twü d a ily T exa n
N ! j U~ll IOd J 11'
Vol. 85, No. 52
The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin
Wednesday, November 13, 1985
25c
UT athletic director sued
By DIANE BURCH
Daily Texan Staff
Form er Texas m en's basketball coach Abe
L em o n s filed a lawsuit against University men's
athletic director D eLoss D odds Tuesd ay, claim
ing defam ation of character
The suit is based on s ta te m e n ts D od d s report
edly m ade in ju ly at a m eeting o f University ex
stu d e n ts in Fort Worth T h e suit c o n ten d s that
Dodds said L em ons was fired from his position
as head basketball coach b ecau se of " N C A A
p r o b l e m s ."
According to the suit,
these remarks were
the Dallas Times H erald and
printed
Lon ghorn Sports.
in
" T h e suit is for d am age arising out of a state
m ent or s tate m e n ts made by D eLoss D o d d s ,"
said C. Robert Dorsett, L em ons' attorney.
" W h e n a man goes out and makes loose state
m ents and if it's not true, then he's accountable
for it."
D odds said he heard s om ething about the suit
a couple of w e e k s a g o " but said becau se he has
not seen a copy of the suit yet, he could not
co m m e n t on it.
" i ' m d isappo inted
it's com e to th is ,"
that
Dodds said. 'It's unfortunate for the University
and for A b e . "
D odds said he thought the suit could be re
solved. " I f we have differences, I'd like to see
them worked out an o th e r w a y ," he said.
" I f that's the w ay Abe wants to handle it,
that's the way we'll hand le i t ."
Dorsett said the suit was not conn ected in any
way to L e m o n s ' March 1982 firing by the Univer
sity. L em o n s ' 1981-82 basketball team had begun
the season 14-0 and had been ranked fifth in the
nation but finished 20-11 after a sea so n -e n d in g
k n e e inju ry to forward Mike Wacker.
" T h e most im portant thing here is that
...
these d am a g e s are arising out of a statem ent, not
a firin g ," Dorsett said. " W e 'r e not talking about
feelings W e're talking about a m an 's property
rights
According to the suit, " T h e reputation and
professional standin g of (L em ons) have been
greatly harm ed as the se- remarks suggest that
(L e m o n s ) was guilty of violations of N ( AA reg
ulations and as such is som e form of a 'cheater'
am o ng st the National Association of Basketball
C o a c h e s ."
T h e lawsuit dews not specify the am ount of
" I t's too early to
d a m ag e s L em ons is seek ing
k now how broadly th ese (statem ents) were dis
trib u te d ," Dorsett said
D orsett said the next step for him and his
a-, caugh* a- e a v uvo
passes r eac* of the as* six ga
-- •
r as accumulated ’ 7 'eceptiors ‘or v '
yards For the story see page 9
-■
W O R LD /N A TIO N
The Chuck and Di report W n* e Prr
cess 3.ana oo^ed on Pence Charles
scored a goa¡ during a Pain-;
F a poio game to atd h s ream to victc
ry
cater the mya- couple attended a ce-
epr *r i ed ga a a* me 3*ea*e's Note r
paim Beac- The S- ’. JGO-a-coijp.e dtr
ner Aas supposed to ra.se some $4 mrf-
or for me United World Co ege r Mon
tezuma \ v
Por the srpry see nag*- 3
W EATHER
Cloudy - The forecast for Aec^esday
c a s for r n o S - , y ooudv /¿earner w*n a
mgr r the mio-QOs and a tow near 70
Winds wi pe ‘ rom me south ,rom tQ. 1 5
mQh and gustmg during the day For
"nore weather see page “5
IN D E X
15
13
15
15
4
11
9
7
5
2
Around C am pus
Oassif^eds
Comics
Crossword
E d/o nais
Entertainment
Sports
State & Local
University
World & Nation
V
Working out
Ken Riddick/Daily Texan Staff
Bill Irwin, a Houston resident, gets a real workout, bending low to hammer on metal ceiling
supports at the new Honda dealership building at Koenig Lane and Grover Avenue in Austin.
Irwin is an employee of Space City Construction, a Houston metalwork company.
v
1
d 8c nation
Page 2/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, November 13, 1985
W alker gets life term In spy case
Because of transmission problems with
the The Associated Press. The Daily
Texan and other Texas newspapers
were unable to receive news stories
from the wire service until late Tuesday
The delay in Texan production made it
necessary to omit the News in Brief col
umn for Wednesday's edition and result
ed in an abbreviated selection of wire-
supplied articles
The mechanical
problems have been solved, and full
wire service is expected to be available
for Thursday's edition
1985 The New York Times
NO RFO LK, Va. — Arthur fames
W alker was sentenced Tuesday to
life in prison as prosecutors raised
the possibility that his espionage ac
tivities had been more serious than
previously charged.
Prosecutors said some evidence
gathered by the governm ent indi
cated Walker, a retired Navy lieu
tenant commander, might have
started spying while still in the mili
tary. They also said that he might
have recruited his brother
John
Walker into espionage, rather than
the other way around.
That would contradict previous
accounts by law -enforcem ent offi
cials who had said John Walker, an
other Navy veteran, had formed the
espionage operation, described as
one of the most damaging in U .S.
to most ac
history. According
counts,
John W alker, who has
pleaded guilty, became a spy in the
mid-1960s and recruited his brother
and son more than a decade later.
Prosecutors would not discuss
details of the evidence m entioned
on Tuesday that indicated earlier
and deeper involvement on Arthur
W alker's part, but defense lawyers
said it included statem ents made by
John W alker's wife, Barbara, and re-
suits of lie-detector tests adminis
tered to Arthur Walker.
"W e have gotten a confession
from Arthur Walker but we have
not gotten the tru th ," said Tommy
Miller, the chief prosecutor in the
case.
In a final statement before sen
tencing, Arthur Walker said in a
clear, quiet voice that he wanted to
"apologize to all the citizens of our
country for what I d id ."
"I have dishonored myself, dis
graced my fam ily," he said. "N o
body could be any sorrier."
His wife, Rita, and son, Curt, sat
in the first row of spectators.
Judge J. Calvitt Clarice imposed
the maximum prison
sentence,
three concurrent life terms, and or
dered Walker to pay a $250,000 fine.
Walker, 51, was convicted of pro
viding his brother with two confi
dential documents from a defense
contractor, for whom he worked af
ter retiring from the Navy. He nod
ded his head slightly as the sen
tence was announced but otherwise
showed no emotion.
Clarke said Walker, as a military
officer, would have to accept special
responsibility for his crimes. "H e
was a Navy officer, a person to
whom our governm ent gave privi-
leges of ran k ," the judge said.
Walker"s
first opportunity
parole would come in 10 years.
for
The prosecution had requested
the maximum
the $250,000 fine,
permitted for the crimes, after tell
ing the judge that Walker had re
tained a Norfolk law firm to handle
offers from book publishers and
movie companies seeking his life
story.
Robert Powell, a lawyer with the
Norfolk firm, said Walker and his
wife, faced with such a substantial
fine, would be willing to sell the sto
ry. "N obody has offered money
y e t," Powell said.
Success
of coup
denied in Liberia
Associated Press
A fugitive general claimed Tues
day he had overthrown Liberia's
governm ent, but a man identifying
himself as head of state Samuel Doe
said by telephone from the execu
tive mansion that he was still in
charge of the W est African nation.
The U.S. Embassy spokesman in
Monrovia said the center of the Li
berian capital was calm at mid-after
noon and Doe loyalists had taken
the governm ent radio station back
from the rebels. He said some sol
diers who apparently were rebels
were still on the streets.
The London bureau of NBC said
its staff telephoned the executive
mansion in Monrovia and inter
viewed a man who said he was
Doe.
"The situation here is under con
trol, and I'm still in p ow er," the
man said. "I want to appeal to the
Liberian people to be calm and all
those that came with (rebel leader
Thomas) Quiwonkpa to put down
their arms and report to tne nearest
police officer."
He said loyalist troops had killed
"about 15 rebels" who attacked the
executive mansion before dawn.
The U.S. Embassy spokesman,
Richard Gilbert, said in a telephone
interview with Associated Press Ra
dio in Washington: "A s far as we
know all Americans are safe. W e've
advised people to remain in their
houses, off the streets."
Quiwonkpa was among the lead
ers of the bloody 1980 "sergeants'
coup" that brought Doe to power,
but his former comrade accused him
of plotting
two years ago and
Quiwonkpa fled the country.
His coup attempt came less than a
month after Doe's party was de
clared the winner of the first multi
in
the
party elections
republic,
which was founded by freed Ameri
can slaves in 1847. Doe, 35, was
elected president but was not due to
be sworn in until January.
Three opposition parties claimed
the voting was rigged and refused
to take their seats in Parliament.
Doe said Monday night, a few
hours before the coup attempt, that
the opposition parties were provok
ing confusion and violence with
charges of electoral fraud.
The U.S. State Department de
scribed the voting at the time as
"the first multiparty elections in Li
beria based on universal adult suf
frage," and added, "W hile there
were some irregularities, the poling
was on the whole well-conducted
with large voter participation."
Fighting began at the executive
mansion at 4 a.m . Tuesday. Wit
nesses said rebel soldiers also at
tacked armories around Monrovia.
religious
The first broadcast word of the
coup came on Radio Elwa, normally
station, which an
a
nounced that Quiwonkpa had taken
over. He declared a curfew, claimed
his troops had surrounded Monro
via and said Doe had gone into hid-
Thousands of Liberians were in
the streets by midmorning, many
dancing and celebrating.
Rebel broadcasts then were heard
on the governm ent's Radio Liberia.
Quiwonkpa's followers said they
had arrested Doe's vice president
elect, Harry Moniba, and about a
score of other governm ent officials.
Radio Elwa broadcast a rebel call
for the surrender of the battalion
guarding the executive mansion.
The United States provided $86.2
million in military and economic aid -
to Liberia in fiscal 1985.
Militiamen remove an injured woman from suicide bombing rubble.
Associated Press
what a militia communique called
"this criminal attem pt to get rid of
historical leaders" of Lebanon.
The communique said only phar
macies, clinics and bakeries would
be exempt from the shutdown.
The Lebanese Forces, along with
Shiite Moslem and Islamic Druse
militias, negotiated Syrian-spon
sored armistice plan. But Christian
opponents of the armistice plan, in
cluding leaders of the Lebanese
Front, said it conceded too much to
Moslem foes.
The plan would trim the powers
of the president, who under an
unwritten pact has always been a
Christian, and calls for phasing out
the sectarian system of government.
Suicide bomber
kills 4 in Lebanon
Associated Press
BEIRUT, Lebanon — A suicide
bom ber killed himself, two army
guards and a woman and injured 26
others when he crashed a pickup
truck loaded with explosives into a
m onastery where Christian politi
cians were m eeting, police said
Tuesday.
They said a 2 ‘/2-foot-thick stone
wall shielded the politicians from
the main force of the blast, which
gouged out crater 20 feet wide.
The meeting in the Christian sub
urb of Aukar in east Beirut was to
discuss opposition to a draft Syrian-
sponsored
agreem ent
arm istice
reached last month by Lebanon's
three strongest militias in an effort
to end the 10-year-old civil war.
The six politicians gathered at the
m onastery belong to the Lebanese
Front, a Christian political coalition
which was excluded from the nego
tiations.
for
An anonym ous caller claiming to
speak
the hitherto unknown
"V anguard of Arab C hristians" told
a W estern new s agency in Beirut:
"W e have staged this bombing and
we shall carry out m ore sacrifices."
in Lebanese-accented
Arabic, the caller accused Christian
leaders of seeking to align Leba
non's Christian com m unity with Is
rael and said "T his (the bombing) is
the end of everyone who is in Isra
el's la p ."
Speaking
All six senior members of the Leb
anese Front were injured, but only
one,
form er D efense M inister
George Skaff, 55, was hurt serious
ly, police said.
They said those slightly hurt in
cluded
former President Camille
Cham oun, 85, and his son, Dany,
51, leader of the National Liberal
Party.
O thers wounded included body
guards, passers-by and four sol
diers, police said.
It was the first suicide bombing in
Beirut since Sept. 20, 1984, when
the U .S. Embassy annex, near the
scene of Tuesday's attack, was
blasted in an attack that killed 12
people and wounded 72.
In the attack on the Christian
leaders, the driver of the red and
blue Dodge pickup was killed in the
explosion. Police said all they could
find was a toe. Officers said the
pickup carried 660 pounds of explo
sives.
The bombing occurred at 10:10
a.m ., moments after the Chamouns
entered the sandstone, brick-roofed
St. Georges Monastery. Camille
Cham oun, who survived two bomb
assassination attempts in 1980, suf
fered minor facial cuts and his son
was wounded in the hand, police
said. Neither man was hospitalized.
Police identified the other injured
politicians as Elie Karameh, leader
of the Phalange Party; Parliament
member Edward Honein, and Fuad
Boustani, a noted, 79-vear-old histo
rian.
The pickup sped past an army
the
checkpoint 200 yards
Maronite Catholic monastery.
from
A corporal and a sergeant jumped
into a jeep and raced behind the
truck, shooting at the driver in an
effort to stop the vehicle. But the
driver crashed the truck into the
the one-story
southeast wall of
monastery. The monks
the
left
monastery nine years ago, and the
Lebanese Front took it over as its
headquarters.
The Lebanese Forces, a Christian
militia once allied with Israel, called
for a 24-hour general strike W ednes
day in all Christian areas to protest
Anglican envoy joins
negotiation efforts
Associated Press
fly
II will
LON DO N — A joint envoy of the
archbishop of C anterbury and Pope
John Paul
to Beirut
W ed n esd ay
to n eg o tia te with
Moslem extrem ists for the freedom
of four American hostages, the An
glican Church announced Tuesday.
Terry' W aite, a special adviser to
Archbishop Robert Runcie and a
veteran negotiator in hostage crises,
decided to go after receiving an en
couraging m essage from the Ameri
cans captors, the church said in a
statem ent.
The announcem ent cam e
five
days after the hostages — a journal
ist, two academics and a Roman
Catholic priest — sent a letter to
Runcie, the head of the 70 million-
member worldwide Anglican Com
munion, urging him to intervene.
Runcie said the Vatican had earli
er asked that Waite intervene.
Independent Television reported
Tuesday night that Waite also will
seek the release of Alec Collett, a 63-
vear-old British journalist abducted
March 25 while on assignm ent for
the U.N. Relief and Works Agency.
"O u r association with the Vatican
has been close on the matter so Ter
ry W aite is actually operating on the
basis of our loaning him to the
p o p e ," Runcie told The Associated
Press in an interview.
"H e is a
joint envoy, and the
pope is corresponding with u s."
A fundam entalist Shnte Moslem
group, Islamic Jihad, has claimed
responsibility for seizing the Ameri
cans, who have been held for peri
ods ranging from five to 10 months.
Islamic Jihad has said the hos
tages' freedom depends on the re
lease of 17 comrades convicted in
Kuw ait of bombing the U.S. and
French
in December
1983. Kuwait has refused to release
the 17.
em bassies
The United States has said it will
not negotiate with terrorists but is
willing to talk to them in efforts to
secure the hostages' freedom.
In Washington, White House
sp ok esm an Edw ard Djerejian,
asked
attitude
the archbishop's action,
toward
the U.S.
about
said, "W e have never discouraged
any responsible parties from mak
ing good-faith efforts to obtain the
release of our h ostages."
Last Saturday, after receiving a
the hostages, Runcie
letter from
made a public appeal for the captors
to meet with his envoy. Waite then
had several telephone calls from an
unidentified mediator in Lebanon,
with whom he had been in intermit
tent contact during the summer.
This culminated
the message
from the captors.
in
The hostages' appeal to Runcie
was contained in a bundle of 12 let
ters delivered Friday to The Associ
ated Press bureau in Beirut.
The letters included one to Presi
dent Reagan, urging him to open
negotiations for their release.
Signing the letters to Runcie and
Reagan were Terry’ Anderson, chief
Middle East correspondent for the
AP; the Rev. Lawrence Jenco; David
Jacobsen, director of the American
University Hospital in Beirut; and
Thomas Sutherland, the university
dean of agriculture.
Colleagues and relatives say the
signatures were authentic.
There was no word on two other
Americans missing in Beirut, diplo
mat William Buckley and the Am eri
can University 's librarian, Peter Kil-
burn. Islamic Jihad claimed Oct. 4 it
had killed Buckley in retaliation for
an Israeli air raid on Palestine Liber
ation Organization headquarters in
Tunisia.
Waite, a 46-year-old layman who
is Runcie's secretary for Anglican
Communion Affairs, negotated the
release in 1981 of four Britons held
in Iran.
Last February he secured the free
dom of four other Britons who had
been held for 10 months in Libya in
reprisal for a British police siege of
the Libyans' London em bassy.
Waite was scheduled to depart
from London's Heathrow Airport
on Wednesday morning aboard a
Middle East Airlines flight to Beirut.
There was no indication when or
w here he might meet
the kid
nappers.
V
t
Rock’s alleged lover
Associated Press
Marc Christian, left, hears his attorney, Marvin Mitchelson, discuss his $10
million lawsuit against late actor Rock Hudson’s estate. Christian claims
that he was Hudson’s lover and that Hudson s staff conspired to hide the
fact that Hudson had AIDS.
Helms alleges superpower deal in seaman case
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Sen. Jesse Helms Tuesday
criticized the Reagan administration's handling
of what appeared to be a defection attempt by a
Soviet sailor.
Helms questioned whether his return into So
viet hands was the result of a "secret agree
m ent" between the two superpowers.
Helms, at a hearing by his Senate Agriculture
Comm ittee, said the administration had aban
doned 25-year-old Ukrainian sailor Miroslav
Medvid and "thum bed its nose at the legislative
branch" of governm ent to avoid bad feelings just
before next week's U.S.-Soviet summit.
"T h e State Department clearly decided it's
more important to appease the Soviet Union
than to allow a young man an unfettered chance
for freedom ," said Helms, R-N.C. The adminis
tration allowed the grain freighter Marshal Kon-
iev to leave Saturday despite a subpoena issued
by Helms' committee commanding the sailor's
presence at a hearing.
Helms said as the events unfolded around the
vessel near New Orleans, the Soviets acted as
though the ship were a protected enclave with
status similar to that of an embassy, and the
State Department "acted in accord with that
view ."
"W hy was the U.S. governm ent so protective
of the Soviets at this tim e?" he asked. "Is there a
secret agreem ent that we will send defectors
back?"
Asked by a reporter later to elaborate, Heir
said he did not know whether there had be<
other cases of Soviet crewmen attempting to d
feet and being returned to their vessels.
Charles Redman, a State Department spoke
man, declined to comment directly when askt
about Helms' charge. "I have no response
specific allegations of such a n atu re," he said.
But Redman added that in dealing with se
men and others who want asylum in the Unite
States, "W e are guided by the law, but also I
strong moral convictions." He said that in Me<
vid's case, the government did "everything i
our pow er" to give the crewman "a chance I
express his choice in a non-threatening enviroi
m en t."
imam
Florida offers polo, gifts to royal couple
Associated Press
W E ST P A L M B EA C H , Fla. - Prince Charles,
playing polo during a 21-hour visit to Florida,
scored a goal Tuesday to help his team w in, and
the crowd of 12,000 people chanted for their fa
vorite, Princess Diana.
Earlier, Gov. Bob Graham and children bear-
ing roses and Christmas ornaments greeted the
royal couple at the airport. Charles and Diana
also planned to attend a $4 m illion benefit dinner
in one of the capitals of U .S. high society.
Charles shrugged off an errant shot that hit
him from behind in the right shoulder to make
the second-half goal for the Palm Beach polo
team, which defeated an all-star squad 11-10.
Early in the match, he barely averted a spill
when his horse buckled, but the British prince
recovered and pulled his mount upright.
A t halftime, many in the sellout crowd at the
Palm Beach Polo and Country Club stadium in
suburban W ellington chanted, "W e want Di! W e
want D i!"
Princess Diana, watching from a special stand,
wore a blue chiffon blouse and a white, blue and
pink-patterned skirt. Early in the game, a single
engine plane flew overhead trailing a banner
asking, "Charles and Diana please help to free
Ireland.” The plane was chartered by the Irish
Am erican Unity Conference, a group based in
San Antonio that supports unification of British
ruled Northern Ireland with the Irish Republic
After the 42-minute match ended, Diana
awarded the team captain the 2-foot tall Princess
Diana Trophy, topped with a figure of a player
aboard a rearing horse.
She gave her husband and the six other play
ers from both teams smaller trophies
Charles raised his trophy aloft as the specta
tors cheered. His wife then stepped up next to
him on the platform before they left for private
gatherings in Palm Beach.
O ver the weekend, the prince's representa
tives came here to select fast, well-behaved po
nies for the prince to ride during the match,
played in 80-degree temperatures. Charles was
treated for heat exhaustion after a match at W ell
ington in 1980.
Charles and Diana were to be guests Tuesday
night at a $10,000-a-couple dinner at the Break
ers Hotel in Palm Beach. Publicists for industrial
ist Arm and Ham mer said the dinner would raise
some $4 million for the United W orld College ih
M onte/.um a, N M
Bob H o p e and Vi< tor Borge headed the enter
tain m en t for the d in n e r Sut h celebrities as actor
( ary G ra n t, actress Joan ( ollins, m edia and
sports m agnate
talk sh ow host
le d Turner,
M e rv G riffin , U S Sen s Pa u la H a w k in s , R I la ,
and Sam N u n n , I )- (,,i , and several oth e r mem
bers of C ong ress also w ere invited
A fte r a rriv in g at W est Palm Beach In te m a tio n
al A irp o rt after a flight from W a s h in g to n , the
ro yal cou p le w a lk e d o ver to about KX) school
c hildren in v ite d to the airport lor their work m
helping replace lib rary books lost in a fire last
ye a r at a school in D ia n a 's h o m e to w n of Booth
ville, En g la n d
K e lly W a rin g , an 11-year old
from G reen
Ac res E le m e n ta ry School, said ( harles com pli
m ented her on her lacy w hite gloves
Ten-year-old A n n a Valencia of Pahok ee Ele
m en tary presented D iana w ith a dozen red
roses.
The prince asked me, 'H a v e yo u been sp en d
ing all of y o u r m o n e y on roses?' ” she said later
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That’s why, for the CDP-302 at *495.00 and the CDP-102 at *395.00, they repre
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AUDIO5501 N. Lamar 459-1371
The Daily Texan/Wednesday November 13, 1985/Page 3
T he Da il y Texa n
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IN> ¿ C T lO f O
Association must
represent electorate
F or the second tim e since
stu d en t governm ent ob
tained a n ew lease on life at
the U niversity in 1982, it is under
EVAN
OSBORNE
T E X A N
COLUMNIS1
attack for being "out of touch with
the stud en ts" and not providing
"any real service" to us, the stu
dent b ody.
This tim e, groups w ith nam es
like S tu dents Tired O f M anipula
tive Politics and C om m ittee to Re
tire A spiring Politicians have
joined w ith the Y oung C onserva
tives of le x a s to try to convince us
that the S tu dent Senate and the
elected execu tive branch are u n d e
sirable dead w ood . Student g o v
ernm ent is said to be full of hacks
w h o take actions that w ould never
see the light o f day if they had to
be ap proved by the entire student
body.
Is it any w onder? This sem ester
has already w itn essed the printing
of literature for h om osexual stu
d en ts listing A ustin gay bars, as
w ell as a p resident w h o d em o n
strated his faith in representative
d em ocracy by w alking out of a
senate m eetin g, trying to erase a
quorum w h en
it w as clear he
w asn't goin g to get his w ay.
B esides m aking us all p in e for
the halcyon days of truly creative
acronym s, the existen ce of groups
like C RAP and STOMP reveals
quite a bit about the dep th of in
difference and outright op position
that stud en t governm ent at the
U niversity m ust con ten d with,
fh e
last tim e w e w en t through
this, grou p s such as the Real Stu
dents' A ssociation tried to abolish
the S tu dents' A ssociation directly
and through the back door, by re
quiring a 20 percent turnout to
validate any association elections.
Some of the complaints this
time around, in addition to the
aforementioned
leaflet, are our
governm ent's allegedly improper
ly lobbying of the Legislature and
its endorsem ent of primarily leftist
candidates for state and federal
office without any indication that
w e supported those m oves.
P rop onents of stu d en t govern
m ent claim that it has provided us
with m any program s w hich great
ly benefit m any stud en ts. This is
true, but it d o es not obscure the
ract our governm ent is at best only
m arginally representative of the
stu d en t b ody, and should not
claim to be anything else.
from
from
ineligible,
A fundam ental tenet of repre
sentative dem ocracy
is that the
representatives are disciplined in
the w ay they cast their v otes by
the threat of having to face the
voters in the next election. In stu
dent governm ent at the U niversi
ty, how ever, it is rare to see an
elected representative run for re-
election The president, in fact, is
prohibited
serving more
than on e term. There is a ten d en
cy for representatives to com e pri
the upper classes.
marily
since
Freshm en are
election s are held during
the
spring before the term of office be
gin s, and
is a natural
p redisposition for those w h o are
less familiar with the U niversity to
sh y aw ay from running for office.
