e Daily Texan Vol. 81, No. 51 (USPS 146-440) S tudent N e w s p a p e r a t The U n iversity of Texas a t Austin Wednesday, November 11, 1981 Twenty-Five Cents Tripartite lignite bid made; sole offer faces scrutiny By MELISSA WARD Daily Texan Staff If the three-party joint bid for lignite reserves in Bastrop County passes the scrutiny of the U.S. Justice D epart­ m ent, then Austin, San Antonio and the Lower Colorado River Authority — the only bidders — will share the 90 million tons of coal. When Bureau of Land M anagement officials announced the highest bidder Tuesday morning, joint bid of $2,004,395 was the only offer for lignite reserves a t the form er Camp Swift m il­ itary base. the After Tessie Anchondo, chief of the bureau’s mining section, announced the necessary qualifications and minimum acceptable bid of $240 per acre, the sole bid was anticlim actic. The joint bidders are offering about $311 per acre. Austin’s share of the reserves will cost nearly $668,132. Ownership of 126 of the 6,434 acres at Camp Swift has not been established. San Antonio officials believe they have the deed for the acreage from a previ­ ous Camp Swift landowner. Their ap­ peal is under review by the Interior Board of Land Appeals. Although the Justice D epartm ent had recom m ended that the bureau postpone bidding or re je c t the joint bid because of possible an titru st violations, the pro­ cess went ahead as planned at Sheraton Crest Hotel. the "As far as the Bureau of Land Man­ agem ent is concerned, the proper fo­ rum for Justice D epartm ent review is after the bidder is announced,” Anchon­ do said. The Justice D epartm ent will review the bid for evidence of price-fixing and m ake a recom m endation to the Depart- o ffic ia ls When Bureau of Land Man­ agem en t an­ nounced the highest bidder Tuesday morning, the joint bid of $2,004,395 was the lig n ite only offer former reserves at Camp Swift military base. The Justice Department will review the bid for evi­ dence of price-fixing and make a recommendation to the Department of Interior. for the m ent of Interior. If the Justice D epart­ m ent rejects the joint bid, the bidding process will sta rt all over again, An­ chondo said. Acting Austin City M anager Tom Muehlenbeck said earlier that the city would assess the possibility of bidding on the entire lignite reserve if the con­ cession is turned down. Arthur von Rosenberg, planning man­ ager for the San Antonio City Public Service, said San Antonio would also consider that option. We have in the past considered it and would consider it again if that were the c a se ,” he said. Von Rosenberg said that San Antonio preferred the co-tenant arrangement because they would be working with a utility that supplies energy to the Bas­ trop area. Bob Tintsman of the LCRA said he was pleased that the Justice Depart­ m ent decided not to order an injunction against the bidding process. Tintsman would not comm ent on the reason for the Justice D epartm ent’s involvement, but said, "I think they’re being extra concerned about what they think is the public interest. But the*elected officials in San Antonio and Austin think they’re working in the public interest also.” One 10-acre tra c t of land originally included in the Camp Swift package was excluded Tuesday because "it does not actually ex ist,” Anchondo said. The bureau had counted the tra c t twice. Only governm ent entities producing electrical energy for sale in Texas were to bid on the publicly * held eligible reserves. TSP selects new ‘Texan’ editor Schwartz chosen; Angerstein reinstated By ERIC BARTELS Daily Texan Staff The Texas Student Publications Board voted Tuesday night to appoint Daily T exa n John Schwartz to fill the editorship for the rem ainder of the year and to reinstate managing editor Paula Angerstein. acting editor Schwartz, named to the interim posi­ tion late last week following the resig­ nation of editor Don Puffer, will likely have to give up his job as editor of the U niversity’s quarterly m agazine, UT- most. Puffer, Angerstein and assistan t edi­ tor Jeff Smejkal left the paper Friday after 11 staff m em bers demanded P uffer’s resignation in a protest that led to at least 20 defections. N early all of the staff m em bers have since re­ turned to their jobs. Schwartz, a second-year law student, got six of 11 votes, while form er T exan staff m em bers Mark Dooley and Susan Albrecht received four and one, respec­ tively. Angerstein, the lone applicant for the managing editor job, was ap­ proved by a 7-4 vote. “ I ’m very pleased, and it’s tim e to get back to w ork,” said Schwartz, son of form er sta te Sen. A.R. "B abe” Schwartz, D-Galveston. Schwartz said though hurt by the internal strife of the past week, can recover fully. the Texan, "The reputation has suffered, people are disappointed in the Texan, and ev­ eryone wants to know what happened,” he said. "B ut there’s no reason for it not to be back to norm al. Wounds heal by them selves. We can show people over tim e that it’s gonna work — that the paper can be as good as ever, better than e v e r.” ^ _ Oh, say can you sae? Lar r y Kolvoord, TSP Staff flagpole in front of the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Brig. Gen. Bill Hill (I) and John Engberg, national adjutant of the Regular Veterans’ Association, salute Public Affairs Building. The dedication Tuesday Old Glory during dedication ceremonies for the new came one day before Veterans’ Day. Reagan calls for go-ahead on plan; sees storms before economic calm WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan, while predicting “hard tim es" in the months ahead, vowed Tuesday to stick with his economic program and chastised Congress for drag* ging its feet on further budget cuts. "Our plan for economic recovery is sound,” Reagan said of the sharp tax and spending cuts that went into effect 40 days ago ‘‘I am determ ined to stick with it.” But at his fifth news conference, the president said the reces­ sion “ none of us had predicted" is likely to get worse before it gets better. "I think w e’re going to have some hard tim es in the next few m onths,” he said Asked if he might need to raise some taxes if the economy doesn’t improve, the president hedged, saying ‘‘th a t’s a deci­ sion that will have to be m ade” early next year. Form ally facing reporters for the first tim e since Oct. 1, Reagan also stood by his controversial view that a limited nuclear exchange is possible, and described his foreign policy accom plishm ents as "astounding. ” The president opened the session in the E ast Room of the White House by reading a prepared statem ent on the economy that declared, "W e’ve laid a firm foundation for economic re­ covery in 1982.” He urged Congress to get working on new appropriations bills, including the additional budget cuts he asked for in Sep­ tember, and noted that most of the spending bills in the works on Capitol Hill a re ‘‘over budget.” "This governm ent m ust stiffen its spine and not throw in the towel on cutting the budget, Reagan said, adding a warning: ‘‘I stand ready to veto any bill that abuses the lim ited re­ sources of the taxpayers.” He also complained about the slow pace of congressional action on the spending m easures, noting that a tem porary con­ tinuing resolution to fund the government will soon run out and probably have to be extended. House D em ocratic leader Jim Wright of Texas, responding to Reagan s criticism , said nearly all the appropriations bills have passed the D emocratic-controlled House and are awaiting action in the Senate, where Republicans a re in the m ajority. Wright said it was his impression that R eagan’s economic plans are ‘‘on hold.” "It seem s that he doesn’t know exactly what he wants to do, Wright said a fte r R eagan’s news conference. While the economy and the continuing tax and budget con­ flict with Congress dom inated the 35-minute session, there were several questions about defense and foreign policy. The president was questioned closely about his com m ent that a battlefield exchange of nuclear weapons could be kept from escalating into a full-blown holocaust — a rem ark that fueled anti-nuclear protests in Europe. Reagan said his response to the ‘‘hypothetical question” was that limiting such an exchange was "som ething that I thought- was possible.” "I could see w here both sides could still be deterred from going into the exchange between strategic w eapons,” he said. On a related topic, Reagan said he knows nothing of a NATO plan to fire a "dem onstration" nuclear shot to deter Soviet aggression. He also rejected suggestions his foreign policy has been ham pered by adm inistration in-fighting. "T h e re ’s no bickering or backstabbing going on," he said. "Our accom plishm ents have been astounding,” he said, cit­ ing improved ties with Mexico and Canada and the genial re­ ception he got at the Cancún economic sum m it, where, he noted, "I didn’t get burned a t the stak e.” On the economic front, Reagan said there is "uncertainty” among his advisers when "w e can bring ourselves out of this recession” but noted "som e pretty hopeful signs” — falling interest rates and m oderating inflation. We a re agreed,’ he said, "We are going to come out of it in the next several m onths” — or by the middle of 1982. "The T exan will be fine,” said M ar­ tin "R ed " Gibson, professor of journal­ ism and m em ber of the board. "We have a very inexperienced editor, but he will learn fast. H e’s a bright young m an.” "I think it’ll be a good T exa n ," said W arren B urkett, associate professor of journalism and a m em ber of the board. Of Angerstein, who left the Texan amid charges that she had failed to pro­ vide adequate leadership for the staff, Gibson said, "S h e’s had the leadership, she’s ju st been reluctant to a sse rt it. She needs to boss these people around a little.” "I m going to do all I can to rectify those m istak es," said Angerstein. a senior in com puter science. "I m an old softy in the fact that I ’m glad Paula is getting the chance to fin- - Newly appointed Texan editor John Schwartz Clayton Brantly, Daily Texan Staff ish out what she’s sta rte d ," B urkett said. Burkett said the credibility of the Texan would not be perm anently harmed by the recent problems. "You rate a good newspaper on the basis of what it does everyday, from day to day," he said. "Any publication would suffer when you have that much turm oil,” Gibson said. "My only hope is that the people who were involved (in the staff walkout) don t say Well, we lopped off one head, le t’s try again. I hope it was just that Don was in the wrong and the over­ throw was for a good cause.” At the board meeting, Schwartz ex­ “ O ' m pressed confidence that V T m o s t would not be destroyed by his departure. "I would not do this if I didn’t think the m agazine would be as good as be­ fore." he said. “I’m not the magaziqe. It will get along just fine without m e.” Dooley, who ran unsuccessfully for editor against Mark McKinnon in the spring of 1980, said his edge over Schwartz in experience may have been offset by his recent lack of involvement with the Texan. The board s selections marked the first tim e a Texan editor has not been determ ined by a campuswide student election since a three-year period of ad­ m inistrative appointm ents between 1962 and 1965. 1 T O Í d l l U 1 3 D D . Supreme Court decision could help GOP in ’82 campaign for Senate seats r . ____ l i : ______________________ ~ U / A C U l N C T n W í T T D r » WASHINGTON (U PI) — The Republican P arty won an im portant Supreme Court victory Tues­ day in a unanimous campaign finance ruling that could help the GOP widen its m ajority in the Sen­ ate next year. The justices struck down, 9-0, cam paign finance restrictions that a lower court said pre­ vented national political parties from assum ing some fund-raising power in Senate cam paigns that Congress originally granted to state party organizations. The National Republican Senatorial Com m ittee successfully urged the high court to reverse a rul­ ing that declared illegal the funding contracts state Republican groups have with the national Senate com m ittee. The contracts were the largest single source of funds for Republican Senate candidates in the 1980 elections, when the GOP took control of the body. "Nothing in the statute suggests that a state com m ittee m ay not designate another com m ittee to be its alter ego and to act in its behalf,” Jus­ tice Byron White wrote for the court. The GOP recently has enjoyed a substantial fund-raising advantage over the D em ocrats, and the high court ruling allows the national party to exploit that edge by funneling funds into particu­ lar state contests Republicans currently enjoy a 53-47 Senate edge and Tuesday’s outcome m ay be critical for the D em ocratic P arty; of the 33 Senate seats at stake in 1982, D emocrats hold 20. Under the challenged spending authority deals, a sta te party organization turned over to the na­ tional group its power to spend the legal amount approved for its state — two cents per eligible voter. Since the national com m ittee also m ay spend two cents per voter, the arrangem ents doubled the national group’s financial clout in each Senate race. D em ocrats claimed the infusion of funds from the national GOP in 1980 tipped the balance in several Senate races — New York, Florida, Penn­ sylvania, North Carolina and Georgia — where Republicans em erged victorious But White said of the state-national agree­ ments, "E ffective use of party resources in sup­ port of party candidates m ay encourage candi­ date loyalty and responsiveness to the p a rty .” The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D istrict of Columbia had ruled the arrangem ents were ille­ gal But the Supreme Court — at the GOP’s re ­ quest — stopped the decision from going into ef­ fect before last fall’s elections That enabled the GOP to spend all the way to the legal lim it in 31 of 34 races. In another decision handed down Tuesday, the court aw arded $20,000 in life insurance benefits to a servicem an’s second wife, even though he had agreed in a divorce settlem ent to leave the money to his three children by a first marriage. The court s two decisions Tuesday were its first signed opinions of the 1981-82 term. The court also heard arguments to allow pri­ vate colleges and universities to regulate political limit activity on cam pus by non-students to speechmaking or pam­ highly offensive" phleteering h inally, the city of Mesquite. Texas wanted the justices to uphold an ordinance barring people un­ der 17 from entering an arcade unless accompa­ nied by a parent or guardian Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, November 11, 1981 Cattigraphy&monstrafwn Mw^Scc^Jl 2901 MEDICAL ARTS STREET PLENTY OF FREE PARKING W£M£/VÍS W65TEEA.' ST Y cr Wlft-fc CUT­ OUTS ON A HEEU. Xhl 'TAN s iz r s 5-M€N 'S w evnseA j HQDIUM rtlM . HÉ£5^10 FOOTGEAR I Ge L Geared to comfort and q u al it y 2200 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TEXAS 78705 512-472-9433 A Clements appoints professor to board Gov. Bill Clements Tuesday appointed a University professor to the 22-member Task Force on Foreign Investments. Robert Green, associate professor of marketing and interna­ tional business, will serve on the committee, which will explore the types and quantity of foreign businesses and investments in Texas. In addition, the group will compile a directory of the foreign investors that will include the investor’s country, type of busi­ ness acquired and nature of assets acquired. The directory also will compute the percentage of state corporations and real es­ tate held by these investors. It (the task force) will look into the area of foreign inves­ tors in Texas with the purpose of trying to come up with some facts and recommendations, Green said. “ I don’t know right now what recommendations they’re looking for — good or bad — but it might just be to find out who these investors are.” Green was co-chairman of the 1979 International Marketing Conference in Brussels, Belgium. He also edits a special sec­ tion on international marketing for the Journal of Business Research. The task force, which includes members from around the state, will be chaired by Jack Lander, chairman of the board of Merchants Park Bank in Houston. Aid deadline Monday Monday is the deadline for applying for University financial aid based on need for spring 1981. Most of this year’s mon­ ey has already been given to those who applied for fall and spring, said Pat Korbus of the Office of Stu­ dent Financial Aid. But some money is left for those who either missed the fall deadline to apply or did not go to school in the fall but will go in the spring. This deadline does not cover those applying only for the Guaranteed Student Loan Program or the Pell Grant, who need not apply before F eb ru ary and March respectively. Some cuts President Reagan has made in the fi­ nancial aid program have already gone into effect, said Korbus, but new cuts for fiscal year 1982 may be slower than in coming those of 1981. “ Apparently both Re­ publicans and Democrats in the White House are be­ coming more reluctant to go along with Reagan’s ideas and are starting to look at this thing more carefully saying, 'We’ve already cut this (financial aid) a lot — do we need to cut this more?’ ” Korbus said she is not optimistic about the situa­ tion. She does not think fi­ immune nancial aid from future cuts, however she does expect cuts to be fewer in fiscal year 1982 than in 1981. is “ (U.S. Secretary of Edu­ cation) Terrel Bell is now the across-the- saying board budget cuts of 12 percent will be more like 27 percent for education. ' Korbus does not think the cuts will necessarily be 27 percent, saying the cuts in fiscal 1982 are yet to be determined. “ There will be a lot of give and take,” she said. One method of cutting spending applies eligibility tests to the Guaranteed Student Loan Program. A student whose fam ily earns $30,000 a year or more will have to demon­ strate need to collect a GSLP loan, Korbus said. Students whose families earn less than $30,000 may borrow the maximum $2,500 in 12 months. The el­ igibility tests became ef­ fective Oct. 1. Tins D u l y T E x a n P E R M A N E N T S T A F F By GERRY RUIZ Daily Texan Staff Joh n Sch w artz E d ito r M anaging E d ito r Brian D unbar A sso cia te M anaging E d ito rs L isa B eyer, Entertain m en t E dito r M elissa H irsch A sso ciate E n tertain m en t E d ito r Cindy Widner N ew s E d ito r A sso ciate N ew s E d ito r F e a tu re E d ito r Spo rts E dito r A sso ciate S p o rts E d ito r Senior S p o rtsw riters G rap h ics E d ito r Photo E d ito r Alex P laza M aureen P ask in Jenn y Abdo Mike H ults Steve Vinson A ssistan t Photo E d ito r Kevin Vandivier Im a g e s E d ito r W arren Spector A sso c ia te Im a g e s E d ito r . H arry P o tte r G en eral R ep o rters M elissa W a rd . Jo d i H ooker. G ary R a sp . G ardn er Selby. Clayton Stro m b e rge r R eid L ay m a nee R o ger C am pbell Suzanne Michel, S u sie W oodhams A ssignm ents E dito r M ichelle Locke __ IS S U E S T A F F A ssista n t N ew s E d ito r N ew s A ssista n t Bob D avila Susan Tron, Mike Sw artz N ew sw riters M ark Stutz E ric B a rte ls, J im H ankins, Brian Sipple. Jen n ifer Bird F rank E d ito rial A ssista n t . . . E ntertainm ent A ssistan t A ssistan t Sp o rts E dito r . (Cavanaugh . Chris Jo rd an Bob F isce lla Sp o rts A ssista n ts F e a tu re s A ssistan t M ake-up E d ito r W ire E dito r Copy E d ito rs E ddie P erkins, Mike Black w ell D iane M oore Andy N eim an D avid T eece Amy M ashberg. M arvilyn Klann, K elly Budd S a m Hurt. M att Stavrow sky, P aul G reenw ay Clayton Brantly, L arry Koivoord P h otograph ers A rtists T E X A N A D V E R T ISIN G S T A F F C a lise B urch ette, Doug C am pbell. Jo e l C a rte r. C laire Donaldson. Erin Donohue. C laudia G ra v es. Mike L ittm an, Cheryl L uedecke, M arianne Newton, Sam Torrey. J im Wells, Ken G ra y s The D aily Texan, a student new spaper a t The U niversity of T e x a s at Austin, is published by T e x a s Student P ublication s, D raw er D, U niversity Station. Austin. TX 78712 The D aily Texan is published M onday. Tuesday. W ednesday. Th ursday and F rid a y , except holiday and ex am periods Second c la s s p o stage paid a t Austin TX 78710 N ew s contributions will be accep ted by telephone (471-451*1), a t the ed itorial office (T e x a s Student Pub lication s Building 2 1221 or at the news laboratory (C om m um ca tion Building A4 136) Inquiries concerning delivery and c la ssifie d a d v ertisin g should be m ade in T S P Building 3 200 ( 471-5244) The national ad v ertisin g re p re se n tativ e of The D aily Texan is C om m unications and A dvertising S e rv ice s to Students. 