory popular music Sheron Bunnell 327 5377 TRAVEL C A U C A S IA N M A L E drivin g to B ebí», C entre! A m erica, about M a y 15 would i t b ilin g u a l non- like a person th a t smoker to ride w m e I w ill pay a il e x ­ pensas Contact H ira m Thomas. PO Box 17543. Austin, Texas 70760 LOW COST travel 9» Is ra el. Ton f r e e * » - 223-707*. 9 a m -* pm M Y tim e M F M S M D — B U M n o m r r i A T i v i A N X I O U S - T I N S ! F E A R F U L F O R N O A R R A R C N T M A S O N CAN'T SLEEP You can benefit from new advance» in medical research. To »ee if you qualify for free and con­ fidential medical treatment, call 177-20H7 — any time. Get Y o u r Eyeglasses In ONE HOUR A t ALPHA OMEGA OPTICAL 4 5 1 - 2 r a t * 12705 R e s e a r c h Casually You C reative Outdoor P ortraits Save Vi Now H o y r e S t u d io s 477-42)8 7470 Guodalupo G lfin y 's C o p y in g S e rv ic e Theses, Dissertations a n d Professional R ep o rts. 4 4 D o b ie M a ll 4 7 6 -9 1 7 1 A U S T I N T A T I O U S F R E E A P A R T M E N T LO C A T I O N 459-4238, 327-5675 RUN BY S T U D E N T S FOR S T U D E N T S P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L I N G , R E F ER R ALS & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G Texas Problem Pregnancy 600 W 28th Suite 101 M -F, 8 J0-5 00 474-9930 F R E E P R E G N A N C Y TESTS Counseling on a ll pregnane y a lte r ­ b irih control m ethods md natives womer, s health i one c " is Walk in basis Mon F r I* 9 S W omen s R eten u enter I800B L a v a ra 47*f.87S A R T 'S M O V IN G and Hauling any area 24 hour*^ 7 days 477 3249 447 9384 MISCELIANCOUS F r e e P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y pregnancy testing and referrals 474- 9930 N EE O ZOO 316K notes tor some lectures lost) W ill pay 510 243-1672 (notebook evenings UNCLASSIFIED Typing call for rates 472-29)7 PointerSisRwl&2,7 BpmOn!y47/-0J57 Free calico kittens 454-9154 Carpet Jester DormRoomBeige471-2424 SnowLionSleepBag Bedframe454-7230 PuppiesM ixLab-Setter 515 477-5)59 FoundlrishSetterEnfield926 237S TO PLACE A TE X A N CLASSIFIED AD CALL 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 HUD SO N R O C K E F E L L E R Corporation For executive "E x e c u tiv e Selection positions w>*h the ma or corporations " T h e W o rld T ra d e c a ll 472 1334 Specialists HELP WANTED A L L Y O U F O L K S th a t need e x tra money can sell flowers with The Original Flower People Paid da iy 288 1102 N E E D PERSONS who are fa m ilia r with restaurant business or w illing to learn Openings now, p- m m um $3/hr , also faking appi ca tons for new restaurant opening June 1st Raw Deal Restaurant 605 Sab.ne 477 0410 JOBS' L A k f Tahoe C al.f Fantastic tip s ’ 11,700 *4 000 summer Thousands r e s ta u ra n ts , s till needed Casmos ra n c h e s , c ru is e rs Send S3 95 fo r applications mfo to Lakeworid, a a Box 60129, Sarto Calif 95*60 W O R LD C RU IS E R S Pleasure boats! No experience* Good pay* Sum m er |obs now Carribean, Haw au, w o rld’ Send S3 95 for application and direct referrals to Sea world. Box 60129 Sac r amento, C A 95860 s u m m e r y ea r O V E R S E A S JOBS round Europe. S A m erica, Australia, A n a etc AH fields. S500 S1200 monthly Expenies paid Sightseeing Free mfor IJC, Box S20TE, Corona m ation W rite Del M a r, C A 92626 in ter­ C A M B R ID G E TO W ER for doorperson and parking viewing a tte n d a n t positions P lease contact Business Office between 10 a m .