The cam paigns for office tradi
tionally have centered on qualities
like "experience," "honesty" and
"leadership." T hese are valuable
traits, to be sure, but candidates
for office should have ideas to run
on that are a little more concrete.
It is true that candidates frequent
ly e sp o u se specific ideas during
the cam paign, but it is u nu sual to
see a candidate vocally prom ote
an idea and then work for its im
plem entation upon assu m ing off
ice.
there
The fundam ental
truth about
stud en t governm ent is that on ce
p eop le take office, they are not ac
countable in any wav to the p eo
ple w h o elected them . The per
fectly understandable
tendency,
then, is for a senator to vote his or
her con scien ce on p reviously u n
know n issues.
We thus have the specter of the
senate sp en d in g stud en t m on ey to
send representatives to Arlington
to argue in favor of UT System
d ivestm en t of stock in com p anies
w ith South African operations.
Ihis w as not necessarily the m or
ally w rong action, but there w a s
no reason for our elected repre-
-t id#
The Daily Texan
■ *ii
■ ’h e ed ito r or th e W'ite»
if the article and
i’ on, fhf> Bo.ird of Benefits of the Texas
Gay club closure justified
T C Mim
lage i lub i Now York state judge closed last w eek because,
’tJim: tii sit w \( 'ik C 11\ officials, it w as perm itting high-
li.dt H ave vou heard c>t iC That's a G reenw ich Vil
risk sexual activ its
*i
I or tiie tost time cits’ officials took advantage of new state legisla
tion th.d 11 low s lot . i i authorities to close bars, bathhin.i¡¿es and other
ss here d m gerous d isease spreading sex takes ptjce, and ruf-
pin»
fled a tesv feather
in the preveas
moil leiu’i oi
1
s ou I thmk people w ould bo happs th.it at least the state of
\ 11 )S already approaching epidem ic propor-
hon
New > ork is w illing tr> •om otlung about it
’ 1
'"un i is il rights ,md gas1 rights activists are upset over the
I In \ to,o ,i greater crackdown on h om osexuals, d is
■ u
1 , am paign for publii health By closin g the Mine Shaft,
legisla 11s'e In, , |nr id the Ness \ ork Civil I iberties Union s,nd,
1,1
guised 1
th*
N» ss \ ork ( ,o\ Mario C uom o and Mayor I d Koch have "taken us
Jossn the dipp'TV slope that mas lead to recrim inali/ation of private
sexual conduct in general
*v c¡ i not re.111 s V\ hat Nevv York C itv did w as c lose’ d ow n an es-
hibli hm. nt that dem onstrated little regard lor the safety of its pa-
h o n s
tually
question of saving lives
111 d litilt understanding of the crisis facing hom osexuals Ac
i Km h ..Mil
it s not an issu e of regulating sexuality, but a
1 V(,n i ntii of the cits s ,u tion admit the Mine Shaft is a "notori
ou s ,md w ell know n place
hg itors
a reputation
li'|H)sition
\n d from reading excerpts o f city in ves*
it s no w ond er the Mine Shaft has earned such
hi tlm dim shaft
investigators wrote, patrons m oved from part-
net to partnei engagin g in anal and oral sex, apparently oblivious to
sign s w arning ot AIDS and offering condom s.
But Richard Dunnt executive director of the Gay M en's Health
trail nutted sexual Is
h .*u don't get AIDS from buildings; you got aids from a
Crisis
- nil
virus I I I I t I
legal sin s u e s toi the center, w hined that
1° be seem;: the cits and state focusing their resources on educational
[Mevent tin spread of the d isease rather than having such a
etiort c
narrow focus
\n d Mark Senak, the director of
it w ould be tar preferable
I duealm nal e ffo r ts’ You d have to be living under a rock not to
t h a t p r o m i -i nous hom osexuals are m ost susceptible to A I D S .
i be 111 m olí' educational efforts seem s a little stra nge w h en vou
k n e w
1 a I k
con -idt i tin Mine Shaft i/u/ post signs warning ot AIDS.
It ' not a
ign of hom ophobia to ask ju s t w hy, w ith the well-
knovyn threat *t
\ID S patrons of the Mine Shaft carry on as they
nit defiance ot reasonable health regulations hardly seem s
, w hen it com es to lighting a life-threatening d isease. U ltim ately,
sv
ot ciuiisc the solution to A lp s rests with research efforts. In the
rn<.in w hilt
hom osexual com m unity has failed to protect itselt
i hone h the authorities will have to intervene w here the
Can fester
W ELL,.. , u h , ... .S u r e x SUPPORT
Sttooent govcrmwvent. X m e a n , X
t io N Y M IN D X F SOME OF MY MONCV
G o e s t o m a k e s o r e student govern
m e n t IS th er e TO SPEMC Fbo M r
^ . e«
vo ^ *
sentafives to believe that it reflect
ed the op in ion of the majority of
students. D o w e support such a
m ove, or the creation of a subcom -
m itee on lesbian and gay issues?
N o on e really k n ow s, because no
on e really asked us. H ence, stu
dent governm ent operates
in a
vacuum devoid of popular will.
With
is
charged w ith, this clearly is an
unaccepta ble a pp roac h .
responsibilities
the
it
Currently, the only p eop le w ho
are paying any attention to the as
sociation are p eop le trying to lob
by them or p eop le trying to get rid
of them . If stu d en t governm ent is
to b ecom e an organization worth
k eeping, it m ust give the student
body a stake in its future. Perhaps
th e
be
changed so that representatives
have to face re-election during the
the
academ ic year, or perhaps
senators should initiate an effort
to get the true m easure of the
op inions of their constitutients on
controversial issu es.
c o n s t it u t io n
s h o u ld
I he prim e forces behind aboli
tion of stud en t governm ent this
tim e (m ainly conservative groups
u p set about actions
this year)
com pared w ith the com p osition of
sim ilar m ovem en ts in the past (d e
cidedly n on-con servative groups
disen ch anted w ith the hack im age
of stud en t representatives) should
tell our elected officials that these
are not just a few d iscon ten ted
poor sports.
The current situation represents
authority w ithout accountability,
and it is perfectly reasonable for so
m any p eop le to be so mad. It is
not en ou gh for senators and presi
d en ts, past and present, to p io u s
ly list all the accom plishm en ts of
stu d en t governm ent. They m ust
d em o n stra te
th ey
sp en d our m on ey and send lobby
ists w h o claim to represent us,
they are truly carrying out the will
is
of the electorate. Until
d on e, they m ust forfeit their m an
date to legislate.
that w h en
that
Osborne is an economics senior.
'Distinguished' citizens' ad just plain silly
G ranted that any full-page ad addressed
to "General Secretary Gorbachev" that
urges on him anything less than that
he resign and go to a m onastery m isses the
point. But after all, there w ere p eop le in the late
'30s w h o addressed tearful full-page ads to
"N eville Cham berlain and A dolf Hitler” and no
doubt it w ill con tin u e to be so, i.e., there will be
th ose w h o believe that Gorbachev is influenced
by a full-page ad that appears in The N ew York
Times and The Washington Post.
In fact, the ad that ran tw o Sundays ago u n
der the h ead in g "End All N uclear Explosions"
is really directed at Ronald Reagan — or, more
accurately, at the American p eop le. It is an ad
asking that w e concern ou rselves over the
"grow ing risk of nuclear war" by declaring a
"m utual m oratorium on nuclear exp losion s ef
fective" on Jan. 1, 1986, or sooner.
N ow the slop p y thought revealed in the lan
gu age here quoted d oesn 't surprise, com ing
from certain p eop le w ho tend to think non-ri-
gorously. The splash y ad is signed by over 100
p eop le w h o classify th em selves as "distin
gu ished A m ericans." And o f course a lot of
them are exactly that, but distinction in on e
field d o es not necessarily bring distinction in
statesm ansh ip . We are familiar w ith the aw ful
perform ance o f so m any scientists w ho special
ize in d ocu m en tin g their gullibility. "Scientists
are p eop le w h o first build the Brooklyn Bridge
and then buy it," the late William Schlamm
generalized.
So on e isn't surprised to see the nam e of Paul
N ew m an , w h o is a fine actor; or Jesse Jackson,
w h o is a fine orator; or Richard Barnet, w h o can
find a pro-Soviet pin in a haystack; or G eorge
M cGovern, w h o m ourns the foreign policy of
WILLIAM F.
BUCKLEY
O N THE RIGHT
Henry Wallace; or Carl Sagan, w h o g r o w s
gaunt on perceiving nuclear w inter next se m e s
ter at Cornell.
But w hat are former secretaries of d efen se
Clark Clifford and Robert McNamara d oing
sign in g that silly ad? Or T ow n sen d H oop es,
w h o has studied nuclear statesm anship? Or,
for that matter, Jimmy Carter, w h o w a s com
m ander in chief? A nd, for h eaven 's sake, a
straight thinker like Ted Turner?
Robert McNamara surely k now s that w hen
he w as secretary o f d efen se w e had bigger and
dirtier bom bs than w e have now
ordered by
him. And the reason w e now have a vastly re
duced inventory o f w eap on s is that w e have
tested and retested, in an effort to d im inish the
holocaustal d im en sio n s of a nuclear arsenal,
w hile m aintaining an effective deterrent.
W ho says there is a "grow ing risk of nuclear
war"? W hy is the risk greater now than yester
day, or the day before? D on't these folks know
that it is only b ecau se of testing that, for in
stance, w e have been able to com press nuclear
w eap on s to fit into sm aller m issiles that serve
to deter yet m inim ize the scale o f potential n u
clear exchanges? D on't they know that 20 years
ago w e couldn't be sure w hether an airplane
that crashed to the ground carrying a nuclear
w eap on m ight run the risk of d etonation , but
that such risks no longer exist — because of
testing? That a nuclear w eap on falling to the
ground at other than the specified sp eed and
angle will not go off — because of testing?
D on't they know that the non-M IRV'd, highly
touted, 30,000-ton M inutem an requires testing?
It is significant that co n sp icu ou sly m issing
from the roster of nam es w as that of James
Schlesinger. And there is a story of great point
goin g the rounds. It is that w hen President Jim
my Carter toyed w ith the idea of declaring a
total m oratorium , Energy Secretary James
Schlesinger, w h o had served as d efen se secre
tary and as head of the CIA, sp ok e very bluntly
to the president. It is said that he told him:
U n less w e periodically test our inventory of
w eap on s, w e can't guarantee that they will go
off it n eed ed . A nd any lack of credibility at this
level d im in ish es the only reason for having the
bom bs in the first place, w hich is as a deterrent.
Jimmy Carter backed off.
But now he is at it again. What these folk are
trafficking is pure superstition. That if you test
a w eap on , that m ean s you are likelier to u se it.
Exactly the contrary is the case. But they are
h ou n d ed by the taste o f atom ic cinders in their
m ouths, and the result of it all is an analytical
incapacitation that contributes n othing to world
peace, and a great deal to w orld insecurity. Be
cause a roster o f d istin gu ish ed A m ericans capa
ble of such slo v en ly thought can only encour
age the Soviet U nion to b elieve that bourgeois
d ecom p osition is in fact definitely in high gear.
1985, Universal Press Syndicate
Stick to relevant issues
It seem s the lexan has once again let its
editorial standards slip and has allow ed
the Firing 1 me to becom e a forum tor
slander and insults
instead ot tor the in
telligent d iscu ssion ot issues.
I m referring to D onnv Jansen ("Chns-
1 riday), w ho, in re
tianit\ cheapi ned,
letter
sp on d in g to another Firing Line
("C lu ist offers good new s," Oct
11),
thought ¡t w ould make a cute ending to
tell the authors to go and rot in hell. Even
it he had a legitim ate point to his letter, it's
regrettable that Jansen ch ose to vent his
hatred in publii It s even more regrettable
that the Texan w ould print a letter in such
poor taste.
Next time, d o us a favoran d don't lower
your editorial page to that level.
R obert M cG reevv
t h e m ica l en g ine e rin g
Deterrence isn't helpful
Evan O sb orn e's colum n on the su ccess
of nuclear deterrence w as a bit too sim p lis
tic W hile deterrence h a s been effective in
p reventin g a nuclear b etw een the su p er
p ow ers it has not solved the problem s u n
d erlying the arm s race. It has only hidden
them u n d er the g u ise of som eth in g akin to
R ussian roulette.
N uclear d eterrence through a balance of
p ow er approach is also extrem ely ex p en
sive, and is the cause o f m uch hunger and
suffering in the w orld, because m uch of
the m on ey used for d efen sive w eap on s
sy stem s is taken aw ay from hum an-ser-
\ ices fun din g. The billions of dollars that
are sp en t on th ese sy stem s could be used
to solv e the problem s in the Third World
that m ay even tu ally lead to a nuclear war.
The psychological effects of nuclear d e
terrence are far-reaching, and according to
the P hysicians for the Prevention of N u cle
ar War, in a stu d y they did of children in
both the Soviet U nion and the U nited
States, the children they su rveyed w ere
afraid of d y in g in a nuclear war alm ost as
m uch as they w ere of o n e of their parents
dying.
I he com m un ication s problem s caused
and exacerbated by the arm s race are
m any, and are goin g to take both adept
politicians and expert p sych ologists to u n
ravel. Ih e fact that at any m om ent a rash
decision m ay be m ade to launch m issiles
in retribution for an aggressive act on the
part of the other player is the m ost fear
som e thing yet in history, not unlike wait-
ing to go to the gas cham ber, w ond erin g if
the craziness surrounding o n e's life w ould
finally en close it.
N uclear deterrence m ay work, but it
isn't a good thing.
Catherine O'Neill
Plan II
society). But true satire on ly su cceed s in a
society in telligen t en ou gh to understand
it. So I beg you , don't write in to Firing
Line. D on't em barrass our com m un ity by
d isp layin g you r ignorance.
C. Grant Mitchell
Radio-tele vision -film
Try to appreciate satire
My com m entary anticipates the inevita
ble d elu ge of letters to be w ritten about Joe
Bob Briggs' cam pus visit. D on't even
bother. We know your argum ent: Joe
Bob s claim s of jest are no excuse or credi
ble cover-up for the writer's blaring racist
sentim ents.
Severe brain dam age could not explain
the chasm that exists b etw een the blind
ignorance that produced this line of rhe
intelligence.
toric and average prim ate
Can't you see w hat Joe Bob represents? Do
I really have to state the obvious? Joe Bob's
racism is so overt that to believe he w as
actually m ean ing to offend w ou ld be ludi
crous. H is parody is on the racists, and
on ly they, if an yon e, sh ould take offense.
Joe Bob's social value m anifests itself in its
outright satire on racism (a blem ish on our
‘I?"1*
An attitude recently expressed in Firing
Line ("K eep law library quiet," Friday) re
garding the u se of and behavior in the law
library rem inds m e of on e of Sam Hurt's
Eyebeam characters. In fact, it is patheti
cally sad to think that a person w ith such
an attitude m ay som ed ay be a d efen der of
public justice. I w ould question the integ-
rity, legal or otherw ise, of an y o n e w h o
speaks of "classes of p eop le" as if one
w ere in som e w ay superior to the other,
and 1 certainly w ould not w ish to have
such a person d efen d in g m e in a court of
law.
All tuition-paying stu d en ts at this u n i
versity have equal rights to the u se of all
libraries, and the standards of
cam p us
conduct in the law library are n o different
from th ose in the A cadem ic C enter. This
elitist attitude persists and o n ly serves to
fortify the stereotype of Leonard N ostril,
Ih e Law School N erd.
Scott Hendrix
History
Grow up, foot-stompers
I read that the p resident of the Y oung
C onservatives is all of 19 years old. G ee, I
d on't k now about the rest of you older stu
d en ts ou t there, but I'm just a little bit u n
com fortable w ith
that som e
the
w orldly and sophisticated kid barely out of
puberty is seek in g to d efin e for the benefit
of the entire stu d en t b ody w hich areas of
concern are appropriate for Students' A s
sociation in volvem en t. This entire law suit-
petition ep iso d e reeks of foot-stom p in g
im m aturity, and there seem s to be too
m uch o f that goin g around th ese days.
idea
N o g o o d p urpose w ill be served by
stripping the Students' A ssociation of its
ability to represent, on issu es of concern to
stu d en ts, the majority v iew p oin t of those
w h o give a dam n about w hat g o es on at
the U niversity ou tsid e of lunch and recess.
It's tim e to support the association, and to
see th ese recent attacks against it for w hat
they really are.
Scott Conrad
Law
versify
UT gradually buying Blackland area; details delay purchase
By PATRICK SHUEY
Daily Texan Staff
is buying
T h e University
in the
Blackland neighborhood , and eventually
will get what it wants, but details and a
letter o f ag re em en t have ham p ered the pro
cess.
land
G Ch arles Franklin, UT vice presid ent for
financial affairs, said the University first
stated in Janu ary 1982 its intention to buy
the entire 16-block area and had acquired
nearly one-third of the area by m id -S ep tem
ber.
The area is east of Interstate 35, bounded
by Martin L u th er King
Jr. Boulevard,
M ano r Road, C omal Street and C h estn u t
A venue. Land immediately north and west
of
is University-ow ned, with
Disch-Falk Field to the west and physical
plant facilities planned for the north tract.
the area
T h e dispute conc erns a letter of ag re e
ment signed by University, city and neigh
borhood officials, forming a com m ittee to
advise on the transition from neighborhood
property to UT land.
I he letter says the University and n eig h
borhood recognize " t h e need for peaceful
coexistence in assuring a s m oo th transition
of the Blackland neighborhood
its
present use, which is pred om inately resi
dential, to its future use, w hich will include
a mix of residential and University cam pus
u s a g e ."
from
Ih e c o m m ittee was created to mediate
betw een the University and the neighbor
hood " f o r the interim use of vacant Univer
sity property in the Blackland a r e a ," until
the property is needed by the University
"fo r its o w n p u rp o s e s ."
Bo M cC arver, Blacklands C o m m u nity
D ev elop m en t Corporatio n vice president,
said the ag re em en t meant the University
w ould, when all ITT acquisition w as com
plete, share the 16-block area with the
neighborhood.
But Franklin said the agreem en t covers
the interim period betw een the initial pur
ch ase an nou n cem en t, m ade
in January
1982, and w hen the University eventually
buys the entire area.
Since the an nou n cem en t, University offi
cials have said the University wanted to
p urchase the entire lot for its ow n use,
Franklin said. "W e have lived up to the
ag reem en t, and will continue to do s o ," he
said.
"T h e intention of the University has been
and continues to be to buy as m uch as is
available, and to eventually buy all of it,"
Franklin said.
But M cC arver said letters and m eetings
with UT officials — and the agreem en t —
have indicated the University eventually
would share the property with the Black
land neighborhood
"Basically, we have no a g re em en t,"
M cC arver said
The University obtained the land imme
diately north by em inent dom ain at market
value.
The University also (ould impose emi
nent dom ain on the area but chose not t<>
because of neighborhood disruptions and
displacem ent of residents
Franklin said the University wanted to
buy the land as it b ecam e available before it
w as developed or the market value rose
He said the land north, south and west of
cam pus already has been developed, and
values have risen, making University pur
chasing unfeasible there
Franklin said the p urchase plan, whi< h is
not on a firm schedule and allows for land
aquisition before it is needed, permits the
University to buy property on an orderly
base , rather than when it absolutely needs
the property
However, Me ( urver aid the 1 Diversity
originally a n n o u n c e d its intention to buy
the land to drive d ow n property values and
dem oralize the neighborhood residents
Franklin called M cC arver’s accusations
"c om pletely erron eo u s
"Wc had the property appraised when
we started buying, and
the University
being ought
in the
TO parce ls of land, out of 167 parcel
If) bloc k area, for SI Ft million
Ihe I diversity initial!'» made several pur
c hases at once, f rariklm said, but since has
pur< hased the Find at a "fairly steady rate
of one p a n e l or two per month
as the
T o r Sale' signs go up
Anti-star
But UT scientist
By BRIAN EDWARDS
Daily Texan Staff
Scientist and w riter Isaac Asim ov
and Nobel Prize w inners Linus
Pauling and G eorge Wald have
joined a group protesting President
R eagan's " s ta r w ars" program .
The grou p , Stop Star W ars C om
m ittee, has asked The Daily Texan
to print a free advertisem ent re
questing donations.
C om m ittee spokesw om an Joyce
C hediac said M onday that the state
m en t and advertisem ent w ere sent
to "ab o u t four or five h u n d red "
publications nationw ide, including
m any student publications.
But C hediac said response from
the publications indicate only a few
will run the gro u p 's ad free.
"T h ere is a grass-roots response
to stop star w a rs ," he said. "W e
have to organize and m otivate it."
But m any prom inent scientists
and researchers su pp ort star w ars
research and developm ent, includ
ing H ans M ark, University of Texas
System chancellor and a form er
N A S A d e p u ty
a d m in is t r a to r ;
G eorge K ozm etsky, head of A us
tin's Institute for C onstructive Capi-
wars group grows
says research work aids economy
‘There is a grass-roots re
sponse to stop star wars.
We have to organize and
motivate it.’
— Stop Star Wars
Committee spokesman
Joyce Chediac
talism, the Large Programs Institute
and
the RGK Foundation, and
Frank Rose, Auburn University
Space Power Institute director
The Strategic Defense Initiative,
also know n as star wars,
is a
Reagan-sponsored plan to develop
a defensive system of space-based
satellites capable of shooting down
incoming nuclear m issiles out ide
the atm o sphere
Kozm etsky, UT System Regents'
e conom ic affairs office associate,
has said SDI is " o n e of the most ex
citing research programs
I S.
h istory."
in
"It can put our econom y back on
equ ilibrium " because of the am ount
of private-sector busin ess SDI re
can generate, Kozmetskc
search
said
Mark said he supports SDI re
search work in the I f Syste m anc
said research is of "fu n d am e n tal im
p ó rta m e to the prosperity of the na
tion" becau se it can create new in
d u s tn e s and jobs
"I support efforts to build a de
fense against nuclear weapons,
Mark said after a report issued in
S e p te m b e r show ed that the Univer
sity received $40.5 million from the
Defense- D ep artm ent for research
( hediac said t h e Stop Star Wars
( om m ittee is a national organiza
tion, with branches in many m a j o r
cities
It also has received support
from form er L S Attorney General
R am sey ( lark, who ( hediac said
will speak in support of t h e < ommit
tec at an upcom ing I nited Nations
press conference.
the
said
Chediac
"fin g e r of
b la m e " for the arms rac e escalation
"m u s t be po in te d " at U S presiden
tial administratio ns
It’s m ore than a job...
Robert Cohen/Daily Texan Staff
John Baier, petroleum engineering sophomore and
third-class midshipman, acts as road guard Tuesday
as companies of the Navy ROTC cross the street at
22nd Street and San Jacinto Boulevard.
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P a g e 6/The Daily Texan/Wednesday. November 13 1985
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Many beautiful patterns and colors to complement any decor. Sale ends Saturday November 30
Group to ‘sell’ student government
By DEBRA MULLER
Daily Texan Staff
The Students' A ssociation soon
will be sold.
A s recent criticism has decreased
the association's market value at the
U niversity, a cam pus organization
plans to sell stu d en t govern m en t to
the stu d en t body.
The A m erican M arketing A ssocia
tion, a cam p us professional organ i
zation w ith about 400 m em bers, has
launched a cam paign to help the
Students' A ssociation im prove itself
as a product.
AM A has started a project to pro
vid e inform ation and su g g estio n s to
the association in an attem pt to e n
hance stu d en t govern m en t's im age
and "assure” its critics, said Robert
C onklin, A M A president.
"Their primary problem
im
age," C onklin said. "The Students'
A ssociation is quite m isunderstood
on cam p u s and a lot of p eop le are
really critical of them ."
is
C onklin said few p eop le u nd er
stand stu d en t governm ent's role on
cam p us — providing a forum to a d
d re s s s tu d e n t p ro b le m s a n d s u p p ly
in g a v arie ty of s tu d e n t services H e
sa id
th e S tu d e n ts ' A sso c ia tio n
n e e d s a m o re "w ide-based a p p e a l."
A lth o u g h C on k lin said th e associ
it p ro v id es
w o rth w h ile p ro g ra m s," but has
b ee n u n ab le to p ro m o te its services
w ell.
atio n h as p ro b lem s,
said
C in d y Lucas, special p ro g ram s
the
co m m ittee c h a irw o m a n ,
p ro ject, to begin la ter this m o n th ,
will co n sist of th ree p h ases. AMA
first will su rv ey s tu d e n t body a tti
tu d e an d o p in io n of th e association,
sh e said.
Lucas said AMA p lan s to ac cu m u
late 1,3(XX to 2,tXX) su rv ey s, to be
ta k en N ov. 22, 25 an d 26. T he stu d y
will u se a ran d o m sam ple by sur-
vey in g o n e req u ired u p p er-d iv isio n
a n d o n e low er-division class in each
school.
If su rv ey resu lts in d icate a lack of
a w a re n e ss of th e asso ciatio n and its
p ro g ra m s, Lucas said AMA will b e
gin the second p h a se
d esig n in g a
stra te g y for s tu d e n t g o v e rn m e n t to
m ark et its ideas.