1633 West C entral S treet. Evanston. Illinois 60201 phone (800) 323-4044 toll free The D aily Texan su b scrib e s to United P r e s s International and New York T im es N ew s S erv ice The Texan is a m em b er of the A sso ciated C ollegiate P re ss, the South­ w est Jo u rn alism C ongress, the T e x a s D aily N ew spaper A ssociation and A m erican N ew spaper P ub lish ers A ssociation Copyright 1981 T e x a s Student P ublication s T H E D A ILY T E X A N S U B SC R IP T IO N R A T E S One S e m e ste r (F a ll or Spring) Two S e m e ste rs ( F a ll and Spring > Su m m er S ession One Y e ar (F a ll, Spring and S um m er) 820 00 40 go j j gg 50 00 Send o rd e rs and a d d re ss ch anges to T e x a s Student P ublication s. P O Box D. A us­ P U B NO 146440 tin, TX 78712. o r to T S P Building C3 200 . Campus blood drive starts Alpha Phi Omega, Spooks ánd Phi Kappa Psi began the annual three-day UT Blood Drive Tuesday with the help of three blood banks. Carter Blood Bank of Fort Worth, Austin Central Texas Regional Blood Bank and the M.D. Anderson Hospital Blood Bank of Hous­ ton have stationed personnel around campus to draw blood from eligible applicants. Donors must pass a physical examination to qualify to give blood. Donors also must weigh at least 110 pounds, not be anemic and never have had hepatitis, a severe infection of the liver, said Gay McCutchen, senior management analyst at M.D. Anderson Hos­ pital. “ We also check to see that the donor’s blood pressure is within normal limits and that he doesn’t have any infection,” she said. Anyone who has had hepatitis can never be a donor because the virus is carried perma­ nently. If a patient is transfused with infect­ ed blood, he can become acutely ill, McCutchen said. However, she said, most UT donors pres­ ent few health problems. “ We rarely have problems with donors here since this is a healthy population of college students.” Kathleen Carter, a freshman Plan H ma­ jor, gave blood Tuesday for the first time. She said she was scared but decided to do it because it was for a good cause. “ At first I wasn’t going to give blood. But I saw the signs around campus, and a friend of mine was going to give, so I decided to come,” she said. “ It’s the fear of the unknown that scares you the first time. But once you have done it, there is no problem,” said Johnny Barboza, a junior biology major. “ I have blood to spare,” said Debbie Collmer, a junior chemistry major. “ I have done it a bunch of times, and it doesn’t hurt — it feels like a regular shot.” Rights of Criminals & Victims” Thursday, Nov. 12th 7:30pm Rabbi Roy Walter Congregation Emanuel Houston, Txx. 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T/.WJ; j 1f;! v, I'M O .i; ( O W V ; ; . ; i : / 1 / . u . v v Wednesday, November 11, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN World & National Page 3 Inflation up slightly; slowdown foreseen • 1981 The New York Times Wa s h in g t o n — inflation at the wholesale level continued to ebb during October, with the Producer Price Index for finished goods rising by six-tenths of 1 percent, the Labor Department re­ ported Tuesday. Although this was the biggest ad­ vance since April for finished goods — items ready for sale to the ultimate user — economists pointed out that it reflected mainly a big jump in prices of 1982-model cars and an end of rebate programs on motor vehicles that had helped keep the rise in September to just two-tenths of 1 percent. “It’s a continuation of the downward trend in inflation reflecting weakening economic activity, particularly in in­ dustrial markets,” commented Richard S. Peterson, senior vice president of the Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Co. “It’s not out of line with what we’ve been expecting.” The two companion indexes, those for materials at the intermediate stage of production and for crude goods, also re­ flected diminished inflationary pres­ sures. Intermediate materials showed no change after seasonal adjustment last month, the first tim e since June 1975 that this index did not rise. Overall, declared Jack Carlson, chief economist of the National Association of Realtors, Tuesday’s statistics offer “further evidence that the underlying inflation rate is subsiding.” This, in turn, is having a beneficial effect on in­ terest rates and is thus “good news” for the badly battered housing industry, he said. The index of finished goods, regarded as primary among the three main pro­ ducer index “equals,” has now risen only 7.3 percent over the past 12 months. This is down from 7.8 percent in September and from 13.1 percent in October 1980. Last month’s six-tenths of 1 percent increase in the finished goods index re­ flected slightly lower prices for energy and for consumer foods more than offset by other items. Virtually the entire acceleration from the exceptionally low September climb was caused by the swing in motor vehicle prices, the Labor Department said. Passenger cars, the breakdown shows, rose 4.2 percent while light trucks leaped 16 percent. These items account for 7 percent and 1 percent, re­ spectively, of the finished goods index. Although some economists said the six-tenths of 1 percent rise was toward the upper range of their expectations others, including Jay M. Woodworth, senior domestic economist at the Bank­ ers Trust Co., expressed relief that the result was a bit lower than they had feared. Tuesday’s announcement, said Wood- worth, “sows the seeds for a renewed slowdown in the PPI for November,” perhaps back to the September level. The Bankers Trust economist, who just returned from a two-week trip in which he discussed economic conditions with numerous businessmen, said, “I got my ears pinned back” whenever he suggested the economy was not heading into steep decline. He said that capital spending plans, a key element in the administration’s agenda for economic recovery, were being pared back and this, combined with the “very encouraging” behavior of agricultural prices, to project continued easing of prices. led him Cuts in federal budget hurting public housing • 1981 The New York Tlmee WASHINGTON — Housing officials from around the country warned Tues­ day that public housing units were fall­ ing into disrepair and would deteriorate rapidly because of the reductions being made in federal housing subsidies. Their warnings were buttressed by internal documents from the Depart­ ment of Housing and Urban Develop­ ment that forecast the same conse­ flow quences — “ c r itic a l problems” for most public housing au­ thorities, “the cutoff of utilities and other essential services,” layoffs of maintenance workers, rent strikes, liti­ gation and the “closing down of large numbers" of public housing units. cash Philip Abrams, deputy assistant sec­ retary of housing, said that the con­ cerns were valid but overstated. With improved management and with larger contributions from state and local gov­ ernments, he said, public housing au­ thorities could continue operations at current levels. the growth President Reagan has proposed re­ ductions in the level of federal housing subsidies as part of his overall effort to control in government spending. Subsidies in the last fiscal year totaled $962 million, or 85.5 per­ cent of the amount for which local hous­ ing authorities were eligible under the established formula. For the current fiscal year, the administration has re­ quested $1.06 billion in subsidies, repre­ senting 69 percent of the “reasonable” service level indicated by the formula. At a news conference here, Robert Maffin, executive director of the Na­ tional Association of Housing and Rede­ velopment Officials, said: “Local hous­ ing authorities are not crying ‘wolf’ when they predict doom for public hous­ ing at the projected operating fund lev­ els. “Ninety thousand units of housing with a replacement value of $6 billion are already seriously deteriorated and could be permanently lost from the na­ tion’s housing stock unless remedial measures are taken immediately.” The federal government provides op­ erating subsidies for 1.2 million units of public housing with 3.4 million tenants. If further reductions are approved by Congress, he said, the housing authority would have to cut back on elevator re­ pairs, janitorial services, building se­ curity and social programs for tenants. Vandalism would almost certainly in­ crease, according to a written analysis prepared by the city agency, and public housing would then “begin to mirror closely the very slum buildings which are found surrounding the projects.” Several local housing officials said that their problems were becoming so serious that they might ask the federal government to take over management and operation of their projects. The housing authority in Jersey City, N.J., has already inquired about the proce­ dures for turning over its housing stock to the federal government. Housing officials from Denver, San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Fort Worth, Milwaukee, New Orleans and Miami joined Maffin in warning that the pro­ posed budget cuts, combined with the reductions already made, would seri­ ously harm their operations. The Chica­ go Public Housing Authority has al­ ready experienced difficulty meeting its weekly payroll, Maffin said. In a confidential memorandum to Philip D. Winn, the federal housing commissioner, the staff of the Depart­ ment of Housing and Urban Develop­ ment said that the proposed budget cuts “would result in nothing less than disas­ ter for Boston and similar public hous­ ing authorities, probably forcing them to close down a substantial number of units.” te», neutralist mood wan gbcid in West Germany. Bre- snivel rad would take military action I Against the Palestinians if Ameri> I #an diplomatic efforts failed to halt I e p ara» build-up in the region. I ■Pure was no immediate comment I Bom Israel. Ptmoklng gun* fomd WTWASHINGTON - The United I plates has solid evidence — a I fc “smoking gun” — Unking the Soviet I 'Union to the use of lethal chemical I weapons in Cambodia, Laos and Pttmly Afghanistan, a top State I Depsrtmeot official said Tuesday. I Wwnow have the smoking gun. We I *wwr lave four separate pieces of I physical evidence” of the use of I lethal to p s against civilian popula- I tions In Southeast Asia, said State I Departntont official Richard Burt. Thg Soviet press has denied the I r t ^ n n ■ | CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - pnth the astronauts confident of a SThursday launch.the countdown be- Man Tuesday for the secood attempt' pD aeod the shuttle Columbia back M fo arfcit mid open a new era of re- ifa a t W»ce travel. The countdown Pending toa 7:90a.m. EST Thursday [blastoff was abbreviated since |tmich of the flight preparation had pdieady been done before the first rwttempt to launch the shuttle was I canceled last Wednesday. “We’re 1 to make it this time,“ said as- [toonautiRkhard Truly. I CHICAGO — A 15-year-old paro- Ichial school student, angry because §ws teach* ■ sent him to the princi- | pal’s office for throwing paper alr- fplanes, dropped an LSD tablet [known as “Orange Sunshine” into I her coffee when he returned to plasa, police said Tuesday. An- Pohiette Indovina, ii, a teacher at ' Notre Dame grade school, was list- pd hi good condition Tuesday. Mrs. PXndovina drank the coffee bid felt no effects until she began hallucinating about noon. Another teacher called an ambulance. piN» charged in nun rape AMARILLO — Police Tuesday charged a teenager identified by a hew fingerprint detection system with murder in the Halloween rape and fatal beating of a 75-year-old nun in her convent. Johnny Prank Garrett 17, who was arrested at his home bite Monday Police said Gar­ nett lived only a few blocks from the Baint Francis Convent, where Sister Ifadea Benz was raped and beaten 10 death in the early morning hours 5 NEW YORK - Stocks were fotxed in active trading Tuesday fvheu an early rally sparked by tow- m interest rates faded amid p it ie s about the economy. The ¡Dow Jones industrial average, Siich rallied late Monday to gain ÍM points, surrendered 1.23 points to 853.88 after being ahead five points at around midday. U.S. troops arrive in Cairo for Operation Bright Star ’82. UPI Telephoto Mubarak defends war games / T TTfcT v * A P A T D A XT' CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) — As more American troops and weapons ar­ rived in Egypt, President Hosni Mu­ barak Tuesday defended the upcom­ ing war games with the United States against Arab criticism, saying they are “not directed against any coun­ try.” Code named Bright Star ’82, the ex­ ercises beginning Saturday will in­ volve 6,000 American troops — 4,000 in Egypt and the rest in Sudan, Oman and Somalia. Libya, as could be expected, led a chorus of condemnation by radical the war Arab regimes, charging games amounted to “foreign occupa­ tion” and were meant to give U.S. forces the experience to mount an in­ vasion. Fending off such criticism, Mu­ barak told reporters the maneuvers, “are not directed against any coun­ try. “We are having these exercises with an advanced country in order to benefit from its experience. I already have stated we will not take military action against any country and I mean it,” Mubarak said. U.S. military officials acknowl­ edged the maneuvers had the prima­ rily political purpose of projecting American power and demonstrating readiness to protect friends and oil lines in the Middle East. The war games will also help fami­ liarize American troops with Mideast terrain should intervention ever take place. Syria noted that Gen. Robert Kingston, commander of the U.S. Rapid Deployment Force, was partic­ ipating and called that “suspicious.” “These American moves are not just maneuvers,” said Libyan Pre­ mier Maj. Abdel Salam Jalloud. “They are an open occupation of the Arab homeland by America.” Conservative Arab regimes, gener­ ally thought to approve of the exer­ cises even though political considera­ tions prevented them from saying so, did not comment. For the second consecutive day, American C-5A and C-141 transport planes brought troops from the Rapid Deployment Force to Cairo West air base, 20 miles northwest of the capi­ tal. U.S. officials said the number of troops on the ground was “approach­ ing 2,000,” with the rest to arrive Wednesday and Thursday. The 24,000-ton American freighter Cygnus docked in the Mediterranean port of Alexandria to unload 325 tracked and other vehicles for units of the 24th Mechanized Infantry Divi­ sion from Ft. Stewart, Ga. Also par­ ticipating were paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne Division and a headquarters element from the 18th Airborne Corps, both based at Ft. Bragg, N.C. Col. Edwin Leland of the 24th in­ fantry division said the equipment brought by the four-deck, roll-on-roll- off vessel included M-60 tanks, M-113 arm ored p e r so n n e l howitzers, trucks and jeeps. air defense weapons, c a r r ie r s , The exercise will start Saturday with an airborne assault by 850 para­ troopers, who will link up with a mechanized force on the ground. One week of individual training will be followed by three days of joint exer­ cises culminating in bombing runs on desert targets by B-52 bombers from the Minot and Grand Forks Air Force bases in North Dakota. They will fly nonstop from the United States and back. In Oman, 1,000 U.S. Marines will stage a one-day amphibious landing. In Somalia, 300 Army and Air Force conduct “logistic personnel will training operations” at the port of Berbera. In Sudan, another 300 Army, Navy and Air Force personnel wilí conduct joint maneuvers. Libyans begin withdrawal from Chad (UPI) NDJAMENA, Chad - The commander of Libya’s forces in Chad said Tuesday all his troops will be out of the country within two weeks but he warned that new civil strife will erupt once the Libyans have gone. “Judging by the experience of my days in Chad I think there will be trou­ ble here,” said Col. Radwan Saleh Radwan in an interview at command headquarters on Ndjamena’s Sergent- Chef Adji-Kossei military air base. “The presence of the Libyan army in Chad guaranteed peace because it was on the side of the legal government,” Radwan said. “Now there will be prob­ lems here.” About 10,000 Libyan troops inter­ vened last December to help Chad’s President Goukouni Weddeye win a pro­ tracted civil war against forces led by former Defense Minister Hissene Habre. The Libyans, who have been in Chad ever since, tightened Goukouni’s shaky grip on power, kept Habre’s forces bot­ tled up along Chad’s border with Sudan and put an end to persistent factional fighting among the Country’s political leaders which had led to 16 years of civ­ il war. But Oct. 28, the Chadian government suddenly asked the Libyans to leave and, despite fears of a Sudanese-backed ‘Judging by the experience of my days in Chad, I think there will be trouble here.' Col. Radwan Saleh Radwan move to topple Goukouni, they began pulling out within four days. Radwan said a fleet of 17 air tran­ sports is flying men, vehicles and equip­ ment to a base at Sabhah in central Li­ bya. The fleet, which includes Soviet- made Ilyushin-76 jets, C-130 Hercules, DC8s and Boeing 707s, flew 34 missions out of Ndjamena Monday, he said. Asked how long the withdrawal would take, Radwan said, “From Ndjamena, I hope three more days. From Chad, an­ other two weeks.” Radwan said the civil strife he ex­ pected was due to deep tribal divisions in Chad and to military rivalry between 11 different factions which make up Chad’s leadership. “Each faction follows its own leader, even though there is now a unified com­ mand for the Chadian armed forces,” he said. “Up till now control and unity of the army have not been achieved.” Radwan sidestepped the question of whether Libya will also withdraw from Chad’s northern Aouzou strip, which Li­ bya has occupied since 1965, saying the question should be answered by Libyan leader Col. Moammar Khadafy. The Aouzou strip is thought to contain rich deposits of uranium, although this has never been confirmed. Walesa tries to end wildcat walkouts WARSAW, Poland (UPI) — Solidarity leader Lech Walesa will travel to the scenes of Poland’s stubborn strikes to try to end wildcat walkouts by 200,000 farm workers, union officials said Tuesday, but Moscow warned “the limit of endurance has been reached.” In Washington, Poland applied for membership in the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to gain loans for its ailing economy burdened by a foreign debt of $27 billion and sagging industrial and agricutural production. China, Russia’s ideological enemy, is the only Communist member of either organization. Acceptance of Poland in the IMF and World Bank would open Poland’s economy to outside scrutiny and controls as condi­ tions for loans a rarity among Soviet bloc nations. Union sources said Walesa was conducting a stop-the-strikes campaign to set the stage for another meeting with Prime Minister Wojciech Jaruzelski. One report said