-12 noon 1*01 Lavaca is now L O V E BOATS wants you E x c itin g c are e rs or sum m er ¡obs w o rldw ide F o r d e t a i l s r u s h S3 50, t r a v e l International Box 530188 Cruiseships M ia m i Shores, Fla 33153 T E A C H O V E R S E A S : for details, send self addressed, stamped, long envelope to Teaching, Box 1049, San Diego, CA 92112 P R E SC H O Ó L C H I L D c a r e ” c e n tT r teacher needed Teaching certificate preferred but not required 512-258-6439 8 am-5 pm for appointment O U T G Ó IN G E X P E R IE N C E D p a r t in t.m e salesperson K now ledgeable i person, clothes and shoes Apply 242 6 im a g e s by B o b E 11 i O f f ' s Guadalupe D O M IN O 'S P iZ Z Á needs p a rt tim e of­ fice worker Fast accurate typist, 10- key by touch book xefxpmg background P refer account ng student 404 W. 26th, 476 2)57 C O M M E R C IA L P H O T O G R A P H E R needs occasional model for assignments. Experience not required Photo 5 infor­ m a t i o n to M ik e G i l b e r t , 2305 / Longview, Box 56, Austin, 78705. M A D DOG A N D Beans is looking for full tim e and part tim e kitchen help Apply m person, 512 W 24th. THE R E D TO M A T O Restaurant is tak mg applications for all positions. Start your summer iob now Apply in person 4 30-5 30 160) Guadalupe T A R IN G S DO W N TO W N needs collec­ tions clerk Heavy typing, m in 50 wpm, 10-key adding, and phom-s 40 hr wk. is re q u ire d C o n ta c t Ms S a tu rd a y for appointm ent Noakes. 476 65) l H O U STO N H O M E needs fem ale student to live in Room board m exchange for evening and weekend child care for 2 young i hildren (713) 778 9402 C A R P E N T R Y C O L L E C T IV E needs politic a lly consi tous people experience helpful but not necessary 441-6276. p a r T T I M E D í S H W A S H E R S and E v e n in g s h ifts la m t o r s n e e d e d a vailab le Apply in person between 2-4 pm M -F , Dobie Dining Commons, 3rd level, 202) Guadalupe E O E Y A R IN G 'S DO W N TO W N needs a sales involved. audit clerk Some overtim e H e a v y 10 key a d d in g . E x p e rie n c e preti f red Call L Brown 476-6511 for ap­ pointment T H U N D E R C L O U D SUBS needs part- lu n c h e s and tim e h e lp w e e k e n d s e v e n in g s M a tu r e h a rd w o rk in g In ­ dividual Apply between 8 30-10.00 am 3200 o r b e t w e e n 2 3 0-3 00 p m Guadalupe, 452-5010 P A R T T IM E C A S H iE R S needed at The Games G alaxy 1905 E R iver side next to M other Earth 441-976) IN S U R A N C E Co. P R U D E N T I A L currently has an opening for a part tim e secretary working 15 hours wk Hours flexible For appointment and more in­ form ation call 476 73H and ask tor Cin- _ -• dy S P E C IA L E D seniors or grad students needed to work 2 hrsrw k with j-5 E M R c h ild ren A p p ro x im a tely $ 5/h r C all Rick or Steve 327 2500 ACCEPT ING A P P i |( AT IONS for part- tim e afternoon sum mer employm ent beginning M ay 14 n dry cleaning sub­ station fur counter attendant & delivery person M aster V alet Cleaners, 2701 Manor Road W A N T E D PART T IM E secretary, light typing bv campus prefer mornings. 