Lucas said the third phase will be
a follow -up survey to m easure effec
tiven ess of the program.
AM A undertook the project for
"practical m arketing experience" in
coordinating and w riting su rveys,
com piling data and
form ulating
su ggestion s
solve problem s,
Conklin said. The association is not
paying any m on ey to AM A, but
Conklin said AM A m ay request
paym ent if the project b ecom es too
exp en sive to handle.
to
Lucas stressed AM A is not com
ing out in favor or against the Stu
dents' A ssociation, but rather is tak
in g
th e a sso c ia tio n on as a
"project."
The project idea cam e from a d is
cu ssion last spring b etw een Conklin
and former AM A President Lucy
McGuire, said C onklin, w h o ap
proached the Students' A ssociation
last sem ester about the project.
Conklin said he believed survey
results w ould sh o w n ine-ten ths of
the stud en t body feel
indifferent
toward the association.
ver try to
(aflsomeoiie whose
line is busy and
end up dialing the
same number over,
and over,
and over,
and over,
and over,
and over,
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j
Fhe Daily Texan/WednehcLiy November 13, 1985/Pagr I
Church groups protest regulations] Change in boundary
of schools may alter
People’s Baptist Church opposes state licensing of children’s homes
AISD busing system
By LISA BAKER
and MARK SHAW
Daily Texan Staff
Evangelist Tim Lee of Oklahoma City speaks at the Roloff children’s home rally Tuesday.
Robert Cohen DailyTexan Staff
Ruth MaeAIlister, e lem e n ta ry e d
ucation assistant
s u p e rin te n d e n t,
said som e sort of b o u n d a r y cha ng e
There will be public hea rin g s on
p ro p o s e d b o u n d a r y ch a n g e s Nov
18, 19, 20 a n d 21 a n d Dec. 2
reiterated
Texas c h u r c h g r o u p s
their p rotest
a g a in st state
th ree P eo p le 's Baptist
C h u r c h - o p e r a te d c h ild re n 's h o m e s in a tw o -h o u r
the Travis C o u n ty
d e m o n s tr a ti o n T u e s d a y n ea r
C o u r th o u s e .
licensing of
"I leave w ith you o n e m e ssage , T exas," said Tim
Lee, a n O k la h o m a City ev angelist a n d V ietnam W ar
v eteran . "If I fo u g h t th e c o m m u n is m in S o uth Viet
n a m , I'll fight y o u . "
Several h u n d r e d sp e cta to rs a n d adv o c ates of the
h o m e s , form e rly h e a d e d by e van gelist Lester Roloff,
c h e e re d Lee a n d o th e r sp e a k e rs in W o oldridge Park
T u e s d a y afte rn o o n .
Litigation b e tw e e n
th e c h u rc h g r o u p s a n d the
state e n d e d Oct. 7 w h e n th e U.S. S u p re m e C ourt
refused to o v e r tu r n a low er co u rt ruling that the
ch u r c h -o p e ra te d h o m e s m u s t obtain a license.
The P e o p le 's Baptist C h u r c h m inistries w aged a
12-year co u rt battle w ith the state o v er the licensing
of C o r p u s C h risti's Rebekah H o m e for girls a n d
L ig h th o u s e H o m e for boys, a n d th e A n ch o r H o m e
for b oys in Z ap a ta.
M en a n d w o m e n , m a n y h o ld in g Bibles, also ral
lied in favor of a p u r g in g of p o r n o g r a p h y a n d crime
from T exas c o m m u n itie s a n d a r e tu rn to traditional
family values.
" T h e sta te of Texas w a n ts the ch u rc h to take a
license," said A u b re y V a u g h a n , p a s to r of Grace
Baptist C h u r c h of H o u s to n . " T h e ch u rc h says they
c a n 't take a license — it's a ga inst o u r religious c o n
vic tio n s."
T he P e o p le 's Baptist C h u r c h h o m e s accept a n d a t
te m p t to rehabilitate child victims of d ru g s, alcohol,
p ro stitu tio n a n d o th e r d eliq u en c y , V a u g h a n said.
H e said a b o u t 500 c hildren live in the h o m e s, staffed
by a b o u t 200 w o rk e rs.
" W e 'v e got to s e n d th e s e p e o p le that are in tr o u
ble s o m e w h e r e , " V a u g h a n said. " W e se n d them to
C o r p u s Christi, th e y sta y six m o n t h s o r a year a n d
G o d gets a h o ld of th e m a n d c h a n g e s th e m .
" T h e sta te of Texas w a n ts to close us d o w n b e
ca u se w e w o n 't take a piece of p a p e r sayin g w e 'v e
got p e rm issio n to d o t h a t ," he said.
But a Texas D e p a r t m e n t of H u m a n Services r e p r e
se n tativ e said th e state is m ainly c o n c ern ed w ith re
g u la tin g th e a d m in istra tio n , staffing, facilities a n d
a d m is s io n of ch ild ren into th e h om e s.
" A n y facility th a t p r o v id e s care for u n re la te d chil
d r e n is r eq u ired to h a v e a license," said S ue Harty,
h u m a n services sta te su p e rv is o r for residential child
care licensing. "It is for e n s u r in g health, safety a n d
w elfare for child ren in o u t-o f-h o m e child care facili
ties."
T h e P e o p le 's Baptist C h u r c h h o m e s d o n o t receive
federal aid, b u t are s u p p o r te d by c o ngre gatio ns
a r o u n d th e state, V a u g h a n said.
to
" W e 'r e o p p o s e d
limited
s t a n d a r d s w h e n y o u h a v e to take a license," he said.
" W e g et th e job d o n e bec ause w e 'r e d o in g w h a t the
Bible s a y s ."
their (the state's)
LAST CHANCE
FOR CACTUS YEARBOOK
C U SS PICTURES
THIS WEEK
NOVEMBER 11-15
Texas Student Publications Building, Room 4.122
DAY STUDIO
NIGHT STUDIO
Monday through Friday
November 11-15
Tuesday and Thursday
November 12 and 14
8:30-11:30 a.m.
and
12:30-4:30 p.m.
6:00-9:00 p.m.
STUDIO FEES:
Graduate Students
and
Graduating Seniors
Seniors, Juniors,
Sophomores
and Freshmen
$3.50
$2.00
By RUDY SUSTAITA
Daily Texan Staff
I h e A ustin I n d e p e n d e n t Scho*i|
District b u sin g system , w h ich has
been h e ra ld e d as o n e of the nation
best, is facing a possible o v e rh a u l in
light of so m e p ro p o s e d b o u n d a r y
c h a n g e s
a possibility o n e bla( k
leader says could bring a retu rn to
se gre gatio n
p r e s e n te d
Distrii t a d m in is tra to r I)an Robert
son
b o u n d a r y -
c h a n g e p r o p o sa ls for th* 1985-1986
school y e a r
th e school bo ard
M o n d a y night
th ree
to
U n d e r o n e propo sal, s tu d e n ts m
k in d e rg a rte n a n d g rad e s I '» w ould
be e x e m p t from b u sin g for integra
tion p u r p o s e s , said Trustee Man
( layton
I he proposal leans m ore to t h e
im p o rta n ce of safety than to busing
for the sake of racial integration,
C layton said Clayton, w h o said 20
p ercent of AISD s tu d e n ts are b u s e d
for integration p u rp o se s, agreed the
proposal could create segregation in
the lower grades.
R obertson could not be reached
for ( o m m e n t.
But ja n ice Robinson, p re s id e n t >f
the A ustin b ran c h of the M’ational
A ssociation for th e A d v a n c e m e n t of
C olored People, said she o p p o s e s
the p roposal.
"B u sin g for racial balance w ould
e n d , " she said. " A n d th a t's w hat
w e 're o p p o s e d
to. T he MAAC P's
position is that it is o p p o s e d to any
retu rn to one-race classro o m s."
R obinson said th e n e w proposal
could foster preju d ice because p e o
ple form o p in io n s a b o u t different
g r o u p s in k in d e rg a rte n a n d e l e m e n
tary school. S he said racial s e p a r a
tion at such an early age could be a
setbat k to th e p ro g re ss AISD has
made.
A ustin schools began bu sin g for
integration in 1979. The district has
been recognized by the federal g o v
e r n m e n t as h aving an ex e m pla ry
p rogra m .
T h e Board is sch ed u le d to m ake a
final decision on the r e c o m m e n d a
tions Dec. 9.
"I will be w aiting to see w h a t
takes place," Robinson said
is inevitable bee aus*
to o p e n seven n e w s< he
the sc hools will be ¡iinic
five will be e lem e n ta ry ,
said
j
sc hools will be Kealing
rently u n n a m e d
A ustin, she said
tw o n e w
[ h e
U SD plans
>ls
I w o of
highs a n d
MaeAIlister
inior high
a n d a cur
in West
t r u s te e Berne*
so n 's
tw o o th e r
n ot have as mu*
m g as his p ro p
m g for s tu d e n t
grade s ] -3
Hart
propc
aid Robert
sals wouT
“ffec t on b u i
>sal to elim inate b u i
in k in d e rg a rte n an
Sh*
said o n e of the pro p o sal
w ould not alter the cu rren t b o u n d a
ry and busin g system bec au se ¡(
w ould affec t only the n*v\ sc hools
A
th ird R o b e rts o n
p r o p o s a l
w ould allow for the * reation of mid
die schools, m o v in g the sixth grade
from e le m e n ta ry schools to junior
high schools
I he1 middle' school p ro p o sa l was
p r e se n te d to the tru ste e s M o n d a y
by the1 m id d le school s tu d y com m it
te-e, co-chairea by MaeAIlister State
to
legislation s p u r re d
stu d y the middle1 school co n c ep t,
she said
the- district
MaeAIlister said
the' c o m m itte e
will m ake a r e c o m m e n d a tio n to the
board before Dec 9
H ou se Bill 72, p as sed in a s u m
m er 1984 special session, called for a
student-to-teac her ratio of 22-to-l
for k in d e rg a rten a n d first a n d se c
o n d grades, H art said
fh e law cre
ated the nee d for m ore class spa**
junior
Hart said Because several
high schools c u rren tly are u n d e r e n
rolled, m o v in g th e sixth g ra d e to the
junior h ighs w o uld not create a
space shortage
Robertson's third propo sal w o u ld
elim inate b u s in g for som e s tu d e n ts,
in grad e s 6-H, H art
mostly black,
said.
U n d er the middle-sc hool p r o p o s
al, A ustin schools w ould be div ided
into ele m e n ta ry schools, kin d e rg a r
ten th ro u g h fifth grade, m iddle high
s c h o o ls ,
e i g h t h
grades; a n d high
sc hools, n in th
th r o u g h 12th g rad e s
t h r o u g h
sixth
Clavton said th e p ro p o sals m av
be revised, a n d are not "locked in.'
APPLICATIONS NOW BEING
ACCEPTED FOR
M A N A G IN G E D ITO R
THE D A IL Y TE X A N
SPRING 1986 SEMESTER
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The TSP Board will meet on Thursday, November 21,
1985, to interview applicants and appoint a M anag
ing Editor for The Daily Texan for Spring 1986 sem es
ter. Following are the qualifications:
1 The a p p lic a n t must b e a student registered in UT
Austin in the sem ester in which ap p licatio n ls
m a d e If ap p licatio n is m a d e during the sum m er
how ever, registration d u rin g the previous spring
sem ester shall b e considered sufficient to satisfy
this requirem ent
2 The a p p lic a n t must h a v e a minimum of 2 5 3PA on
work d o n e at UT Austin
3 The a p p lic a n t must h a v e com pleted
ing) a n d J314 (ed itin g ; at the time c
g r a d e of C ' or better
4 The a p p lic a n t must h a v e com pleted
law a n d ethics) or b e registered for it
filing, a n d shall receive credit for the
taking office
.2 (report -
ling with a
>60 'm e d ia
the time of
irse betore
The a p p lic a n t must h a v e co m p leted J 322 repc
ing; at the tim e of filing with a g ra d e o! C
better
or
The a p p lic a n t r
tim e of filing
course before tc
igu; . r u e r e y is
1 shall receive
>a office
.h e a p p u c a n t m us- h av e served at reas* on
w eek for nine weeics on the ed ito n a. staff
Daily Texan d u rin g e a c h of a - .east *wo ser:
(or one sem ester a n d o ne .2 w eek sum m
including the sem ester in w hich a p p h c a
m a d e The official record of the ap p lica n t s €
e n c e will consist ot the Texan staff cox
8 The a p p l
the tim e :
int must b e servm
ipp.ication
1 exa:
.h e a p p a c a r.: mus* a g re e to fulfill all
the m a n a g in g editor d uring the full
pointm ent a n d to sign the m a n a g in g
Qualifications, 1, 2, 4 and 9 are not waivable Qualifications 3, 5, 6 7, and 8
may be waived by a % vote oí members present.
APPLICATION FORMS MAY BE PICKED UP IN TSP 3.204. MONDAY THROUGH
FRIDAY, 8am-5pm. The com pleted form and a letter oí application, resume,
grade transcript, sam ples oí published work, and letters of recom m enda
tion must be received in TSP 3.204 by NOON, Thursday, November 14
T h e Da ily T e x a n
Page 8The Daily Texan/Wednesday. November 13. 1985
Barrientos says proposed oil pipeline might be contested
By MARK SHAW
Dally Texan Staff
Landow ners, legislators and en vi
ronmentalists are prepared to fight
a proposed crude oil pipeline routed
over the Edw ards Aquifer recharge
zone, Sen. Gonzalos Barrientos said
Tuesday
"U n less
I can be assured that
there will not be an accident-prone
situation. I'm going to fight it all the
w a y ," said Barrientos, D-Austin.
Barrientos said the pipeline build
ers have failed to cooperate with lo
cal officials
"1 was perturbed that the compa
ny d id n ’t make an y efforts to con
tact officeholders in this area," he
said. "It was done very quickly —
like it was being sneaked in ."
C urrent plans show' the pipeline
running just south of Buda through
about seven miles of the Edw ards
Aquifer recharge zone. The
re
charge zone is the area in which w a
ter enters the aquifer, which pro
vides drinking water for several
counties and individual landow n
ers.
W hen complete, the pipeline will
stretch l,7f>8 m ile s from Bakersfield,
Calif., to Freeport.
Landowners in the area said a
pipeline leak in this region would be
disastrous.
" A lot of the ground out here is
lim estone," said Theresa Perry,
C ald w ell C ounty landowner. " If the
oil le a k s , it will go right through the
fissures in the stone and into the
w ater."
The completed 30-inch pipe will
m ove at least 300,000 barrels of
heated crude oil per day.
Celeron Oil and Gas Co., a subsi
diary of G oodyear Tire and Rubber
Co., is building the pipeline, known
a s the All American Pipeline. O ffi
cials at Celeron and All American
could not be reached for comment.
Perry said the company decided
not to refine the oil in California be
cause of pressure from environmen
tal groups.
All American is considered a com
mon carrier, classified bv state law
a s any person who builds a crude
oil pipeline for hire to oil compa
nies, said Ray Grasshoff, Railroad
Commission spokesman.
Grasshoff said a common carrier
has eminent domain rights, under
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which land can be condemned by a
court to allow passage of pipelines
deemed to be in the public interest
"It's the same principle as the
land to
government condemning
build a h ig h w ay," Grasshoff said.
construction,
Although eminent domain a llo w s
All American to begin surveying
and
the Railroad
Commission must grant operating
permits before oil can be sent
the pipeline, Grasshoff
through
said.
All Am erican currently has opera
ting permits up to M cCam ey, near
M idland, Grasshoff said.
But disputes with pipeline build
ers may halt pipeline construction
through Hays and C aldw ell Coun
ties, landowners said.
Residents filed a petition with the
Railroad Commission forcing the
commission to declare the situation
a contested case. A public hearing
will be scheduled soon’ to allow in
terested parties to speak, Grasshoff
said.
" W e haven't set a date for the
hearing vet," Grasshoff said. "B u t it
might be December or January be
fore it's scheduled."
Grasshoff said he is not sure what
the company would do if a permit is
not granted. " I guess they might
change the route or revise their
plans to meet our requirements," he
said.
The
session
passed a law directing the Railroad
Legislature
last
Commission to prevent pollution of
surface or subsurface water, Bar
rientos said.
The law also directs the commis
sion to adopt and enforce rules and
regulations related to oil and gas
storage and transmission, but Bar
rientos said the commission had not
adopted any such rules.
"T o date it is my understanding
they have not adopted rules in this
area," he said. "I'm working to see
if they will adopt these rules prior to
granting an operating permit to the
pipeline."
Ken Cramer, Sierra Club spokes
man, said his organization is look
ing into possible action.
" W e haven't made a decision on
whether to take formal action or just
monitor the situation," he said.
" W e 'r e gathering information and
discussing options."
Sharon Michaelis, a Hays County
landowner, said pipeline officials
insist the pipeline will not pass over
the Edw ards Aquifer recharge zone.
"B u t the surveys show the pipe
line going through every meadow
of our ranch," she said ."O u r ranch
is directly over the recharge zone."
Michaelis said any type of con
struction would damage the delicate
recharge zone.
"T h e aquifer is like a maze, like a
honeycom b," she said. "Construc
tion alone will close off some fingers
of the aquifer but a spill would be
disastrous."
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December 5 - Student Night
December 6,7,8
Texas Union Ballroom — 7 pm
Tickets:
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$17.50 to Public groups o f 10 or more
Charge-A-Ticket 477-6060, (tickets available at U T T M Outlets)
for m o re in fo rm a tio n c a ll 471-5651
Presented by I he Texas Union Arts & Humanities Committee and Staff
Europe Student
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4-6 p. m. Thursday
Nov. 14, at
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Meet Texas alumni and group leaders
from the top-rated Club Europa
student tours of Europe. Videos and
tips on the fun and affordable Europe
adventure.
Wine, cokes & cheese
Second level, Dobie Mall • 469-5656
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Texan Graphics/Mark Greene
Large Dotted Line Shows Path of Proposed Pipeline
TH£
MANY
LAST 3 D A Y S
Nov. 1-2
7-9
14-16
Utopia Theatre
In the UT Education Annex. E.
20th and San Jacinto, just
north of Texas Swim Center.
Plenty of parking.
A DOCUMENTARY DRAMA by CARLOS MORTON
SHOWTIME: 8:00 PM
$5 donation requested
$3 students and senior citizens
Sponsored by
The Center for M exican
Am erican Studies and the
G rad u a te Opportunity Program,
of the University of Texas
For more information
472-2273
&ECÍAL “¿ULl¿TIN’’
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YOU ARE PRE-APPROVED TO LEASE ANY GENERAL MOTORS
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3. G RA D U A TED W ITH IN LAST TWELVE (12) M O N T H S
4. HAVE A JOB O R A VERIFIABLE JOB C O M M IT M E N T
5. N O RECORD OF BAD O R UNSATISFACTORY CREDIT
6. D O W N PAYMENT C O N S IST S OF SECURITY DEPOSIT EQUAL TO
T W O PAYMENTS, R O U N D E D TO NEAREST $25.00
7. FIRST PAYM ENT DUE NINETY (90) DAYS AFTER CO NTRACT DATE
8. TRADE-INS ACCEPTED
9. LE A SIN G F IN A N C IN G RATE AT 12%
CALL US FOR DETAILS
k COVERT BUICK
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500 WEST 5th • 476-4761
Ask for Rick Sprague in Covert Showroom
HISPANICS
IN
COMMUNICATIONS
W ednesday, Nov. 13
2 pm
Chicano Culture Room
T exas Union 4.206
State Representative Lena Guerrero
(owner Bravo Communications)
Austin American-Statesman reporter
Arnold Garcia
lex * Urnon
The Daily Texan/Wednesday November 13, 1985/Page 9
Lindbergh’s organs removed
after parents say goodbye
A c c n m t D H P r t i c c
Associated Press
S T R A T F O R D , N .J.
Doctors re
moved organs for transplant dona
tions from the body of hockey star
Pelle Lindbergh Tuesday after the
parents of the standout goalie said
their goodbyes to their brain-dead
son, authorities said.
Philadelphia Flyers team physi
cian Edw ard Viner said Lindbergh's
parents gave doctors permission to
remove the organs, but delayed the
they wanted
operation because
more time with their only son.
''Privately, they must hope there
could be a miracle ... but they're
anxious not to lose the potential of
helping others," Viner said.
The operation to remove the or
gans was completed by 8 p.m., said
Maria Toci, a spokeswoman at John
F. Kennedy Memorial Hospital-
Si i i íford I ’i i .ion
she would not disclose which or
gans were taken out of the body
and had no other information.
Dr. Louis Gallo, a surgeon at the
hospital, said Lindbergh's parents
had signed a release allowing dona
tion of his organs.
Mis relatives "h a v e accepted the
finality of his condition.'"
"Ih e y want more private time
with him ," Viner said. Lindbergh's
two sisters, who are in their 40s, re
mained in Sweden, a team spokes
man said.
"From a purely medical point of
view, he's been dead since 5:40 a.m
Sunday, said Viner, w ho described
Lindbergh's existance as "a state of
semi-living."
Sigge Lindbergh flew from Sw e
den M onday to his son's bedside
goaltend.T's mother,
where
tti
Anna-Lisa,
fiance, Kerstin
and
Pietzst h, have kept a vigil since the
e at the West
Mall, Wednesday,
Novem ber 13.
Gay growing into potential
By GAYLON KRIZAK
Daily Te/an Staff
It was for players u< h as I /erett
(.ay that the word 'potential' first
came about.
"H is potential is unlim ited "
Texas C o a ch bred Akers in the
L o n g h o r n s ' I9H4 m edia g u id e
A lot of times, that word is used
when a coach knows a player has
some sort of untapped talent, but
isn't exactly sure what it is
I hat, more or less, was the case
with Gay.
"L a rly in their career that's really
about all you can say about them
because you
really don't know
what they're going to do with it,"
"H e 's improved his
Akers said.
speed and he's improved his con
centration and has really become a
good college receiver."
But it was his junior year at the
University before G ay actually be
gan to make a significant contribu
tion. G ay caught just one pass his
freshman year, that coming against
North Texas State in the second
game of the season, but looked
good prior his sophomore season
and was expected to contribute.
Me played in all of two games,
catching no passes.
" I was in a learning process, km-
da feeling things out a little bit
m ore," G ay said. " I was catching
on, I thought, real well But you
just have to wait your tu rn ."
I he waiting continued through
the Missouri and Stanford games
this season as G ay's string of
games without a reception reached
24.
"Y o u never know how much
you re going to
starts, ' he said
petting to do
and do it well "
Slow ly, his
"Y o u just
whatever
gan to irn
lut k
prove Me had two receptions in
the Longhorns' 387 yard passing
show against Rice, then provided
the biggest
spark in the lethargic Iexas offense
against Oklahoma with two < ate hes
for 29 yards
perhaps the only
"M e started really catching the
football and catching it well and
catching the tough passes in that
ball gam e," Akers said " f ie made
some good catches under pres
sure."
Since being shut out in the first
two games. G ay has caught at least
two passes in each of the last six,
inc luding a four catc h game against
Arkansas and a five-catch perform
ance against S M I Me has (juietly
become the Longhorns' leading re
ceiver with 17 receptions for 320
yards
Mis development has closely
coincided with that of Iexas quart
erback Bret Stafford Both have be
come more and more confident in
recent weeks, and the results have
become increasingly more v is ib le
"H e 's got so muc h athletic a b ilit y
that he's bound to help you out,"
Stafford said. "M e does a good job
of going up for the ball arid coming
bac k to the ball and keeping the de
fender aw ay from the ball
It's nice
to have him in there "
It became especially nice two
lech
weeks ago against Texas
when an underthrown Stafford
pass deflected off the Red Raiders'
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I very time I the>w tin
loll t<.
I verett, I k n<
h<
to get to th* ball,
g< it *h< abib
Stafford said
Me has such great leaping ability
to where he can get to it wherever
it's thrown
In that ability lies (,a v
poten
tial Mis si/» coupled with hr-'large
hands give him the ability to catch
. Akers
the hard to-catc h p a s s e s ,
hinted at in the 1985 media guide
" / v e r e t t h a s g r e a t l e a p i n g a b i l i t y ,
a n d h e h a s t h o s e b i g <>! h a n d s , a r i d
h e h < is r e a l l y i m p r o v e d h i s ,p e e d
Akers
Although acknowledging steady
improvement, G ay .ays he has yet
l i m i t a t i o n s Me s not
to reach hi
exactly sure what define
his po
tential, but knows he won't be* able*
to fully define it any time soon
"I'm still
learning,"
fie said
"1 very time I go out on th e field, I
learn somthing new
I re ally don't
think I can fulfill m y potential this
year
" I just go out and try to do what
ever D an
L O N G H O R N N O T E S
Seve ral
players listed as questionable for
the f( I game returned to practice
Iuesdav
Wide-
receiver D onovan Fitts
half injury), offen ive tackle Rick
Houston pinches! boulde r ne-rve )
S te v e
and d e fe n s iv e be kIe*s
Llew ellyn ispraine*d arch),
ferry
Steeihammer (shoulder) and M ik e
(strained net k ¡ all worked
Finn
out, although Finn's m jurv forced
him to leave practice early
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THE UNIVERSITY
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CLEMENTS
TO DISCUSS
HIS PREVIOUS PERIOD AS A
GOVERNOR AND HIS '86 BID
FOR GOVERNOR
W EDNESDAY
N O V. 13th, 1985
6:30 p.m.