Walesa might see Jaruzelski, who is also party leader and defense minister, as early as Wednesday if he met with success in his conciliation efforts. Government spokesmen said they could neither confirm nor deny the two men would meet for the second time in one week. Privately, however, they indicated such talks were likely to take place soon. Settling the biggest current farmers strikes, in Zielona Gora, appeared to be far more difficult than arranging a meeting with Jaruzelski. The walkout affecting 200,000 was in its 20th day. Walesa told workers at the Lenin Steel Mill in Krakow and other industrial plants in the province that unless Solidarity and the government can find a way to cooperate, Poland will be caught up in a new wave of unrest that will lead to “slaughter.” In Moscow, an article in L i t e r a r y G a z e tt e , entitled “Soli­ darity Stepping up Terror,” said officials from the Slask Da- browski regional committee of Solidarity threatened to cut off air supplies to miners unless they joined a Solidarity-sponsored strike. "The limit of endurance has been reached,” wrote Arkady Sakhnin, who the article said had recently returned from Po­ land. “The limit of concessions, all-forgivingness to political ad­ venturists and the enemies of Peoples Poland for their criminal actions has been exhausted, and let it be known to those who have made their activity for undermining the economy a weap­ on in the struggle for the overthrow of power,” the article said. Spokesmen in Gdansk said Walesa also would travel Wednes­ day to Sosnowiec, where 2,500 coal miners have been on strike for two weeks to protest the local government’s inability to find those responsible for a mysterious poison-gas attack at a mine entrance. Fifty men were injured in the incident. There also was a chance Walesa would go to Zielona (Jora Solidarity members in the western province 270 m iles from Warsaw said they would not give up their No. 1 demand — removal of an unpopular state farm director and two of his deputies. Gulf rulers hold summit, discuss Mideast security RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (UPI) — Arab rulers from six Persian Gulf na­ tions met- Tuesday in a summit ex­ pected to endorse unanimously Saudi Arabia’s Middle East peace plan. The approval by the six oil-wealthy countries would ¿ v e another boost to the proposal that has won European support and kind words from Presi­ dent Reagan. Israel has rejected the plan outright. The six countries — Kuwait, Oman, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar and Saudi Arabia — opened the summit with a debate on establishing a joint force to protect their oil fields. The two-day conference was inau­ gurated by King Khaled of Saudi Ara­ bia, who in an opening speech said be hoped “ the conference will achieve all its goals that would ensure a bet­ ter future for our people.” The six, who are grouped in the Gulf Cooperation Council, will dis­ cuss a multi-point agenda, drawn up by their foreign ministers who m et Sunday and Monday in Riyadh. The leaders were expected to voice unanimous support for the eight-point Saudi plan for Middle East peace, boosting the Saudi stand in the up­ coming Arab League summit confer­ ence scheduled for Nov. 25 in Fez, Morocco. The Saudi plan, made public in August by Crown Prince Fahd, calls for a P alestin ian sta te with Jerusalem as its capital, Israel’s re­ turn of all Arab territory captured in the 1967 war and the right of nations in the area to live in peace. Reagan has called it a beginning because Saudi recognition of Israel’s right to exist is implied. Britain’s Foreign Secretary Lord Carrington, who was in Saudi Arabia last week, supported the plan and said the PLO must be a part of any Middle East peace talks. Israel, however, has said the Saudi {dan is a rehash of Arab positions be­ fore Camp David and seeks toe de­ struction of the Jewish state and end of Camp David. Page 4 By Paul Qreenway and Matt Stavrowksy Editorials THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, November 11, 1981 Getting this show on the road Vievfy>oint campus must talk back. Fluorescent lights whine 24 hours a day, bouncing off walls that take their little color from the dirt that has settled on them. Not that it’s dreary, mind you. But it is just the sort of place that allows you to lose hours at a stretch without noticing, falling into VDT- induced video hypnosis. Texan staffers don’t know if it is raining outside unless someone walks in wearing a raincoat. If the Tower were to topple into the West Mall (stopping, as predicted, just inches short of the Architecture Building) we would only find out when some­ one saw fit to tell us. It’s not that bad. But we can feel fairly cut off. That’s why our re­ porters roam the streets and halls: to get out and find the news in a living campus. That’s our responsi­ bility and our job. But it’s not enough to just poke and probe; news also comes from how the University responds to the news. “We know you’re out there, we can hear you breathing,” as the vaudevillians used to say. For the Texan to be an effective news gatherer and serve the campus, the First we must give you some­ thing to respond to. That means ac­ curate and balanced news, with a stimulating editorial page. Then it’s your turn. Write, whether to attack or laud. Call in news tips. Let us hear you. As Wally Schirra said from the Apollo 7, “Keep those cards and letters coming in.” How do you close something like this? A good way might be with the passage Ronnie Dugger chose to be the policy statement for his Texas O bserver: A journal of free voices We will serve no group or p a r­ ty but will hew hard to the truth as we fin d it and the right as we see it. We are dedicated to the whole truth, to hum an values above all interests, to the rights o f hum ankind as the foundation o f dem ocracy ; we will take or­ ders fr o m none but our own con­ science, and never will we over­ look or m isrepresent the truth to serve the interests o f the pow erful or cater to the ignoble in the hum an spirit. Schw artz is Texan editor. i 4 l p i t By JOHN SCHWARTZ How do you start something like this? A new editorial, a new job, a new Texan. No one knew I ’d have this job past Tuesday; now you’re stuck with me until May. Will there be any major changes? Probably not. We’ve got enough on our hands working on old problems without creating new ones. But the old problems are very important. Take isolation, for instance. The Texan can be a very insular place. We work in the TSP Building, that squat cinderblock next to the big rusty cube at 26th and the Drag. In the basement. With no windows. 4> th p t clipping t k e co u p o n s •tp c + r in The Dmtiy Tezmn h nemkee c e n u ! TRAFFIC TICKETS AFFORDABLE PROFESSIONAL DEFENSE FOR YOUR TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS ATTORNEY: Peter Van Tyle Call 477-8657 Legal Fees: $55 per city ticket...$85 DPS 306 E. 11th St. Suite 1-7 Austin, Tx 78701 «35 D o b if' M a l l * 4 74 83 83 QUALITY ITALIAN FOOD ft DRINK 1601 GUADALUPE 476-7202 Parking 17th ft Guadalupe and United Bank Parking Garage Wednesday, November 11, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 PRE-CHRISTMAS • HUGE DISCOUNTS FUR SALE now in progress NORTH LOOP Wednesday to Saturday Nov. 11 to 14 DOWNTOWN Monday to Saturday Nov. 16 to 21 DAYS ONLY • W E D N E S D A Y • F R ID A Y • TH U R SD A Y • SATURD AY November 11 thru 14 Missy Entire stock of SEPARATES Save on missy m ix'n match holiday and career w ear from our Missy dress department Sizes 8 to 18 Y A R IN G 'S DOWNTOWN, NORTHLOOP, W E S T G A fE , SOUTHWOOD, and H IG H LA N D M A L L Junior Select group of Lurex Stripe DRESSES 302 reg. 39.00 Select groups of holiday lurex striping, m any styles. Sizes 5 to 13 A L L Y A R IN G 'S S T O R E S Junior Select groups of SKIRT with VEST SETS 30 %Off reg. 35.00 to 39.00 Choose from wool or corduroy skirts with vests. Sizes 5 to 13 A L L Y A R IN G 'S S T O R E S Missy KORET CITY BLUES Save on blazers, pants, shirts, and skirts in polycotton prewash blue denim . Sizes 8 to 18 M IS S Y S P O R T S W E A R Y A R IN G 'S DOWNTOWN, N O RTH LO O P, SOUTHWOOD, and H IG H L A N D M A L L Junior 100% wool SHETLAND SWEATER reg. 20.00, now 14.00 Your choice of m any colors in S-M -L JU N IO R S P O R T S W E A R AT A L L Y A R IN G 'S ENTIRE STOCK OF WARM WINTER R O B E S AT A L L Y A R I N G ' S S T O R E S I NC LU D IN G L AD Y Y A R I N G ' S NORTH & SOUTH Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, November 11, 1981 Campus News in Brief CAREER CENTER: New York University Graduate School of Business will recruit students interested in a master’s of busi­ ness administration d©gr©6 from 2-4 p.m. Wednesday in Jester Center A115A. STUDENT VOLUNTEER SERVICES needs tutors for local el­ ementary school students. Go by Texas Union Building 4.214 or call 471-3065 for more information. UT DART ASSOCIATION will play at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the CHICANO CULTURE COMMITTEE will sponsor an exhibit of paintings by Mexican-American women as part of the La Mujer Symposium from noon-3 p.m. Wednesday in the East­ woods Room of the Texas Union Building. COMMITTEE FOR THE CONVOCATION OF NOV. 11 Peacelight fellowship of UT will hold a teach-in on nuclear war and weapons at 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Board of Di­ rectors Room of the Texas Union Building. The BBC docu­ mentary “ The War Game" will be shown at 3 p.m. in the same room. CHABAD HOUSE will sponsor international night at the Kosher Co-op, featuring kosher Mexican food, at 5:15 p.m. Wednes­ day at 2101 Nueces St. AMAN ETHNIC ENSEMBLE will sponsor music, a lecture and a demonstration of international folk dances at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Texas Tavern of the Texas Union Building. INDIA STUDENTS ASSOCIATION will sponsor "India Night" with food, music and folk dances at 6 p.m. Saturday at the Texas Federation of Women’s Clubs building, 24th and San Gabriel streets. Texas Tavern in the Texas Union Building. MEETINGS ASSOCIATED STUDENTS will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Graduate School of Business Building 2.218. ANGEL FLIGHT will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in Russell A. Steindam Hall 317. COALITION OF MINORITY ORGANIZATIONS will meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday in Student Services Building 4.108. SCIENCE ENRICHMENT IN ELEMENTARY EDUCATION will meet at 9 p.m. Wednesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 7.104. CBA COUNCIL will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in Graduate School of Business Building 2.210. UNIVERSITY MOBILIZATION FOR SURVIVAL will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Calhoun Hall 21. BLACK HEALTH PROFESSIONS ORGANIZATION will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Education Building 370. UT FASHION GROUP will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Gear­ ing Hall 125. NATIONAL CHICANO HEALTH ORGANIZATION will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Graduate School of Business Build­ ing 2.202. COMMUNICATION COUNCIL will meet at 6 p.m. Wednesday in Communication Building A4.218. UNIVERSITY PRE-LAW ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Welch Hall 2.246. LECTURES LIBERAL ARTS COUNCIL: A discussion of economic feasibil­ ity of future energy sources, with Drs. James McKie and Ste­ phen McDonald, professors of economics, and Dr. Allen Jacobs, assistant professor of finance, at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Sinclair Suite of the Texas Union Building. UNIVERSITY GAY STUDENTS ASSOCIATION: "Coming Out,” a panel discussion at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Un­ ion Building 3.116, preceded by a business meeting at 7 p.m. UNIVERSITY STUDENT ATHEISTS: "Censorship in the Unit­ ed States,” by Jon G. Murray, director of the American Athe­ ists Center, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Union Building 4.108. ALTERNATIVE MIDDLE EAST STUDIES SEMINAR COL­ LOQUIUM: "Contemporary Arabic Literary Criticism," by Mohammad Khazali, teaching assistant in the Department of Oriental and African Languages and Literatures, at noon Wednesday in the Governors’ Room of the Texas Union Building. CLASSICS DEPARTMENT: "The WS Ranch Project: A Thou­ sand Years of Prehistory in West Central New Mexico," by Dr. James A. Neely, associate professor of anthropology, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Art Building 1.120. CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION: A speech by Bishop Hines, former presiding bishop of the United States, at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Episcopal Student Center, 27th Street and University Avenue. FOREIGN LANGUAGE EDUCATION CENTER 8TUDENT ASSOCIATION: “ Teaching English in the People's Republic of China,” by Ann Bishop, graduate student in the FLEC, at 1:30 p.m. Thursday in Texas Union Building 4.206. MOORE-HILL DORMITORY: "Abortion: The Pro-Choice View," by Steven Shott of the Austin Planned Parenthood Association, at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Men’s Residence Halls Recreation Room. CHICANO CULTURE COMMITTEE: "Mexican-American Women and Art," by Santa Barraza, painter and muralist, at 1 p.m. Wednesday in the Eastwoods Room of the Texas Union Building. At 2 p.m. in the same room, Irene Gonzalez will read poetry and comment on the state of Chicana art. ART DEPARTMENT: “ The Art of the Monks of Silos: From Liturgical to Aesthetic Experience," by Otto Karl Werckmeis- ter, visiting professor from the University of California at Los Angeles, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Art Building 1.110. spinach crepes Austin Cruzer Bicycle Factory 620 B W. 34th 452-6864 Les Amis Cafe 2 t t h X S a ti L n t i i n m around the corner from the Party Barn "Home of the tw enty-eix in c h e rt" Mongoose Cook Brothers Power Lite Laguna Cycle Pro m Parts Sab» Service 66 LA MUJER” A SYMPOSIUM ON THE WOMAN WEDNESDAY Novem ber 11, 1981: The Arts Eastwoods Room 2.102 in the Texas LInion 12:00-3:00 An Art Exhibit of Chicano Art 1:00-2:00 Santa Barraza, An East Austin Artist 2:00-3:00 Irene Gonzalez, U.T. Lecturer Texas Union IMMIGRATION Permanent Resident Visas Based upon Familial Relationships PAUL PARSONS Attorney at Law 2200 Guadalupe, Suite 216 Austin. Texas 78705 ( 512 ) 477-7887 Se Habla Español u Qhicano Culture C o m m it te e Telephone Tapes — 4 7 1-3 3 1 3 (A Service of Counseling & Referral Service) Tele p h o n e T ap e s o ffe r 5-8 m i n u t e tapes 24 hours a d ay , 365 days a yea r, d e a lin g w ith a v a r i e t y of m e n t a l and physic al health issues. Lists of tapes m a y be o b ta in e d at the i n f o r ­ m a t io n desk in the M a i n Building. soon it will be for us the silence of a w inter night we do not resist then the body, but like a quiet rain over land flow into its ways and at length will become the scene of its will, the sea to its tiny bark • \ / You are cordially in v ite d to a reading and autograph p a rty V !*V S \ on the joyous occasion of V ¡ ' Prentiss Moore's \ i 4 first p u b lish ed volu m e of poetry, The Garden in Winter and Other Poems 5:00 to 6:30 p .m . Thursday, N ovem ber 12, 1981 '* Gamer & Smith Bookstore 2116 Guadalupe Street GENERAL FOOOS cArainyday and Café^rancais... Color/B&W Darkroom Rental Complete Range of Classes Austin Photo Center offers a total range of services and facilities. New, state-of-the-art equipment. Abundant darkroom space And fresh, individual chemistry for each customer. FREE: 1 free hour of B&W dark­ room rental time with this ad. One coupon per customer Offer valid until 1 15 81. 3409 Guadalupe. 453-0047. Ample parking in the rear QUALITY ITALIAN FOOD & DRINK 1601 GUADALUPE 476-7202 Parkins 17th & Guadalupe and United Bank Parking Garage Studio Rentals Now Available Open 9am to midnight, 7 days a week. l4 * e “ >(i o " 4 1. c, k a\Ne X & If y o u need t o stash it, s to w it , save it, store it, stack it the Store Store has carts, cans, cases, caddies, and con tain ers o f every k in d , in every c o lo r — to help y o u con qu er c lu t t e r The Grand Opening celebration starts November II at 10 a.m.— and there’s plenty in it for you! Gift Certificate Giveaway W e'll be giv in g aw ay three g ift c e r t i f i ­ cates w o r t h up to $ 5 0 each on Novem ber 21. Y o u can register for this giveaway d u r in g the Store Store's G rand O pe nin g. There's no purchase necessary t o register, and w inne rs need n o t be present at the d ra w in g. Free Gifts W it h every purchase d u r in g the Store Store's G ra n d O penin g, y o u 'l l receive a special g i f t w i t h o u r c o m p lim e n t s . Crafts Demonstrations Y o u ' ll discover a w o r ld o f d e c o ra tin g and p e rson alizin g ideas w i t h Cameo p a in t pens, Wet Paints, and H o b b y paints. Free d e m o n s tr a tio n s b y George A n n e Chalm ers start N o v e m b e r 11 and 14 at 10 a.m. A u s tin 's c o m p le te c o l le c t io n o f con tamers and organizers...plu s great g ift ideas* O n ly at the Store Store, 6 4 0 3 B urn e t Lane, just o f f B urn et Road be tween A n d e r ­ son Lane and Koenig. ,\e< .1 ,G °° o e '4 rx»*° ,\es ^ 6 ° le’ s f t '* '4 e<4' 3>N ^ eS X * O vS X ® f CV \e9s ,a<»'eV -\ (S'!4 X J ^ Ga<^S A e v G t° c c 0\e< .0 ° G»s Ks" to*3 X < ° X » SV x acVkS \ 0 ^ S , X » ' V * sS0 \s\ v \ ° ° j e f i eVS ^ X » X » se ’ G ° ° Ve . 0 ^ 0 «W C s^eS' Ls E V n <°c a ^ ' e ^ 3 v o . ,*4" ' O o » ’0 c a < ,yjes S ^e X < * X * ev \e«v Ge n e r a l f o o d s In t e r n a t io n a l Co f f e e s Ma k e G o o d Co m pa n y. C ate F ra n ca is lis s c M o d mi I JrisbHM ocha!M mt SWISS STYlt •NjlW WSH STYlf WSVSNT COFFEE BfVFR** ( j f f / QappTuccino SHARE A CREAMY-LIGHT CUP OF CAFÉ FRANCAIS. 6 4 0 3 B u rn e t Lane at B u rn e t R o a d A u s tin , T exas 7 8 7 5 7 (5 1 2 ) 4 5 8 -8 7 0 0 2244 Guadalupe UlflllflCC/ 477-6141 >'s 0 < > X a* - C3 "V , , ^ 4' „ „ n \ e< ie°~ us & U P.