472 70!) T H U N D E R C L O U D SUBS South has afternoon and evening hou^s available Apply in person between 6-8 pm 201 E, Riverside D E P E N D A B L E M A N A G E R needed for 16 unit complex M m or maintenance ability helpful A fterS 472-1008 443 2750 N E E D E D 2 STRONG people tod o some foundation digging in a confined area S5 hr 20-40 hours Anytime, but must be completed during May 454-9365. receptionist P A R T T IM E M E D IC A L from 4 7 pm M on day-F riday Must be in su ra n c e and m ed ic a l able to do transcription Call Estelle 458-2095. LO B STER IS L A N D IS now hiring wait, bus k .h h en help Apply a fter 7 p m at 3300 Anderson Lane N O R TH A U S T IN electronics firm is in­ te rv ie w in g Senior E E students for summer em ploym ent If interested, con­ tact Tom at 836-0440 ext 3027. W A N T E D P A R T T IM E stockers and checkers Apply at R ylan ders, 3708 Jefferson M A T U R E A D U L T to run m obile home park 472 8158 472-8159 CAR R E N T A L agent Weekends and evenings 474-6636 tub or partfim e F U L L A N D parttim e help - w ait persons. Apply at !922E 12th from noon 472-0086 TV C O N TR O L operator 16 hrs per week FCC First Class license One year exp erien ce switching TV broadcast equipm ent s,( 80 per hour Contact Andy 471-481! EO AA G üilo. K L R N T v Em ployer SERVICES i f SERVICES *5 BONUS (on firs t donation only) BRING IN THIS AD & I.D. WITH PROOF OF AUSTIN RESIDENCE, OR STUDENT ID Austin Plasma Center 2800 Guadalupe 474-7941 *8.00 — first Donation 110.00 — Second Donation *10.00 — Bonus on 10th Donation Summer Storage Special in well- Students, store your possessions lig h te d m aso n ry b u ild in g s . R esident m anagem ent, content insurance available, free courtesy trailer. Spaces for $ 1 2 up. Ask far student summer special. U-Stow & Go. O n e mile south M artin Luther King on H w y. 183. C all 9 2 8 -0 1 0 9 for information. N E A T , P R O F E S S IO N A L m anuscript*. term papers, business letters. S *5 page. Call Marla. 476 5924 I i-----------------------------------------------------------------\ ■■ __ J14, ...... ! S(GOOD P A Y ) $ Day, evening, p a rttim e w o rk a v a ila b le M a ke m ore m oney than you can spend. We need 40 telephone o p e ra to rs fo r fun job A p p ly in person at 1538 E ast A nderson Lane Suite 1 ( H w y . 183 C a m e r o n ) . M o n d a y-S a tu rd a y, 9 am-9 pm See M r W a ll. L I G H T D E L I V E R Y $(GOOD P A Y ) $ Day, evening, p a rttim e w o rk a v a ila b le M a ke m ore m oney than you can spend. We need 15 d e liv e ry people, m u st have o w n c a r and k n o w A u s tin ar»a A p p ly in person a t 1538 E. A n d e rs o n L a n e S u ite 1 (H w y . 183/C am eron) M onday th ro u g h S a tu rd a y 9 am-9 pm See M r W alt. C a tfish P a rlo u r South B urleson & Ben W h ite Need hostess, host, ca shie r, bus person A p p lic a n t * m u s t be a b le to w o r k w ee ke n ds G ood w o rk in g c o n d itio n s . S2 90 s ta rt A p p ly a fte r 4 30 4705 E Ben W hite 443-1698 A P T M A N A G E R Responsible, neat, courteous, m o tiv a te d in d iv id u a l o r couple needed beginning M ay 15 to m anage 29 u n it apt. com plex or, s h u ttle bus ro u te a t 108 W 45th in e x ­ change to r ! B R a p t Send resum e to A p t 101 108 W 45th, A u