UTC 1.144
5 Million Americans
Are Looking
In The Wrong Place
Por Hele
Do you go to
the refrigerator
even though
you’re not really
hungry? Do you
keep eating long
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Yes No
G G I )n you f a t w ith o u t h* in g in m g r .'
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Ik )y o u spend m ost o f your tinu th in kin g
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i_J □ D o you fin d e a tin g soothe your pm hlt rn - '
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emptiness inside. A feeling of rejection.
Frustration. Or loneliness.
Yet the more you eat, the lonelier and more
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But it’s not your fault.
It’s a disease called Bulimia or Bulimarexia.
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Hays Memorial Hospital
1301 Redwood Road. San Marcos. TX 78666
1965 In cooperation with Adventist Health System
Legend, hyperbole in ‘Noises Off’
Noel Harrison seems unconcerned about fame and fortune on a grand scale
Page 10/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, November 13, 1985
It is a farce within a farce
in which a provincial act
ing troupe tries to put on
a hackneyed, fifth-rate
comedy and finds it be
yond its level of
competence.4
quite an exaggeration. W e all work
pretty hard, but it looks more dan
gerous than it is." Entrances and ex
its are frantic, though, and Harrison
counted the door slams one night at
the behest of a Little Rock theater
critic. There are 352.
Harrison speaks highly of the
present company, which has been
touring since the beginning of Sep
tember and just finished a very suc
cessful two-week run in Dallas. He
said co-star Kilgarriff "has spectacu
lar technique. She graduated from
the Royal Academy of Dramatic
Arts with Peter O'Toole, Alan Bates
and Albert F in n e y." He got his own
training in British repertory.
Harrison's role of the addled d i
rector in Noises is one he particular
ly enjoys because "in the first act
I'm mostly out in the audience. I en
joy being out there, to be able to see
what they're doing.
I can sneak
looks at them ."
Harrison has been a director him
self, including stints as artist in resi
dence at St. Edw ard's University —
once in 1978 and again the early
'80s. The son of noted actor Rex
Harrison, the younger Harrison has
made numerous guest appearances
since 1980 on shows like Kate and
A llie and H a rt to Hart, but said
"M o st of my employment has been
on the stage or playing music. M u
sic's the thing I would least like to
give u p ."
Harrison had Top-40 hits in the
'60s with W indm ills o f Your M in d ,
A Young G irl and Suzanne, and
was much in demand as a television
celebrity and nightclub performer.
H owever, he spent some years
aw ay from the limelight on his farm
in Nova Scotia (he now lives in
Maine), and seems unconcerned
about fame and fortune on a grand
scale.
As television goes, " I'd like not to
do a series, but if I was offered one,
I would have to think rather hard.
They pay so well, it's like w inning a
jackpot. I'd have to consider the na-
By PARRY GETTELMAN
Daily Texan Staff
It's 1985, which means we of the
provinces finally get to see the hit
com edy of 1 ondon's 1982 theater
season. M ichael Frayn's Noises O ff
enjoyed the acclaim of both audi
ences and critics in England, and
was a
it
opened in N e w York in December
1983.
riotous success when
Legend and hyperbole surround
the physical stamina required for
Noises, a sex farce w ith in a sex farce
in which a provincial acting troupe
tries to put on a hackneyed, fifth-
rate com edy and finds it beyond its
level of competence.
Noel H arrison stars in the Para
this
mount Theatre production
weekend. H e
is perhaps best
known to television audiences as
M ark Slate in The G irl From Uncle,
but has had a longer career in music
and the theater.
Australian-born M ichael Blake-
more, w h o directed the London and
Broadw ay productions, has said
when he first read the script "it
made me want to go and lie down at
once.” H arrison's co-star, Patricia
Kilgarriff, has asserted it "takes ei
ther a great deal of stamina to per
form, or a death w ish ."
Harrison, however,
said
"it's
By NICK DAUSTER
Daily Texan Staff
Leon Redbone is among A m eri
ca's most distinctive musicians. He
is certainly an anom alv on the pop-
rock circuit into which he is cast —
for lack of a more adequate venue.
In the age of M T V , Redbone ha
bitually wears a string tie, sunglass
Noel Harrison, center, has a cactus spine removed as the zany Noises Off cast gives him emotional support.
ture of the work, and if I'd have to
go to L.A . and work, I'd really have
to think hard about it."
Harrison, who has done some
movie work, is refreshingly blunt
about the possibility of pursuing a
movie career.
" I'v e never really
made it in films, I've sort of written
them off. I don't think of myself as a
film actor. For a television or film
actor who does the level of work
that 1 do
it's kind of hard to break into m ov
ie s . M aybe I'm not a very good film
actor!
I m not on Broadway
" I'v e done mostly comedy.
It's
been a long time since I've done
something serious,
I don't know
how I'd feel about it. I think I'd miss
the laughs."
Noises O ff, starring N oel H a rri
son, at the Paramount Theatre at 8
p.m. Friday, and 2 and 8 p.m. Sat
urday and Sunday.
Eccentric Redbone committed to living tradition of American music
es and a carefully trimmed goatee.
His material is a w ittv tribute to
America — Redbone's combined
knowledge of folk, blues, country,
RICHARD
«T0LTZMAN
What emerges is the im
age of a man who is an
eccentric, a very private
human being in a world
made for celebrities.
vaudeville, and jazz traditions is
more impressive than that of an y
one currently recording. A n d then
there is the voice: that w ry, expres
sive mumble that issues effortlessly
from beneath the goatee.
W hat emerges is the image of a
man w ho is an eccentric, a very pri
vate human being in a world made
for celebrities. But Redbone's utter
professionalism precludes any man-
nerisms. As the music business has
come to resemble nothing so much
as a corporate boardroom, Redbone
has remained committed to his orig
inal vision of the living tradition of
American music.
That vision has cost him, too. In
the late '70s, Redbone released four
albums on W arner Brothers, the
first of which, On the Track, sold
over 200,000 copies. He was also a
musical guest in the early days of
Saturday N ig h t Live. But then he
was pegged as a "n o v e lty " act, and
the recording contract fizzled.
But recently, Redbone seems to
be making something of a come
back. H e has been seen on a
Budweiser ad, which makes good
use of his w rv persona, and there is
a new live album on Greene Stone.
Redbone's return is particularly
welcome because of his command
of the subject and the joy he takes in
all
singing American music
Am erican music. As a preserver of
the American musical tradition, he
belongs in the same league as Ry
Cooder and John f ahev. Neverthe
less, Cooder frequently seems al
most scholarly in his approach, and
Fahey's appeal resides
at least be
fore his later music became quite so
obscure —
in the purity of his
sound.
Redbone, on the other hand, is
the one Am erican musician w ho can
summon up the feel of the past,
w ho can sing Shine t i n, Harvest
M oon, with a sly relish — but no
apologies — and then slip into a
lovely old Jelly Roll Morton tune.
Iht' man has enormous range, and
he handles it with unmatched style
I he records speak for themselves,
ih e backup musicians often read
like a roster from a jazz hall of fame,
from Dixieland greats Joe Venuti
(violin) and Vic Dickenson (trom
bone), barrelhouse pianist Sam m y
Price, and bluesman Little Brother
Montgomery,
jazz
saxophonist Yusef Lateef. These
musicians play for Redbone because
thev recognize him for what he is
.m intelligent artist dedicated to re
vitalizing their music tor another
generation.
to progressive
I eon Redbone, Thursday night
at Liberty Lunch.
Debussy
Berg
Brahms
Stravinsky
Bernstein
Gershwin/Gach
Gershwin/Bennett
t of mde^ nbobie genu
The Washington Post
V.
clarinet
La File au cheveux de lift
Arabesque II
Vier Stucke
Three Pieces for Clarinet Solo
Sonata for Clarinet (1941)
Three Preludes
Sonata in Eb M a p r for Clarinet and Piano,O p 120 N o.2
fasonatm Rhythm, Em braceable You I G ot Rhythm
Tuesday, November 19, 8 p.m.
Tedormtng Arts Center Concert Hall
Tickets $ 12,58,$4
¡
V< mt ers and Sen or Cit^ens S8.S8.S4
( kefs available at the PAG,Erven Center,and all UTTM Centers.
Information 471.1444 Hharqe-a-Ticket, 477 6060
IMMIGRATION
THOMAS ESPARZA
& ASSOC.
Consultation on any
Im m igration m atter
’ Student visas
* Reinstatement to student status
’ Adjustments ot status
* Multi-lingual
1811 South First Street 441-0062
Not certified by Texas Board ot Legal Specialization
GENEVA GLEN
CAMP
Indian Hills, Colorado
Is ottering
SUMMER
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITIES
for positions ot counselor, and cook The di
rectors, Ken and Nancy Atkinson, will be on
campus Thursday. November 14.
in the
Stahrtes Room, Texas Union 3 208, from 1-5:00
p m Promotional presentation will be given at
2:00, and at 4:00
It unable to attend and would like further In
formation, contact
Ken and Nancy Attdmon
c/o Geneva (Men Camp
P.O. Box 241
Indian Hills, Co 80454
(303)597-4621
UP TO $1.80 OFF ON
THE BEST TASTE M THE MALL
Save your appetite
for our original, ten
der ’n juicy boneless
breast of chicken
sandwich. Delicious
by itself or with crispy
Waffle Potato Fries™
and freshly chopped
coleslaw. Save these
coupons, head for
Chick-fil-A, and get
the taste you’ll love
for good—for less!
e Performing Arts Center and the Texas Union Cultural Entertainment
Committee The University of Texas at Austin
......
m in im hi illin iu m in ......... .................................................... ............ ..............................................
I WET WEDNESDAY
I
ENJOY THE BEST IN
FOOD, MUSIC
AND DRINKS
TONIGHT!
MOLSON &
JBoarcfcvalir CORONA
$1.00
| | f l Offer not good with any other coupon.
One coupon per person per visit. Expires
November 27.1985. Closed Sundays
l SAVE300 |
Im ON XCHKK-FN.-X SANDWICH
I
I
I
■ CUtc k M ji
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ON A CHICK-FIL-A MEAL
Meal includes 1 or 2 Chick-fil-A Sand
wiches or 1 or 2 dozen Chick-fil-A
Nuggets'." Waffle Potato Fries’," and
coleslaw. Offer not good with any other
coupon. One coupon
per person per visit. Ex-
ires November 27,1985
tosed Sundays.
savesux)
ON 2 CHICK-FIL-A MEALS
Meal includes 1 or 2 Chick-fil-A Sand
wiches or 1 or 2 dozen Chick-fil-A
I Nuggets." Waffle Potato Fries'," and
coleslaw. Offer not good with any other
-MM coupon. One coupon
per person per visit. Ex-
Eires November 27,1985.
osed Sundays.
|
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THE WORLDS MOST HONORED MfrlloN jgffggT
WRMEROF
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T O N IG H T
The Ruth and Gail Ensemble
no cover
Thursday
Ucam presents
Bill Oliver w/Steve Parkess
and his Conpañeros
Friday
Butch Hancock and
Narce LaCouture
opening: Hal Michael Ketch urn
Saturday
Kerville Bluegrass ( hampinns
Tex Sweeney and
the
Grazmatics
no cover
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Every Wednesday
j $1251st Place j
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Mon-Fri
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4476417
THE MOVIE STORE
V ideo Sales & R en tals
1
4301 A G uadalupe 453-1237
Classics, sci-fis, new releases
Largest Selection In UT Area
w ith o v e r 1 5 00 title s **
including
, B e v e rly Hills Cop
* 2 .0 0 PER MOVIE WITH AD*
MON-THURS ONLY
‘ Rental plus deposit
*• 1200 are on sale - 20% off
The Inheritors
G erm an w /subtM es
Today at 5 A 7:00 pm
Hogg Aud.
2.50 U.T.
3,00 Non U.T.
H erm an H esse's
S i d d l i a r t a
T o d a y a t 9 :1 5 pm
U n io n T h e a tre 2 .5 0 N o n U .T
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Tonight at 9:00 pm
H ogg Aud.
2.00 U.T.
2.50 Non U.T.
TONIGHT
Bellydancing
w/Mirage
N ew Music Night
M ixed drinks $1.85
Thursday
Soul Night
Domestic Pitchers
$2.95
Friday
Argylas
Saturday
Pressure
z n m c « T H E A T R E S WIPNUPAT* TOM
$ 2 * 0
TWI-tlTI SHOWS A MATINEES
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Page 12/The Daily Texan/Wednesday, November 13, 1985
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280 — Sporting-
Camplng Equip.
SCUBA GEAR wanted;
mask, g oo d condition Scuba Pro brand
preferred Tom, 4 7 9 -6 5 6 2 11-21
regulator, BC,
WINDSURFERS, SCUBA d-versl Wehuit.
mens medium, 2-pc, gloves, Vz", near
new $150 1 -2 95-7788 11-15
AFG21 HANGGLIDER $ 2 5 0 o r best of-
fer 3 3 9 -9 7 4 5 ,4 7 2 -0 2 8 0 11-18
SKI EQUIPMENT Pair Olm 170s with So
lomon 226 bindings, $ 5 0 Women's size
7 N órdica booh, $ 5 0 Phone 250-0198
11-15
330 — Pets
FREE TO good home two adorable 10
w o gray
trained 335-0671, nights. 11-15
lo ng-haired kittens
litte r
FOR SALE Burmese python, very tome,
?ood eater, easy to take care of, 12',
4 0 0 neg 4 6 9 -0 8 3 2 11 18___________
O NE CO O L kitty with shots & accessories
fo r good home o r meat!oaf $5 0 0 /
negotiable Call Steve 4 7 4 -4 6 7 8 11-19
340 — Misc.
DRY O A K firewood, $ 6 0 per pick-up
load
is
mostly split 11-13
3 8 5 -3 7 4 7 Anytim e W o o d
FIREWOOD DRY sp lit-p ost oak. $135/
cord, $ 85 /pickup iood Coll anytime
Clyde, 2 8 2 -4 2 7 2 11-13
PORSCHE SUNGLASSES for sale Case,
gold rim, 2 sets of lenses, $100 Like
new Coll Vemon, 4 6 2 -9 2 7 0 11-13
VINTAGE CLOTHING from N e w Eng-
land, oil sizes, dresses, suits, sweaters,
more Missy or Abbie, 4 5 3 -4 9 2 0 (leave
message) 12-9
FULL CORDS of oak for sale by UT stu
dent Green $125, mixed $135, dry
$150 Also hove 3-year-old seasoned
w o od Half cords available 8 3 4 -0 7 2 9
11-14
1984 14kt UT class nng BA/Biology
Traditional 10'/?-size $215 H-P 41C
calculator N o chips $ 60 448-0519 a f
ter 5pm. 11-14
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER, like~new $75
447-8127 11-15
DINNER SERVICE for 8 plus 7 serving
pieces, wine and water glasses, $75
4 47-8127 11-15
M UST SELL F ord M u s to n g 1 9 7 9 G o o d
c o n d itio n new tires, A M /F M s te re o A C
s i 7 0 0 firm 4 4 3 -3 2 1 8 1113
8 2 H O N D A M B 5 5 0cc, m o p e d /m o to r
c y c le E xcellent c o n d itio n , 2 , 3 0 0 miles
o n ly $ 3 7 5 C oll Ten, 4 4 3 6 3 9 6 11-18
'7 6 O L D S Cutlass S A C PS, PB, A M /F M
cassette
transm ission,
6 3 K E xcellent c o n d itio n $ 2 4 0 0 3 2 7
0 9 6 2 11-14
stereo,
re b u ilt
1 984 H O N D A V T 5 0 0 _ A scot, excellent
c o n d itio n , 6 4 0 0 miles, g a r a g e kept,
o r ig in a l $ 2 3 9 8
2 8 0 -
1 7 8 7 11 18
ask in g $ 1 5 0 0
197 6 O L D S R eg ency 9 0
$ 5 0 0 takes it 3 2 7 - 7 4 4 7 . a fte r 6 p m o r
le a ve m essage II 14
lo a d e d ,
first
1 975 F O R D Pinto, 2 d r sedan, g o o d en
am e a n d b o d y 4 spd . 7 6 ,0 0 0 miles
$ 7 0 0 251 2 9 3 8 11 19
1 9 7 5 O L D S M O B IL E Cutlass S uprem e,
lust
4 7 4 - 7 9 2 4 11-15
re g is te re d a n d
liscenced
$ 4 0 0
1 9 6 9 IM P A L A , v e ry clean , 4 d o o r 2 y e a r
o ld e n g in e
1 4 7 4 Keep try in g ,11 18
lo w miles $ 1 0 0 0
4 6 7
1 9 8 4 H o n d a C H 1 2 5 E lite S c o o te r
$ 1 0 0 0 0 0
1 9 7 5
2 8 0 Z ,
r e d o n e
t h r o u g h o u t ,
t ig h t m o t o r
g r e a t
s o u n d s y s te m b a r g a in a t $ 3 0 0 0 0 0
1 9 8 5 J e e p C h e r o k e e L a r e d o
fu lly
l o a d e d , 2 5 lite r $ 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 o ffe - s
o r tr a d e s p o s s ib le o n a ll 8 9 2 2 1 2 2
8 9 ? 6 3 3 6
B LAC K 1985 H o n d a Spree, 4 3 0 miles
$ 3 4 9 0 6 0 C all M ik e 4 5 4 0 8 7 5 11-18
H O N D A X 1 6 0 0
lo w m i le o g e $ 1 5 0 0 o r best o ffe r
9 7 4 5 , 4 7 2 8 2 8 0 11-15
'8 4 G o o d c o n d itio n ,
3 3 9
M O TO R C YC LE TRAILER~84 U n d e r w a r
ra n ty $ 2 5 0 o r best o ffe r 3 3 9 - 9 7 4 5
4 7 2 8 2 8 0 11-18
1 9 8 0 K A W A S A K I 1 0 0 S tre e t/tra il M in t
c o n d itio n , 4 ,8 0 0 miles, outclass a ny
m o p e d First $ 4 0 0 4 7 4 - 8 4 0 9 11-19
1 98 4 H O N D A 5 0 0
new . 1 5 ,0 0 0 m iles, ke p t
$ 2 2 9 5 4 4 7 1128 4 4 7 2 4 5 9 11-15
In te rc e p to r, b ra n d
in g a r o g e
1 9 8 5 H O N D A S p re e ” 8 0 0 m iles $ 3 0 0
plus o il a n d w a rra n ty 4 7 4 - 2 9 0 6 in PM
11-19
197 5 H O N D A S u p e rs p o rt 4 0 0 - 4 ve ry
lo w miles, e x c e lle n t shape, $ 5 0 0 4 5 9
0191 11-19
1 2 -1 6
80 — Bicycles
M U S T SELL im m e d ia te ly Puch A u stro --
D a im le r, o n e y e a r o ld e x c e lle n t c o n d i
tion, $ 1 0 0 4 7 7 - 4 4 0 4 11 14
M E N 'S 10-speed bicy cle , $ 4 0
8 1 2 7 11-15
4 4 7 -
2 7 " TA K A R A G ra n d T o u n n g 12 speed
like new , $ 2 0 0
4 6 2 -1 2 3 1 o r 3 2 8
3 8 0 0 11-15
1 9 8 4 U N IV E G A S a fa n 10 Tenspeed, Bell
H elm et, Ze fo l Pum p $ 1 2 5 4 7 4 - 2 9 0 6 in
P M . 11 19
B R A N D N E W B lack S chw inn "C ruis er" 5
speed w /K ry p to n ite lo c k & C a r R ack a ll
fo r $ 2 0 0 C all 4 4 4 - 3 0 6 9 1119
20 — Sports-Foreign
Autos
7 3 PORSCHE 914 2 0 L, AC, o v e rh a u le d
e n g in e , UT o ra n g e g o o d c o n d itio n runs
g r e o f J 3 9 ° 0 2 8 0 0 3 6 0 11-13
LIG H T BLUE 1 98 5 M u s ta n g . 5 - s p d , T
T op A M /F M cassette stereo, cruise
p o w e r locks a n d w in d o w s , lo w m ile a g e
W o rk p h o n e , 4 8 0 - 5 0 3 6 11-14
7 7 V W R abbit N e e d s b ra k e |o b $ 1 2 0 0
neg C a ll evenings ask
4 78 -
6 7 6 3 11-14
fo r A ll
1 98 0 T O T O T A C o ro lla liftback, a u to m a t
ic, 8 6 ,0 0 0 miles,
2 5 5 8 611 11-15
runs g re a t $ 2 5 0 0
1 97 8 LO TU S Espmt R are h a n d -b u ilt E n g
tra n -
lish e x o tic , m id e n g in e 5 speed
soxle,
$14 9 5 0
2 4 4 2314 3 4 3 I4 8 6 11-15
te m fic h o n d lm g
fast
75 V O L V O 164E N e w M ichelm s, n e w
e xhaust system $ 9 5 ,0 0 0 miles N e e d s
u p h o lste ry
4 5 3
5 8 5 0 11-13
runs g re a t
$ 2 5 0 0
1 978 H O N D A Cisne CVCC, b lu e A C ,
A M /E M stereo cassette, o n e o w n e r w /
m a n u a l g o o d c o n d itio n , runs w e ll o n ly
$ 1 4 5 0 C o ll 4 7 6 9 0 6 ! 11 15
1982 B M W 73 3 i A ll o p tio n s, m int c o n d i
tio n $16 5 0 0 915 6 9 8 3941
9 1 5 /6 9 2
0 4 1 0 11-13
1969 V W S q u a re b a c k D o e sn 't run, but
engm e o k a y G re a t C hnstm as p ro te c t
$ !5 0 /b e s t o ffe r 4 8 2 8 8 1 6 11-18
19 79 M G 8 R oocbtor, 5 7 0 0 0 m ÜM, t w w
top. W e b e r c a rb u ra to i headers, fre sh ly
tuned a n d in e x ce lle n t co n d itio n 4 5 3
4 8 9 9 11 18
BEAT THE C hnstm os
M id g e l rre a m p u ff See a n d m ake o ffe r
8 3 5 4 2 1 0 11 '8
rush
78 M G
’ 9 8 4 D A T S U N 300Z X , m int c o n d itio n ,
black, 2 0 .0 0 0 miles, w in d o w tint, k e p t in
g a ra g e $ 1 3 ,9 5 0 4 4 7 1128 4 4 7 2 4 5 9
1115
1978 H O N D A CIVIC $ 8 0 0 5 8 0 0 0 m iles
runs
some b o d y d a m a q e 4 5 2
5 6 6 9 11-15
fine
79 TO Y O T A Célica GT 5-speed A M FM
new hres a n d battery, $ 2 2 0 0 n e q o tia b le
4 7 6 620 1 o r 3 8 8 2 7 2 9 11-19
7 9 TRIUMPH S pitfire G re a t c o n d itio n
33 0 0 0 a n g in a l miles British
ra c in g
g reen $3SO O /best o ffe r 4 5 9 3 5 3 3
15
I I
82 CELICA GT E xce lle nt c o n d itio n
G re a t stereo 4 7 2 6 4 8 8 11-19
30 — Trucks-Vans
l IKE N E W Bndgestone ra d ia l tire size R
15 plus 5 lug truck w h e e l $ 3 5 O B O
4 7 2 9 6 0 2 1113
6 0 — P a rts -
Accessories
F O R E IG N A U IO PARTS n e w & u tw l,
most m okes and m odels, o p e n 2 d a y s/
w eek
IB M Partswerks 4 5 3 6 6 6 3
II
LIKE N E W fin d g e s to r
15, plus 5 -lug truck \
4 7 ? 9 6 0 2 11-13
e rodtal hre size R
'heel S35 0 8 0
70 — Motorcycles
EXPERT M O TO R CY CLE sales a n d service
fo r o v e r 3 5 years Lo w o verhead, lo w
pnces S cooters scooters scooters End
o f season sole m ake o ffe r on 8 5 s Aus
tin H o n d a . 1901 E 1st 4 7 6 7 5 4 7 U 27
8 2 SECA Y om oho C a n d y A p p le red
4 0 0 cc Looks runs g re a t $ 8 0 0 best o f
far
11-13
TRANSFERABLE W A R R A N TY Purchased
new M a y 8 5
Electnc
miles,
lea ve m essage 11 22
like new Best o ffe r 3 3 5 1410
starter a n d e x c e lle n t tires 1100
82 Suzuki G S 3001
Y AM AHA MOPED 82 fa n than 1300
miles $ 2 7 5 o r best o ffe r 4 6 7 1782 11
15
H O N D A PASSPORT
Helmet, 441 6 3 3 4 11 15
"81, 70cc. $ 2 6 0
R IAL ESTATE SALES
120 — Houses
HEMPHILL PARK. Unique 3-21'? in one of
Austin's charming, o lde r neighborhoods.