\s r t .uS Sports Page 9 Wednesday, November 11, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN Carl’s case stays too bad to tell? The Carl Robinson case is quite tantalizing. Like a public figure who suddenly “ resigns” from office without explanation, the indefinite suspension of the Texas Longhorn starting junior fullback rem ains a m ystery. Even the length of the suspension is a m ystery. “ I t’s in­ definite,” Coach Fred Akers says. W hatever th at means. “ I have to think that he should be back (before h e ’s reinstat­ ed ).” The m atter has been a closed-mouth case from all p a r­ ties. His team m ates, those who will adm it to knowing any­ thing about the m ystery, won’t talk. Roger Campbell Akers, too, refuses to elaborate on the m atter, term ing it “ fam ily” business. And understandably so. “ We have rules and principles, and we can’t preach rules and principles without living by them .” But what rules, what principles? “ D isciplinary reasons,” is the line from Akers. As one player rem arked: “ They’re keeping it hush, hush. I don’t know what he did. They didn’t really tell us.” Hell, even Robinson won’t speak out. A ttem pts to contact him, even in the wee hours of the morning, have been in vain. Was what you did so bad that you don’t answ er your phone anymore? I t’s still the sam e num ber isn’t it? Where are you, Carl? Where are you living now? Who was that fellow “ H enry” anwering your phone Tuesday afternoon? He was no help either. Because athletes a re people like the re st of us, this latest “ offense” is no surprise. Certainly you’ve heard of at least one of their wild pranks committed around here that m atch some pulled by non-athletes. An incident of this nature — w hatever it is — might espe­ cially be expected from Carl Robinson’s freshm an season, the tim e where some form of wildness is alm ost expected anyway. Even a year ago, it would be no surprise. But, this is Carl Robinson the remodeled edition. He leads the team in pass receptions. He starts. (Or started.) His career, he says, is guided by the Good Lord. This is Carl Robinson the m atured athlete who let it be known from the beginning that he got his act together on and off the field. And has definitely shown it. Now th a t’s what causes so much curiosity. Ju st what did Robinson do severe enough to be sidelined for what was then unquestionably the Longhorns’ biggest gam e of the season? And could it have been so bad that public acknowledgement would em barrass him? Was it an isolated thing, or was he just the only one caught or singled out9 One player who did not make the trip to Houston and, pleading anonymity, guessed Saturday night over a drink that, “ he sneaked out his hotel room the night before?” We will never know, really, and can only imagine the w orst when it might have been something minor. Unless, of course, the real Carl Robinson speaks out. NIEUWE HOPE INN 2801 GUADALUPE Longhorns surprise Cuba Women overcome lack of height By SUZANNE HALLIBURTON Daily Texan Staff Jody Conradt did a very uncharacteristic act Wednesday night a fte r she w itnessed the Texas women’s basketball team defeat a highly rated Cuban team , 67-61. Conradt went up to Abe Lemons and gave him five. And why not. Conradt’s team , who she said earlier would not beat the Cubans, posted a come-from-behind win, avoiding — at least tem porarily— the preseason criticism heaped upon her team . With the help from one freshm an, Annette Smith, and two backups, Esoleta Whaley and Lesa Jones, Texas m ade up for its lack of height and experience to achieve the upset. But the sta rt of the gam e didn’t m irro r the finish. The Long­ horns lived up to their low preseason evaluations as they quick­ ly stum bled to an 18-6 deficit with 13:55 left in the first half. The triple post form ation Conradt utilized a t the s ta rt fiz­ zled, as Texas attem pted to shoot from the outside against a Cuban team that fielded four sta rte rs over 6-0, and one a t 6-4 1V 4. High post Joy W illiams was suffering through an off first half as well as freshm an low post Smith. Jones, coming off the bench, accum ulated three fouls, and starting forw ard Sherryl Hauglum did not have her outside shot. Suddenly the high-flying Cubans hit a cold spell with 7:55 rem aining and the score 26-16, and the Longhorns took advan­ tage of it. E nter Whaley, backup guard. The 5-6 sophomore hit an 18- foot jum per to bring the score to 26-18 and ignite the Long­ horns. Guard T erri Mackey hit a bank shot, and Jones added a 22-foot jum per to pull Texas within four. Whaley then pumped in alm ost identical long jum pers, and suddenly the score was tied a t 26 with 4:46 to play in the half. Cuba finally woke up, and the half ended a t 33-31 in favor of the visitors. was feeling its criticism . Cuba leaped to a 41-33 lead with less than four m inutes off the clock. But Conradt scrapped the triple post, and Smith shed her opening gam e jitters. The 5-11 freshm an from Bay City negated a first half per­ form ance (1-8 from the field, and 1-5 on free throws) pumping in 16 points in the second half. M ackey hit two layups and a 15- foot jum per to com plem ent Sm ith’s showing, to pull Texas within two, 51-49, with 8:36 to play. Jones hit two long shots, and Texas took the lead, 57-55 not to relinquish it again. “ We w ere huffing and puffing out th e re ,” Conradt said. “ It was the first gam e pressure, that kind of game. I knew if w e’d play, w e’d have a chance. We played in spurts, and we were crying for the inside play. Finally Smith started doing that. We needed to develop our inside shooting, instead of depending on our perim eter shooting, which w as excellent tonight. They had us outsized. it was ridiculous to try to shoot over th em .” Before the gam e, Whaley adm itted thinking the Longhorns would be outmanned by the Cubans. “ I didn’t think we would win,” said Whaley, who scored 10 points. “ We had to realize we had to relax. It w asn’t a big deal, after we relaxed and played some ball. We kept thinking, ‘Cuba, beat Cuba?’ It was exciting when we did beat them. Coach really told us they (Cuba) w ere good. They shoot the ball weird, but th a t’s how they practice it. It faked us out a lot, and caught us off guard. “Ju st before the half, we got fired up. I knew that would be the turning point.” Smith, who led all scorers w ith 19 points, m ost from the inside, and along with Mackey, grabbed seven rebounds, shrugged off her performance. “ It feels all right now,” Smith said. “ I was kind of shaky at first. It (the ball) just wouldn’t fall in. I was just going out to play. No one else was going to do it (go for the inside play), I ’d at least try .” So a t least for now, the Longhorns have quieted the criti­ When the second half started, it seem ed again as if Texas cism. ■ Smith attempts block against Cuba. opradllng, Dally Texan Staff Texas clings to slim 3-shot lead in Penick tournament By MIKE BLACKWELL Daily Texan Staff The Texas golf team widened its lead to three strokes after Tuesday’s second round of the 11th annual Harvey Penick In­ tercollegiate at M orris Williams golf course. But considering the caliber of the team s within a whisker of that lead, the sm all margin should not be etched in stone ju st yet. The Longhorns shot an even-par 360 for a 36-hole total of 729, but Oklahoma State, Oklahoma, the winner of last y e a r’s tour­ nam ent, and Houston a re all within striking distance. The Cowboys finished the round in second place, shooting a 359 for a total of 732, while the Sooners fell from second to third place with a 368 for a two-day score of 738. Oral R oberts’ Bill Glasson shot a 5-under-par 67 for a 139 total, taking first place away from Texas’ Paul Thomas, who finished the day a t 73-142. Brandel Chamblee of Texas fired a 69 for a 142 score. Oklahom a’s Joe Nick also shot 69-142. Glasson knows exactly what he has to do to win the tourna­ m ent Wednesday. “ I need to shoot two strokes b e tte r than whoever is in second place,” Glasson said. Chamblee could have carded a better score had he not played the back nine at one over. The sophomore was 5-under a fte r 11 holes. “ Like any round, it could have been b e tte r,” Chamblee said. “ But overall it w asn’t a bad score. It will do. Maybe I ’m saving some of it for tomorrow. I ’m looking forward to it.” Thomas, who credited his first round lead to not stringing together two bad holes, put together four bad ones in his round, carding bogey on holes 10-13. A fter coming back to birdie 16 and 17, the 6-5 sophomore bogied 18. “ I was interested to see how well I would play today, and it was about about w hat I expected,” Thomas said. “ I was think­ ing ahead instead of playing it hole-to-hole. But now I ’m not in the lead anym ore and I ’ll have a different attitude tom orrow .” Perhaps the m ost dangerous team in the tournam ent a t this point is Houston, which improved its score by 33 strokes, firing a 6-under-par 354. David Tentis and M ark Fuller shot 70 to put the Cougers within 12 strokes of Texas. Tentis is tied for third place in the individual standings with a 143 score. Willie Wood and Tracy Phillips of Oklahoma State a re also a t 143, as well as Eastern K entucky’s Dave Sironen. With the top five of scores recorded in tournam ent play, the Longhorns enjoy an advantage the other team s a t the top of the heap do not. Their fifth and sixth best scores, a 149 by Law­ rence Field and a 150 by Mark Brooks, enable them to afford a bad round by one of the two players without hurting their chances at the title. Freshm an M arc Howell shot 70 fo r a 148 total. Texas coach Jim m y Clayton was pleased with his team’s perform ance, but surprised at the lack of low scores. “I think overall we played pretty w ell,” Clayton said. “We had some people who brought it back after yesterday. I was definitely surprised the scores w eren’t lower. “ I think we will have to shoot under par to win, but P m looking forward to W ednesday.” 1 54-hole Harvey Penick totals Tm r i k o t m from th e first tw o rounds ot ths 5 4-h o ls Hsrvsy P snic k In ts rc o lts - glsts Q olf T o u rn a m e n t at M orrta W II- liam s QoH C ourse. 1. T e x a s ......................................................... 729 2. Oklahoma S ta te ................................ 732 738 3 O klahom a...................................... 741 4 Houston.......................................... . 744 5 Eastern Kentucky . .................................... 749 6 Texas A&M 7 North Texas S t a t e ............................ 750 759 8 Oral Roberts .761 9 Tulsa . . . . 10 L a m a r ............................................... 762 11 Oklahoma C ity.............. 763 ................................... 768 12 Arkansas Individual I . .7 2 -6 7 — 139 Bill Glasson. ORU . Brandal Chamblee, Tax. . . 73-M—142 Paul Thomae, Tax..................M-7S—142 .7 3 -6 9 — 142 Joe Nick, Okla David Tentis, Hou..................... 73-70— 143 . .7 4 -6 9 — 143 Tracy Phillips, OSU Willie Wood, OSU . .7 2 -7 1 — 143 David Sironen, E Ken................ 71-72— 143 . .7 4 -7 0 — 144 Greg Morrison, NTSU . . . . •POKE* a UTTLE FUN at the latest AGGIE JOKE! Get your •Reacting like an Aggie* Bumper Sticker (and one far your Aggie friendal) by sending $2.00 for each & a sett-addressed, stamped envelope to: Bumper Sticker, P.O. Box 2275, Grand Prairie, TX 75061 15% off Publisher’s Prices all listed hardback NON-FICTION FICTION 1. Hotel N ew Ham pshire, John Irving. Best Sellers Happy Hour Mon-Fri 1 O o m - 7 p m in Bar Cocktail & Oyster Bar 11 A.M . til 2 A.M ., 7 Days Happy Hour Spocialt Hi Ball* $1.25 Oyster on the half shod 20* oach AVOCADO R IN G S $2.85 Stuff**! w ith choice of sh rim p or chicken salad C H E F ’S SA LA D ..................$2.85 L e ttu c e . C heese. 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(L im it one per customer with presentation of this ad) EXPIRES: NOV. 8th 24th and Rio Grande 474-9804 i i Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, November 11, 1981 Haines inherits Weber’s spot Sports Record Sophomore tackle gets first start against TCU a s.il< >n t< >r w « m u ‘n .iiu l iiit'ii $2.00 off haircut with P e g g y Collins j f o r m e r ly f r o m P e g g y ’b a t \ o r t h w e s t e r n I n i r e r n i t y Í 1101 K n f i e l d R d . 479-0164 By DAVID McNABB Daily Texan Staff The season-ending knee injury to starting defensive tackle Mark Weber will be a tough blow to the Longhorns, but with an experienced, highly regarded, and, of course, huge John Haines Im m igration M atters Student visas Tourist visas Investor status Corporation transfers Temporary workers Fiancee visas School approvals (1-20) Exchange students Labor Certificatioas-Permaaeai Asylum Relative visas Deportation Exclusion Orphan petitions Medical graduates Refugee documents Citizenship t/Temberary/Skillei/Profewloaal Jones and B ennett ATTORNEYS AT LAW SE HABLA ESPAÑOL PH. 512-476-0672 208 WESTGATE BLDG. 1122 COLORADO AUSTIN, TX 78701 waiting in the wings, the nation’s No.2 defensive team won’t fall off too much. At 6-6 and 247 pounds, Haines has been picked by Coach Fred Akers to fill in for Weber. “ He will have to pick it up as a starter,” Akers said. “He has played well so far.” A sophomore from Fort Worth Arlington Heights, Haines will be getting his first start for Texas in Saturday’s game against TCU. “ I guess it’s always difficult losing a starter, I am confident I can do “I’ve been filling in a lot for both of them and I have gotten a lot of experience this year. I have learned about the competi­ tion and what level I have to expect of m yself if I’m going to get the job done.” Although Haines usually enters the game for Kenneth Sims on the left side of the line, he’ll have few adjustments to make to handle Weber’s slot on the right side. “Since I’ve gone in for both of them during games and practice,” Haines said, “I know what differences there are. Both positions are pretty much the sam e.” One of Texas’ “highly recruited” players, Haines turned down offers from Nebraska, Oklahoma and most Southwest Conference schools, including TCU, to follow up his childhood plans. “ I’ve always been a Longhorn fan, and when I got the chance to come here and play there wasn’t much doubt that this is where I wanted to go,” Haines said. “ Also, Texas has a big reputation on defense. Coach (Mike) Parker has had some great tackles, and his being here influenced my decision.” Right now Haines is just thinking about his first game as a Longhorn starter. "I’m working hard and concentrating very hard for this game. I know I have a big responsibility to fill for Mark, but if I go out and play my game and take it to them, I’ll be okay.” Spurs use Brewer, defense to rout LA SWC Football BouBmeet Confer onoo BteBoBco Inrttrtrtmi Laadare WueNng 895 4.7 787 4.4 612 5.3 611 5.7 aft yde avg M ypg Dickrsn, SMU . 211 1159 5.5 18 128.8 8 99.4 . 191 James, SMU 5 87.4 Abrcrmbie, BU 177 E Jacksn, AAM 116 1 76.5 7 76.4 107 Hectof, AAM ■lonoo, Tex . . 14B SM 8.8 4 78.1 4 88.4 Gentry, Bay . . 130 Wilson, Hou 7 63.0 155 Andrsn, Ark 1 55.4 98 Waiter, Tex. . 8 88.1 616 4 7 567 3.7 499 5 1 . BB 441 l i Dickrsn, SMU Lahay, Ark Garcia. SMU Alegre, Tex Jimmrsn, BU Porter, TCU . Soaring M xp tg pte ppg 18 0 0 108 12.0 0 29 17 80 8.9 0 32 11 65 7 2 0 14 14 •8 7.0 60 6.7 0 21 13 1 16 10 52 5 8 138 6 1307 Beeping eft amp Inf yde M rfg Jtfry, Bay 84 8 1509 Stamp. TCU 235 130 17 2013 14 132.5 Kbak.A&M 164 83 12 1400 10 127 8 37 1 122.2 64 Taylor. Ark Jones, Ark 91 6 121 9 51 Clhn, Rice 208 88 11 1315 19 115.0 6 1053 Wilsn. Hou 140 69 11 959 Mcllny, SMU 123 9 904 5 1052 55 Mctvor, TexIM M f BIB • 08.4 6 86 2 Rves. Tech 226 3 523 5 597 94 11 1227 FleeeMng Washngtn. TCU McNeil Bay Phea. Hou Haney. TCU Baker. Tech Fortune. Rice Ford. Hou Whitwell, AAM Hector AAM ct yds M egg 6 6 3 8 3 6 3 2 3 0 2 8 2 8 2 6 2.4 46 779 34 589 32 486 29 348 27 435 25 431 25 340 21 541 19 191 6 5 0 2 1 6 3 3 0 The Line RENO Ñev (UPI) - Weekerx tootball odds as posted Tuesday by Harrah's Reno Tahoe Sports B o o k NPL SAN FRANCISCO MIAMI PHILADELPHIA Buffalo GRENN BAY Denver CINCINNATI MINNESOTA NEW ENGLAND Atlanta KANSAS CITY Dallas NEW YORK GIANTS San Diego Cleveland 3 >5 Oakland 4vy Baltimore 13V5 ST LOUIS 4v? Chicago 3 TAMPA BAY 2 Loe Angeles 3>y New Orteent 9 New York Jets 2Y» PITTSBURGH Houston 4vy DETROIT 3\i Washington 1W SEATTLE 5 Vi C Stanford Washington St Clem son Dartmouth Michigan St Cornell Duke Florida Georgia Navy Harvard Colgate Penn State Yale Michigan Tennessee North Carolina Illinois Texae Wisconsin Kansas Oklahoma Nebraska Oklahoma St SMU Baylor Arkansas M ram r . . . Oregon I3 h Cekfomia 13 Maryland 14 Brown 8 Minnesota 4 Columbia 10V? North Carolina St 1 Kentucky 15 Auburn 13 Georgia Tech 8W Pennsylvania 16 Holy Cross ivy Alabama 4 Princeton 14 Purdue 11 Mississippi 7 Virginia 18 Indiana 13 ....................TCU I I Iowa even Colorado 9 Missouri 7 lows St 18 Kansas St 10 Tsxas Tech 20 Rice 14 Tenas AAM 3 Virginia Tech 13 v» NBA NATIONAL BABKBTBALk. ASSOC. Amay vfWMg in^HTORiOTia (Waal Coaal Qamaa Nal iM M e d ) Philadelphia Boston New York Washington New Jersey Milwaukee Atlanta Chicago Detroit Cleveland Indiana San Antonio Utah Denver Kansas City Houston Dallas Portland Phoenix Golden State Los Angeles San Diego Seattle L Pat OB - 1 833 1 833 — .500 2 3 200 3 » 4 .167 4 5 2 600 — - 2 800 .500 4 3 .500 3 500 .500 3 V, Vi Vi Vi W L Pei 1 833 5 600 429 400 333 167 OB IVi 2 Vi 2Vi 3 4 0 1 000 — 3 3 4 3 3 571 2 Vi 400 3 Vi 333 4 250 4 250 4 Pacific DhrMan New York 111, New Jersey 99 Indiana X09. Cleveland 102 Atlanta 94, Milwaukee 83 Boston 90, Washington 84 Philadelphia 95. Detrorl 93 San Antonio 128, Los Angeles 102 Chicago 119. Kansas City 107 Phoenix 109. Denver 106 Utah at San Diego, night Seattle at Golden State, night Dallas al Portland, night Kansas City at Boston, 6 30 p m Milwaukee at New Jersey. 6 35 p m Chicago al Philadelphia, 6 35 p m Los Angeles al Houston, 8 05 p m Dallas at Seattle. 9 30 p m Basketball TSXAS «7, CUBA «1 CUBA Borrel 6 2-3 14. Atiel 2 2-3 6, More 8 0-0 12. Berner 3 2-2 8. Camilo 3 0-0 6. Des- paigne 3 1 37. Pordomo 1 0-0 2. Ososria 0 0-0 0 Skeel 3 0-0 6, MacCarthy 0 0-0 0 Totals 27 7-11 61 TBXAS Whaley 5 0-0 10. Rankin 0 0-0 0. Mackey 7 0 0 14 A Smith 9 1-5 19. Jones 5 0-0 10. Boiim 1 0 2 2, Scott 1 0-0 2. Williams 2 0-0 4 Hauglum 2 2 2 6 Totals 32 3-967 Cube................................u IB—11 T c x c c .................................... >1 Transactions T ueedey-» Sports TranaecOens By United Praaa MemaBenai New York (AL.) Gave thud baseman Eric S Oder holm hts unconditional release sent catcher mtielder-outtieEder Dennis Werth and catcher Bruce Robinson to the minor leagues signed outfielder Lou Ptniel la to a multi year contract estimated at $200.000 a season New York iNL) Named former Kansaa City manager Jim Frey as batting coech New York - Waived forward DeWayne cales and placed center Bill Cartwright on the active list New Jersey Activated lorward Albert King and waived guard David Bums shns HopkKis Jim Amen resigned as head basketball coach. Edward "Nappy" Doherty appointed interim coach “banon Valley Cottage - Named Claude Osteen as head baseoail coach BICYCLES NOW IN STOCK A l a P i G e. 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MPT C •H O LE Y CA *470* SPECIFY ITEM ft COLOR S2 50 SH ftflN G CA RES ADO 6 % SALES TAJ PLEASE ALLOW 4-6 WKS DELIVERY one SAN 472-9724 309 W. 17th I GA&qEL fa the job,” he said. “It won’t be too different from the rest of the games this year. John HainGS By United Press International Ron Brewer scored 44 points Tuesday night to set a career high for the third straight game and lead the San Antonio Spurs to a 128-102 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers. Brewer’s scoring and a swarming San Antonio defense that forced 20 turnovers helped the Spurs overcome a 19-8 Los Ange­ les lead in the first period. The Spurs, behind Brewer’s 10 first-quarter points, closed to within a point at 23-22 and finally took the lead for good at 37-36 on a layup by Johnny Moore with 7:15 left in the second period. The Spurs boosted the margin to 57-48 at halftime. In other NBA action, the Trailblazers dumped the Mavericks, 117-95; the 76ers nipped the Pistons, 95-93; the Knicks whipped the Nets, 111-99; the Pacers clipped the Cavaliers, 109-102; the Hawks beat the Bucks, 94-83, the Celtics got by the Bullets, 90- 84; and the Bulls defeated the Kings, 119-107. The Lakers, on the strength on ten third-quarter points by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, closed to 65-61, but the Spurs outscored the Lakers 20-6 in the next three minutes to take a 85-67 lead. NBA Brewer hit 19 of 24 shots from the field and Mark Olberding added 28 points on 13-of-18 shooting as the Spurs won their fifth game against one loss. San Antonio was without injured start­ ers George Gervin and Reggie Johnson. Jabbar scored 29 points and Magic Johnson had 24 for Los Angeles, which fell to 2-4 on the season. The Spurs hit 57 of 108 shots from the field for 52 percent while Los Angeles was 45 for 100 for 45 percent. Brewer had set a previous career high of 40 points against New York in the Spurs’ last contest and scored 39 against Cleveland in the game before that. San Antonio had only 11 turnovers. Jim Paxson scored 21 points to lead a fleet of high-scoring Portland guards and pace the Trail Blazers to a 117-95 rout of the Dallas Mavericks. Portland, the only unbeaten team in the NBA with a 7-0 record, had an easy time against the Mavericks, now 1-6. Paxson along with teammates Kelvin Ramsey, Darnell Val­ entine and Billy Ray Bates combined for 66 of the Trail Blazers’ points. Portland led 32-17 at the end of the first quar­ ter and was up 60-41 by halftime. PROBLEM PREGNANCY? Are you considering Abortion? Confidential Free Pregnancy Testing & Referrals for information call PROBLEM PREGNANCY OF AUSTIN (512) 474-9930 507 Powell Near West Lynn A West 6th DURHAM NIXON CLAY COLLEGE u Linon New York December 29-January 5, 1982 $695 Europe $1395 December 28-Janiilry 9, 1982 Deadlineeto Regieter, Nov. 16. Call Texas Union 471-5651 for information Attention GREEKS LICENSE PLATE HOLDERS 7TB#, A X S l, AXA,B©TT, KAO, A $ , A r, A T Jl, ZAE, A E * , Q K V , £ X ZBT, E N Quantities Limited SO HURRY! Use your VISA or MC LONGHORN COUNTRY street level free 1 hr. parking I w /|3 purchase THE BOOK THAT STARTED A REVOLUTION IN PSYCHOTHERAPY. ARTHUR ]ANOV PHD * WITH A NEW FOREWORD BY THE AUTHOR The Primal Scream has been reprinted in paperback and is now available in bookstores! To order direct—send $6.95 plus $1.50 postage and handling to: Sales Dept., Perigee Books, 200 Madison Avenue, New York, NY 10017. Mail to Sales D e p t, Perigee Books, 20 0 Madison Ave , NV. NY 10017 YES! I enclose $ poetege and handling ( appropriate sales tax added in NY and NJ). books @ $6.95 plus $ 1.50 for Name Address City State l|6on request the Primal Institute will send you a complimentary copy of its W ile to The Primal Institute. 