stin, or c a ll 452-1419 or 453-2771 fo r in te rv ie w a p p o in tm e n t PARTTIAAE I M M E D I A T E O P E N I N G S 2, 3, or 4 sh ifts Der week, S3/hr , 5 pm-1 am . A p p ly Stop N Go M a r k e t s 2805 Rogge Lane E q u a l O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y e r A L T E R N A T I V E JOBS! N a tio n w id e lis tin g s of jobs in n o n -p ro fit, social i hange c o m m u n ity groups Take on a ch a lle n g e Tor free sam ple lis tin g , w rite C o m m u n ity Jobs, Box AN, 1766-C U nion S treet, San F ra n cisco , CA 94123 WANTED: HUNGRY PEOPLE Shenanigan's Restaurant is now i nter vi ewi ng for day & evening cocktail f o o d w a i t p e r s o n s , & c o o k s / k i t c h e n h e l p . Hourl y sal ar y & liberal tips, w i t h a schedule tailored to your needs. F u l l & p a r t t i m e avai labl e Contact Steve or A n d y , 9 12 m o r n in g s at B a r t o n S p r i ng s & South Fi rst. NEED A JOB THIS SUMMER? W e 'll Pay You To Try A rm y ROTC. $ 4 5 0 p lu s ro o m , b o a rd a n d tra n s p o rta tio n costs to a tte n d a ca m p a t Fort K n o x, KY. 21 M a y - 2 8 J u n e 1 1 J u n e - 19 J u ly 9 J u ly - 1 0 A u g u s t N O M ilita r y o b lig a tio n limited openings CALL N O W ! 4 7 1 - 5 9 1 9 L a r g e a p a r t m e n t c o m m u n i t y n e e d s exp e rie n ce d le a sin g a g e n t. Super le a sin g a b i l i t y a n d g o o d w ith books. S a lary c o m m i s s i o n . p l u s C all J u d y : 4 4 7 -6 6 9 6 fro m 9 a m -6 pm . S tudent needed begin nin g June 15 to m anage 18-unit a p a rtm e n t house near Seton H o sp ita l m exchange fo r lB R f u r n . apt. Student m u st pay fo r E & telephone. D uties inclu d e show ing & leasing apts., m in o r e le c tric a l & p lu m b in g re p a irs J a n ito r ia l w o rk, y a rd w ork & fu r n itu re m o vin g M u st be on the p rem ise s at least 2 h a lf days M on th ru F r i M u st be a v a ila b le fo r at least 2 years $75 deposit re q u ire d , no pets Send resum e to Box D- 3, A u s tin Tx 78712 M O T E L N IG H T A U D IT O R Good m a th sk ills n ecessary 11 pm-7 am . F u ll or p a rttim e a v a ila b le P e rm a n e n t position. A p p ly a t H ow a rd Johnsons, 183 and IH 35 836 8520 E a r n $4-7 h o u rly O utdoors. No selFing. Have tu n m e etin g people 478-5376 Best job e v e r! P A R T T IM F m a tu re dependable sales c le rk Bee Caves L iq u o r. 300 E Bee Caves (W e stla ke H ills M O T E L DESK c le rk w anted, day s h ift M o n -F n 8 a m ! pfr, P re fe r n ig h t s tu ­ dent Cross C o u n try Inn 6201 US 290 E 452 88*i SW IM , P L A Y to n n is and e arn su m m er money C om panion w anted to keep m y the sons age 10 a nd 7 busy d u rin g s u m m e r P a r t tim e C a ll 926-5881. References re q u ire d A T T E N T IO N : D A L L A S C o w b o y o r Houston O der fans You can e arn up to $500 w a tch in g th e ir re g u la r gam es next fa ll Send to r a p p lic a tio n The F'oofball Research C o rp o ra tio n 6 E 45th St., New Y o rk. N Y 10017 ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for lllth m e d ia te e m p lb y m e n f a t positions in a unique and e x c itin g atm o sp he re . A p p ly at 1206 W 38th Thank you SUMMER JOBS FULL TIME PLENTY OF WORK 214-224-3005 or 214-661-0622 COOK POSITIONS W I