Ideal location fo r UT professionals. A n
derson CaHisle Realtors, 343-1144
3 4 5 -8 3 5 4 11 13
LO W D O W N I Convenient 3 1 new roof-
corpet paint! Tiled bath den-entry! Laun
dry ro o m , storage shed, fence, morel
O w ner financing! Hurry! Celebrate the
holidays in your ow n home 4 4 3 -3 7 4 2
11-15
130 — Condos -
Townhouses
F H A
a s s u m p tio n ,
LARGE T O W N H O U S E SE, n o n q u a lify -
in g
lV ? B A ,
p o o l, w a s h e r/d ry e r in c lu d e d
fire p la c e
$ 2 0 0 0 d o w n
$ 6 4 7 /m o N o c lo s in g
costs 1 o c re o f g re e n b e lt a t b a c k d o o r
2 6 6 2 5 8 9 11-13
2BR
TARRYT0WNC0ND0
2-1, $56,900, designer touches,
secured financing Pnvate, quiet
com plex
3 2 7 -
467-9811
64 55
MEISLER
11-19
140 — M obile Hom es-
Lots
1979 WAYSIDE mobile home. 14x60,
furnished, CA/CH, appliances
located
m UT mobile home p a r i 4 74 8 6 8 ? 11-
18_______
^ EOT 2BR 2BA, W /D , storage shed,
BEAUTIFUL 1984 Fleetwood 14'x56', all
electnc, AC, cedar w all in Irving room
$11,500 Days, 472 7247. nights, 2 5 9
________
3066_ 11 13
MERCHANDISE
190 — Appliances
W O R K IN G REFRIGERATORS, $ 75 and
up Gas and electnc stoves, $ 65 and up
Washers ond dryers, $85 and up 440-
0313 11-14
KENMORE WASHER with Permanent
Press, $100 Also dryer, $100 Excellent
condition. I will deliver 3 39 -9 2 0 8 , N
Lamar 11 18
200 — Furniture-
Household
SALE O AK desk, metal dresser with mir
ror; $35 each 6-draw er chest, $65
Coll Micheál Lofton, 4 77 -0 99 7 , 478-
2 797, 2021 M onor Rd 11-27
CARPET REMNANTS room size, $40-
$130 Car mats, 50< Truckbed remnants,
$8 Repairs restretching 8 3 5 -5 2 4 2 11-
12________________________________
SOFA/LOVESEAT/recliner—o il three for
$250. Coll 442-1575, after 6pm or
weekends 11-14
WATERBED PRACTICALLY new, queen-
size
$150 Cindy, 453-1532, 474-
6 6 0 8 11-13
BAR WITH 4 stool, $ 80 Upright freezer,
$75 Antique Singer sewing machine,
$145 Coll 244 9 6 9 4 11-13
SOFA BED, goo d condition, brow n $65
4 5 3 -4 3 0 9 11 13
TEAK BEDROOM set, includes dresser,
mirror, bedside table, stereo cobinet,
bedframe, mattress and boxspnngs
$ 430. Coll 4 6 9 -9 4 6 0 , leave messoqe
11-13
SOFAS A N D loveseots by Massaud ond
Ayers Accent chairs, end tables ond o t
tom an Excellent condition from $75
$ 2 0 0 Call after 9 30pm 3 4 6 -6 0 5 0 11-
15______
SOFA WITH queen siz*e sleeper N e w
$ 4 0 0 Asking $ 2 5 0 Leave message,
478-3130, days. 11-15
NEED A twin bed? $25 fo r quick sole
Call Frank, evenings, 3 4 5 -5 9 0 3 11-15
CARPET REMNANTS— room size, $40-
$130 Car mats, 50c Truckbed remnants
$8 Repoirs-restretchinq 8 3 5 -5 2 4 2 11-
19
210 — Steroo-TV
M O RANTZ SP1230 speaker system, port
ed 3 -w ay speaker with 12" w oofer, ou
tomatic overdrive with LED indicator; m i
drange, tweeter level controls Excellent
condition, paid $ 6 0 0 sell for $ 2 7 5 835 -
0112 11-13
DBX 118 Dynamic Range Expander First
$ 80 takes, 835-0112 11-13
two
PIONEER STEREO
speakers All
like
new $ 2 0 0 3 4 3 -8 7 5 5 ,4 8 2 1995 11-13
receiver ond
in g oo d condition,
P A N A S O N IC STEREO/tape/speokers
Excellent condition $180 451 9 6 2 3 11-
13
PHASE LINEAR 4 0 0 0 pream p, $ 6 3 0
new, current value $ 280, asking $140
Sounds excellent 4 7 4 -6 6 3 9 11-15
SONY STR V X 550 receiver PS-LX510
turntable R M -57 5 0 remote control A ll
pieces new, $ 7 7 5 Asking $ 4 5 0 Leave
message, 478 -3 13 0 days 11-15
ATARI 5 2 0 0 video game system with 20
?ome cartridges N e w $425, asking
190 Has brok en controllers Leave mes
sage, 4 78-3130 11-15
CAR STEREO B O N A N Z A Sony A M /F M
Auto Reverse Cassette w /D d b y ond A l
pine 8 0 watt EQ oil for only $150, a
$ 5 0 0 savings 4 4 4 -3 0 6 9 11-19
MACINTO SH RENTALS D aily/w eeklv/
monthly For
4 7 2 -5 8 3 3 11-15
in form ation call
further
SAVE A bundle Macintosh 512K dual
disk 14"
Imagewnter pnnter, $ 2 9 5 0
Call 2 4 4 -6 7 2 7 afte r 5pm Ask fo r Kevin
11-13
_____________
230 — Photo-
Cameras
PENTAX IX, Contox RTS I! systems. M any
lenses Complete Beseler color d ark
room Must liquidate! 4 7 7 -9 0 6 0 $ 3 0
5 0 0 11-15
240 — Boats
large, $ 3 7 5 new,
DRY SUITS-imaH,
$175 each 9"8". 9"2'' Custom
ta il
boards, soils, $ 2 5 0 eoch 4 7 6 -4 3 0 9 /
4 9 9 -5 3 7 3 11-13________________
WEST W IN D custom boards; 9"2", tw o
8 '6 " $ 3 5 0 ; N eil Pryd# soils 3.7, 4 0, 4.4
$180 9 26-1834 11-18_________
Instrum ents
FENDER 75 omp, $500, Rickenbacker
4001 boss, $450, IBM typewriter, $95;
Kuger
Ruger 3 5 7 Magnum, $ 3 0 0 2 8 2 -3 4 6 5
11-13
FOR SALE Rickenbacker 4001 S a tt Gui
tor $ 4 0 0 4 95 3221 11-19_____________
350 — Rental Services
m%4
r A p a r t n n " !
m Selector.
S itu s - 1 9 5 9 . o u r Ires* s t-rv ic t* hm q in d iv id u a ls
a n d < < ir |X tr a liiin s l i x a tv a p a r t m e n t h o m e s W e h a n d le m a n v
u n a d v e r t is e d s|»er ia ls
N o rth /N W /R o u n d rc x k
451-2223
8 5 0 1 -B u r n e t R d.
C e n tr a l/N E /N o r th
474-6357
S o u th /S o u th w e s t
441-2277
2 2 1 9 W B en W h ite B lvd
U T /R iv e rs id e
445-0005
Professional Apt. Locating Help
GARDEN GATE
APARTMENTS
C O C O
MOVE IN TODAY!
NOW PRELEASING FOR JAN. 1
220 — Computers-
Equipment
360 — Furn. Apts.
$ 75 00 4 77 -3 1 24 1113
250 — Musical
#
V
0 *'
L u x u r y 1 B R F u r n is h e d
2222 R io G ran d e
476-4992
typewriter, one
BROTHER ELECTRIC
touch corrections, with core, like new,
$150 A lan home computer 32K, lo b of
extras, $ 5 0 Bell Mognum 3 helmet,
S40 C ra ig 3 4 3 -6 7 8 8 11 18
A N Y SIZE or cut loose diom ond o r col
ored stone Wholesale prices/40- 70%
o ff
8 3 3 0 Burnet David Kendall, Dia
mond Broker Viso-MC, 335-1213 ony-
twne 12-11_____________
FUN, HANDPAINTED mod sweatshirts!
Various colors and sizes. $ 24 G reat
gifts Call 4 76-1533 11-18
FOR SALE Chinese Happy Coats G reat
fo r Christmas gifts S15-S30 Coll 479 -
0509 11-19
NOVELTY ITEMS
AIDS REPELLENT— Paranoid of Bars,
Churches, Silverware?!
Fighl AIDS-Raphobio with this fra
grant spray, Purse size— $4 95, Party
size— $6 95
AIDS SURVIVAL KIT
Everything for the ultimate phobic, T-
shirt included— $19 95
T-SHIRT
"STOP AIDS HAVE SEX ALONE"
$10 95 S/M/L/XL
$2 0 0 Shipping
Paranoia Inc., P O Box 9696, Pana
ma City Beach, Florida 3 2 4 0 7
CATALOG OF SURVIVAL— $2 0 0
RENTAL
S|IIHIIIINMnilllllNMHIIHraNH|
RENTAL
!
HOTLINE
Condos • Apartments
Ask Us About
_
Free Month Rent
s
Specials1
S
Call:
477-5312
I
imimiituinmnnnniumniiil
360 — Furn. Apts.
Villa
Orleans
206 W. 38th
El Cid Apts.
3704 Speedway
Hurry! I have
only 3 apartments
available:
1-1 $420 All Bills Paid
1-1 $370 + Electric
1-1 $345 + Electric
Call Lori
at 452-3314
IMPROVE YOUR
GRADES!
Rent A Quiet Place To Study
Before Final Exams
O ne Bedroom Near Shuttle
$325 f E
Call: 459-1597
GREAT O AK- 1 block low school Spo
clous, quiet 2-2, ceiling fons, CA/CH,
pool $ 6 0 0 /m o 2 9 0 0 Swisher, 477
3 388, 4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 11-13
W EST C A M P U S IBR, gas ond w a te r paid
AC, parking, shuttle, pool, new ly carpet
ed Reasonable rates. 1 007 W 26th
Tony, 4 7 9 - 0 3 6 5 11-13
12-16
All Bills Paid
$335-$450
Efficiencies, IBR, 2BR
Walk or shuttle to UT
2212 San Gabriel
474-7732 452-4639
12-16
$285 + E
W e ora looking for quiet, conscien
tious nonsmoking students interested
in o large efficiency in Hyde Pork.
CA/CH, laundry, deadbolts, no pets.
458-2488
12-10
$285 + E
W e ore looking for quiet, conscien
tious nonsmoking students interested
in a large efficiency in Hyde Park.
CA/CH, laundry, deadbolts, no pets.
11-13
458-2488
12-10
SHANTI APTS.
3304 Red River
Large 1 bedroom apartment
available. Walk-shuttle UT.
Fully
furnished, CA/CH,
pool.
$ Saving Rates
479-8139
453-2363
COTTAGE CHARM
Efficiencies and (BR apartments in p a rt sef
hng Fully furnished shuttle route 2 city bus
routes, laundry room Starting at $ 2 8 0
E
KENSING TO N SQUARE CLOSE TO CAM
PUS O N E WEEK FREE RENTI For more info,
call W yatt at 4 7 6 2633. after 6 p m and
weekends 441 0 3 8 5
WARWICK
APARTMENTS
2 9 0 7 W est A ve.
L e a se mom mmd R eceive
* m e t k . FREE ELECTRICITY
a p a r t m e n t s ,
G a r z l . a
t a l l y
la a d a c a p a d n rtfti p o o l a a d
w a t e r f a l l . B a r - B Q e e
p it s .
L a r p e 2 b a d /2 b a t b a a d 1 b a d
r o o a r t a l l y f a r w ia b a d . C e i l i n g
f a n e l a e a c b r o o m .
2 Bedroom $585 + electric
1 Bedroom $395 + electric
474-7426
444-2750
♦
WALK TO
CAMPUS
DOS RIOS
2818 GUADALUPE
NEW!
.
BR 1 BA— Covered parking, ▼
individual washer/ 4
^ micro wove,
▲ dryer, ceiling
fans, CA/CH, ^
a
14 78 -427 1
♦
♦
Available now. ▲
474-0971 4
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
i m p m r a n
Alpine Forest
■H B ieneies
(Furnished or
Unfurnished)
• Newly Remodeled
• Shuttle to UT Campus
• A/C & Appliances
• Laundry Room
• Lota of Parking
4558 Ave. A
454-8903
LARGE EFFICIENCY, 38th an d Ave. B;
$ 2 9 0 *■ E, loft efficiency, we$t UT canv
pui, $ 4 3 5 + utilities. H o w ell Properties.
4 7 7 - 9 9 7 5 11-21 ________________
HALF M O N T H fre e rent. W est campus
lorae efficiencies. All appliances, carpel
a n a drapes, pool, laundry, a n d on-site
m an ag er $ 3 3 5
Call D avid M e N e a l
C o , 4 7 8 - 3 5 3 3 o r 4 7 6 - 8 5 9 0 11-25
W A LK T O campus. Large IBR 1BA +
study Buses, m any extras $ 3 2 5 /m o .
Coll D arlen e at 4 5 2 -1 3 8 7 .1 2 -1 6
3 60 — Furn. Apts.
THE
305
APTS.
NO Fair Offer
Refused
NO 1 st Months Rent
Make Your Best Offer
And Be Reedy To...
Move In Today
459-4977
Davis & Associates
HYDE PARK
12 OAKS APTS
One Bedroom furnished/unfurnished,
ceiling
laundry room,
$3 3 0 /$ 3 1 0 + E 301 West 39th,
45 2 -7 4 5 4
fons, pool,
$100,00 discount
____________________________ 11-70
1 BEDROOM
$325
Secluded, imoN, quiet complex in pork
like letting. Nicely furnished ond car
peted 6 0 9 East 45th Street, 453-
1418,451-6533.
CENTRAL PROPERTIES, IN r
11-25
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
♦
r ►
WALK TO CAMPUS]
♦ RIO NUECES ♦
♦
600 W. 26
♦
1 & 2 bedrooms 4
♦
furnished
▼ Furnished, Balconies. Security,
J
$ 2 Shuttle Stops, Plus electric
4
6
Available Now
A
4 474-0971 474-1004 4
FLEUR-DE-Lis Aportments, 4 0 6 E 30th
m an a g e r in # 2 0 6 1 block north o f cam
pus Large IBR fo r $ 3 9 0 . C all John, 4 7 8 -
1 6 3 4 11-13
__________________
1 BLOCK west UT. la r g e IBR apartm ent,
large yord, built-in bookshelves, storage
closet, quiet m ature individual. N o pets
4 7 4 -1 2 1 2 12-5
HYDE PARK efficiencies, near shuttle, gas
ond w a te r paid $ 2 7 5 - 3 0 0 /m o
4 5 2 -
3 5 9 0 11-26
_______________
ST M O R IT Z Apts - 8 0 0 W 25th Pool
side efficiency, large balcony ovedooks
2 5th St $ 3 6 5 r elec Coll 4 7 6 - 4 0 6 0
a fter 7pm or leave message 12-2
W EST C A M P U S Furnished Efficiency
$ 3 0 0 /m o n th , $ 1 2 5 deposit 910 W 26th
on shuttle C om e by or call 4 7 8 - 1 3 5 0 a f
ter 4pm weekdays, all day weekends 11-
22
3 0 0 0 G U A D A LU PE 1 BR, 1 BA Ceiling
fans, patio W alk to campus A vailable
im m ediately 4 5 4 -4 6 2 1 .1 1 -1 5
911 B L A N C O Large 1-1 near dow ntown,
dishwasher, huge closet, n ear bus/shuttle
$ 3 5 0 , Electricity 4 7 7 -4 1 0 7 12-16
ENFIELD AREA— 1515 Palm a Plaza
Large 2-1, all appliances, laundry roo,
block to shuttle. $ 4 6 5
electricity Call
3 9 7 2 5 7 6 11-19
LUXURY C O N D O 1-1 furnished E 45th
a nd S p eed w ay O n shuttle Pets o.k. 4 5 0 -
0 2 0 8 K eep trying! C all Late 1 2 -6
370 — Unf. Apts.
N E W LY R EM O D ELED efficiencies, 1 and
2BR Some with fireplaces and skylights
Convenient north centrol location. N e a r
IF shuttle 2 pools $ 2 9 5 - 4 5 5 + E
$10 0
off 1st month's rent 4 5 1 -4 5 6 1 , 4 4 2 -
4 0 7 6 .1 1 -1 4 __________
HYDE PARK special $ 1 5 0 off 1st month's
rent Large efficiencies. All oppliances,
carpet, drapes, pool, laundry, an d gas
ond w a te r p aid
C all David
M c N e o l C o , 4 7 8 - 3 5 3 3 or 4 5 8 - 8 8 9 3
11-25
$ 315.
B A R G A IN HU NTERS delight 2BR 1BA,
amenities, 50" pool, spo, pool table, vol
leyball, ciolhing o p tio n a l security, 3btks
rent, 9 0 d ay
to shuttle, $ 3 5 0 monthly
lease, availab le n o w (5 1 2 )4 7 6 -5 8 7 5 11-
12______________________
NEAR IF shuttle. N ice IBR apartm en t in
small com plex. G as ond w a te r paid
Pool. $ 3 2 0 + E 4 5 3 -7 5 1 4 , 4 4 2 - 4 0 7 6 .
11-14
B R O W N S T O N E PARK Apts is now leas
ing 1 and 2BR $ 3 4 0 - 4 6 5 + E. G as ond
w a te r p aid 2 pools. First stop in IF shut-
He 4 5 4 - 3 4 9 6 , 4 4 2 - 4 0 7 6 11-14
T A R R Y T O W N ALL bills p aid 1-1 $ 4 3 5 ,
2-1 $ 5 9 0 2 6 0 6 Enfield, m an ag er apt
» 7 4 7 2 - 0 8 2 8 o r 4 7 4 -1 1 0 0 11-13
T A R R Y TO W N LARGE 2 -2 $ 5 0 0 ; water,
2 6 0 0 Enfield, m a n a g e r
gas p aid .
opartm ent # 7 . 4 7 2 - 0 8 2 8 o r 4 7 4 -1 1 0 0 .
11-13
IBR U N F U R N IS H E D apartm ent, 4 0 7 W
3 8 th St. $ 3 0 0 - $ 3 2 5 Coll 4 6 7 -6 0 5 2 .1 1 -
18
________________________
N O R T H O F UT O n shuttle o r w alking
distance Efficiency, $ 2 7 0 - $ 2 9 5
$ 2 9 5 - $ 3 2 0 .
$ 4 0 0
2BR,
4 5 2 - 4 5 1 6 ,4 5 3 -8 8 1 2 11-20
IBR,
4 7 7 -2 2 1 4 ,
360 — Furn. Apts.
TIMBERWOOD
APARTMENTS
N O 1st Months Rent
N O Furniture Charge
N O Shuttle Problems
WE ARE
ON TOP
OF CAMPUS.
M OVE IN
TODAY!
• Large Eff.
• Finest Location
in UT Area
• Shuttle or Walk
to Campus
• Fireplace
BETTER
HURRY!
26th & San Gabriel
4 9 9 - 8 7 1 2
$100 Deposit
Newly Renovated 1 &
2 Bedrooms with
F ire p la c e s , F ro n t
Door Parking. Gas
Utilities Paid. Just A
Few Left!
Call N o w . . .
454-2636
1 A N D 2
Bedroom Apartments $330-
$435/m o n th . G as /H eat
paid. Call 478-7963.
12-3
ENFIELD
1 and 2 Bedrooms
1200 ENFIELD RD
478-7963
12-3
Cattynea*
Sféupte
8 0 0 8 . Congress
These spacious one bed-1
room apartments have
large closets and storage
rooms Amenities include
Swimming pool. Hot tub.
Ceiling Fans On U T
Shuttle and City bus
ro ute s. These a p a rt
ments have been com
pletely remodeled Prices
s ta rt at $ 4 0 0
472-1893
$ FALL SPECIAL
$300 ★RENT SAVINGS
★ l MONTH FREE RENT
Large 1 and 2 bedroom apartments
Immediate move-in. Foculty, staff, and
students welcome. UT shuttle, 24 hr.
security, laundry facilities, quiet neigh
borhood, walk to major shopping
center. For more details coll 454-
25 3 7 or 4 5 4 -2 5 3 8
1200 Broadmoor
11-15
37500 + E
Large one bedroom with study W e
ore looking for a quiet, conscientious,
nonsmoking individual or couple in
terested
in a small complex near
Northcross. Private potio, fully carpet
ed, draped, CA/CH, laundry, dead
bolt No pets
458-2488
12-2
COBBLESTONE APTS.
HOLIDAY BONUS
1 and 2 bedroom opts; $325
and up. Easy move-in
terms.
Community
living, UT shuttle,
Capital Plaza, pets okay. 452-
1 2 - 1 0
.
1-1
Fireplace — ceiling fans.
900 E. 51st. Call 478-
7963.
12-3
KITTIES ARE FOR KIDS
Family anvironmant, (2) courtyards poolside
wrtkr haatad spo & racraotion room, quiat sida
with p*cntc orao, btlta padttng ond vollaybott
Entire complax security ond clothing optional
Apartm ent size and housebroken pats of
low ed with $150 pat deposit 2 bdrm * $350,
1 Bdrms from $ 2 9 5 N o gimmicks just reason
able rent 4 7 6 5875
12-16
O N E HALF month's free rent in Novem
IBR near S Lamar and O lto rf
ber
Sectton 8 welcome M onthly rent only
$ 3 2 5 Coll 452 1387 11-13___________
I-1, $ 3 2 5 w / V? month's free rent in N o
vember N e ar S. Lamar and OHorf Coll
4 52-1387 11-13
SECTION 8 welcome. A re you certified
*or a IBR with the Austin Housing Au
-hority? O ur apartments ore near S
.am or and OHorf Call 4 52-1387 11-13
ENFIELD ROAD -Large 1 bedroom studio
on shuttle Appliances, ample closets
N o pets $ 37 5 4 5 3 6 67 3, 4 7 8 -9 7 6 7
1-14
'A/EST CAMPUS neighborhood 1 b r car
pet, CH/CA, off street parking A p p li
ances Block shuttle patios and balconies
Tower view Tile both
3 4 5 -3 7 5 * E
472 -2 27 3 .1 1 14_____________
PRE-LEASE efficiency fo r spring semester-
-walk to campus from very unique, e x
tensively restored "turn o f the century"
small, cozy opartment house A ll new
plumbing, wiring, flooring, heating and
to o lin g systmes, brass ceiling fans, tall
ceilings, stained w ood w o rk and cabine
t ry, ond more $ 36 5 4 5 9 -9 0 9 5 11-27
O NE BEDROOM- five minutes university
dow ntow n Zilker Gas w ater heat paid,
l>erfect condition 4 7 2 -5 5 5 6 , eve/w knd
I I-1 5__________
IJT AREA, large 1-1, all appliances includ
ing microwove, pool 2 4 0 4 Longview
T 3 85 per month Call 4 5 2 -9 3 5 7 o r 892
3644 11-20
HELP! GRADUATING! Please take over
ease fo r fantastic 2 ’/J opt S Austin Call
Suson 4 4 0 -0 2 8 5 11-13
LARGE EFFICIENCIES with built-in kitcTT
ens, laundry facilities and pool Close
to
buslines. Furnished and unfurnished
Small pets welcome with deposit 453 -
5 73 7 11-21
RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts.
lllllllllllllllllimillllllllllllllll
ACT IV
A p a r t m e n t s
N O Rent Due Till
Nov. 1
N O Furniture Charge
Make Your Best
O ffer and Be
Ready To Move In.
• 1 BR Furn.
$ 3 5 0 + E
• Near Law
School
• Shuttle Bus
at Corner
3311 Red River
474-8125
iiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiuiiinuiii
NO Rent Till Nov. 1
NO Furniture Charge
NO Hassle, Small
Friendly Complex
S o r r y , O n l y
4 L e f t
3818 Guadalupe
,4 8 9 - 1 6 6 4
TANGLEWOOD
NORTH
APARTMENTS
THIS WEEK —
NO 1 st Months Rent
NO Furniture Charge
NO Qualified Applicant
Rejected
«
Sorry, OniyJS' 2 Apts.
L e ft For This Deal
We Pay All Your
A/C and Heating
1 0 2 0 E. 45th
452-0060
Professionally Managed by Davis & Assoc.
H O O V E R VA C U U M , $ 2 0 GE to o st.ro
ven $ 2 5 Both g o o d condition 451-
9 6 2 3 11 13
CALL 471 -5244
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED A0
130 — Condos-Townhouses
O N E L E IG H
2409 Leon
New Condos for Sale or Lease
Available Now
The S
eli gh is a newly constructed condominium project con
sisting of 26 spacious units. These 1-1, 2-2, and 3-3 floorplans are
vai able now for immediate occupancy. Besides having less than a
block from the WC Shuttle stop, the Stoneleigh provides
many outstanding amenities which include a pool, roof sundeck,
elevator, security system, covered parking, decks, wonderful
views of Austin and a full appliance package.