2215 Colby Ave Los Angeles. CA 90064 Zip CALL FOR APPT. 4 7 8 -3 4 4 6 . i n u k e it m .ik e 's it g re a i id a lu p t a n d 191 1 R iv e rs id e FLY NAVY. THE BEST ALWAYS HAVE. CLASSES BEGIN NOVEMBER 23 TOEFL /UNIVERSITY PREPARATION UNIVERSITY LEVEL AND ADVANCED COURSES SIX MONTH "BASIC” COURSE FOR BEGINNERS SHORT COURSES AND PRIVATE INSTRUCTION SMALL CLASSES/CONVERSATIONAL METHOD AUTH. UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO ENROLL NON-IMMIGRANT AUEN STUDENTS (1-20) It's thi ulti- M U N C H A GUZZLE FOR ONLY $ L 4 0 L mull sL hiogo-styk' ikvpdish ! - piz/.i by the sliu m.itc lunch tnr high-speed pizza | lovers, because it's ready when ! j \ mi are ( iet the sin e at the ¡ right priie, along with i drink ¡ |ns! SI +i with tins euupon So tome hue (oday. It s tlu I In Slue A\ail.iblc frwnt 11 \ I tod. ss i ekd.i \ s onlv bo>t imuu li mil guzzle in town I And .it llu lust prn i L >tfi r e \- ¡ II. I'JKI f.ood with j pires IX . xiupun only at 2WK» (iii.uLuups ; j and 191.1 Kiversnk Imatious Wednesday. November 11, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Front Four and “Bosom Buddies” star Donna Dixon, a tall blonde with big breasts. ....(7) (2)....NURSE (Season Premiere) One of Mary’s patients goes into shock, and she has to perform an emergency hemmoroidectomy with a plastic butter knife. ....(9) (18)....THE VIETNAM VETERAN: A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH SPECIAL A 30-minute guide to all the best music of the Vietnam era. Hosts: Orson Bean and Andy Gibb. GOOD GUYS WEAR BLACK SILK G- 9:00.... (H) STRINGS Kung-Fu God Chuck Norris beats off a thousand attackers in this modem American cinematic spectacular. Eight minutes .... (9) (18) ....DICK CAVETT Dick interviews six different people with absolutely nothing to say. (Strong language, violence) 10:00....(2) (6) (7) (10) (24) (36) NEWS 10:30....(6) (38) . ...TONIGHT Host: Lenny Bruce. Guests: The Beatles, Little Feat, Wally Cox and their wives. ....(24)....SOLID GOLD Host Andy Gibb welcomes hard-rockers Rick Springfield and Ethel Merman. ....(12)....LOVE BOAT Julie and Gopher, acting under the direct orders of ex-Ugan- dan dictator Idi Amin, massacre the crew and take the passen­ gers hostage. A bleeding Julie demands freedom for the Neil- sen families held captive in America. ....(N)....WEST COAST REPORT Bill Moyers hosts this remarkable, in-depth summary of the various psychoses and drug-taking paranoias of the Hollywood jet-set. Special Guest: Fran Tarkenton of “That’s Incredible.” 12:00AM.... (24)....NIGHTLINE Anchorman Ted Koppell interviews Libyan philosopher Col. Muammar Khadafi. Khadafi spouts all the great knowledge and intelligence he has acquired over the years. 12:01AM....(24)....ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS A senile old executive turns his vicious, mad-dog assistant with a heart-condition loose (Hi the free world in this bloodbath of a horror story. ....(36) THE LATE SHOW: BEDTIME FOR NEGROES Ronald Reagan stars in this postwar film classic about rac­ ism and stupidity in the oval office. 1:00 AM....SIGN OFF By ROBERT MEAD Daily Texan Staff 7:00PM.... (6) (36)....REAL PEOPLE Host Sarah Purcell battles 600-pound Japanese sumo wres­ tler Ben Wah in a chain-saw death match. No one walks away. (Blow by blow description by John Davidson.) Live coverage and interviews of the poignant reunion of Lassie’s offspring in Yellowstone National Park. ....(H )...> BEYOND THE POSEIDON ADVENTURE (1980) A cast of tens in this undisputed comedy classic. Re­ garded by most as simply the very best film ever made. Direct­ ed by Dick Gozinya from a screenplay by Wan Leng Wang. ....(24) (10)....THE GREATEST AMERICAN HERO Ralph Hinckley saves the world, twice, then decides to join with cousin John on a super-secret mission. Special guest star Washington policeman Thomas DeLahantey. 7:30PM....(7)....WKRP IN CINCINNATI Les moves in with Venus and decides to have a child, and Dr. Fever gives Jennifer a spanking new pearl necklace. (Parental deception advised.) 8:00....(6) (38)....THE FACTS OF LIFE Mrs. G arrett’s girls have a few friends in to spend the week­ end Episode directed by Bob Guccione with special guest stars ‘Wikka Wrap’ a burning hunk of funk By DENNIS NOWLIN “Wikka Wrap/All Wrapped Up” ; by The Evasions (Sam Records). “ Wikka Wrap” is the most unfunky rap imaginable. A very reserved Brit­ on elocutes over music that is a pas­ tiche of almost every convention of modem funk. Sort of Monty Python meets Grandmaster Flash on a 12-inch dance single. “ Wikka Wrap” is a chant-and-response delivered from a lectern; to George Clinton, Tom Browne, Chic and Anita Ward. The music is too reverent to be a parody; the lyrics are too tongue-in-cheek to not be laughed at on the dance floor as you boogie “ Off the Wall.” the gospel according The lyrics are comprised of song ti­ tles, funk cliches and a definition of funk. The rapper on this album is the antithesis of the mercury tongued vo­ calists common to rap. When he says “ whooaoh” ; it sounds like he has a cold. “ Party down, strut your stuff, don’t stop till you get enough,” deliv­ ered by this man convinces no one that he is a burning hunk of churning funk destined to become the heir to Kurtis Blow. Yet, the cool Briton’s insights into funk music provide the humor to offset his lack of soul. He compares funk key­ boards to “ crushed ice tinkling into a dry m artini.” The chorus is a melodic steal from Tom Browne’s “Jam aican Funk” ; the rest of the song is lifted from Browne’s “ Thigh’s High” and Chic’s “ Good Times.” But lack of ori­ ginality and outright theft does not di­ minish “Wikka” one whet.“Wikka Wrap” is great because it does steal from the best. The bass line from “An­ other One Bites the Dust” has been worked to death in rap songs. The Eva­ sions at least go elsewhere to pinch their licks. “In this business, good is bad and bad is as good as you can get,” says the Brit to end the rap. This single is as bad as it gets. “All Wrapped Up” is the instrumen­ tal flipside; a rap-it-yourself tune for boisterous party-goers. The title is ap­ propriate. All funk from the past two years is included on this track and it’s done well. It is not cute like its vocal counterpart; just a certified dance number out to shake your body down to the ground. Entertainment Pape 11 ‘Day’ records the dawn of rock Smith’s novel challenges lies, half-truths, fictions ” ... and By CHRIS WALTERS Daily Texan Staff “The Day the Music Died” ; by Joseph C. Smith; Grove Press; $12.95. More than any other part of mass culture, pop music de­ nies its own history. Chroni­ cles — good ones — have been written and records reissued, but for millions of listeners under 30, the rock ‘n’ roll past is lost in a dim swirl of half- truths, myths and nonsense. The biggest fiction, the one white American radio rein­ forces every day, is that black people had almost nothing to do with inventing the music. “The Day the Music Died” gives the lie to that notion with anger and intelligence to bum. It fills the gaping hole that dozens of hackneyed rise- and-fall star stories have left in the popular conception of the music’s history; if it is it’s schlock schlock fiction of a high or­ der. fiction, then Smith’s novel ends with the the advent of the Beatles, point where current mytholo­ gy begins. One of his major characters is the head of a small Chicago ‘n’ blues label who obtains fi­ nancing from the head of the city’s black mob to indemnify himself against being cheated by white businessmen. rhythm The real-life parallel to this explanation. When merits EMI, the enormous British conglomerate, first dumped the Beatles on the American market, the first album was released on a small independ­ ent label called Vee-Jay, which mostly handled black artists. As one of the last of its kind, Vee-Jay still had to farm out its distribution, and even when d is tr ib u to r s weren’t cheating small labels (which was usually the case), there was a 60- to 90-day tur­ naround period before they were required to pay accounts due. Until 1964, “ Introducing the Beatles” was just another stiff a large company had dumped on an independent. When “ I Wanna Hold Your Hand” took America by storm that year, the Vee-Jay album became a hot property. The small company was faced both with enormous orders from which it would not profit for months to come, and with insufficient funds to pay for pressing and shipping costs. The extreme cash-flow prob­ lem that resulted killed the la­ bel. As a symbol of one culture being subsumed by another, there is a Nashville hustler named Carl Clinger, Paulie Schultz (an obvious Phil Spec- tor surrogate) and Mark Do­ novan, a decent young man who is expected to trash his principles the greater for good of the huge record com­ pany he is employed by. And just offstage, somewhere there is Smith himself, who, under the name Sonny Knight, was around for the flowering of Los A ngeles’ crazed scene. rhythm & blues Smith’s experience shows in the plausibility of the book’s situations and the often up­ roarious quality of its dia­ logue. Here is Paulie Schultz confronting his uncle, who Smith is interested in the process by which the music black Americans created out of necessi­ ty changed hands and became white America’s plaything. His prose is full of verve and humor with its moralistic drive, rich characteriza­ tions and sharp sense of place. the Vee-Jay incident is almost too convenient. Smith was ob­ viously inspired by it, but he’s more interested in the pro­ cess by which the music black Americans created out of ne­ cessity changed hands and be­ came white America’s playth­ ing. Smith correctly realizes that the events of the late 1950s and early 1960s wrought incalculable changes in the nation’s cultural life; amaz­ ingly, he wasn’t overwhelmed by the complexity and size of his project. His prose is full of nerve and humor with jts m o ra lis tic rich characterizations and sharp sense of place. His derivative structure — four interwoven stories intended as represent­ ative of the era — works out considerably better than such devices usually do. d riv e , Aside from Monroe Wilcox, the Chicago entrepreneur, owns a small New York record label: lying, “I “You see, S a u l,” Paulie continued, like you. I ’ve alw ays liked you. though you don't E ven know a goddam n thing about the m usic business; you got a p re tty fa ir head fo r business, you know w hat I m e a n ? ’’ “Now m in u te - gan. w ait a fu ckin g - ” G oldman be- “N o ,’’ Paulie in terru p t­ ed, “L et m e finish. You see, the m usic business is changing. T h e re ’s a new sound com ing in, w hat I call ‘the colored sound ’ ...” What he calls the colored sound, G oldm an thought. D am m it, I would give m y left nut to kick this p o m ­ pous little son o f a bitch’s ass! I u n d ersta n d this new m usic. I ’v e been listening to it since I w a s a kid — ” “ Y o u ’re still a g o d ­ dam ned k id !’’ G oldm an bellowed. “ — and I know w h a t other kids m y age w a n t to hear. I ’m going to be fr a n k w ith you, S a u l,’’ P aulie said im m o d estly, “w hen it com es to understanding colored m usic, I ’m a g en ­ ius. I gotta a d m it it, I ’m a fu ckin g genius, you know w hat I m e a n ? ’’ Uncle Saul doesn’t know what he means, but he finds out soon enough. Unfortunate­ ly, Smith can only grasp S c h u ltz /S p e c to r’s v a st heinousness, not his equally vast talent. And though he in­ timately understands the mo­ tives and mechanics behind the theft and assimilation of black music, he scarcely com­ prehends the needs of the dominant culture — the one that did the stealing. To im­ ply, as he does, that Brian Ep­ stein was given a fantastic sum by “ the third largest body of money in the world” with which to develop the Beatles is simply wrong; to imply that the Beatles’ im­ p a c t on A m erica was planned is ludicrous in the extreme. rock By all means, get the book and read it; the only fiction about roll which ‘n’ comes close to matching it is Harlan Ellison’s 20-year-old “Spider Kiss.” And once you’ve finished “ The Day the Music Died,” you might read Philip Norman’s “ Shout! The Beaties In Their Generation” to find out what happened to the white foreigners who claimed the music of Smith’s people for themselves, only to rediscover the horrible dan­ gers of unleashing so much power. GIVE THE GIFT OF LIFE U.T. BLOOD DRIVE LOCATIONS Jester West Lobby Academic Center Castilian Dorm ROTC Rifle Range Dobie Dorm Phi Kappa Psi House Kinsolving Dorm Alumni Center 0, 11, 12 noon-9pm 0, 11, 12 8am-5pm 0 6pm-midnight 0 8am-5pm 1 8am-3pm 1 6pm-11pm 2 6pm-midnight 2 2pm-10:30pm Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, Spooks and Phi Kappa Psi Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ W ednesday, November 11, 1981 ib e r 11, 1981 T4i< g o ld b ead s Check our regular low prices. ‘Reflections’: a tapestry of sexuality * 2mm .39 .4mm S I.69 5mm $1.69 8mm $3.99 6mm $2.49 4mm .99' 7mm $2.99 By LO U IS B L A C K By LOUIS BLACK Daily Texan Staff Daily Texan Staff also Lapis. Malachite, Garnet, Onyx and more The Mercantile Sym phony Square 1 ith & Red River Tues, Wed, F ri 10-4 Now Open T h u rs. 10-6 “Reflections in a Golden Eye” ; directed by John Hus­ ton; at 7 and 9 p.m. Wednes­ day at Jester Auditorium. Cinematic adaptations of Carson McCullers’ work have tended toward haunted mood pieces emphasizing the com- ing-of-age aspects of her frag­ mentary reminiscences, but John Huston’s “Reflections In A Golden E ye,” unrelentingly pursues the most deliriously perverse psycho-sexual impli­ cations instead. The weird sentimental tone of projects such as “ A Member of the Wedding” and “The Heart Is A Lonely Hunter,” flavored by a sense of inevitable and obvious tragedy, seems al­ most Disney-esque in contrast to Huston’s obsessed exami­ nation of the manifestations of sexuality in a puritanical culture. F eaturing outrageously brilliant and daringly exces­ sive performances by Eliza­ beth Taylor, Marlon Brando, Brian Keith and Julie Harris, the roaring emotional apoca­ lypse of “Reflections” never attempts to appear even va­ guely logical or realistic. In­ stead the convoluted narra­ tive metaphorically evokes in­ the nature of personal teractions in a society that views sex as immoral, cor th e a tr ic s (H arris) is not-very-succ< fullv recovering from a (H arris) is not-very-success- fully recovering from a ner­ vous breakdown. Taylor’s out- o f-co n tro l a r e counterpointed and illum inat­ ed by Brando’s intensely m aniacal perform ance. Ironi­ cally, within this hysterical tapestry, the homosexuality of Brando’s character is han­ dled m ore m aturely and hon­ estly than in most Hollywood films. as There is no one narrative point of view, as the film in­ stead constructs a m ulti­ layered m aze where everyone sp ies on and m a in ta in s secrets from everyone else until the process of human communication seem s like a hopeless activity in a sea of distorted and torm ented de­ sires. Huston choreographs “ Reflections” a m ar­ velously baroque and exag­ gerated ballet of exploding sexuality that is willing to go to any extrem e, no m atter how depraved or hysterical. He seem s to be determ ined to single-handedly force Ameri­ can filmmaking onto a new plane of ambition and sophis­ is a tication. “ Reflections” them atic, symbolic, narrative and visual cornucopia of sexu­ innuendos, al tensions and fantasies, the very abundance of which be­ comes terrifyingly comic as well as profoundly disturbing implications, rupt and soul-tainting. The a t­ m osphere of repression that is a consequence of this out­ look breeds the kind of pres­ sure cooker environm ent that distorts all sexual activity. is a “ R eflections” tour- d e - f o r c e m e lo d ra m a of rep ressed , outlaw ed, d is­ guised and denied relation­ ships. C haracters don’t oper­ ate from a desire for erotic pleasure, but from a confused and driven sense of attem pt­ ing personal self-definition in the ever-more-entangling web of societal rules, roles and strictures. Set on a southern Army base, the plot perfunctorily concerns a m urder m ystery. Its real text is a jigsaw puzzle narrativ e^ a wife (Taylor) cheats on her Army officer husband (Brando) with anoth­ er officer (Keith) whose wife DeVille king of ‘doo-wop’ on ‘Coup’ By CHRIS JORDAN Daily Texan Staff “Coup de Grace” ; by Mink DeVille; (Atlantic Records). In an understated way, Willy DeVille cradles the essence of his musical val­ ues on the cover of his latest album. Seated in a gaudy, multi-colored throne, the king of the dime store lyri­ cists, with gilded tin scepter in hand, appears ready to issue a “Coup de Grace” from his make-believe post on high. The upshot of the proposition, put simply, is that Willy DeVille is an in­ curable believer in the power of a gar­ ish doo-wop ballad, and both his six- inch high pompadour and pencil m oustache stand as living testam ent of his faith in rom antic overkill and tacki­ ness And, if a tin scepter and a far-out hairdo a re n ’t proof enough that Willy’s heart is shaped like a valentine, then listen to his songs. “ Teardrops Must F a ll,” “ She Was Made in Heaven’’ and “ So In Love Are We” work lyrically, simply because Willy pours his heart into every word he sings And, what m akes the tunes even bet­ ter is the way that he. and his band Mink DeVille, cast them musically. The five-part harm onies of late 1950s street corner vocal groups are sup­ planted by the spicy Latin feel of vibra­ phone accents and classical guitar riffs, the plaintive appeal of lilting sax and Cajun-style accordion lines and the sheer bravura of Willy’s own soul- stricken vocals Credit should also be given to form er Phil Spector/Neil Young sideman Jack Nitzche for his brilliant arrangem ent of this ethnic hodge-podge of sounds. But above all, Willy himself should be commended for his belief in corny rom anticism and tacky balladry But, then again, th a t’s what I ’ve come to expect from the man whose wife is named Toots.’’ 