T H BONUSES A V A I L A B L E A p p ly at LOS TR ES BOBOS 1206 W. 38th S U M M E R JOBS Austin-S an A ntonio area S5.85/hr. C all between noon-4 pm only 459-3440 P A R T T IM E 8. fu ll tim e to clean, p a in t a p a rtm e n ts C all before 9 am , a fte r 6 pm Joe K rie s 452-3969 WANTED HUNGRY PEOPLE Pelican's Wharf in Austin is now in te r­ viewing f or busper- sons, host/hostesses, food prep, cooks & b a r t e n d e r s . H o u r l y salary & tips. C o n t a c t Dav e, 9-12 morn ing s at 425 W. Riverside. EO E. No Phone Calls, Please. 3 months onlyl O ur e x tre m o ly busy, e x ­ citing A profitable sum m er season requires im m e d ia te a d d it io n a l s t a f f in g . Use r e a l e s ta te yo u r T exas license as an A p artm en t Selector counselor A p ut m oney in your life. Call collect: 713-691-0690 Joskes of Texas Has im m e d ia te openings fo r p a rttim e m o rn in g s and fu ll tim e d a y s , h o u s e k e e p in g I n t e r e s t e d p o s i t i o n s . a p p lic a n ts should c a ll 452-9393 ext. 611 fo r an in te rv ie w ap ­ p o in tm e nt. Joskes-H ighland M a ll-E O E C O M M I T T E D And need a su m m e r ¡ob? ACORN, the c o u n try 's larges* c o m m u n ity o rg a n iz a ­ tio n, is h irin g su m m e r s ta ff. We are lo o k ­ f o r h a r d w o r k in g p o l i t i c a l l y in g to r positions pro g re ss iv e a v a ila b le in D e n v e r, P h ila d e lp h ia , A u stin and Rhode Island T ra in in g w ill c o n t in u e th e e n d o f th e sem ester, and the positions w ill becom e open upon the s e m este r's co m p le tio n . If you can liv e on SI 20 per week and lik e the w o rk we do, c a ll: in d iv id u a ls t h r o u g h 442-0934 M-W , 9 30-12 00 fo r in te rv ie w . START SUMMER JOB NOW BE A DOMINO'S PIZZA DELIVERY PERSON • MAKE G O O D M O N EY N O W • PART TIME OR FULL • FLEXIBLE HOURS & DAYS • MUST USE O W N CAR APPLY IN PERSON: »uada!up« 458-9101 • 2011 E. Riverside 477-6681 » 404 W. 26th St. 476-7181 » 1110 West Lynn 474-7676 Peace Corps d & # '( k n e w w k M iftiwi (tSAbxuj w J I k . I k/vUM, (hut fc k t evJUfr 6*tiA a n td B g w . w k fr k a v e <*Md ffhutuL Volunteers ■ In Service H ■ T b America It's not too late to apply for worldwide positions that start this summer. Call 397-5925, or stop by the Peace Corps/VISTA Office at 515 Congress, room 1414. Office open all summer. Special People... People Who Care H O u/ C A N I P 0 A R E P O R T RUN P0U1N TO THE LIB R A R Y, O N H A N N I 3 A L . M A R C I E ? S IR , A N P LO O K H I M U P IN IV E NEVER H 6 A R P O F H I M ) T H E E N C Y C L 0 P 6 P IA ... T H A T 'S W H A T I P IP .. T UNITED Feature Syndicate M onday’s Puzzle Solved: ACROSS 1 Burial place 5 Bargain 9 Tree trunks 14 Tune 15 G irl’s name 16 Banish 17 Grit 18 Two 19 Horseman 20 Niches 22 Frightened away: 2 words 24 Respect 26 Weapon 27 Flesh 29 Blaster’s item 30 Lid 33 Inveterate 37 Speak w ildly 38 Land units 39 Bad Prefix 40 Opera extra 41 Mix 42 Ottawa body 44 Ad — 45 Drunkard 46 Italian com­ mune 47 Condescend 49 Closet item 53 Practiced 57 Artless 58 Happening 59 Stigma 61 N Mex re­ sort 62 Concise 63 State 64 Babylonian god 65 Made a mis­ take 66 Ashen 67 British gun DOWN 1 Cup: Fr 2 Some exams 3 N. 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