451-8249
COOK CONSTRUCTION
474-7628
Project open 10-5 Mon.-Fri and 1-5 Sat & Sun.
Well Give You
A Deal That YouH
Thank Us Fori
W e Feature: Swimming pool, Ceiling fans, Gas/
water paid, Laundry facilities on site, On site
management/maintenance. Easy access to I-H-
35 & Mooac.
$100 Discount on 1st Months Is a t
El Campo
305 W 39th Street
F urn ish e d
U n fu rn ish e d
LaPaz
401 W. 39th St.
Fu rn ish e d
U n fu rn ish e d
El Dorado
3501 Speedway
Furnished
Unfurnished
1 Bdrm. 1 Ba — Unf. $320-$330
Furn $345-$355
2 Bdrm. 1 Ba.—Unf. $420
Furn. $455
IT S OCR ATTITUDE
THAT HAKES THE DIFFERENCE.
We Listen To What
You Can Pay, Then We
Lease To Meet Your
Pocket-Book
NO 1st Months Rent
NO Furniture Charge
NO Hassle—Just Friendly
Professionals
NO Reasonable Offer Rejected
We Will Beat Any Offer to Qualified Prospects
On — 1 or 2 Bedroom Units.
Willow Creek
Hills
Apartments
MOVÍ IN TODAY!
1911 HWtowcree*
Davis & Assoc. Managem ent Co.
A s p e n w o o d
A p a r t m e n t s
MOVE M TODAY!
T H IS W EEK—
NO 1st Months’s Rent
NO Furniture Charge, Free! Wow!
NO Transportation Problems,
Shuttle At Front Door
I W ill Give You The Best
Apartment Deal in U.T. Country,
TH IS WEEK ONLY.
4 5 3 9 G u M d m iu p e 4 5 2 - 4 4 4 7
47 2-4 8 9 3 ft 4 5 2-8 5 3 7
Professionally managed by Johnston Properties, Inc.
l444-0010
444-0014
lasstcal ond mpr-. vised styles 4 5 3
Col! italics 4 5 9 H 2 0 11-21
RENTAL
RENTAL
400 — C o n d o s-
T ow nhouses
A N N O U N C E M E N T S
E D U C A T IO N A L
SERV ICES
SE RV IC E S
E M P L O Y M E N T
E M P L O Y M E N T
435 — C o -o p s
530 — Travel-
590 — Tutoring
7 5 0 - T y p i n g
750 — T y p in g
790 — Part Time
790 -
Part Time
The Dd / Tex an /vef Jr
□ a v N (
/rrihf/r 13 1385 Page 13
RENTAL
3 7 0 — Unf. Apts.
LARGE 1 BEDROOMS 3 floor plan,
laundry facilities and pool SmaH pet,
welcome with deposit 9 2 6 2142 11 21
1-1, go o d location on UT shuttle $315
month CaR 4 5 3 - 3 5 2 0 11 21
D A R L IN G E F F IC IE N C Y ^ lorq»
',1*,,,.
quiet Gav/water paid laundry busline
8501 Dryfield $ 2 8 0 8 3 5 0 4 5 2 251
5 9 4 5 12-9
l a r g e , s p o t l e s s r ^ T T u * ^ ;
$ 3 2 5 $ 3 5 5 Q uiet
protect
5 9 4 5 12 9
privately o w ned
2 9 2 6 Mullen 451 0 0 2 6 251
D IS C O U N T $ 3 8 2 1 B R . T V b a , ¡ S T S
ng fon, fireplace, security, shoppmq
bus M i AHen 4 6 3 4 0 7 9 4 5 3 20 9 4 11
15
O N E B E D R O O M efficiency
41 0 3
Speedw ay See m anagei. apt # 1 0 3
4105 Sp ee d w ay 451 4 9 9 II 18
Í 5 M O N T H S RE N T F R K l Large 1-1, new
carpet, one block from RR Only $ 315
4 6 7 - 6 5 0 8 11-13
EFFIC IEN C Y N E A R laundromat shuttle
Speedw ay and 38th $ 2 7 5
4 7 4 6205, 4 7 8 -6 2 0 1 11 25
bill,
G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T Block from law
ichool AC, new paint floor coverings
appliance!, and mini blinds Use '2 go
rage areo $ 3 7 5 t utilities Call 39 7
2 5 7 6 11-19
VERY N IC E 2 2, ga s paid walk to cam
pus, pool and hot tub, 4 7 4 7 5 4 0 11-26
T A R R Y T O W Ñ A R E A la r g e 1BR studio on
shuttle All appliances ample closet,
$ 3 75/mo 4 5 3 - 6 6 7 3 , 4 7 8 9 7 6 7 1118
380 — Furn. D u plexes
D O V V N T O W N L A R G E 1-1 A C pan
eled, carport UT 17 blocks $ 3 0 0 8 9 '9
Ramey 4 7 2 - 2 0 9 7 , 4 7 8 5 7 3 9 12 16
390 — Unf. D u plexes
B A R G A IN RENTl 2 blocks
1BA duplex, will fix up 4 7 6 4851
6510 12-6
UT 2BR
4 7 8
W EST A U S T IN Deluxe 3-2 duplex "vath
fireplace Perfect condition 3 0 0 6 M a y
w ood Circle $ 9 7 5 4 7 2 - 6 2 0 6 or 4 7 7
8811 11-13
DU PLEX N E A R shuttle, 2-2, carpets,
E, 1901A
drapes, no pets $ 4 2 0 •
Valley Hill, 4 4 2 -8 3 7 7 , 2 8 2 - 0 9 3 5 1115
Y O U 'LL BE first to en|oy completely re
decorated 3-1; CA/CH, all tile bath
kitchen appliances including dishwasher
new carpet covered corpoit Shuttle
bus 9 2 5 E 41 N o pets $ 5 0 0 4 7 2
9 5 0 2 12-4
C E N T R A L
L O C A T I O h T ^ r P n rL
Large, beautifully remodeled 2 2 CA/
CH,
appliances Bargain $ 5 5 0 4 7 9
6153 N o pets 11-26
N E A R L A W school--5 0 6 Harris Ave 3-
2 hreplace fans, C H / C A appliances
$ 9 0 0 Kirksey le vy Realtor 451 0 0 7 2
12-6
2-1 AC, refngerotor near shuttle $4 75
mo 3 8 ’9th and M a p le w o o d Clear
Rock Properties. 335-1151 11-27
R E M O D E L E D 1-1 duplex. 2 blocks from
UT hard w ood floors ceiling fans, w d
$ 4 5 0 3 2 7 -5 7 6 7 . nights weekends 12
16
400 — C o n d o s-
T o w n h ou se s
UT C A M P U S condo, IBR l'9 B A Fire
place
$ 6 75 /m o
Square 4 7 4 0 8 0 6 ask for Stacey 12 2
large windows high ceilings
Preservation
utilities
•
B O U L D IN A N D West Annie, |ust off Bar
ton Springs Rd , new large 3/2 s, CA/
C H ceiling fans $ 5 9 5 $ 6 2 5 Tony 47 7.
7800, 441 2 8 3 7 11-20
VERY LA R G E 3-2, fireplace all appli
anees pool, sauna clubhouse near Wil
liam C onnon/IH -35 $ 5 6 5 / M o no de
posit With g o o d references 3 4 6 - 4 3 9 2
12-5
2-2 C O N D O Ceiling fans, fireplace W
D, microwave O n shuttle 3 5 0 6 Speed
way $ 7 5 0 / mo Free rent til end of
month 453-3611 11-27
FREE REN T— LUXU RY C O N D O M , N .
U M S near Honcock Center Appliances
fireplace ceiling Ian, adequate storage
from $ 3 4 5 A R C H P ROPERTIES 4 6 7
2 3 7 7 12-16
A V E B shuttle, new 3-2 enerqy efficient
CA/CH, fans, appliances g a ra g e W 'D
yord, $ 7 9 5 3 4 5 9 4 4 2 11-21
C O N D O FO R leose Very clean IBR 1BA
furmshed. Between G uodalupe and
30th St $375/m o. 2 5 5 - 8 5 3 2 . 1 M 5
'W EST A U ST IN /d o w n to w n -110 6 W 6 th
St aw ard winning one bedroom
l '/2
bath condominium. Spectacular views
from three d ecks $ 7 0 0 2 8 2 9661 12 6
F O R S P R IN G luxury con d o unfurnished
2BR. 2B A CA/CH, W/D, security, hre
place, microwave O n IF shuttle route,
3 2 n d and Sp ee d w ay $7 50 /m o •
E
4 7 7 r1271 11-13
FULL M O N T H heel 2 2 condo G o r
geous large floorplan, W /D, fireplace
Central Martha, J B G o o d w in 4 4 3
8101 11 13
L E N N O X -luxury and
THE
location
fhree units available on a short term
lease for spring Call 4 7 2 6198 for de
tails. 12-9
2 B E D R O O M 2 BATH condo $ 575/m o
elec Microwave, washer, dryer,
pool, hot tub, tennis court N e a r River
side 4 6 3 3 2 26 , W ayne, or 3 8 5 8879,
M elissa 11 22
W A L K T O ÜT, west campus, 1-1 luxury
condo, available now, hot tub, mi
crowave, security, A a ro n 451 1618 1115
A V E B, shuttle, new 3 2, energy efficient,
CA/CH, fans, appliances, garage, W /D
yord, $ 7 9 5 3 4 5 9 4 4 2 11-21
jP R IN G 2-2 Lenox luxury condo, W
23rd, oil appliances, pool, hot tub, securi
ty. covered parking and more $ 8 5 0 0 0 /
month 4 9 9 0 0 4 3 11-26
x - O N D O 2-2, new large for 3 to 4 room
mates, ceilina fan, vaulted ceilings, w/d,
microwave. Forge walk in closet, shuttle
oute, hot tub $ 8 5 0 0 0
* elec Scott
:h n s 4 9 5 -9 1 7 0 11 19
370 — Unf. Apts.
4
r
I
$
T
T
f
4
' r
Í
á
T
4
y
CONDOMIMIMS
On [wo
Ml
Í
S h u t t l e R o u t e s
I a rg e 0 n e H n | fl„„n ,
riul Ivtn Bcilftxitih
Starting at $340
• i- . :
• I v
• K ik h r -M !
• Assigned Purimg
• N
• Jacuzzi
1
4
4
y
A*
C
V
J
' I J
f \ ( l I ( t
l \ m ( t ila lt
lOliorl Burleson KnjJ
T
ft
t t '
Areul
44J-S4SI
2B R 2 B A , la rge living ro om d in in g
room, o u t d o o r patio, p o o l a n d h o i
tub Fireplace, fans, frack lighting fire
a n d b u r g la r alarms, c o ve re d p a rk in g
O n U T shuttle route $ 8 9 5 / m o r tr
David, 45 1 2 2 4 2 , 4 7 9 8 0 0 8
410 — Furn. H o u se s
A C U IT Y H O M E available January to
Vugust 19 86 3/2, all appliances central
leat/oir, fireplace, pool 4 4 4 - 3 6 / 0 11-19
HYDE PARK- 44 12R (near Speedway!
>n shuttle route, IBR house N o pets
One person occupancy Available 12/
’2 Lease through 8 8 6 $ 3 0 0 • bill,
1 5 9 -4 5 5 0 11-22
Í2 0 — Unf. H o u se s
apphance,
2-1 with all
"IEAR H IG H L A N D M o ll Rem odeled
lean
fo-
individual or couple Fro,’
lonsm okm g
ree
stove, washer and
Iryer
included Hord w o o d floors, ce.l
ng fan gum ' neighborhood N o pets
>4 5 0 4 5 8 2 4 8 8 1 2 ! '
refrigerator
V O RTH UT area Restored 2-1 CA/CH,
eiling fans, w ood floors mini-blinds,
enced yard and ga ra ge $ 5 9 5 4 5 9
70 95 11 2 7
5 2 0 4 A V E N U E G. Charm ing 3-1 renova-
ron H a rd w o od floors, appliances mm-
blinds, AC, fenced $6 50 /m o 47 4 1 2 / ’
II 26
A L LE N D A L E LARGE Carpeted 3 -2 , CA/
CH, fireplace range, refrigerator, dis
posai, D W W /D connection ga rage
yard 2 0 0 6 pompton $ 7 2 5 4 7 2 2 0 9 7
4 7 8 5 7 3 9 12-16
PRE LEASE for spang semester Hyde
Park remodeled, 3BR 2B A 2 livmq area
2 story house 1 block to shuttle $ 8 9 5
4 5 9 9 0 9 5 11 27
S T O N E H O M E Room y ? - l H a rd w o od
floors, oppliance*
1606 Treadwell
near Zilker Park Ready for move in
Call 44 2 21 2 0 11-18
A V A ILA B LE now 1,2,3 BR houses for
rent 4 5 2 - 5 9 7 9 (24 hours) l ? 6
2915 B F A N N A House for rent. 2BR !BA
across from UT low sc h o o 1 enclosed
backyard go rage Call G re q at >7 7
6 0 2 0 11-21
N E E D T O leose by second semester 2-1
Cam eron Rd, shuttle bus, g o o d
hon, fenced yard 4 6 7 -8 4 1 2 II 13
' ondt
N EXT TO UT campus 26th and Benno 2
1 W o o d floors, freshly pu.nted ■ . de
stove no refrig use of 2 double ga rage
$6 2 5 • deposit 3 9 7 - 2 5 7 6 11-19
T W O LA R G E bedroom s 1BA on IF shut
tle Country kitchen N o pets 1 yr lease
$ 4 5 0 9 2 6 - 7 2 4 3 12 16
425 — R oom s
R O O M S F O R boys with adioinm g bath 3
blocks campus $230/m o A B p Hawaii
Properties, 4 7 7 - 9 9 2 5 11-21
PRIVATE R O O M with kitchen, quiet m a
ture individual, men share bath no peH
lease 47 4-12 12 12 2
PRIVATE, S IN G L E dorm room - furmshed-
bills paid kitchen privileges close
to
UT- man or w om an 4 7 7 -1 5 2 9 11 13
G R A D N O N S M O K F R Spring ' Summer
O w n
com fortable house
Untrehevobly Hose 9 people 4 74
7 0 0 2 4 7 ? $ 6 4 6 11 25
'rjfjm
. r
M /E O P E N IN G $ ? 7 6 double $ 3 3 0 „n
g if includes all bills and food
4 78
6 5 8 6 II 26
Q U IE T EFFICIENCY, two M ocks to UT
$ 2 9 5 A R P 2 5 0 2 N ue -es # 2 0 9 . or see
m onager 4 74 2 1 6 5 11 13
VACANCIES FOR WOMEN
Weir ome fu the /. ftr O O P for *F-
E A II il Friendly sel* governing , am
muaity close
cam pus P/.-.l sur-
d e rl AC Pun filled edurafionnl or
hvitiei, 'it meal, A BP ( r-me bv *o'
2 0 0 0 P e a r l
4 7 6 - 5 6 7 0
<»! t 2 B l
qie $374
T ransportation
W1NTER B R IA K sk„ng rfl Steombrxr
Sp'.rrgs ond Vat! from $ 7 5 or sunnmc
South Padre Island and Doytonr
or
Be-t- t Ur ■• $991 Hurry ■ ,11 Sunchos,
lo u r, for rn,
r.<.,rmwfl,on toll free 1
8 0 0 12! 5911 or contort a Sunchase
Representative TC/f A r WT e. your w.r
540 — Lost & Found
LO ST &UST sweater prjrt s*>ede if found
rail 8 9 2 1312 Reward 11 19
560 — P ublic N o tice
440 — R oom m ates
570
R E SP O N SIB L E M A L E A S A P ^ t m g e T a ñ
peted qu.pt y 2 CH/CA, DW , disposal
pool 7 9 0 0 Swisher $ 3 0 0 4 7 7 33 8 8
4 72 2 0 9 7 12 16
IN TELLIG ENT C AREER minded, sportt/*-
outgoing Leierosexual w om an looking
for same to sho-e mee 2BR duplex Bor
ton Hills $ 2 3 7 5 0 ■
4 4 5
7 5 4 9 11 2 7
fo utilities
M usic-
M u sician s
B A N D nvc able for Istrarghr) drrty
s D o g -oik $ 7 0 0 Coll D e n .G
0 5 5 /.- -It 4 5 3 1172 Puf* 11 13
EDU CATJO NAL
N E E D FEM ALE nonsmoker neat to share
nice house'shuttle $ 2 6 5 •
nee 46 3 -6 9 1 8 441 7 6 5 0 11-20
2 bills Re
580
M usical
Instruction
PRIVATE B E D R O O M , 3BR haute 1 block
from
$ 3 15/mo 4 7 3 2 5 8 4 II 2 0
low school W /D 12 17 5/25
Q U IE T F fM A L E nonsmoker to share fur
apartment on PV
wished
shuttle
2 bills 4 4 3 6 8 4 6 11
13
2BR/2BA
$ 2 6 0 *
LIBERAL FEM ALE to share 3 bedroom
house Travis Heights $ 2 0 0 month plus
3 utilities Linda 4 4 5 43 5 * 11-13
N E E D FEM ALE to share mee 2BR 2 BA
cond o /lose to campus, on shuttle
• bills 4 7 4 - 8 4 2 9 >1-15
S 3 2 5
PIANO ; LE . O N S B eq ir ■ er through od
/.), rnd Expe- er.'eq qurjl l.ed re-i- r..,
9 6 9 6 11-13
G u i t a r L E S S O N S R ¿ B, rock
cr ntry
of material Expe'
err,.-! ustructO' A n d y Bullrnqton 45 /
6181 1? 5
jr-t -
'
'
a P L E S S O N S Expeuenred .nstru,
(O' performef All styles Beginners ad
ed M a x 4 6 2 V 2 0 6 11 2i
590 — Tutoring
11-22
H YD E PARK, female roommate to share
beautiful renovated 3 2 fireplace
ceil
mg Ions, hard w ood floors, C A / C H W /D
4 5 3 - 2 0 5 0 11-14
M A T H
T U T O R
5<)4 W. 2 4 th St.
O f f ic e 477-700.4
ver Ml vp«r‘ of prr>
rnHk‘ T H E O R A f l K
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ENGIN
EM306
EM3M
E M 3’-i
E M3 ’ 9
F E 3 ^
EE41’
EE318
FE2t?
EE 323
ENGLISH
COMP
SCIENCE
w TERMS
CS304P F
CS206
CS315
CS410
CS410
CS328
CS336
CS345
CS352
CS-3"?.
CHEMtSTRY ENG6T
' HEM301 302ENG307
.HEM* ’0A 8 ENG 30fi
' HEM* SAB ENG310
B'JStNESS
ASTRON
ACC311 312 A ST X ”
AST302
AST 303
AST307
FRENCH
GERMAN
SPANISH
; 326# 327
K I
IN3S4
P^V303Kt
PH v 32 7KL
DATA PRC
ECO
Don • put th« cdf until the mgbt before
an exam It 8 too bite then
*• 1 Btock to UT
•Fr&* Parking
• Vary reaannab*e
rnt»9
Mac htgh acPooi cmtrae» in the above
subfeds and SAT & G PF Review
•Lot» of patmnce
»tn a language
you can
understand
N ext d o o r to M a d D o g & B e a n s
Bfu ebon net >
i sr
Plaza
/ 1,1 X u . r , .
TUTORING
SERVICE
F R E E
Midterm
Special
FREE Movie Rental
w/1 tv. Tutoring
FREE 1 hr. of Tutoring
w/10 hrs. Reduced
Block Rate
• Expert
Tutoring
fNosf SubRcti, AJI Leveis)
• EXAM PREP
GRE LSAT. MCAT
• Resumes
• WORD
PROCESSING
L a se r Printing
IB M & A p p l e
H O U R S 0 3 E N
M - T h
Fn
S a t
S u n
7 a 'T v 1 2 nn d
7 0 * ^ - 5 d ' t-
1 0 an*-. 3
5 p n r - 1 2 m d
4 7 2 - 6 6 6 6
F E M A L E SUBLET Riverside apt, share
roam, $205/ mo
a electricity and
•
phone Call 4 6 2 2 0 4 9 11-2?
Fc M/,LE ST U D E N T needed to t-ilre lease
fur
2-2 $ 2 0 0 /mo
mture Call Peggy, 4 76 4 4 5 3
4 5 /
6 8 4 6 " I S
- electricity phone
W A L K T O campus C harming 2-1 bouse
to share w/non-smoking female profes
sional or graduate student. 4 8 0 - 0 2 0 3
11-15
F E M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted 2-1 on N.
IH -3 5 $ 2 0 0 *
Call 8 3 6 -1 2 5 5 11 15
9 utilities Erea coble
R O O M M A T E B R O K ER S
M L K 4 7 8 -5 0 9 6 . 12-16
IN *
910 w
N O N S M O K I N G EFM /-! E housemate
O w n bedroom $ 2 2 5
t utilit.es City
bus to UT N o w or far January M a n y
amenities 4 4 8 -3 1 6 8 1! 18
O W N R O O M $ 2 2 5 4/2 n^Lse Are
place ceiling fons, CA/C H ( R shuttle
large fenced v-ud 4 5 3 8 5 4 8 11-18
R O O M M A T E W A N T E D Jan 1st 2 - l’fo
r wnhouse lakes.de View first stop N R
Shuttle 2 5 0
C A / C H Sim on 441 v !84
11-19
/
W A N T E D F E M A ' E roomm ate 2 -2
pools logging trail W /D fully furn.shed
townhome 250/m o '/< bills
'a l l 3 8 E.
2427.11-19
W A N T P E R S O N to share house Unfur
■ashed bedroom $ 2 5 0 month
? Nils
Nonsm okers Darrell 4 5 4 2 8 4 8 451
8411 ext 341 11-20
R O O M M A T E W A N T E D Spring Semester
2 ? furnished apt off Enfield h-,fl blo-k
UT Shuttle Bus $ 2 3 r $'.00 depose
utilities 4 7 7 - 6 7 9 4 11-14
R O O M M A T F SPRtN f- ! <-nox w 23rC
pnvate bedroom and ■ ath, all amenitie*
$ 4 25-00/mantti Call 4 9 9 - 0 0 4 3 11-26
B O R N A G A IN Christian "-ale (eeks same
to share expenses of auplex near cam
pus C H r H W/D. shuffle $ 300/m o bills
paid Will hold to Jon. Coll D a n before
8 0 0 a m 4 7 8 4 8 9 7 11 19
P O O M M A T E W A N T E D to share
- T 7 Í
nouse ocoted in Highland Hills S of
North lar d on Balcones Dr Rent $ 2 2 6 3
bills C all Mike 4 5 3 2418 11-19
450 — M o b ile H o m e s*
Lots
O N E B LO C K off 8 2 0 0 block North
l amar 2-1 *7 trailer home on foundation
F-'ont yard back yard and carport
$ 3 3 0 /mo $ 3 0 0 deposit N ee d one or
two avil.zed scholars 3 4 5 - 4 8 9 4 11 15
460 — Bu sin e ss
Rentals
O F FIC E SP A C E 24th and Lamar, 6 0 0 sc
h and up available at 85c and up
utilities
8 2 7 3 11-15
immediate occupancy
48C
A N N O U N C E M E N T S
Entertainment-
Tickets
A L A B A M A FL O O R & Arena seats $ 3 0
ond up Coll Doc ni 4 4 8 4 6 9 or
N orm a n 441 5750. 11 15
TCU TICKETS available Yard ¡me seats
Either in twos or fr. .■* D
- -jq 4<$9
9411 11-15
T IC K E T S
ALL CONCERTS
ALL HOME
FOOTBALL GAMES
CRAIG 472*7896
520 — P erso n als
seeks female
year
$ W M 2 2 6 2
re
Chem Eng. grad student for cosuo¡
lationship Applicant must be toto squ*d
and have great ¡egs N o punk
SoKcuts
please 11-14
TEXAN CLASSIFIED
A D S W ORK —
FOR Y O U R S CALL
4 7 1 -5 2 4 4
370 — Unf. Apts.
G o O n e o n O n e
w t h a W in n er'
STU DEN T SH A R E 4BR house furnished
CR shuttle W a sh er/ D rye ' microwave
$190 per month plus 4 util'ties Robert
4 5 2-20 71 11-19
510
430 — R o o m -B o a rd
S U B L E A S IN G FO R Spring semester, Do-
bie Center,
roommate only,
female
room and board, 3 9 7 3 0 3 8 1114
D O BlE C EN T E R subleasing Spring semen
ter Spacious com er sui*e/pnvqte ho**
living room Full meal plan Across street
from campus M ale only, 4 6 9 5815 11
14
C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4
T O P L A C E A C L A S S I F I E D A D
N O W LEASING
Special Spring
Summer Rates
• 1 2 3 5 B e d ro o m s
• 2 I ighted Tennis Courts
• Shuttle Bus Sto p SR
• Sec urity Service
•City Transportation
• P uhm q Q rp e n
• O u t d o o r Jocu/Zi 5
• Bar B Q u e s & Pic me
Fac ilities For Each
Building
• Poolstde Kestroom
• D eluxe A ir C o n d itio n e d
Lau nd ry R o o m s
• C eiling Fa n s m All
Living R o o m s & B e d ro o m s
• Exercise R o o m s
• C ar W a s h in g A re a
• C a b le TV H o o k U p
• Two Sw im m m g Pools
• Basketball & V olle yb all
Courts
Open For Business
M o n -F r i 8-6, S a t 9-5, Sun 12-5
V i l t a £ e \ T e n
JV H A J V 1 IG G
4505 DUVAL
4 5 4 - 4 7 9 9
NOW LEASING FOR
FALL AND SPRING
• Newly Remodeled
• Pool
• Gym
• Recreation Room
• On CR/IF Shuttle
• One Bedroom s and
Townhouse Units
Ir
%
S e H a b l a E s p a ñ o l
f * fbr^f n t m
W i r S p r e c h e n D e u t s c h
f
''J a k a k a in t ir v d i n q P ili p in o
447-4130
2101 BURTON DR
GREAT FOR ROOMMATES
^ ^ ^ a r n ^ C o m ^ J ^ T o d a y ! ^
CHRISTMAS
CASH
$6 +
PER HR.