1 AMATEUR COMEDY Z W a d n a t d a y 1 0 P M Shoe Shop *“a* yy . . W . m ok. and ^ & SHEEPSKIN repair boots ,h~‘ b*"‘ leather goods ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN Capitol Saddlery *'■ 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas______ 478-9309 TONITE- WOMMACK BROS. THURSDAY- X-SPAND.X N ever A C over oom M IS E. RIVERSIDE TONIGHT Vetaran Rochan... THE SKUNKS with STANDING WAVES FOR JUST $2.99 TOMORROW One HeHuva Tima... THE FLESHTONES FRI/SAT IGGY POP* NOV. 17 Rock-n-Roll Adult GARLAND JEFFREYS* .. «* Advance Tix Available I For a perfect picnic or a flavorful gift alternative, let us fill a charming basket with a variety of our fine imported cheeses and just the right bottle of wine . . . or build your own basket around your favorite wine and cheeses. C lifford At horn C on d ucting 12th & W. Lynn 472-3790 ¡AUSTIN a»riKi ¡COMMUNITY ORCHESTRA NOVEM BER 14 at 8PM PAC BATES R E C IT A L HALL TICKETS S4 00 PubWe S2 SO CEC/PAC Ch«r9»-A Ttcket 477-0060 i otanobm at tha Frank Erwm Cerner tha PAC and tha Texas Unx>n Fine haircuts by design 478-6754 2408 San Gabrial »3a|. X THURSDAY, NOV. 12, 1981 WOMEN AND THEIR MUSIC featuring margie adams and her song writing and keyboard artistry V KYTHARA KIM GORMAN Harp MARY GOLDEN Harp Tickets $5.50 Reserved seating Bookwomen Paramount Inner Sanctum Waterloo Ice House THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE 713 Congress 472-5411 signed for the hearing impaired Presented with the support from the city of Austin Parks and Recreation Department ALLEGRO CHAMBER GROUP MEGAN MEISENBACK Flute MARY ROBBINS Piano, Harpsicord DELTA HOLL Cello r r r n r m f r i V l V t • on—I ■BEd • • • • o> dW B • • • The Texas Union Cultural En tertain m en t Com m ittee and Perform ing A rts Center T he U n ive rs ity ot T e xa s at Au stin Armenia Bulgaria Egypt Greece Mexico Russia Yugoslavia The Pavlova Celebration with Starr Danias prima ballerina of the Joffrey Ballet 19 Thursday Nov. 8 pm Concert Hall Public $8, $6, $4 and $3 CEC/PAC & Senior Citizens $6, $4, $3, and $2 x T ic k e ts 1 0 - 6 M o n d a y -F n d a y at PA C C on cert Hall T exas U n io n & E rw in S a tu rd a y at Erw m Center C h a rg e -a -T ic k e t A u stin ( 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 ), S an M a rco s (392 27_ ) T em p le (7 7 4 -9 1 7 6 ); K illeen (5 2 6 -2 8 8 1 ) F u rth e r inform ation 471-1444 No ca m e ra s No re c o rd ers. P ro g ra m s sub ject to ch an g e and the U.S. featuring the World Premiere of The Texas Suite S ‘One of the finest ethnic companies anywhere Repeat: anywhere.” Martin Bernheimer, Los Angeles Times One Performance Only! Friday, November 13 8 pm Concert Hall * Tickets at PAC, Erwm Center, T exas Union Public: $ 10, $8, $6. $4 CEC/PAC: $ 7.50, $6, $ 4 .5 0 , $3 Charge-a-Ticket: 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 Information: 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 No cam eras No recorders 5' BEER NIGHTPlus Great Country Music Ladies $2.00 Men $3.00 DOUBLE EAGLE 5337 Hwy. 290 W (Oak Hill) 892-3452 The University of T e x a s at A ustin College of Fine Arts Performing Arts Center A guaranteed night of outrageous insults and disrespect. F e a t u r i n g y o u r H o s t . A u s t i n ' s o w n L a r r y W i n s t o n . 3SOO Guadalupe 4 5 3 -9 8 3 1 M U B L E ! r ~ 'W &áÉfí, 606 Maiden Ln. 458-5950 FEATURING THE TOUGHEST MARGARITA WEST OF THE GUADALUPE ALL NIGHT EVERYNIGHT! 60 OZ. PITCHERS OF EVERCLEAR $4.50 MARGARITAS $4.50 The All N tw Nasty Hour 5-8:00 p.m. all highballs all draught b#er 50c “ l f r Eddie Bracken Jaye P. Morgan Fhtl Ford Toni Kaye /r?LESOx **0 SICAV NOV. 21 & 22 • 3:30 & 8:30 p.m ’ 17” ’ 16's s157! ’ 14” CHARGE IT BY PHONE 472-5411 T R E N 713 C O N G R E S S A V E N U E ■ Wednesday, November 11, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN D Page 13 T I H I H p —1 4542711 6757 A IR P O R T BLVD. | 1 THEATRES-RUSnN 1 IMANN 3 WESTGATt* 8922775 1 4608 W E S T G A T E BL. | 1 HALLOWEEN 11 (R) (5:00)-7:00-9:00 CARBON COPY (PG) (5:05)-7:10-9:10 DOUBLE FEATURE PATERNITY m 6:35 ONLY & PRINCE OF THE CITY (R) 8:30 ONLY f % A / 0 E ñ S OF THE ■m ^ LOST ARK I P G ] a PARAMOUNT PICTURE (5:15)-7:20-9:30 PATERNITY (PG) (5:10)-7:05-9:00 LOOKER (PG) (5:35)-7:30-9:35 I LATE SHOW PRI. A SAT -FOX ONLY. HAUOWEEN II 11 PM, WIZARDS 11:30 PM, jjj ■ ■ PINK FLOYD 11:45 PM. I I | REDUCED ADULT ADM ISSIO N ALL F E A T U R E S IN ( B R A C K E T S )- C A P A C IT Y O N LY ■ \ g r-PPRÉSIDIO THEATRES Sn Acodomy Award Winnar "18 i iFfnMnlr ,l> oM®ZART: ■ " ’.V"; ■ I DOUBLE FEATURE ¡ L O O K E R ! H i ¡ ■ i S A A C S T E R N - ' I N C H I N A 11 1:30-3:10-4:50-6:30-8:10-9:50 k Looker 1:00-5:15-9:30 Suparman 2:55-7:10 X Rj | Georg* Segal Susan Saint James 2:0 0 - 3 :50 - 5:4 0 j 7 :3 0 - 9:20 VILLAG E 4 2700 A N D E R S O N • 451 8352 1:5 0 -3:4 0 -5:30-1 M I I'I D in ■ .ms John Claasa TIM E BANDITS b _.thev didn't make history, they stole it! □CllotwiT—51 1:0 0 - 3 : 15- 5 :3 0 - 7:4 5 - 10:00 Marsha Mason ■ Kristy McNichoi J¿2^2¡20^20^22H2¡22_ of the LUST n/xJs. □DlOCl8r«TWW¿~] 1 12:40- 3 0 0 - 5 :30-1 LA K EH ILLS 2428 BEN W H IT E • 444-0552 [12:35- 2:50- 5 :1< 7:30-9:50 I The most fan money can bay DiaSay Moors WTÍ1 Treat Williams in PRINCE OF THE CITY fa 5 :4 0 - 8:50 R IV E R S ID E 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5689 5 :50 - 7:50-9:50 REDUCED PRICES UNTIL 6:00 • MON. THRU FRI t i l l < . MMRRRHRRMM ‘Steambath’ a simmering look at life’s absurdity By BRIAN SIPPLE D aily T exan Staff “ Steambath” ; written by Bruce Jay Friedman; pro­ duced by the Fifth Street Playhouse and the John Bate­ man Players; at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday through Dec. 4. Tandy sits patiently in a Chinese restaurant, enjoying his soup and spareribs, wait­ ing for his mooshu pancakes. Suddenly, a bang, and Tandy finds himself no longer in his in the ethereal booth, but steam of death’s waiting room. He left the earth with­ out even paying his tab. Bruce Ja y Friedm an ’s “ Steambath” begins when Tandy, a high-strung social cipher, finds himself in a pur­ gatorial sauna. But, it soon gyrates into 90 minutes of up­ roarious Woody Allen-esque humor as the central charac­ ter attempts to cajole God, portrayed here as a Puerto Rican janitor who attends to the sauna, into sending him back to Earth so that he can finish his historical novel on King Charlemagne. While waiting to talk to God, Tandy amuses himself by conversing with a beautiful blonde. At first the conversations are su­ perficial. The two discuss Tandy's old job — teaching art appreciation at the police department. But soon, the conversation turns to deeper subjects like death, orgasm s and unpaid bills at Blooming- dale’s. And though Tandy would no doubt like to wipe the sweat off his brow with a towel the woman is wearing, his first priority is getting back to life. through a Friedm an’s God views the television world monitor, spouting orders to an unknown party to create an atrocity here, a m iracle there, or just about anything else he sees fit to commit. God knows, life can be ab­ surd. So, when Tandy de­ mands fairness and reason, God responds, “ Wher’ dee yew get thaat from ?” But God being God — or a janitor in this case — is fair. And when he orders death and de­ struction on the San Diego freeway, he's sure to counter it by fixing a hernia, or put­ ting bigger towels in a Tel Aviv hotel. A riveted aggregation waits in the steambath to tell God, or the attendant (whichever he is), “ their story.” But God has no time for sob stories. He shows little compassion as he judges those stories on a scale of zero to 100 and de­ cides whether someone goes through the mysterious door, behind which we know not REFLECTIONS what lies, never to be seen again. Now, I always try to judge a work on the feeling it pro­ vokes when I think about it the next day. Looking back at “ Steam bath,” I only wish I had had some way to remem­ ber all the fantastically funny one-liners that left only a 15- minute intermission for me to catch my breath and hold my sides. Ken Webster a s the angry and confused Tandy is exqui­ sitely funny — a m aster of concentration who manages to keep from breaking charac­ ter in the wake of lines that could break the most serious frown. Tito Menchaca does an excellent job portraying what I think God would look like, and I’m thoroughly convinced that his role was typecast. the with accommodations. The Fifth Street Playhouse, formerly the Theatre In The Rye, proves unequivocally the ever-popular adage that you can only do so much with a tiny theater. Of course, the Playhouse isn’t sponsored by Mobil Oil Corp. or ITT, so I can understand why they go with the mousehouse look. My only complaint had less to do with the production than And, as billows of laughter roll out with the steam, we soon forget trite regards, and the in ironic undertones man’s search for self-fulfill­ ment slap us in the face like a wet towel. Bruce Ja y Freid- man displays comic genius in “ Steambath” as he shows us that the panacea for life is ab­ surdity — no doubt because life itself is absurd. The play is not about death, but life. And while the players sweat, and the audience laughs, a paradox in itself is created. Augustine and Winnie the Pooh... By RICHARD RYAN The glowing parables of orthodoxy confronted the murky rumblings of deconstruction last Friday and Saturday during the first Young Scholars Symposium, “ Augustine and the Clas­ sical Tradition.” Mainstream and radical scholars, at times seemingly incomprehensible to one another, advanced opposing interpretations of the doctrines of the fifth century saint with an alm ost political intensity, but were unanimous in acknowl­ edging the importance of the patriarch of Christian metaphys­ ics. The symposium itself was something of an anomaly; Texas undergraduates shared the podium with internationally known academ ics in a program intended to cultivate student partici­ pation in professional scholarship. The Young Scholars, a campus group open to anyone inter­ ested in research and interpretation in the humanities, is the brainchild of Sabine MacCormack, assistant professor of histo­ ry, and philosophy student Chris Boynton. “ There are students around here who invest two, three weeks of their life on a paper, and they get it back with a ‘B ’ on it,” Boynton explained last week. “ They’ve tried to explain the decline of the Roman Empire, and their professors don’t get it.” Young Scholars was tailored for those “ hard core” students. The symposium, first proposed last spring and funded by the College of Liberal Arts, was attended by students from across the state and professors from a s far away as Nottingham, Eng­ land. The collection of lectures, designed to make ancient wis­ dom accessible to the modem age, became a study in the dif­ ferences separating traditional scholarship from the avant garde. Deconstruction, a continental critical philosophy that seeks to both attack and liberate textual meaning by calling all of its various aspects into question, was applied to a number of St. Augustine’s theological documents by several speakers, while neo-classical theologians and historians countered with extend­ ed celebrations of Augustine’s conception of the Word Incar­ nate and his sweeping synthesis of Christian and pagan texts. Louis Mackey, professor of philosophy, brought the symposi­ um to a close with a lengthy paper that explored the impor­ tance of doubt within the saint’s rigid doctrine of faith; Mac- key’s reading delved into sources as incongruent as Scripture and “ Winnie the Pooh.” Some of his auditors appeared suspect. The University of London’s Averil Cameron remarked, “ Dr. Mackey’s paper was clear and reasonable; it had a point, which is precisely why it wasn’t deconstruction.” Any students interested in joining the Young Scholars and planning next year’s symposium should contact Sabine Mac­ Cormack in the Department of History. STRT€ Si­ n s CONORSSSGAMES - . . . « O I A ' - 4 7 * 4 2 8 0 5 « IH 9 30 UN ! “ su DRESSED TO KILL B R £ 8 £ l Drive-In ^ PRICE EVERY MONDAY 385-7217 Privacy of Your Auto 6902 Burleson Road Radio Sound System JESTER AUD. 7 & 9 p.m. Only $1.50 Directed bs John Huston. Passion, anxiety *£ frustration abound in a Georgia Army Post. ELIZABETH TAYLOR MARLON BRANDO BRIAN KEITH JULIE HARRIS ROBERT FOSTER THE POLICE * GO-GO S A U S T IN 6 521 T H O M P S O N OFF 183 S OF M O N T O PO LIS BR ID G E DEVO 28 R A N D S / 3 0 SOIMGS ADULT THEATRE C O M P LE X ft V ID E O C A SSETTE CEN TER O N E P R I C E S I X S C R E E N S O R O N E 100 T I T L E S A D U L T V I D E O IN S T O C K D E L U X E T H E A T R E O P E N 24 H O U R S P H O N E 3 8 5 5328 SEX WORLD ONCE m ^ |GHUy SILKY HOT LUNCH DEEP THROAT DEVIL IN M ISS JONES DISCOUNT: MILITARY « STUDENT . SENIORS » COUPLES HEAD SET A. ( ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ! ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * * * * * * * * I * * * * * í * * * * * * * * * * * * If * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * FUN -N- GAMES Now Featuring the Finest in D ELI SANDWICHES and BEST IN VIDEO 26TH & GUADALUPE THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED MOTION PICTURE! 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Tim.Ti..... m J ¿im c T H E A T R E S T I M E S S H O W N F O R T O D A Y O N L Y TWI-LITC SNOWS LIMITED TO SEATING REDUCED PRICES POR STUOCNTS 4 SENIOR CITIZENS WITH AMC CARD AM E R IC A N A 4 5 3 - 6 6 4 1 TTOO HANCOCK DRIVE G A L LIP O LI (fcM /$2.00)4:l5 AQUARIUS 4 GOIN’ ALL THE WAY (440/51.75)4:40 , V/.4 4 4 - 3 2 2 2 isoos pleasant valley ro SE V E N ALO N E (5:15/$1.75)-7:15 H ALLO W EEN II (5:30/51.75)-7J0 CA LIG U LA (5:30/31.75)7:45 N O R T H C R O S S 6 ^ 454-5147 ««SffS MOMMIE DEAREST (5:30/31.75)4:00 — GOIN’ ALL THE WAY (4:00/51.75)4:15 ts S O FINE (5:45/Sl 75) K Z O O T SU IT 7:45 a I C A LIG U LA 1 1 |„ ISrtS/JUSUSO ..theydlti t make msion ilcy stole It! SHOWN HIM niHB H TIM E B A N D IT S (5:30/51.75)4:00 1 1 4 4 2 - 2 3 3 3 t « 3 « bln w h ih blvo A LL M O V IES EXCLU DIN G MIDNIGHT SH O W S $100 TRAVELLER ^ ^ ■ T o u r n a m e n t A S e l e n e * F i c t i o n B e l * — P l a y I n g O n m t C e -Sp « n s*r*4 > 7 F n n t a c y W n r g n m n r s i f F rie r. Now. W — Sp m -N U n lglH ★ SntncOny, Nnv. l4 ~ N o *n -M id n ig h t 'fcwUncn T IX A S UNION '¿ ’Contact ROBCRT AOTM M at 471-7050 ________ ter mete Iwlnctnnflnn_________ MTE SHOW IM S p.m. Union Theatre 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Nen-U.T. Definitely not for Kkís ES3 IM M IIE ■ 8 C E E E N S American Independent Rime presents “ TRAVOLTA IS A K NO C K O U T!” — Archer Winsten, N.Y. Post “ It’s a great movie!” — Pauline Kael, New Yorker M agazine John Travolta & Nancy Allan in Brian De Palma's BLOW OUT k \ E L i n marriage of Mattie and Trax 6:00-8:00-10:00 6:05-7:55-9:45 X Col Young Un"-" Astonishingly good .surprisingly satisfying — Vincont Canby N.Y Timm I X COMING NOV. 13-15 " A CELTIC T R IL O G Y " - M a g ic a l Talas of Caltic Culture kl 100 1 She’s a “Platinum Princess” -A L GOLDSTEIN MAG. ■ IN S ID E s t o g y O f | JENNIFER WELLES | ZORRO THE GAY BLADE / YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN '?k YF SAO 2: fcOO V IC T O R Y *30-7:45 Desserts and coffee 'til 1 a.m. "the best cheesecake in tuun" 1200 West Lynn 472-3790 Dragons were real. f\ 'p R p G O N S U M EJL P G Page 14 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, November 11, 1981 FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS SERVICES TYPING TYPING C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G C o n se cu tive D a y R a te s 15 w ord m in im u m E a c h w ord 1 t i m e ....................s .20 E a c h w o rd 3 t im e s ....................$ .44 E a c h w ord 5 t im e s ....................S .54 E a c h w ord 10 t i m e s .................$ .88 1 col. x 1 inch 1 t im e ................ $5.69 1 col. x 1 inch 2-9 t im e s ............ $5.49 1 col. x 1 inch 10 or m ore tim es . $5.20 $1.00 c h a rg e to ch a n ge copy. F irst two w o rd s m a y be a ll ca p ita l letters. 25* tor each add ition al w ord in ca p ita l letters. S T U D E N T / F A C U L T Y / S T A F F (P r iv a t e P a rty A d s O n ly ) Co nsecutive D a y R a te s 15 w ord m in im u m E a c h w ord. 2 T im e s ......................17 E a c h W ord, 5 T i m e s .....................27 E a c h W ord, E a c h Addtl. T im e . 054 1 Col. x 1", 1 or M o re T i m e s .......3.18 50* c h a r g e to ch a n ge copy. F ir s t two letters. w o rd s m a y be a ll capital E a c h add ition al word in ca p ita ls, 25‘. A ll a d s m u st be n on -com m e rc ia l and prepared. DCAOUNE SCHEDULE Manrioy T a ran ................ Friday 2 p.m. Tuaarioy Texan............. Monday 11 a.m. Wadnaoday Taran......... Tim d dy 11 a.m. THvnday Taran........ Wadnaoday 11 a.m. Friday Taran............... Thursday 11 a.m. h tha avont of err on maria in an arivar- Htamant, immediate notice must be given as ilia publishers are responsible far only O N I Incorrect insertion. All claims for ad­ justments should be marie net later than 30 days after publication. AUTOS FOR SALE L & M V o lk sw e rk s new and used V W parts. Rebuilt engines $629 installed, e x ­ change. W e buy V W 's any condition. 251- 2265. 1979 TR-7. L e ss than 12,000 m iles. F u lly loaded. 50,000 m iles/5 year w a rran ty . 255-4515 after 6 p.m. G O T O C a lifo rn ia in this beautiful 1971 Super Beetle! New paint, upholstery, tires, everythin g else in top condition. $1,700. 476-1089 after 6 p.m. 81 B M W , W hite S Pack age, 7800 mi. Best offer a bove $15,900. C a ll 451-6968, 443- 9659. E xten d ed w a rran ty included. 1971 D A T S U N . 4 door, standard, AC, A M / F M stereo, good m ileage, reliable . transportation. $950. 258-3158. • t o r 's 72 V O L K S W A G E N Convertible. " C o ll e o reb u ilt. It e m . " M e c h a n ic a lly $3,500. 453-7760._______________________ 75 C U T L A S S 2-door, origin al owner, AT , A C, P S, P B , A M / F M , C B radio. Bucket seats, tilt wheel. $2100. 345-4903 even­ ings, 477-3656 days. 1977 T R A N S - A M , origin al owner, only 31,000 m iles. Excellent condition, new ra dia ls, r a lly wheels, 400 engine, choco­ late brown, A C, power w indow s and locks. $4,550. 478-2748._________________ S E L L I N G A P lym outh Vo la re in good condition for $2600. C a ll 835-4828 a fter 6 p.m. 1976 C U T L A S S , super condition, new paint, clean interior. $2695 or best offer. 477-8095, keep trying. 1978 K E L M A R K G T , two seater sp o rts coupe with P o rsch e engine. C a ll S T e ve at 473-2263.____________________________ V O L V O 80 D L . Stereo, A C, excellent condition. M u s t sell. 476-0126, 477-1841. 1973 TR6 . V e ry good condition. $5500. 476-4973 .______________________________ 73 B U I C K R e g a l. O r ig in a l owner, good condition. $1495. A fter 5 p.m. 453-3537. 1977 C U T L A S S Suprem e, blue and w hite; P S / P B ; A C ; A M / F M / 8 . M u s t sell Im m e d ia te ly ! Best offer! 478-9232 Ken. . 1981 F O R D F-350 D ualey, R a n g 7 r ~ X L T pickup, fu lly loaded, excellent condition. 442-1280 a fter 5:30 p.m.________________ 1978 G M C pick-up, fully loaded, a u to ­ m atic, needs paint job. $3500 or best of- fer. 926-6337.__________________________ 1969 M U S T A N G . A utom atic, 6-cylinder. $650 or best offer. 926-6337. 1974 M U S T A N G II, V-6 engine. P e rfe ct ru n n in g car. B o dy has som e rust. $650. 477-7794 .______________________________ MotorcycU-For Sol*_____ 1980 H O N D A XL125S, like new, g re a t all arou n d bike! O n ly $750. C a ll M ik e 474- 9706.________________________ 1980 Y A M A H A 400 Spe cial-exceptionally clean, pam pered. $1600. C a ll *59-0497 or see at 6500 N asco. 1980 H O N D A C8900 Custom . UnderlTÓ Ó low price. m iles, excellent condition, M u s t sell. 467-9911, 443-8604 1978 KZ200. V e ry good condition. 4900 m iles, 80 m pg, electric start, lu g g a g e ra ck. E x c e lle n t transportation. $600. C a ll Scott 327-7206.________ _ _ _ 1979 H O N D A 750F. N ever wrecked. Best offer. C a ll 451-9650._________ 1980 G S5 50E Suzuki. Black, excellent condition, m u st sell. N o reasonable offer refused. R id e it, you'll buy it. 385-7572 M O P E D . T ire d of w a lk in g ? B u y m y m oped and help support m y education Su sie 255-0770.________________________ like 78 B A T A V U S moped. 2700 m iles, new. $375 or best offer. 451-6646 after 7:00, or Su n d a ys. 1979 T R I U M P H Bonneville. 3,000 m iles. ignition. B la c k and silv e r E le c tro n ic A s k $1650. 443-4512 anytim e. 1979 B A T A V U S moped. G ood condition $350. 467-2761. 