SALARY
EVENIN9S — W.I.
50 Immediate
W A N T E D ART ttudenh to o*i '.o*o ' block
and white phcrtos '‘<*e
M
t rve Mcrtenah
31 9 * 8 3 11 *4
Scrturdoy
f NT W A N T f D for offw e k
Afferrkoorn M u í» be ovr
»e*p/er
iiiabée
2 2 12-
Ifrrout
^FR AIDE needed »o woHr
wtti- 4
' V ‘" :
tsbytert'jn C M d D#v«4opmer
APPQ:IN ÍM F N T SCTTFt Pfeosorti v o x e
$ 4/hr
$2/oppri.efrrwni
»5
b r\J
week
Fvemng hour, C d f G
M o v e '$ 8 3 7 7 7 3 3 V 15
APPLY
Tele-Saver
Services, Inc.
D o b t« C * n t » t
G u o d a fu p # Sf F n lfo n c#
2nd floor Suit® 24
Next to U nico m Sriop
469-5621
BE H O N E S T
C'J' fO, afford *0 rruss
financio* opporr,jr,,t, 0 f f,J jr
look m g fo- a
y o u - -
S / '7 0 0 OD a
...
* 'r tionoi Bustr ess Asso' otes
451-087
n te '/ e w i
ever- n g ^ w eekend .
e o e d fo f
__
' >cate w '4^ fj w»de vo'te^y of p eo p le
P qy ror ge * írpm $ 4 5 0 $ 6 0 0 * o u-
f or o r
4 7 4
't e r v ie w corrtact K.r-
7 5 *4
FRONT DESK DECEPTION '*
P o r t time positior for Satu rd a y
an d Suridoy 8 5,
light boot-
k e e p .'g sk i's f e p f. A p p ly ir
p erson at Atlas West 4 2 ? Atr
port Blvd.
ARTICULATE STUDENTS
PUBLIC RELATIONS par »,m
evening positions Flexible //o'
schedu1® $5/hr 450 015? Mr
Campbe*
Attention
E a m f u l l t i m e c o s r p o r t * . m e
267-2201 445 645
Bud ge * 8 e H - A *C i
counter a g e n t r
o p e n S a tu rd a y c
must W e o re oc
at our 3 3 3 0 M a r
478-6430 for ma
0 0 5 3 0 and
0 0 5 rX) C o *
eeh aq staff
T uesda y ^
800 — G e n e ra l H e lp
W anted
j I N S T A N T C A S H
rece«ve S 1?).
tn
A N D B O N U S
I ff y o u n w d cash» to K e lp y o u
| o u t w h ile a t t e n d i n g c o lle g e
w h y n o t d o n a t e b l o o d p l a s
m a 7 Y o u c a n d o n a t e tw ic e in
a 7 d a y p e r i o d — fo r th e 1st
fo r
d o n a t io n
th e 2 n d d o n a t io n
th e
s a m e w e e k **.re»ve $ ' 2 P lu s
w ith t h is a d y o u 'll r e c e iv e a
$2 b o n u s o n y o u r fir s t v is it
A l s o a s k a b o u t b o n u s p r o
g r a m s S o h e lp o t h e r s w h ile
n e lp i n g y o u r s e l f M u s t h o v e
v a lid ID o n d s o m e p ' o o f o f
A u s t i n
r e s id e n c e D r a w i n g
h e ld o n c e a m o n t h fo r t w o
$ 2 5 b o n u s e s C a l l 4 7 4 7 9 4 1
A u s t i n s n o s m o c e m e r
2 8 0 0 G u a d t ’lu p*-
e m p lo y
Im m ed ia te
m ent
E n u m e ra to rs
needed, updating the
Austin City Directory.
Pleasant,
N o selling
o u t d o o r w o 'k ,
full
time, part time, male
or female E O F A p p ly
in person 9 am to 3
to work,
ready
pm
M on-Thurs, 2 5 1 2
IH-
35-South, Ste. 100
~ j É L
ft 0O W S TY P I% G
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4 6 7 f 1 1 1
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f r i
W l f K I N I i S
9 6
PATTY'S W O R D P 'ocesvn q Th
'•«‘.■I*e*. -J/xbr efs, d i« e —3tirjñ.
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S'O ' u 'e po ris ' arrp j,
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W O R D P P O C E SSIN C - $• ? ' o'j-j-
bte sp o m d P co PR *«.-
w y en en c #. 4 5 2 - 8 3 3 6
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-
R E S E A R C H paper
T Y P IN G
ti
d'ssertorhon,
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'easonab1* Ore day ser/*'e ' "*
selectnr 44
resumes ■
39 3
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confidence
pF P Su A 3 V F PF3 j M F $ ^ « 'H* *
rn your career
your
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/ res 2 4 2 0 G u a d o pe 1 7 8 - 3 6 3 '
16
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p
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TYPIN G SE R V IC E S gu-ji'i-ee/- e<
t ie ji-ote- A" lyping need,
- u,.-*
Khoinsti- 4 5 9 ',3 7 8 ’ 2 6
L F TTER P E R f T c '
'y p . n g
Pa
/A r -.♦#.<
2 7 4 9 11-26
P R O F ESS tO N A L
d sie/’-i'io- s
quality printer N e a r '- ; " p
11-27
resume,
3V PC ene
4 7 8 - 5 4 8 '
4
come. 282-0412 8arr pm
PROFESSIONAL WORD PROCESSING
*•351 'eiiople ond accurate Spe- itize
m rush qrjje-; yy 1 ^
M a ry 8 3 6 / 4 7 4 '1 29
5 rr
W O O D S T Y P 'N G and Wc H P-
ng.
$ 50/pg non-njsh 25 - page, Prior
paper, * r o " S 75/pg 2 2 0 0 G d o ,c
'side entrance. 4 7 2 - 6 3 0 2 2 3
YYPtt»G REPORTS /e4 -
Reo«3nobi«
V - i ; ~ 7 ~ ,
convenient Sour,
'qte,
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4 9 3 S 12 3
nw w s • f u im s - t u
w o rn H f o c t m m
Leave Tour Typing To Ui
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2 3 D o b l e M a l i
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fPtjTilfoation 'j’SJifty pnr »5J
', T , r T '^visions
R'JSf JObS rO U''jtM9rr
Hours
tf t O p r
469-5 6 3 2
W W U M f O W
c o m p r m *w t o w
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p n o r e s s i O N A L
TYPING
• W o r d
P ro c e s s in g
• E d it
C o p y
• R ig h t
J u s tific a tio n
Network Ent.
2813 R io G r a n d e
4 7 9 - 8 0 2 7
italics
• proofreading
• !!. J: Park I •
W O R D M A S T E R
Your Word Processing
\
Professionals
papers
letters
copies
Rush Service Available
1900 E Ofcnrf «110
SR & RC Shift)*
447-9257
THE WAIT IS OVER...
TRADE UP NOW!
>er f Spec o?s
Coll
Houses j«xe»es .Ad^s 452*9316
ALL L O C A T IO N S
ACTION APARTMENT LOCATORS
g m V E R A T E E ’S
__ 1 Pi ih! i< V .tjr.
•
2(1 Yt srs l e^al 1 xpeifcmt
• Term Papers
• .d\k Briefs
• rheses
• )issertati(ins
• ( over Letters
• Resumes
$12 E
4 5 4 - 1 5 3 2
st
M A T H P H Y SIC S tutoring T*r
p e n a n '* a$ A» TA
avodoble G rey 4 f>4 9 9 4 5 11 IS
tor Bio^k
I A N G U A G F
TUTOR
Ertglrsh
' edrheó tej*
Fnglfsh
rate*. r at! Flyj 4 / 6 70 0 2 1
Por
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in- ¡yjm q FresbrrtQ^
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M A T H TUTOR $ 1S 'h r Algef>ra >rkg rai
f.uiu$ D tvo un f rrj*ei n e g aH day T jf-
riOf Colt Bnar 3 8 8 1054 tl
P R O f F S S lQ N A
tutor now
PRfVA f f
ava'i'ifiin U)r atf oanting and finar»#«.
rkn % *‘ or ' a v '* jd*e$ r oft 3 4 6 - 5 6 / 3
11 26
610 — Misc.
Instruction
■ ,»f Pfyjjf r .
/,1-ws Arrittigrr ' “'JV )' nq vknlic
DfOg
0 0 $t" e/rjhjrjbrjr Enroll HOW for Jarnjfjry
4 / 4 Z 8 0 5 H 13
SERV ICES
630 — Com puter
Services
STATISTIC Al C O N S U t TAN T will p, 0
/.d<> K *lp witt-, 'jpr,', ffjif quonWaflve
m^triads statist./ al arvri/sis a n d '« s e a rr h
m ethodology Tobey K o o p P h D
4 / '
8152 11 27
D O Y O U have a ■ omp./tryr and ,/;*///afr-
but n-
»tt©, guolrfy p,.,.r*.,? y j* rrjr>
Printing TO', pg B M -ompctibu*
650 — M o v in g -
H a u lin g
A B IE B O D IE D Moven^ ser/mg the Austin
Community wrth core courtesy and skill
Long distan' 6 arranged 441 2 6 2 2 12 6
ABC APARTMENT
MOVING
M o v in g Austin os low c
$ 3 9 9 5 Student discount
CALL 339-MOVE
7 3 0 — H om e Repair
2 5 % D IS C O U N T UT empioy^es and stu
dents for jobs under contract by Jan 1
W e provide residenhai contracting ser
vices, design work
2 6 6
2 5 7 5 11 15
refe'ences
750 — T ypin g
Z IV L E Y ’S
THE COMPLETE
PROFESSIONAL
FULLTIME
TYPING SERVICE
PRINTING, BINDING
/ I V I K V >
□
FIJI
HOUSf
2707 HEMPHILL PARK
At 27th & Guadalupe
Plenty of Parking
472-3210
472-7677
COLLEGE A ID
Complete Typing Services
Resumes
Term Papers
Theses
OPEN 24 H is
*KEEP/U4DeirvE»v
~ 331-5500 ~
JOB W IN N IN G
RESUMES
vVf
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Expert S*-/ces -ocsd fos* uod occu/'j*e p.-.
up crna delivery av;. able 444 59 2 8
e verm g, or « / • daytime message '2 4
W O R D PROCESSINGS- ^ 7 -
proi<“,« o -o i « - / c e PC S T A T IO N
2.3 D o h -e M a R 4 6 7 -5 6 3 2 ’2-6
C O M P U T
mo-iey
course *
xjve nme a n
persona: compute'
o,,i,ion*'« PC STATiOn rve 23 Dob-*
Ma 469-5632 2 6
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■ e s,-g o*
,-'/>ooi p op e ', W at*
resume, ER sf , * » 4 7 8 5163 2
-v
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P f O F E S S l O f A l - / “ N O $1 ooge m0 ,
tems compos pt-r c. de*-/ery
B v
Select - -
- .o "j Mead qverynq/-* Jon -
2 4 4 3213 i ? - i i
TYP - iG SER7/ C E Close to campus Eas*
or'urqte -eoso-ab*" N o ob toe - g • •
*ao
472 4066
W ORD PRO CESSIN G $; page 38 S
p i.rat-or, fo r par* • me d s r w
shift — e ah qnd heaftk
'S u r o r -
d*v
" o m 2 4 p -
- p erson at 4 2 0 6 D u vc
,5* Ha /e p - ' -.e
Back-ln-A-Flash-
Fast Stop Clerk
Neeriec port --e a* ohoto ooo**
downtown W¡ oc-eo* tustomers
de': q-.d sol pbotogrophx' supe es
de-'j ‘or studen*, 'emporory oos
hon Hours 7 30 am 00 pm
Apply in person
8 0O a - 4 30 pm
2901 N 35 S •» X
*+Orv,moKen, D'«ov?
DELIVERY DRIVERS
Needed
irJr GRAND OPENING
AT MLK
Z a r malte be-x/ee- S d - S ’C
-
A lso O penm g For
° " 9 ^ ^ ^
-,» r'y D n v # r ? !J N N PI?S COr n n
-•eeded wage a- ,/s bps Appry at ae
MR. GATH'S ON MLK
'f^opQí ca*’® attendor
‘o ' d 'so b ie d ado
34
S r o '^ - A -e
p ro g ra r- 4
H o , ,« 4 4 7
SPEEDWAY
I
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J o
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TYPING
a — 3701 Speedway z ▲
a o. O Night Super Rush 5 I
T O IF Shuttle Parking ? T
472-4009
I
TYPEW RITER R E K T A L
▼
?
• P a p e r s
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• R e s u m e s
• M A C o r
I B M
L a s e r p r i n t i n g
In by 11 Out by 7
Open 'til Midnight
H o u s e o f
V
We Never Stop!
T Y P IN G A N D word processing $1 50/
p g M onthly occounts $8 50/
Coll
Cond oce 451 4 8 8 5 12-11
STARR Q U A LITY W o rd Processing, stu
dent poper, of oil kinds, equations table,
doto base 8 type font, 4 4 4 - 0 8 0 11
26
760 — Misc. Services
THE INFO-PROS
760 — Misc. Services
. 288-1930
Resum es to Dissertations
Q uality W o rk
At Econom ic Prices
Discounts For Quantity
( « • V E R A t e e s
•D
""
• R E S l M E S
• C O V E R L E T T E R S
• F R E E S T O R A G E
¡5 + 1 5 52 •
A/AERIG AN E a G lE W O R D P R O C E SS
■N O resume, ond .eoort, V P -q of oil
Rusr ob, occep'ed Caf1 458-
kmd,
8 8 6 9 12-2
UNBALANCE!
cxjlorvce you' ;
Suenes, coi' •
798
'7-16
> E C < 8 0 C H r !
kbook $6 st
PHOTOS
for
PASSPORTS
APPLICATIONS
RESUMES
3 m inuta service
M O N -FRI 9-6
SAT 10-2
477-5555
THIRD EYE
2532 Guodalupe
EMPLOYMENT PREPARATION
LEARN
B A R T E N D IN G
• 1 Or 2 Week Course
• Day O r Evening
• Job Placement Assistance
...CALL NOW! 458-6000
SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS!
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PR O FESSIO N A L
BA RT EN D ERS SCHOOL
NEED YOUR RESUME FAST?
Call us for an appointm ent and we'll
type it while you wait.
g in n y i*
THESES, DISSERTATIONS & P.R.'S
W e guarantee our typing will meet
graduate school requirements.
454-6874
5417 North lam ar
f lln n \ / < ?
y » * ■■ 1 / ^
SMAU LOANS
From $5- $300
5134 SUANCT ROAD
454-0450
OAK HIU
5195 HIGHWAY 190 WEST
891-0016
E M P LO Y M EN T
790 — Part Time
PART TIME aflem oor 'fro - ' q pasmo
ovonabie working with pre-schoolers
Experience p rete'rd Apply m
person of
Creo»/» W o n d
2 0 2 0 Dentc
Dr 8 3 7
8 8 2 2 n-13
D A Y C A R E N £ £ D $ p0 r* hme Ke*p G o o d
pay North 4 5 2 - 4 9 4 7 8 3 7 6 70 0 V 4
Port-time C o s h e *
v / e e x e - d pos't-ori
-e e d e d
* ' d a y a n d
*o r
S a t u r d a y 5 5 0 0 ; h o u r A/jst be
g o o d w **• n u m b e -s Fun b n
ro n m e n t A p p iy - o e rso n D o 'ia s
N ig h t c ub. 7 " ~h B u m e t R d afte r
7 0 0 pm
11-15
10 000 Resear - *■
p a r t t m e ->•
ve m vocn-v
-A Adc.-- n D*rv:-' Ncrtriwejt Hflri
N m o c y 39 0 Far //«>
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IE NEXT PPESD!
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IH35 and
flo o r jS0 F*
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pm EOE
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Solu rdoysoniv 9am 5oc- ^
Bo> rd for
n9 ' Do*hw 'to w n 5 0 6 C ongrí
9 P a ? ’ hr~« DeoD»e needed w.med«c*
Fo-m op *o $ 5 0 0 mo-*4* Co*i Daie
;868 Det‘w/ee'* v o n on c
o o « -ig fo r 3 ~'-.d e ! N p e , to i*a“ trietr
'eforions
AuS»- mcdrer-rq qrd
eam
4 5 8 -
2922
By o p o oi--*m »r-
H 2 0
R E C E P T IO N : S ’
he Costillar h o, 3 - b o » r - g for O
1 ,11.w ie mgrir 3e,x
’ 2
-iC )r,g h i-8 am P t e o ^ a o c r r oer
o r at
-e c e o n c .-,•
T-e C a st -ia -
2 3 2 3 S a n A r . t o n io
A u s t in T x 7 8 ^ 0 5
E O E M F H
nxerd,
N E A R ^AAX-- ;S evening
nrjj
vpme n c m r g s A s m o a n , 25
¿ o .
-v*
h O - S ’ a v P E R mrixs-
wpm
exp»-e>--'uc.". romensunale . - if expe-
i
ence 702 w /4m S» Co# 45 4 5 7 5 ’
15
“ ■Cs
A D m iN 1STRA TlVf A S SIST A N T 4 nrs,
PersonoDte well-
day
groom ed
at least 6 0 wpm $5/hr Cok
Jim Crafl 4 5 4 5 8 6 '
5 days, wk
!4
R E C EP TIO N S T 'S E C R E TAR'/~ Apply m
oe-son !3 0 0 w Ben xVSrte Sen Whrte
° lo ia Around west ude of buildmc 462
O K ' 11-14
P A R A lE .u A . A S S S 'A N ” i-,- dow-row--
n m alls a n d stores C re a tiv e work,
tn n ge benefits, all training p ro v id e d
IB yrs a n d o v e r C all M s Pnm ock. M r
Thom as, o r M r t e a c h 4 6 7 - 7 2 0 4
11 1 3
★ N O W HIRING ★
W e n o w h a ve 12 15 o p e n in g s for
y o u n g a n d a g g re s siv e p e o p le to le a m
h igh tech equ ip m e nt sales All appli
cants will b e c o n sid e re d for entry
level m a n o q e m e n t N o e xp e rie nce
net e ssa ry 4 6 2 0101
N O W H IR IN G
N o experience necessary.
Minimum $4/hr. M a n y full
a nd part
time positions
available. 462-0101.
11-18
11-13
.
,
..
-----------------.
Foreign Student . j rrf ( V> rt 11 h‘ G ra n d e
4 7 7-
7j
A T T E N T IO N A D V E R T IS IN G A N D
M A R K E T I N G G R A D U A T E
S T U
D E N T S A g g r e ss iv e and Innovative
transportation com pany seeks individ
ual fo r part time sales position Flexi
ble h o u rs G ro w th & management
inquines only
possibilities
C all R.T 5-1 932 fo r appointment M s
H e lg e
Se> io u s
11-15
MODEL TYPES
franchise operation
In te rn a tio n a l
lo o k in g fo r 3 model types to staff thetr
Austin m a rk eting and public relations
By appointment only, 4 58 -
team
2 9 2 2
11-20
t O S E W E IG H T M A K E S t i t t N ee d
loss
1 0 0
p ro g ra m
fo r new weight
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A m inim um of 10 per order for n am ecards and an n o u n c e
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D E A D LIN E: N O V EM BER 1 6
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U N IV E R S IT Y C O O P
M a j o r i n g in S e r \ it <> S in c e IHitfi
‘2246 Guadalupe
Phone 476-721 1
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a must purchase.
BUY YOUR COPY TODAY!
AVAII ABLE WHE REVER FINE B O O K S ARE S O L D !
DRESS FOR SUCCESS.
Y o u ’ re the m a n in ch arge. A n d y o u
ca n h a n d le it. B e ca u se the N a v y
h as giv e n y o u the m a n a g e m e n t
a n d te ch n ica l tr a in in g to get the
jo b done.
T h irty m en report to you. A n d
w h a t y o u d o in c lu d e s the care
a n d re sp o n sib ility for m illio n s o f
d o lla r s w orth o f so p h istica te d
equipm ent.
A t a ge 22 y o u ca n be a le ad er
in the Navy. W ith all the d e c isio n
m a k in g a u th o rity y o u need
to help y o u m atch u p to y o u r
responsibility.
Th e re w a rd s m a tch up, too.
A so lid s ta r tin g s a la r y o f $17,700,
a n d u p to a s m u c h as $31,000 in
fo u r y e a rs w ith r e g u la r p r o m o
tio n s a n d increases.
R e s p o n s ib ility a n d rew ard. It ’s
the w ay y o u m e a su re su c c e ss in the
N avy. See y o u r N a v y R e c ru ite r o r
C A L L 8 0 0 - 3 2 7 - N A V Y .
NAVY OFFICERS GET RESPONSIBILITY FAST.
Just ducky
A duck paddles around in the pool of a Palestine, Texas, apartment com
plex, apparently unconcerned that there is no lifeguard on duty. With humm
ing season just around the corner, the swimming pool may have been a
safer bet for the floating fowl Tuesday than the wild.
Associated Press
Highland Park woman
gets fine, probation
for shooting student
Associated Press
DALLAS — Betty Minyard Stein,
a flamboyant eccentric convicted of
aggravated assault in the shooting
of a high school student she claimed
had tormented her, was placed on
10 years' probation and fined $5,000
Tuesday.
‘These people are great
production people.... I
think they worked an old
wound to get some
blood.’
The Dallas County jury deliberat
ed more than six hours Monday and
almost three hours Tuesday before
deciding the sentence.
Earlier, the panel deliberated only
about an hour before convicting her
of the charge stemming from a July
24 incident in which she said she
was trying to shoot out the tires of
the car driven by Ward Huey III.
Huey, 18, testified she shot him
after an altercation
in which he
cursed the woman after she told
him he should be arrested
for
screeching his car out of a parking
spot near her house.
Stein said Huey tried to hit her
with his car twice the day of the
shooting and once the day before.
O ther w itnesses contradicted that,
however, and said she was never in
danger.
Both Stein and Huey are m em
bers of prominent Dallas families.
She is the widow of the founder of
the Minyard grocery store chain and
Huey is the son of the president of
Belo Broadcasting Co.
During the trial, Stein provided
her own defense. She described the
students at nearby Highland Park
High School as "little degen erates,"
"sad ists" and "little com m unists."
She testified the students had tor
mented her for years.
Stein is know n in her exclusive
—Betty Minyard Steiri,
Dallas eccentric
Dallas suburb
for her eccentric
dress, which often includes a cow
boy hat and flowing caftans, and for
her house, which is covered with
overgrown vegetation.
In a heated exchange during the
trial, she called the prosecutor "stu
p id ." Visiting state District Judge
B.D. Moye accused her of "verbally
abusing" prosecutor
Jim Nelson
and ordered her to spend three days
in jail for contem pt of court.
Huey testified that his left arm,
which was hit by Stein's gunshot, is
still weak.
But Stein argued the wounds he
showed the jury were actually old
scars from a ski pole injury, a claim
the prosecution described as "p re
posterous."
"T h ese people are great produc
tion p eop le," she said. " I think they
worked an old wound to get some
blood ."
The prosecution argued Stein was
dangerous because of past threats
she has made and her repeated
com m ents during the trial that she
planned to buy another w eapon
and would use it to protect herself.
After the judge read the sentence,
Stein said she would appeal.
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT
EMPLOYMENT
840 — Sales
880 — Professional
890 — Clubs-
MARKETING STUDENTS
Opportunity to gain professional
experience in the field of mar
keting. Part-time. G o o d commis
sions. N o experience necessary,
just need transportation, phone,
and desire to learn. You will be
working with Miles Homes, a di
vision of Insilco Corporation, a
Fortune 5 0 0 Company. Contact
John or Meryi M cN eill for par
ticulars. 4 4 3 -6 3 7 3 .