1979 P U C H 2 cycle, 1500 m iles. E x c e lle n t condition. $650 or best offer 926-6337. Bkyde-Foc S o U B I C Y C L E F O R sale. A u s t r o -D a im le r A D - S . L . E L ik e new. $275 p lu s a c c e s s o ­ ries. C a li D a n 471-5087, keep try in g . F U J I G R A N Tourer. M e n s 12-speed b i­ c y c le w ith b ra k e re le a se s a nd light. G re a t condition. $195.473-2913. M O T O B E C A N E G R A N D R e c o r d ^ 2 5 " m e n 's bicycle. To p q u a lity com p on e n ts, c o m m u te r/to u r ist bike. 258-6533. B I C Y C L E S , U S E D and new. R e p a ir s e r ­ vice. H on e st v a lu e s on re co n d ition e d b i­ cy cle s. Student discount. So uth A u s tin B ic y c le s. 2210 South F ir s t W e e k d a y s 10- 5pm, Sat. 10-2pm. _______ Stereo-for Sola_______ C I R C L E S T E R E O . P ro m p t, re a so n a b le a u d io /v id e o service. U se d e q u ip m e n t bough t a n d sold. P a r t s a n d a c c e ss o r ie s 1211 R e d R ive r. 476-0947 HOMES FOR SALE FOR SALE Stereo-For Sale F O R S A L E G e r r a r d turntable, 1 ye a r old, v e ry good con dition. $85 c a rtrid g e included C a ll 345-5078. M U 1 T S E L L by N o v. 15. 4 R -I4 speakers, S o n y turntable, P io n e e r am p/tuner. T o ­ tal $600. 478-1120 n igh ts, k eep try in g T E C H N I C S F M / A M stereo receiver, T e c h n ic s casse tte deck, and two E C I sp e a ke rs. Y e a r old. P e rfe ct condition. 473-2407. _________________ M A R A N T Z 8 -tra ck p la y e r-re c o rd e r with D o lb y soun d N e w $175 neg C a ll 478- 3779 after 7 00 ___ _ Musical-For Sale E L E C T R I C G I B S O N P a u l " w / A n v il c a se $375. A s k for J im 474-7878 . _____________ g u it a r " T h e P R O II 60 w att tube a m p. E x c e lle n t o v e rd riv e re v e rb a nd m id ra n g e . $250 A s k for J im 474-7878 V IO L I N , T U R N of C e n t u ry S t ra d iv a r iu s copy. $400. 476-7038. C L A R I N E T S E L M E R 10, C o n ce rt case, v e ry good co n ditio n. U se d four ye a rs. A fte r 5, 478-6932 2 0 % O F F e v e r y th in g w ith coupon fro m p a ge 38 of last F r i d a y 's T e x a n s u p p le ­ ment. A lp h a M u s ic C e n te r 611 W. 29th. 477-5009 S I L V E R E D B A C H S t r a d iv a r iu s M t. V e rn o n trum pet. H a n d m a d e m id 1940's. S u p e rio r con dition . A s k in g $650. 443- 5468 B U Z Z A R D R E C O N I N G . ^ S p e a k e r ’ and a m p lifie r r e p a ir a nd m o d ifica tio n . 1115 S C o n gre ss. 443-7793 Pets-For Sale A K C G O L D E N R e t rie v e r puppies. $125- 150. G ood h ip s a n d e ye s. S ir e C D X 454- 1921. Homes-For Sale W A L K T O la w sch oo l. 2-2, C A , C H , m o d ­ e rn kitchen, p riv a te . E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tion. 459-0964. $69,500 b y ow ner. 14X60 M O B I L E hom e. $900 plus take ove r p a y m e n ts of $170.05,'m o C a ll after 6 p.m. 835-1599 H E R I T A G E H O M E W a lk to U T . L a r g e 2 s to r y 4 B R - 2 B A hom e in good con d ition . W oo d floors, fire p la c e , 2 c a r g a r a g e , zoned B B O w n e r financed. On the Avenues 3 B R , 2 B A hom e, e a s ily du p le xe d. $59,500 ow n e r fin a n ce d ; $10,000 dow n, 1 2 % in ­ terest O th e r t e rm s negotiable. 2 B R 1 B A 2 liv in g a r e a s w ith study. R u stic re sto ra tio n co m ple te d. M u s t see to a p p r e c i a t e O w n e r w i l l i n g to negotiate. $57,500. Call D O U G R O S T E D T 458-8277 Daniel L. Roth and Associates. Condos-For Sale F O R S A L E S tu d e n t e ffic ie n c y con d o m i n iu m 3000 G u a d a lu p e Pla ce . F u r n is h e d $38,500, fin a n c in g a v a ila b le . 478-1500 255-3705. B E A U T I F U L N U E C E S ~ P ia c e ~ C a m p u s C o n d o m in iu m B r ig h t a n d sp a c io u s two lofted b ed room , vaulte d sto ry condo; ce ilin gs, fire p lac e , a ll a p p lia n c e s T w o b lo ck s fro m U T c a m p u s. E x c e lle n t in ­ vestm ent, su p e rb ta x a d v a n ta g e s C a ll 476-1558 N E E D T O sell y o u r c o n d o m in iu m ? G iv e u s a call. W e h a v e b u y e rs ! T H E C O N D O C O N N E C T I O N 479-6618 U T C O N D O M I N I U M S . W e h a ve 1 and 2 bed room s, all p r ic e s 'a l l lo c a tion s F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n ca ll T H E C O N D O C O N N E C T I O N 479-6618 CONDOMANIA H a v in g tro u b le w ith ke e p in g up with con d o s in the U n iv e r s it y a r e a ? W e h a v e 1,2,3 b e d ro o m co n d o s a v a ila b le w ith p ric e s s ta r tin g in the m id 30's C a ll the co n d o s p e c ia lists- Linda Ingram and Associates 476-2673 Miscellaneous-For Sale D O U B L E B E D with box sp rin g , m etal f ra m e 452-1351 after 6:00. S O F A , T A N and blue flo ra l pattern, one y e a r old, $225, queen size w ate rbe d , $100, 835-1367 after six. G O L F C L U B S . G ot tim e to p l a y ? B u y m y ne w set of clu b s and help su p p o rt m y e d u c a tio n S u s ie 255-0770. A N T I Q U E A M E R I C A N o a k d re sse r, $145 B e a u t ifu lly re finish e d. 837-3305. C O M P U T E R T E R m T n * L T T Y M o d e l 43, pe rfe ct con dition U se d 6 m on ths. 132 C o lu m n s re lia b ility . $850. K e r m it G ra f, d a y 454-4797, n ig h t 837- 3011. E x c e lle n t E L E C T R I C T Y P E W R I T E R - O l i v e t t i E d ­ itor 3 $125; E d ito r 2 $75 472-2254 I B M S E L E C T R I C II typ e w rite r. E x c e l­ lent con dition . Y e a r a n d '/a old. A u t o ­ m a t ic c o rre c tin g W a s $1000, w ill take best bid 471-2398 after 6 p.m. A s k for L isa . H I K I N G B O O T S . R a ic h le size 11. W o r n th re e tim e s. E x c e lle n t con dition. $65 negotiable. C a ll G e o rg e 837-9854. F I B E R G L A S S S U R F B O A rI d T T frT go o d con dition . G re a t gift to get now ! $40. L e a v e m e s s a g e 478-1777 a n ytim e . V I N T A G E C L O T h T Ñ G 20's-50's, new w ave , new rom a n tic. A r m a d illo F le a M a r k e t , 2301 S. C o n g r e ss at O lto rf M A R Y K A Y co sm e tic s close ou t sale. P r ic e s sla sh e d W ill d e liv e r 443-0653 S e a r s W A S H E R / D R Y E R K e n m o r e d rye r, ga s, h e a v y duty, w a sh e r h e a v y d u ty 60 top load Both e xc e lle n t c o n d i­ tion. A s k in g $400. A s k for B r e n d a 443- 6423. 113 S Q U A R E y a r d s c a rp e tin g . B r o w n s h o rt s h a g $3 00/yard. 926-6337 R E N A I S S A N C E C L O T H IN G . A r m M iH Q F le a M a r k e t , 2301 S C o n g r e ss at O lto rf F O R S A L E football silk m u m c o r s a g e s w ith h e lm e t and cow bell, $7. E x t r a le tte rin g 45' p e r ribbon. C a ll 837-6317 a f ­ ter 6 p.m. We buy jewelry, estate jewelry, diam onds and old gold. H ig he st cash prices paid. C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N. L a m a r W E B U Y G O L D Silver, Estate Jewelry D i a m o n d s and Coins H ig h Prices Paid S A N D C L I F F S J E W E L R Y D o b ie M a ll 2nd Le v e l 2021 G u a d a lu p e FURNISHED APARTMENTS V a c a n c y Act IV 3311 R e d R i v e r 474-8125 $265 p lu s E V a c a n c y Act VI 2801 H e m p h ill 476-0411 $265 plus E V a c a n c y Act V I I I 2808 W h itis 474-5650 $265 plus E V a c a n c y Act I X 2803 H e m p h ill 476-0411 $265 plus E V a c a n c y Act X X 301 W 29th 474-5650 $265 plus E V a c a n c y Pecan Square 506 W 37th 459-1597 $245 plu s E V a c a nc y 2711 and 2721 Hemphill 472-0649 $225 plus E V a c a n c y Three O ak s 409 W. 38th 453-3383 $265 p lus E E d Padgett 454-4621 M O V E I N T O Y O U R S U N N Y V A L E C O N D O NOW. M A K E N O P A Y M E N T ' T I L J A N U A R Y 1, 1982. C h a rm in g , clo se -in se clu d e d S u n n y v a le C o n d o s a re n e a rly sold out. O n ly 5 one b e d ro om un its r e m a in P r ic e d fro m $37,- IH 35 at R iv e r s id e . 750 V ic in it y of P o o lsid e locations, la r g e closets, fu lly re m ode le d incl. ne w a p p lia n c e s. C a ll to day. 512/451-8178o r 444-67dó (w e e k e n d s) i y j O rang e Tree Condo in excellent Efficiency unit c o n d i t io n w it h h a r d w o o d l o n g . f l o o r s . W o n ' t A vaila ble Christm as. Call L in ­ In g ra m and Assoc., the da Condo Specialists at 476-2673. l a s t Tickets-For Sale E A R T H , W I N D & F ire . B e st floor and a re n a tickets 2-4-6-8 together. C a ll 447- 9891 after 9:00 p m Jo se F A N T A S T I C E W F 479-6922, 473-2138 flo o r seats. C a ll Miscellaneous-For Sale S A L E ! I N D I A N ¡e w e lry is 2 5 % o f f ! N e l­ s o n 's Gifts, 4502 S C o n g re ss . 444-3814, 10-6. closed M o n d a y s S H O E S , C H I N E S E sty le s; soaps, w oks, incense. L ib e r t a r ia n books, s cie n c e fiction. P A C I F I C S U N R I S E , 1712 S. C o n g re ss, 441-4565. s e v e r a l S K I B O O T S L a n g e 900, size 10 In s t r u c ­ tors m odel. A lm o s t ne w $95 467-8965, keep tryin g. S C U B A D I V I N G w et su it T o p and bot tom . E x c e lle n t con dition. $125 476-7038 1200 H A Z E L F I N E t e r m in a l $350, m o d e m $120, S C M m a n u a l typ e w rite r $95, T l 58 c a lc u la to r $70, T l 55 $40 4 " re fle ctor telescope $40, B illy B e e r can $75 928-3135. $235 F O U N T A I N T E R R A C E A P A R T M E N T S L a r g e 1 B R a pt. f u r n is h e d , w a lk - in closets, w a ll to w a ll carpet, ca b le T V , s w im m in g pool, w a te r a nd g a s paid. W a l k i n g to U T . N o c h ild re n , p e ts 610 W. 30th A pt. 134 M a n a g e r 477-8858 472-3812 d i s t a n c e 2505 N U E C E S Brownlee Dorm itory All bills paid $210 478-4038 3 2 N D A T A v a l o n H35 A p t s . n-$285 1 bedroom-J On premise laundry W a lk cam pus 472-7604 O L D M A I N A p a rtm e n ts, 25th a n d P e a rl, 1 B R , e ffic ie n c ie s F o u r b lo ck s U T , s h u t ­ tle, cable, pool 476-5109. W A L K T O c a m p u s L a r g e e fficie n cy Sh u ttle a n d c ity bus. M a u n a Ka i, 405 E . 31st 472-2147 D U V A L V I L L A has 2 B R a p a rtm e n ts next to pool a v a ila b le soon. C lo se to U T shu ttle a n d sh o p p in g. 4305 D u va l, 451- 2343. N E W L U X U R Y e fficie ncy a p a rtm e n t in S p r u c e H o u se co m p le x n ear U T c a m ­ pu s $390/m onth H ow e ll P ro p e rtie s 477- 9925, 476-8)44 S U B L E A S E R O O M at T ri-T o w e r s ( e x ­ tra la r g e c o rn e r a p a rtm e n t) fo r this s p r in g s e m e ste r C a ll 473-2715 3000 G U A D A L U P E Pla ce . S u p e r condo. A v a ila b le Ja n . 1. $325 mo. C a ll 478-9161 o r 327-2209 N E E D 1 C re e k A pt on R iv e rs id e . 442-8381. fe m a le to s u b le a se W illo w O N E B E D R O O M a p a rtm e n t for rent. S p r in g se m e ste r. E x c e lle n t c a m p u s lo­ ca tio n V e r y sp a cio u s. O n shu ttle route. 467-0337. N E E D T O s u b le a se la r g e f u rn is h e d apa rtm e n t. $330/m onth, all b ills paid. B e h in d H ig h la n d M a ll. C a ll 458-5018. H Y D E P A R K a re a apt. a v a ila b le Dec. $270/m onth. O n e b e d ro o m C a ll 453-7895 a fte r 6 S P I F F Y 2 B R 1 ' j B A T a n g le w o o d N o rth su ble a se . D ir e c t ly on shuttle. Y o u r s in m id -D e c e m b e r. 454-0179. S U B L E T 1 B R apt. M o r e in form a tion, 5:00. a v a ila b le Dec. 15. ca ll 467-2509 after U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C Y 1 B R g a rd e n a p a rtm e n t. H y d e P a r k . N e w carpet, pool, c e ilin g fan s. $270 p lu s E . C a ll 451- 9444 after 6 p.m. 2 F U R N I S H E D r o o m in g ho use ro o m s for rent $120-$160/month. A B P $50 d e ­ posit. C a ll 474-5981. L A R G E O N E b ed room . L o ts of light, b a th ro o m s k y lig h t. Pool, quiet. E x c e l­ lent m a n a g e r. O n IF shuttle 3301 S p e e d ­ w a y. C a ll P a m 476-5674. E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T M E N T S d o s e to u n iv e r s it y a n d W e st A u stin . A v a ila b le now. $225/m onth. M a n a g e r a p a rtm e n t 206, 6-10 p.m. 3 b lo c k s e a st of W e st L y n n Off W e st 9th. 808 W in flo 476-7554 W A L K T O c a m p u s 1 b e d ro o m N e w paint, ca rp e t a n d A C . $265 p lu s e le c t ric i­ ty 478-6148 E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T M E N T - 3 0 8 W a I nut D r off of G e o r g ia n and A n d e rs o n L a n e P lu s g a s a n d e lectric, $250 m onth. D e p o sit re q u ire d . 441-2312, 5-10 p.m. E F F I C T e Ñ C Y A V A I L A B L E - now - 1-Í a n d e fficie n cie s for s p r in g se m e ste r. L a u n d r y , cable, pool, fire p lac e . Vi blo ck shu ttle C h im n e y Sw e e p A p ts 105 W. 38’ 2 454-2339 F E M A L E ~ S C i E N T IF 1C v is it o r fro m E n g la n d to U T B o t a n y Dept, w ould like to s u b le a se apt close to c a m p u s a p p ro x. Dec. 15-Jan 7. 471-1900 UNFURN. APARTMENTS E X T R A L A R G E 1 B R a p a rtm e n ts. T w o la rg e w a lk -in closets, perfect for r o o m ­ m ate s. Se con d stop on U T shuttle. W a lk to r e sta u ra n ts s h o p p in g and e n te rta in ­ ment. S a x o n y A p ts 443-0051 S P A C T O U S E F F i C I E N C Y a n d 1B R , f u r n ish e d and u n fu rn ish e d $215 plus E and $230 p lu s E . C o n v e n ie n tly located in nice com ple x, 451-4206. 477-6191 N E A R L A W school L a r g e 1 b e d ro o m in s m a ll quiet c o m p le x $260 p lu s E . 474- 1240, 477-6191. N W A P T a v a ila b le for su b le a se tow n h ou se w ith W D con n e ctio n s m o n th plus elec 345-6127 eves. 2 - 1 1 j $345 Q U I E T 2 B R , 2 B A W a n t to su b le a se for m o n th s J a n - M a y 1982 $370 p lu s E R iv e r H ills A pts. Se con d stop on R C shuttle route 441-3721 L A R G E 2 B R , 2 B A a v a ila b le Ja n 1 R C - S R shuttle 2124 Burton . 444-9229 H Y D E P A R K g a r a g e a p a rtm e n t. $190, ele ctricity. I F shuttle A s s u m e lease be­ g in n in g D e c e m b e r. C a ll a n y t im e 454- 1474. * ROOMMATES ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ When you need * a roommate in a hurry call Roommate Inc. 452-0420 * * * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ R O O M M A T E W A N T E D , ^ R e sp o n sib le fe m a le gra d . L a r g e 1 B R , S R shuttle, pool, cable. $157/m onth, Va bills. 445- 5949 M A T U R E H O U S E M A T E large, peace ful house n e a r 45th. S h o a l C reek. $187, x'i bills. N o tobacco, pets. Jo h n 458- 8451 fo r Y O U N G W H I T E m a le (g y m n a s t, lib e r ­ al, m e llo w ) se e ks s a m e a s ro o m m a te . I a m close to c a m p u s. T im m y 479-8113 F E M A L E T O s h a re n ice house. F ir e ­ place, m o re P re fe r n o n -sm o k in g g r a d u ­ ate. R e n e e 477-1484 nights, 445-1289 d a ys. F E M A L E N E E D E D to s u b le a se a p a r t ­ m ent off R iv e rsid e , s p r in g se m e ste r. $97.50 p lus % bills. 441-6648. R E S P O N S I B L E " R O O M M A T E fo r 3-2 S ou th A u s tin house w ith y a r d N o sh u t ­ tle $180 p lu s W bills. 444-5541, 472-1236. L O V E L Y 23rd St a p a rtm e n t. F e m a le so u g h t to s h a r e w ith a rc h ite c tu re g r a d $175 plus, deposit. 479-6219, 442-1935 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D s p rin g $192.50 p lus Va E for h o use on 45th and A v e n u e G P le a se ca ll A n g e la at 453- 1306 If not home, le a ve y o u r n a m e and n um be r. for fem ale, non- R E S P O N S I B L E , N E A T , s m o k e r 2-1 duplex, South $165, Vi b ills 441-3199, 445-7422 K a y R O O M M A T E W A N T E D R e sp o n sib le fe m a le n o n -sm o k e r to s h a r e H y d e P a r k d u p le x $117 50 plu s Vt u tilitie s 479-6895 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed im m e d ia te ly to s h a re 1-1 f u rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t on E R shuttle $140 p lus E C a ll 477-5492, 472-0385 M - F 2-10. S T U D IO U S , Q U I E T a nd re sp o n sib le g ra d u a t e fe m a le needed to s h a re nice 1 B R a p r on W. 21st sta rt D e c $135 plus elec N o T V . C a ll D ia n a 476 8179, 4-6 30 p.m. S T U D E N T / P R O F É S S I O N A L ~ to sh a re 3 B R house E a s y acc e ss, nice n e ig h b o r ­ hood C a ll m g h ts 467-9911, 443-8604 R É S E R V É D F E M A L E Student S m a ll, nice one b e d ro om apt on sh u ttle P a r ­ tia lly fu rn ish e d $110 rent 479-0380 N E A T F E M A L E _ s h a r e b ig 3 B R 2B A apt $117 p lu s v3 low b ills N R shuttle 447-8714 e v e n in g s N E E D R O O M M A T E M a t u r e fe m a le *o s h a r e 2 B R , l ' . B A $192 50 plus. R a c q u e t Club. C in d ie 443-7285. F E M A L E F O R nice 2 1 fu rn is h e d house, fireplace, W D T a rr y t o w n area. E R shu ttle $225 p lu s u tilitie s 476 9162, late m o r n in g s w eekends. F E M A L E N O N S M O K E R to s h a r e 3 B R 2 'a B A tow n h o u se n e a r sh uttle $160/ m on th A B P 445-5250 after 3 00 p.m. W O M A N 35, se e ks re a so n a b le liv in g s it ­ uation im m e d P re fe r n o n -sm o k e r s u n ­ n y r o o m (s), a c c e ss to tuned p ia n o W ill settle for le ss S e r v r a g h 474-2104 or 263- 2895 K e e p try in g H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D J a n 1 2 B R ' i b ills $75 dow n, IF 2 B A $162 50 m o shuttle 458-5040 C a ll E d W A L K T O c a m p u s 1 a n d 2 b e d ro o m s N e w paint, c a rp e t a nd A C . $265 o r $450 p lu s e le c tricity 478-6148 for F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E w ante d 3 B R hou se 2 b lo c k s fro m U T W D, quiet n e ig h b o rh o o d $150 d b ills 474-8853 N E W 2 bedroom , ce ilin g fan S 1st St $450 474-9918 IV j bath, fireplace, O N E R O O M e fficie n cy S h a r e patio. $125/month. $75 deposit. N o pets C a ll 467-9932 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES Close to U T 1-1, ceiling fans, 5295/month. Call 346-3100. on shuttle, Debbie at U T - L A W school, I block shuttle, la r g e 3- 1 A p p lia n c e s. 459-0964. N o pets. $595 808 H a r ris . N O R T H W E S T H I L L S new d e lu x e -2 B R , 2 ’ i B A F ire p la c e , c e ilin g fan, view . C o n ­ v e n ie nt M o p a c , schools, N o r t h c r o s s M a ll C ity a n d sh uttle bus $575/m onth A v a ila b le now 345-1699 N O R T H E A S T L A R G E 2-2, a n d 2-1!*, 2 s to rie s F ire p la c e , C A C H , carpet, stor a g e $350. 477-5198 345-8891 ROOMS A T T E N T I O N F E M A L E fa c u lty or g r a d ­ uate students. C o m p le te p r iv a c y in one w in g of hom e in N o rth w e st A u s tin $295 __________ A B P 346-2043 M A L E S T U D E N T needed to take o v e r c o n tra c t at T a o s d o rm . L e a v e n a m e and n u m b e r at 474-6905 or 477-8865. N I C E P R I V A T E ro o m s for m e n and w o m e n stud e n ts ne a r U T c a m p u s C A C H , carpeted, kitc h e n p r iv ile g e s $160 m onth. H ow e ll P r o p e r t ie s 477-9925. R O O M A V A I L A B L E in Dobie. S p r in g s e m e ste r for inte re ste d fe m a le C a th y 477-5478 to C O N S I D E R A T E P E O P L E needed s h a r e la rg e co-op, co -e d u c a tio n al house V e r y n e a r c a m p u s. C a ll S te ve at 479- 0681, 2510 R io G ra n d e . F E M A L E N E E D E D to tak e ov e r d or mi tory con tra ct C ontact R o s a iy n 478 7352 P R I V A T E R O O M co-ed two b lo c k s fro m U T C A / C H , b ills paid, fu rn ish e d , s h a re kitc h e n S 1 6 9 'm o n th 480-0372 C O - E D D O R M 1 block fro m c a m p u s S p a c e a v a ila b le im m e d ia t e ly a n d for s p r in g 474-6905 UNFURNISHED HOUSES C O U N T R Y L I V I N G - la r g e 3-1, 14 m ile s e a st on 969 W o r k in g cou ple L é a se $350 478 5739, 472-2097 P R E T T Y 3 B R , I B A A lla n d a le for rent J a n u a r y - J u ly 82 $547 p lu s bills. 458- 9913 Staff only. I N D I V I D U A L T O s h a re 4 B R , 2 B A house on 20 a c re ra n c h 15 m in u te s fro m U T H o r se stables, tank. D e p o sit fis h in g $100, rent $)80/m on th p lu s ’ i u tilities C a ll R o n at 478-2567 or afte r 5 p m. call 474-1765. R E S P O N S I B L E C O N S I D E R A T E n o n ­ s m o k in g fe m a le to s h a r e 2-1 d u p le x w ith fenced y a r d South A u s tin D e c e m b e r 1 th ro u g h M a y 31 $130 p lu s a bills. D la n n 441-4507 M A T U R E A P T - M A T E sought. S h a r e 2-2 w g r a d student Q uie t a re a N e a r c a m ­ pu s $100 p lu s 13 u tilitie s R e fe re n c e s ( A v a ila b le m id -D e c 1 477-7428 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a nte d s p r in g se m e ste r S p a c io u s s u n n y 2 B R , 2nd floor d u p le x 2 m in U T C a l l ! 