______________
11-15
850 — Retail
THE INSTITUTION FOR
FINANCIAL CRIME PREVENTION
IS SEEKING QUALIFIED ANALYSTS
to perform multi-disciplined re
search on a contract basis. Our
firm is a small, fast growing, na
tional consulting firm dedicated
exclusively to research, develop
ment, and prevention programs
involving all areas of financial
crime. W e are especially inter
ested in post-doctorate individu
als who desire to supplement
their
in
uniquely rewarding ways.
income periodically
FUL TIME, par* time employment oppor
tunities; positions available: checkers,
cashiers, grocery clerks and pockoge
clerks. Apply in person at Tom Thumb
$71, 2725 Exposition Blvd. 11-14
B IG A N D Tall mens clothing store seek
ing part or full time sales person Call for
appointment, 452-1429.11-22_________
T-SHIRTS Plus of Barton Creek and High
land M oll needs Christmas help storting
immediately. Hard-working and out
going personality a must Contact Tom
or Bill, 327-4331, 451-0423 11-19
Applicants must be PhD or
equivalent, and be involved in
some phase of business, sociolo
gy, criminology, psychology, or
other related field that Dears
white-collar crime
research.
Please send resume or vita to:
Donald W. Reaves, executive di
rector, 716 West Avenue, Austin,
Texos 78701.__________11-18
870 — Medical
N E E D CH IL D core workers for residential
treatment center. Must have high school
education, go o d driving record, and be
over 18 yrs of age. G o o d benefits, 2
locations-Austin and Liberty HiN Phone
2 59-3807 Shifts: 3 -llp m and 11pm-
7om. 11-15
SELL
IT!
CALL 471-5244
890 — Clubs-
Restaurants
W ANTED: EVEN IN G tins co o t apod
wage + tip*. Contact Ken, 474-7777 if-
15________________________
■'
ANG LES NIGHTCLUB it now accepting
applications for cocktail wailpertom
and doorpenons. Apply in ponon, M -F
from 1-4pm. 3500 Guadolupe. 454-
6047.11-14_______________________
ABBEY IN N on Rivortido it acopting ap
plications for BEERTENDER. N o experi
ence nocottary. Contact Louis, 459-
8521.___________________________
HEADLINERS EAST, immediate openings
for part-timo cooks. Nighl shifts available,
apply in parson between 2 p.m. and 4
p m, 406 E 6th St. 11-18_____________
BAGEL BREAK is now hiring M - and
part-timo countar and food prop pooplo.
Baker's assistant and dotivory drtvor also
noodod part-timo. Cad 453-2266, 8-11
a.m. and 2-5 p m 11-15
R a sta u ra n ts
County Lino O N THE LAKE now hir-
ing porttimo and fudtimo d oy prop p o
sitions. Start at $4/hr. A lso hiring
nrghttimo host parsons, cocktail, ond
bussing positions. Belter than overage
wages. C all for an appointment. 346-
3664.
11-1?
H A R P O O N H E N R Y 'S
Now hiring for bartender,
oyster bartender, night
waitperson. Apply in person
between 2 and 4 pm, 6019
N. 1-35. EOE.
Beachcombers Wanted
Pelican's Wharf is now accept
ing applications for assistant
woitpersons. Apply in person M -
F, 9-11 o.m. 425 W. Riverside Dr.
N o phone caNs please. EOE.
_____________ _______ in a
BANANAS RESTAURANT
AND BAR
Coola position open, part time
nights, no experience necessary,
apply
in person, 4:30-5:30,
1601 Guadalupe.
M S O -B H M M É *.
■ m
« F T H N O O N H fir a t m M b S |
pooling childcare, etc Car, n fe n n ig il
necessary. Could Sue in separata quorJ
1
tan. 345-2206.12-4
LOVING, RESPONSIBLE ponon tort»
with 2 children oftar school, ogas 6 and
K>, and also do howohoaping duties. 3-6
ond occasional evenings. 345-3614 Di
ana Hrudn, 343-6620.11-14
BABYSITTER/HOUSEKEEPER. 8am to
6pm, 18-month boy, non-sm ofor
references.
satiny negotiable. 459-
3532, nights and weekends. 11-15
y t
T o t
mental daycare in your home near
MoFoc or UT Outdoor ploy; looming oe-
m m 458-2746.11-19
around campus
Around Carnpiu it a daily column
listing University-related activities
sponsored by academic departments,
student services and registered stu
dent organizations. To appear in the
Around Campus column, organiza
tions must be registered with the Off
ice of Student Activities. Announce
ments must be submitted on the
correct form by 11 a.m . the day before
publication to The D aily Texan off
ice. No exceptions will be made.
and Denmark will be present. There
will be a reception at 4 p.m. following
the program.
UT Department of Music presents
the Percussion Ensemble performing
at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Bates Recital
Hall. George Frock will conduct. Ad
mission is free.
UT Department of Music presents
Carol W incenc,
flutist, and Heidi
Lehwalder, harpist, in concert at 8:30
p.m . W ednesday in Recital Studio.
Admission is free.
M onterey Institute for Internation
al Studies will be on campus from 10
a.m . to 4 p:m . W ednesday in the Tex
as Union lobby.
Institute of Latin American Studies
Student Association will meet at 5:30
p.m . W ednesday in Sid Richardson
Hall 1.320.
Committee on Student Services of
the Students Association will meet at
4 p.m . Thursday in the Texas Union
Governors' Room. Picture will be tak
en for the Cactus yearbook
Harvest Communications will meet
at 7:30 p.m . W ednesday
in W .C.
Hogg Building 14. Jim M cCotter from
W ashington, D C. will be visiting.
The departments of English and
Philosophy and the Texas Union Ideas
and Issues Committee will present a
lecture and discussion on "Beyond
Revolution" at 5 p.m. Thursday in Ac
ademic Center Auditorium Dr. John
Clark, author of The A narchist M ove
ment, will be speaking.
National Chicano Health Organiza
tion will meet at 6:30 p.m. W ednesday
in the Texas Union Chicano Culture
Room. Representatives from South
west Medical School will speak.
University Beach Club will discuss
the Acapulco Christmas break trip at 8
p.m. W ednesday in Graduate School
of Business Building 2.122. N on-m em
bers are welcome.
Chicano Culture Committee will
meet at 5 p.m . Wednesday in the Tex
as Union Chicano Culture Room.
Subcommittee on Lesbian and Gay
Issues will meet at 8:30 p.m . W ednes
day in Texas Union 4.108. Contact
Mat at 458-5941 for more information
Peanuts©
vice meeting at 6:30 p.m. W ednesday
in Robert A. Welch Hall 2.310 and an
executive council meeting at 7:15 p.m
Wednesday in Robert A. Welch Hall
2.308.
University Unitarians will have a
brown bag lunch from noon to 1 p.m
W ednesday
in Texas Union 4.108.
Matthew McNaught, m inister of the
First Unitarian Church of Austin, will
be the guest speaker.
Department of Oriental and Afri
can Languages and Literature will
have a talk on "Parody in Medieval
Japanese Farces (Kyogen)” at 4 p.m.
W ednesday at 2601 University Ave
nue 118. Carolyn Haynes will be the
speaker.
the
University Underwater Society will
film Blue Water, White
show
Death at 7:30 p.m . W ednesday in the
Texas Union Stahrles Room.
Catholic Students Association will
have Catacombs at 8 p.m. W ednesday
in University Catholic Center base
ment.
Christians on Campus will have a
study at noon
Revelation Bible
Wednesday in Texas Union 4.224.
Tennis Club will have the group
picture taken at 5 p.m . Friday at the
Intramural Tennis Courts.
Spooks will meet at 4 p.m .
Wednesday at the Kappa Delta house,
2315 Nueces St.
Canterbury Episcopal Organization
will have Eucharist, dinneT and a pro
gram at 6 p.m . W ednesday at the
Episcopal Student Center, 27th Street
and University Avenue.
National Student Business League
will meet at 7 p.m . W ednesday in
Graduate School of Business Building
2.120. Pamela Everhart, manager with
Ernst and W hinney, will speak on the
accountant's role in corporate Am eri
ca.
UT Roadrunners will meet for a 5-
to-6-mile run at 5 p.m . W ednesday
outside L. Theo Bellmont Hall. For
more information call Danny Steiner
at 450-1233 or Chris McCampbell at
445-6120.
Hillel Foundation will have Israeli
Folk Dancing from 8 p.m. to 10:30
p.m. W ednesday at Hillel Founda
tion, 2105 San Antonio St.
Premedical-Predental Association
will have a study break at 9 p.m.
W ednesday in the Texas Union Tav
ern.
International Business Association
will meet at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday in
the Texas Union Eastwoods Room.
Azizali F. Mohammed, I.M .F., will be
the speaker.
University Sports Car Club will
m eet form 9 p.m . to 10 p.m. W ednes
day in Texas Union 4.224. All interest
ed students are invited to attend.
Spanish and Portuguese Depart
ment will have "B ate-P apo"
(Por
tuguese Conversation Hour) from 5
p.m . to 7 p.m . Wednesday at Les
Amis Sidewalk Cafe, 24th and San
Antonio streets.
Center for Asian Studies and Ban
gladesh Students Association will
have a discussion on "Rural Develop
in Bangladesh" at 3 p.m.
ment
W ednesday
in Academ ic C enter
Knopf Room. Obaidullah Khan, am
bassador from Bangladesh and former
minister of agriculture in Bangladesh,
will be the speaker.
EARN EST is sponsoring a bicycle
trip to Buda leaving at 9 a.m . Sunday
from 27th and Guadalupe streets.
Registration deadline is Saturday.
Alpha Phi Omega will hold a ser
I he Daily I exan,Wednesday November 13, 1985/Page 15
7>>
%
AND THIS IS MY INNER
SANCTUM, IF YOU FALL. I COMB
HERB TOBE FINE TUNED ON
MY ARMS CONTROL POSITIONS
^ BY MY HANDLERS
AMAZJN&f SIMPLY ASTONISHING,SIR*
1 WONDER IF THE MRERS OF *UFE-
STYLES OF THE RICH AND FAMOUS"
could see VHATSm wse closer,
I'M SURE ITS SOMETHING THE REST
OF US CAN ONLY OREM ABOUT'
■B Tm m i, I HAVE TO SAY ■
■ **/*£ RJGHT, MR.LEAChA
VHIS IS WHERE1 KEEP MY I
DAILY INTELLIGENCE REfORTSÍ
ON SCMET ARMS CONTROL m
/ SUPE f
SUPER' NOW,HOW
ABOUT YOUR POCKETS’ UH
COULD YOUEMFTY
SURE.
YOUR POCKETS FOR
OUR CAMERAS *
/
/
J!Nqí£/
'^NSí£ /
by Charles M. Schulz
PAY ATTENTION T O M E Ü
B.C.
.. MAYÉ FUN IN
SCHOOL T O O Y 'f
WÉ MADATÉfTOAl
THQMAf O B f f e e f o N
H o w b ifou do ?
**
VC
BY J O H N N Y HART
*
t K m America Syndicate ’ MS
BLOOM COUNTY
//'?
by B erk e B reath ed
Temperatures
70 80'
_
s c r y ' 9 0
Associated Press
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST UNTIL 7 P.M. TUESDAY
Austin weather will be mostly cloudy Wednesday with an afternoon high
in the mid-80s. South winds will be at 10-15 mph. The National Weather
Service forecasts showers in parts of Arizona and New Mexico, Oklaho
ma, Arkansas, Missouri and Kentucky. Snow is predicted for the Western
Plains states. Rain can be expected in a band stretching from Nebraska
eastward to the New England states.
^ ^ ■ T O D A Y ' S ^ M
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED
ACROSS
1 Meat cut
5 Washbowl
10 Dear: It.
14 English
composer
15 Irregular
16 Featured
song
17 Do quickly
20 Layer
21 Drier
22 Tops
23 Insects' home
24 Heckled
25 School
discipline
28 Kind of poem
32 Extraordinary
people
*33 Bishop’s hat
34 Kind of deer
35 Fixed amount
36 Donor
37 Mane locale
38 Convent girl
39 Mouthfuls
40 Nickel or
copper
41 Separate
43 Spur parts
44 Eternities
45 Electrified
46 Ascends
49 Let it stand
50 Undermine
53 To check
reactions
56 Big quantity
57 Chip
58 Irish kings’
home
59 Commanded
60 Made out
61 Chinese
island
DOWN
1 Light giver
2 Viva voce
Black
Born
Act well
Came about
Genre
8 Ism adherent
9 Novitiate
10 Charge
11 Refuges
12 Anarchy
13 Stupid ones
18 Earths
19 Sequence
23 Injure
24 Ceremonies
25 Discovered
26 Boredom
27 Harness gear
28 Resident
29 Wrathful
30 Resin
31 Ships’ spines
33 Smidgeons
36 Emits
37 Eft
39 Generate
40 — Carlo
42 Greet
43 Took in sail
45 Poker pot
46 Puncture
47 Soft drink
48 Footless
49 Dominant
50 Hit hard
51 Gas: pref.
52 Appeal
54 Gums
55 Greek letter
© 19*5 United Feature Syndicate
Eyebeam
by Sam Hurt
Burnt Orange Blues
Capitol View
FIRST OATES N\ake
THE g i r l 's m u s i c a l
How MUCH MONEY
M E N E R V 0 U 6 , DICK
So k \UCH t o f i n d
OUT ..
v
TASTE # POu i T IC A L
DO X
5 ?CN D ?
PH| LOOOFM1E5 , LIKES
How ABooT you, D ick?
a n d Di s l i k e s . . .
w h a t do you
W a n t
Know o n a
to
F i r s t d a t e 7
)
by Van Garrett
••• U r E , L i b e E T V
ANt> The FtiR-SUIT
OF MAMD6AGS,..
JF
m .. & r
/
j
by Dubove & Saenz
by Miles Mathis
Student Involvement Committee
will have a party at 3:30 p.m . W ednes
day in Alumni Center. Guest speaker
will be Deloss Dodds, UT athletic di
rector.
Golden Key National Honor Soci
ety will m eet at 4 p.m . W ednesday in
Texas Union 4.108.
Communication Council will have
a Career Expo from noon to 4 p.m .
in C o m m u n ica tio n s
W e d n esd a y
Building
lobby. Representatives of
Fellers, Lacy and Gaddis, WFAA-TV,
Dallas M orning N ew s and other com
munication notables will be present.
Qaptist Student Union will have a
luncheon at 11:55 a.m . W ednesday at
2204 San A ntonio St.
Baptist Student Union will have
aerobics at 4 p.m . W ednesday at 2204
San Antonio St.
Communication Council will meet
at 6:30 p.m . and officers and chairpeo-
ple will m eet at 6 p.m . W ednesday in
Com m unications Building 5.160.
Texas Juggling Society will meet
from 7 p.m . to 10 p.m . W ednesday in
Russell A. Steindam Hall 215. Call
445-6188 or 440-0023 for information.
UT D epartm ent of Psychology will
present William W. Eatesn, associate
professor from Johns Hopkins Univer
sity, speaking on
the
Force of M orbidity in Psychiatric Dis
orders" at 4 p.m . W ednesday in Grad
uate School of Business Building
3.130.
"M easuring
UT Waterski team will meet at 7:30
p.m . W ednesday in Burdine Hall 136.
All prospective m em bers who are
trying out m ust attend this mandatory
meeting.
Student Health Center will present
a "M ethod s of Contraception" class
from 7 p.m . to 8:30 p.m . W ednesday
in Littlefield Library.
Student Health Center will present
a "M ethod s of C ontraception" class
from 1 p.m . to 2:30 p.m . W ednesday
in Student Health C enter 448.
W anted by the Student Health Cen
ter: Volunteers to assist with Quality
Assurance survey. Assistance will
also be needed after survey results are
contact Wanda
com pleted. Please
Hubbard at 471-4955 ext.212 for more
information.
Wanted by the Student Health Cen-
tér: Peer instructors for our M ethods
of Contraception classes. The six-
week training program will be held
January through February. To apply,
stop by the Student Health Center 347
Of call 471-4955, Ext.212 for more in
formation.
Pi Sigma Pi will m eet at 7:15 p.m .
W ednesday in Ernest Cockrell, Jr.,
Hall 1.202.
SMPE will m eet at 6:15 p.m .
W ednesday in Ernest Cockrell, Jr.,
Hall 1.202.
Engineering Management Society
will meet at 5:30 p.m . W ednesday in
the Texas Union Sinclair Suite.
Huntington Art Gallery presents a
concert by the University Tuba-Eu-
phonium Ensem ble at noon Thursday
in H untington Art Gallery in the Har
ry Ransom Center.
pood for Thought topic is "Procras
is
tination: He/She W ho Hesitates
L o st." The talk will be from noon to
1:30 p.m . Thursday in the Texas Un
ion Eastwoods Room. Sponsored by
the Counseling, Learning and Career
Services.
The Career Center is sponsoring
résum é critique labs from 4 p.m . to 6
p.m . W ednesday in Jester 223.
University AlAnon will meet at
noon every M onday and Thursday in
Student Health Center 412. Special
focus on Thursday is adult children of
alcholics.
Mirage Mid-Eastern Dance Troupe
will have a special performance from
7:30 p.m . to 8:30 p.m . Wednesday in
the Texas Union Tavern. Show is free.
University NOW will have a dis
cussion on
"A fterm ath: Emotional
Crisis of Relatives and Friends" from 7
p.m . to 8 p.m. W ednesday in Jester
A217A. Speaker is from Austin Rape
Crisis Center.
' University NOW presents Date
Rape Awareness: A Discussion for
M en from 7 p.m . to 8 p.m . W ednes
day in Brackenridge-Roberts Dormito
ry, TV lounge. Speaker from Austin
•Rape Crisis Center.
, University NOW will have a dis
cussion on "A fterm ath: The Victim's
Emotional C risis" from noon to 2 p.m .
W ednesday in the Texas Union Gov
ernors' Room. Speaker from Austin
Rape Crisis Center.
« Youth for Y'shua will have a Jewish
Sbripture
study on Deuteronomy
18:15-22 and Acts 3:19-26 showing
that M oses believed in Y'shua, the
for
Jew ish Messiah. Call 474-8044
more details.
‘ Chabad Jewish Student Organiza
tion will have a Torah in the '80s
study session from 2 p.m . to 3 p.m .
in Texas Union 4.226.
W ednesd ay
Rabbi Y. Leverton will lead the discus
sion.
> JUT Rugby team will scrimmage
from 6 p.m . to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday
a t the Intramural Fields. Call Jon-Mi-
chael Desaloms at 454-5522 for more
information.
Black Health Professions Organiza
tion will m eet at 6:30 p.m. W ednesday
in Jester A303. Speakers will be from
Southw est Medical School in Dallas.
Liberal Arts Council will have a
"M eet Professors from Around the
W orld" program at 3 p.m. W ednes
day in Old Music Building 3.102. Pro
fessors from Nigeria, France, Russia
Page 16/The Daily Texan/Wednesday. November 13. 1985
i o a q i i vvtjuntibuay. iNovemoer i j . iyoo
Thanksgiving meal a real turkey
Poultry specialists say native American bird not too smart
Associated Press
Associated Press
C O LL E G E S T A T IO N — T u rk e y s
h a v e g rac ed
th is c o u n try 's d in n e r
ta b les a t T h an k sg iv in g for h u n d r e d s
of y e a rs, b u t th e b ird still suffers
from im ag e p ro b le m s, p o u ltry s p e
cialists at Texas A&M U niv ersity
say.
T he tu rk e v m ay be ta sty , b u t o n e
th in g is ce rtain — it is n 't sm a rt, said
Vv llliam C aw ley , a p o u ltry e x p e rt
w ith th e T exas A g ricu ltu ral E x ten
sion Service h e a d q u a rte rs at Texas
A&M
"They d o s tra n g e th in g s. For in
stan ce, v o u n g e r tu rk e y s a re so in
q u isitiv e th a t if y o u leave a n e m p ty
b u ck e t in th e ir p e n , th e y 'll all clim b
In
th e
in u n til th e bu ck et fills u p ," he said
sp rin g , w h en y o u n g e r
b ird s are raised on o p en ranges,
so m e of th e m are so a m a /e d by
h ea v y rain s th a t th e y g a /e at the sky
u n til th e y d ro w n , C aw ley said.
T he w o rd tu rk e y — th e n am e E u
ro p e a n s c h o se for th e native A m eri
can bird — m ay stem from th e m is
th e bird s w ere
ta k en belief
im p o rte d from T urkey, said D avid
M ellor, w h o also is w ith th e ex te n
sion service
th a t
th e P ilgrim s'
The b ird w as called tu rk ey long
la n d in g at
b efo re
P ly m o u th Rock in 1620, M ellor said,
a n d
the
it w as d o m e stic ate d by
A m eric an In d ia n s before th e disco v
ery o f N orth America in 1492.
Spanish explorers took the bird
from M exico to Spain in 1498 and
from there the turkey w as distribut
ed to other parts of Europe. It w as
b ro u g h t to England in 1524, Mellor
said.
"The Europeans m ay have been
co n fu se d a b o u t the bird's origin,
th in k in g th a t it, like the gu inea-fow l
or peacock, cam e from T u rk e y ," he
said. "S o o n th e n a m e tu rk e y w as
ap p lied o n ly to th e bird from A m eri
c a ."
M ost tu rk e y s fo u n d o n U.S. ta
bles are h e n s — as o p p o se d to m ale
b ird s called to m s o r g o b b lers, C a w
ley
said.
Doctor defends weed-killer diet
Associated Press
H O U ST O N — A H ou ston p h y
sician w h om the Texas attorney
general's office is su in g d efen d ed
the u se of a w eed killer in the diet
clinics he o w n s, sayin g the ch em i
cal is effective in h elp in g patients
lose w eigh t.
The attorney general's suit con
ten d s the chem ical 2-4 dinitrophe-
nol can cau se seriou s sid e effects
— in clu d ing vom itin g, high fever,
h ead ach es and abdom inal pain,
but Dr. N ich olas B achynsky says
"every drug has som e side ef
fects."
B achynsky, w h o o w n s P hysi
cians C linics, said dinitrophenol is
effective in treating 90 percent of
patients w ith w eig h t problem s.
"In the 10,000 p eop le w e'v e
there h ave been no
treated,
d eath s," he said M onday. "What
h ave I d o n e that's been illegal?
W here are the dead people?"
The attorney general's office
last w eek su ed B achynsky, claim
in g the u se of the drug, w hich
also is k n ow n as Mitcal — in
ov erw eig h t patients is toxic and
has n o m edical value.
Physicians Clinic has
three
ou tlets in H ou ston and offices in
Dallas, San A n ton io and Califor
nia, according to the attorney g e n
eral's suit.
Bachynsky said each Physicians
Clinic patient is tested , asked to
sign a con sen t form and w atches a
vid eotap e about the drug before it
is a d m in is te re d . H e said he p re s
cribes a d o se ac co rd in g to th e p a
tie n t's in d iv id u a l n e e d s.
"T h e q u e s tio n is n o t th a t it is a
p o iso n , b u t w h e th e r it's ta k en in
th e p ro p e r d o s e s ," h e said.
in
O th e r d ru g s , su c h as c o u m a d in
a n d d ig ito x in are p o iso n s w h e n
large d o se s, h e said.
u se d
C o u m a d in
tre a tin g
is u se d
h e a rt p a tie n ts, as is d ig ito x in , a
d e riv a tiv e of th e foxglove p la n t.
in
W hile d in itro p h e n o l lacks Food
a n d D ru g A d m in is tra tio n a p p r o v
al, B achynsky sa id , it h a s b e e n
available o v e r th e c o u n te r since
th e 1930s a n d is a p p ro v e d by th e
E n v iro n m e n ta l P ro te ctio n A g e n
cy.
24th & San Antonio
O p * n (v * ry M g M U n M I J O
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DataLife,
/ he W y n d h a m Hote l f s o u t h Park)
I IS A B en W h ite B lv d A u stin . IX
D u e to a p a r tn e r s h ip l iq u i d a t io n , I a k e w a y In v e s to rs .
I td has o rd e re d th e p u b lic a u c tio n o f these 10 m a g
n if ic e n t 2 s to ry c o n d o m in iu m s at Texas m o s t p re
s tig io u s re s o rt
f- r a t u r e d A m e m t i e s I n c l u d e
’ C o m p le te A p p lia n c e s
C o u r s e s
• A p p ro x im a te ly I ,§ 1 § to
1 , 1 » S q Ft
■ 2 sto ry ( .la s s W a lls tk
C a th e d r a l ( e i ln n g s
■ M a n y R e s id e n c e s F u lly
F u rn is h e d
F ire p la c e , P atio , W et Bar
F q u e s tria n ( e n te r w ith
SOO A cres of R a m b lin g
Trails
12 W o rld C la s s In d o o r
a n d O u td o o r I ig h te d
C o u rts
R e n ta l M a n a g e m e n t
P ro g ra m
• S i*fy fiv e M ile l o n g
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• P riv a te M a r in a . Y acht
C lu b , a n d A irp o rt
’ 2 C h a m p io n s h i p G o lf
• ( o r p o r a te ( o n fe re n c e
a n d ( o n v e n tio n
F a c ilitie s
F in e D in in g at L ak e w a y
In n a n d l^ k e w a y
R a c q u e t C lu b
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A c c o m m o d a tio n s fo r
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S econd H o m e b u y e rs a n d In v e s to r s
All sa le s w ill c lo s e o n o r b e f o r e D ec 31, 1905
at th e o ff ic e s o f S te w a rt T itle
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_ _ . .
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