467-2447 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E 7 o r~ ~ n ic e 2-1 a p a rtm e n t 51st and G u a d a lu p e IF sh u t­ tle $175 plu s 1 1 b ills 467-8202 S E C U R E P R O F E S S I O N A L or g r a d stu dent h o u se m a te U n fu r n is h e d ro o m in o ld e r 2 B R hou se N e a r 7th and Blan co, Shuttle $238 SO and : i b ills C a ll J im 474 6832 ROOM AND BOARD D o n 't W a it Apply Now M a le a nd fe m a le v a c a n c ie s for S p r in g 24 A in C o o p e ra tiv e A p p l i c a t i o n d e a d l i n e N o v s u c c e ssfu l e x p e rim e n t liv in g C a ll or co m e by 21 st St. College House Co-op 707 W 21st St. 477-4777 U N E C H A M B R E pour deux a ou e r a L a M a is o n F r a n c a is e Tei 478-6586 A S H A R E in co-op no m e a v a ila b le $150- $180/m onth C h a r m in g s p a c io u s home, re c e n tly re n o v a te d N e a r U T a n d d o w n ­ tow n V e g e ta r ia n m eal, o r g a n ic g a r d e n 13 people (a g e r a n g e 8-69) P r o f e s s io n ­ als, A n retirees, ch ild re n w e lc o m e e qua l o p p o rtu n ity h o m e C a ll 472-8049 T u e s d a y -S a t u rd a y 10 30-6 00 or le a v e a m e s s a g e at 472-3329 F E M A l E D O U B L E v a c a n c ie s in N e w G u ild Co-op O ld house tw o b lo c k s fro m c a m p u s, fe a tu rin g s h a r e d r e s p o n s ib ili­ ty, nice fire place , la rg e e n o u g h fo r b a l­ ance of p r iv a c y a n d c o m p a n io n s h ip C o m e by betw een 6-7pm S u n d a y th ro u g h F r id a y to eat d in n e r a n d m eet the folks. 510 W 23rd St by N u e c e s R O O M i n C A S T I L I A N a v a ila b le for s p r in g se m e ste r T w o fe m a le s C a ll 474- 0758 a sk for N a n c y F E M A L E S P A C E a v a ila b le at D o b ie for s p r in g se m e ste r 3rd floor! C a ll N ic k i 474-5764, keep t ry in g ! F E M A L E N E E D E D to s u b le a se ro o m in D o b le A v a ila b le s p r in g s e m e ste r C a ll G a y le 473-2558 C A S T I L I A N - S U B L E A S E for s p r in g se ­ m e ste r C a ll T o m or B a r r y at 477-5935 2 S P A C E S a v a ila b le for s p r in g se m e ste r at the C a st ilia n C o n v e n ie n t to c a m p u s. 474 8825. R O O M A V A I L A B L E s p r in g se m e ste r for fe m a le clo se to c a m p u s C a st ilia n A s k for L is a 478-4824 FURNISHED HOUSES N E A R ro o m C a ll 926 7243 I N T R A M U R A L F ie ld la rge kitchen, no pets, 2 bed- shu ttle PERSONAL PROBLEM P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L IN G , R E F E R R A L S & FREE P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G la x a s Problam Pregnancy 507 Powell St M-F, 8 30-5 00 458-5408 37th & G uadatupo 45 3-5452 f o r PHOTOS PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 m in u te s e r v i c e M O N - F R I 10-6 SA T 10-2 4 7 7 -5 5 5 5 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 G U A D A L U P E PROBLEM P R E G N A N C Y COUNSELING, REFERRALS & FREE PREGNANCY TESTING Texai Problem Pregnancy 507 Powefl Street M-F 8:30-5:00 4 7 4 -9 9 3 0 P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L I N G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T I N G T e x a s P r o b le m P r e g n a n c y 507 P o w ll St M - F , 7 30-5 30 474-9930 D O N 'T L E A V E T O W N ! F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S A N D R E F E R R A L S T O A U S T I N R E S O U R C E S W o m e n 's Referral Center 603 W 13th N o 210 476 6878 M S Shuttle Texas Instruments Service E x c h a n g e Center Twin Towers 1106 Clayton Lane F o r a v a ila b ility h o u rs a n d a d d itio n a l In ­ fo rm a tio n ca ll J E N N I N G S ' M O V I N G a n d H a u lin g D e ­ pe n d ab le p e rso n a l la r g e or sm a ll iobs 7 d a y s w eek 442-6)81 s e rv ic e A R T 'S M O V I N G a nd H a u lin g : a n y a re a 24 hours. 7 d a y s 447 9384 442-0)94 477-8467 H A I R C U T S I a m lo o k in g for ail of m y old c u st o m e r s (a n d frie n d s !) CaM, or stop by — 24th at L o n g v ie w N e w c u st o m e r s a re w elcom e, too Jeffi S T R E S S E D - O U T 7 P r o fe ss io n a l th e ra ­ peutic m a s s a g e P le a su ra b le , h e a lin g Ste ve n F e a r in g M A , M s T 477-1465 in ­ tro d u c to ry ra te s P R I V A T E M A I L B O X E S for rent. U n i­ v e rsity M a ilb o x R e n t a ls 504 W 24th, or call 477-1915 U N I Q U E N E W B O O K S E R V I C E n oti­ fies you of fo rt h c o m in g books in Y O U R field A n y su b je c t or a utho r Sp e c ia l or- d e r s B O O K C H O IC E , B o x A A 1497 E v a n sto n , IL 60204 O u t - o f - p r i n t s e a r c h TRAVEL Travel P r o g r a m S I G N U P B Y N o v 16, 1981 N e w Y o r k -W a s h ln g t o n D C w ith U T ID-S695, other-$715 E u r o p e a n W in te r H o lid a y w ith U T ID -SI.3 9 5, other $1,415 T e x a s U n io n P r o g r a m O ffice 471-5651. ext 272 Y O U B O O K E D * A T T E N T I O N * A T T E N T I O N * * A T T E N T I O N * A T T E N T I O N * H A V E Y O U R C H R I S T M A S F L I G H T S 7 Y O U ' D B E T T E R G E T O N I T ' M A N Y H O L I D A Y F L I G H T S A R E A L R E A D Y S O L D O U T ! F I N A N C E S A R E T IG H T O V E R T H E H O L I D A Y S T H E M O R E Y O U S A V E O N A I R F A R E T H E M O R E Y O U L L H A V E F O R P A R T Y I N G I 'L L G E T Y O U T H E B E S T F A R E P O S S I B L E T H E R E IS N O E X T R A C H A R G E F O R I S H O P U S I N G E X P E R T S IN T R A V E L A R O U N D F O R T H E B E S T F A R E S F O R Y O U A N D T H E R E A R E N O L I N E S T O S T A N D IN C A L L M E T O D A Y 477-6505 A S K F O R J O E , O R S T O P B Y O U R O F F I C E C O N V E N I E N T L Y L O C A T E D D O W N T O W N O N 6 T H S T R E E T IN T H E G O L D B U I L D I N G E X P E R T S IN T R A V E L 8 2 0 A M E R I C A N B A N K T O W E R 477-6505 A T T N S K I E R S 6 d a y s C re ste d Bu tfl $179, A sp e n $209 C a ll M ik e S m ith 444 8108 or C a s s i 467-8377 H u r r y C a ll today WANTED W E W A N T Y O U R B I K E S ! W e buy, re pair, sell a nd tra de b ic y c le s Bob's Bike and Key 5413 N. L a m a r 452-9777 F A S T C A S H W e b u y or loan on gold and silv e r in a n y f o rm N o rt h 454 0459, 5134 B u rn e t R o a d Sou th 892-0019, 5195 290 W est ________________ _ B U Y I N G W O R L D gold, gold jew elry, s c r a p gold, old coins, antiques, pocket w a tc h e s P a y in g fa ir m a r k e t pric e C a p ­ itol C o in C o 3004 G u a d a lu p e , 472-1676, P h illip N o hra , o w n e r A P P L I A N C E S J & B S e rv ic e and Sales, 711 W St Jo h n s. 451-2075 $50,000 6 6 1 of W Í Ñ M c D o n a ld 's c u rr e n t sw e e p sta k e s C a ll 480-0971 after 2 00 p m ne e d Ño. I TUTORING S P A N I S H T U T O R P r o f e ss io n a l S p a n is h in stru c to r w ith 5 y e a r s expe rien ce . C a ll S e rg io 45I-4704 a fte r 4 p.m N A T I V E S P E A K E R , F re n c h and A r a bic, a n d e x p e rie n c e d teache r of m a t h e ­ m a tic s a nd p h y s ic s R e a so n a b le ra te s 34 5 3754 M A T H E M A T I C S T U T O R A lU r e s h m a n , so p h o m o re c o u rs e s E fficie n t, effective, re a so n a b le g r o u p ra te s D o n 't wait, s a v e this 926-5658 }fl\p*dkK M B A * T Y P I N G , P R IN T IN G , B I N D I N G The Com plete Profottional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 27 07 H EM PH ILL PK P le n t y o f P a r k i n g e^onotype e^onocopy Typing, Copying, Binding, Printing IBM Correcting Soloctric Ron tal B Supplio$ 5e copies North M -F 8 :3 0 -5 :3 0 Sat. 1 0 -4 :0 0 South M -F 8 3 0 -5 0 0 Sat. 1 0 -1 :0 0 E. Riverside & L a k a th o ra 4 4 3 - 4 4 9 8 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • T.E.C.S., Inc. Typing Service lO OS K. Bl. Elmo Road ’O f f e r in g P r o fe s s io n a lis m w i t h a P e rso n a l T o u c h " PICKUP POINT I S D a i l y * M a m O ffice 'G r e e n w o o d T o w e rs 18 0 0 -A la v a c a S : 3 0 - 7 : 4 S p m D a l l y o r b y a p p o l n f m o n i * 1 8 0 0 Lav aca , N o 8 0 9 ( M o lly Ficken 4 7 8 -2 2 5 3 ) Term Papers, Theses, a n d D is se r ta tio n s a s lo w a t $ 1 . 2 S p a g e R E S U M E P A C K A G E Original & 50 copies $ 9 . 0 0 443-4433 A N D L E G A L K a t h e 's Q u ic k -T y p e ence I B M I I I 443 6488 d a y s e v e n in g s t y p ng 15 y e a r s e x p e r i­ p r o f e s s io n a l T Y P I N G T H E S E S , m a n u s c rip ts , statis- t cal 453- 113*______________ E x p e r ie n c e d p ro fe ssio n a l T Y P I N G - F A S T ra te s C a ll G re tc h e n 928-1751, 451-2332 se rv ic e , r e a s o n a b 'e R E S E A R C H P A P E R S *yped p r o f e ss io n ­ a lly Ir e n e 's B u s in e s s S e r v ic e 282-5500, 282-0622 N E E D A la st a c c u ra te t y p is t 7 I h a ve a B A m E n g l is h a c o rre c tin g S e le c tric an d 12 y e a r s se c re ta ria l e x p e rie n c e C a ll A n n at 447-5069 8 6 w hen you W O O D S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e w a n t it done r ig h t 472-6302 2200 G u a ­ dalupe, side e n tra n c e sur* w* DO typ* FRESHMAN THEMES wfcy net stert eet wHk feeri (reries 2 7 0 7 H *m p h ill Just North at 27th at Guarialupo 472-3210 472-7677 A ll N A T A L I E 'S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E ty p e s of ty p in g done I B M C o r re c tin g S e le c tric a n d I B M d isp la y w rite r C a ll 255-3141_________________________ _ J E A N N E S T Y P I N G S e rv ic e . T y p in g in m y N o r t h A u s tin home. F a st, a c c u ra te , r e a so n a b le 836 4303 R E S E A R C H papers, theses, T Y P I N G d iss e rta tio n s, C o r re c tin g S e le ctric, plca/elite W ill proof, e x p e r i­ enced, re a so n a b le 441-1893 sta tistic a l I N T E L U G E N T , A C C U R A T E ty p in g R e p o rts, r e su m e s H ig h lite ra c y , c u s ­ to m e r m is s p e llin g s co rre cte d R u s h s e r ­ v ic e a v a ila b le A ls o e diting c o n su lta tion C r e a t iv e S e rv ice s, 2420 G u a d a lu p e , 478-3633 E L L I S O N t y p i n g Theses, d is s e r t a ­ tio n s E x t e n s iv e e xp e rie n ce w ith g r a d u ­ ate C o r re c tin g re q u ire m e n ts S e le c tric , sta rt $1 00 pa ge 441-7243. sch ool RESUMES w i t h or w i t h o u t p i c t u r e s 2 7 0 7 H em ph ill Park J u s t N o r t h of 2 7 t h at G u a d a l u p e 4 ^ 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 A N D E R S O N T Y P I N G S e rv ice , 302 W. 15th, R o o m 206C. 472-4196. $1.50/page. _____________ D iss e r ta t io n s $2/page. X Y p i n g - C O R R E C T I N G S e le c t r ic , o v e rn ig h t se rv ice , p ick -u p a v a ila b le till 11:50 p.m. E x p e rie n c e d , p ro fe ssio n a l. Patty, 345-4269 till m id n ig h t._____________ P R O O F I N G A N D ty p in g of d is s e r t a ­ tions, theses, c la s s pa p e rs, them es. 452- 3780, 447-4769 P D Q T y p i n g S e rv ice . N e w location, 1802 L a v a c a . P ro fe ss io n a l, a c c u ra te t y p ­ ing. T im e ly r u sh w o r k a v a ila b le . 474- __________________ ______________ 2198. p ro fe ssio n a l T H E T Y P I S T , q u a lity gu a ra n te e d C a m p u s d e liv e ry , pick-up. I B M C o r re c tin g S e le c tric. H elen, 836- 3562, 835-5235. P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I N G . F r e e c a m ­ p us p ick -u p a n d d e liv e r y A n y length. 95* a p a g e C a ll 928-1147. 24 H O U R ty p m g / w o rd p ro c e ssin g . 474- 4735. R u s h s e rv ic e a v a ila b le . F A S T S T U D E N T ty p in g C a ll or le a v e m e ssa g e . 441-8933. rates, p ro fe ssio n a l E X P E R I E N C E D ty p ist A C C U R A T E . w ill do te rm p a pe rs, theses, re p o rts of a n y kind, sta tistic a l ty p in g I B M S e le c ­ tric in m o st c a se s. $! 00 page 442-6133 a lte r 6 p m ________ s e rv ic e 24-hour L I N D A 'S T Y P I N G S e r v ic e South. 442- 7465 after 5 p.m F a st, e fficient a n d in e x ­ _ pensive. P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I N G done in m y hom e C a ll S a n d r a at 476-5081 afte r 6 p m __ M E L I N D A ' S T Y P I N G S E R V I C E 95‘ per page 15 years experience E xce lle n c e , style, q u a lity g u a ra n te e d 458-2312 ( A n y t im e ) HELP WANTED e a r ly a f t e r n o o n -e v e n in g R O O M C L E R K a p p lic a tio n s b e in g take n for sh ift H o u rs 2 30 p m 9 00 p m , a lte rn a tin g M o n d a y , W e d n e sd a y F rid a y , 1st week a n d T u e sd a y T h u r s d a y Sa tu rd a y , 2nd w eek etc A p p ly In p e rso n o a m I p m d a ily W est W in d s M ote l, A ir p o r t B lv d and IH 35 Bean's Bean's Restaurant is now in­ terviewing experienced cooks to work part time Flexible schedule. A pp ly in person, 311 W. 6th. E X C E L L E N T P A R T T I M E J O B O P P O R T U N I T Y interested W e a re in h ir in g R u s s ia n t ra n sla to rs M u s t be e x tre m e ly fluent, p r o f i c i e n t m E n g l is h and m u st ha v e a E x - w o r k in g s c ie n t if ic b a c k g r o u n d and ce len t p a y w o r k p a r t t im e w h e re v e r you w ish Se n d r e su m e s to T ra n sla to rs, P O B o x 7552 A ustin , T X 78712 G R O U P H O M E C O U N S E L O R S North Austin T he B r o w n S c h o o ls h a s 2 o p e n in g s for co u n se lo rs to w o rk w ith d e ve lo p m a n ta l- iy a n d e m o t io n a lly d s a b le d a d u lts H o u r s a re llp m - 7 a m M F or p a rt tlm a 5pm 9pm M - F F o r in fo rm a tio n ca ll 478- 6662 E O E M A K E S7 /H O U R A N Y S C H E D U L E Full or part time, fun at­ m o s p h e r e . I m m e d i a t e openings, no experience necessary. After 1 p.m., 600 W. 28th No. 1Ü7 G / M S T E A K H O U S E 1908 Guadalupe c o o k p o s i t i o n s C o u n t e r , available. Flexible hours a c ­ cording to school schedule. Free m eals A pp ly 2-5 N o phon e ca lls, please M E D I C A L L A B O R A T O R Y E Q U I P M E N T T E C H N I C I A N P a r t time, m in im u m 20 h o u rs week, w ill tra in to r e p a ir a nd c a lib ra te m e d ic a l la b o ra to ry In stru m e n ta tio n , e le c tro n ic s and c h e m is tr y e x p e rie n c e p re fe rre d 385 6232 Full Tim e/Part Tim e S A L E S W e n e e d 30 s h a r p p e o p le to w o r k e v e n in g s and or w e e k e n d s for A m e r ic a n A d v e n t u re s C a ll J im o r C a r r ie 9 a m -6 p m at 459-1082 for co m p le te details. H O O K 'S S E A F O O D G R I L L E Now hiring valet park ers A pply in person W e e k d a y s betw een 3.30-5 30 5122 B e e C a v e s R d M A K E M O N E Y IN Y O U R S P A R E T I M E Set a p p o in tm e n t for u s $4 00 per h o u r to s t a r t F l e x i b l e 4 h o u r t im e s l o t s a v a ila b le fro m 8 am -8pm , 6 d a y s par week P h o n e 451-5362 H ook's Seafood Grille is in te rv ie w in g p e rs o n s w ith e x p e rie n c e for the fo llo w in g p o sitio n s W e e ke n d c o c kta il se rve r, a s s is ta n t food se rv e r, n ight cook a n d d ish w a sh e r. A p p ly in p a r ­ son w e e k d a y s betw een 3 30 5 30 at 5122 Bee C a v e s R d J J 'S S U B M A R I N E S A N D W I C H S H O P S W e a re now a c c e p tin g a p p lic a tio n s for v a rio u s sh ifts at v a r io u s loc a tion s P le a ­ sant w o r k in g con d ition s, fle xib le hours, good food A p p ly in 5307 A ir p o r t B lv d . or call 454 2585 L E A D g u ita r p la y e r W A N T E D for w o r k in g b a n d E x p e r ie n c e d e sire d but not n e c e ss a r y If y o u 'v e got the fire c o m e show it to us 477-1169 HOMES FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS DON'T PAY APARTMENT RENT DON'T BUY EXPENSIVE CONDOS We Have N e w Homes fu lly Furnished at less than $11,000 • Financing Available • MOBILE HOMES TEXAS NO. 1 RETAILER In Mobile Homes 6300 E. Ben W hite 385-8700 F R E E — Apartment referral service FEE PAID BY APT. O W N E R all sizes, prices and locations 474-6357 3507 N. IN TE R RE G IO N AL 441-2277 R IV E R S ID E A R E A 088 ^ D O A L L T H E S E A D S D R I V E Y O U B A N A N A S? WE RENT AUSTIN, FREE! apartments duplexes, & homes all over N O R T H 4 5 8 - 6 1 1 1 S O U T H 4 4 3 - 2 2 1 2 N O R T H W E S T 3 4 5 - 6 3 5 0 PA U L S. M E IS L E R P R O P E R T IE S 4 7 4 -9 9 3 0 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F re e preg n a n c y testing and r e fe r r a ls 474-9930 L O S E W E I G H T now ! P r o v e n self-test r e v e a ls e x a c tly how m u c h you need to eat a n d e x e rc ise for a m o re be a u tifu l you F re e bo n u s! Se nd $3 00 to P r ic e P u b lic a tio n s, B o x 26708, Dept. D T A u s ­ tin, T X 78755 S H Y B U T s e n su o u s you D o n 't w ait! S e n d for T he P r iv a c y C o m p a n y 's free b ro c h u re toda y! 504 W 24th, B o x 20, A u s tin 78705. D isc r e tio n a ss u re d E N G I N E E R I N G S T U D E N T woulcTTike to meet a young lady age 18-25 for com ­ panionship and possible m arriage S e ­ rious replies only P le a se write to P O B o x 49604, A us ti n 78765 H A P P Y 20 TH b irth d a y R o m a n ! MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O G U I T A R te ac h e r B e y m n e r s-a d v a n c e d U T d e ­ g re e A fte r 1 p m 459 4082, 451-0053 P R I V A T E M U S I C in stru c tio n in voice, piano, theory, c o m p o sitio n , c la s s ic a l or p o p u la r technique, tra d itio n a l o r c o n ­ t e m p o ra ry lite ra tu re 327-5904 B E C O M E A d ist r ib u t o r of h o m e c o m ­ pu te rs full or p a rt tim e $600 in v e stm e n t re q u ire d M u ltile v e l m a r k e t in g N o e x ­ p e rie nce n e c e ssa ry , P O B o x 1428, D a l­ las, T X 75221. D I S C O IN S A N M A R C O S B e st location in town H a s the p o te n lia l to net 8-10 K per m onth, if ru n by o w n e r A s s u m a b le S B A loan, o w n e r fin a n c in g a v a ila b le C on tact I B E C - G a r y T h o m p so n (512) 454- 2733 MISCELLANEOUS " F i r s t W H A T D O F r a n k O 'C o n n o r 's C o n fe ss io n ' a n d E d g a r A lla n P o e 's " T h e F a ll of the H o u s e of U s h e r " h a v e in c o m m o n 7 LOST & FOUND L O S T R A Y B A N s u n g la s s e s (b la c k ). V i ­ cin ity P C L P e r io d ic a l R o o m 472-1433, a sk for B e c k y 452 3864 e v e n in g s L O S T K I T T E N B ro w n , o ra n g e a n d beige strip e s L o n g h a ir e d 3 m o nth old fe m a le $50 r e w a rd P h o n e 473-2251 812 E 31st St. 10/24/81 L O S T M c C la r e n u m b re lla P a r k by D e e p E d d y R e w a rd 476-8040 b ro w n -w h ite stro lle r strip e d E i l e r 's TYPING TYPING MASTER TYPIST, INC. THE C O M P U T E R IZ E D TY PIN G SERVICE We do RUSH work! S A M E DAY & O N E DAY SERVICE G rad Students Save Yourself Headaches USE W O R D P R O C E S S IN G on your Dissertations, Theses, PRs, & Law Briefs Dobie M a lL N . 36 2021 G u a d a lu p e St. 472-0293 Free Parking UT professor to study beach erosion Texas A&M funds $32,000 coastline research By MARK STUTZ Daily Texan Staff A UT professor has been given a one- year grant by the Texas A&M Univer­ sity Sea Grant College Program to study erosion processes on north coast beaches in Texas. Kent Butler, assistant professor of architecture and a community and re­ gional planning specialist, has received a $32,000 grant to study the yearly loss of sand on Texas beaches and to make recommendations to federal, state and local officials about the loss. “ Texas gulf beaches north of Corpus Christi have been losing about 400 acres a year,” Butler said. “ No one has yet tried to determine the mone­ tary loss or what kind of protection is needed. We’ll make property loss stud­ ies and study case histories to deter­ mine what can be done.” Butler said various natural and man- made factors have been contributing to the erosion process. “ There has been a gradual rise in the sea level, and the beaches may be responding to this by migrating inward,” he said. “ Bulkheads, sea walls and other structures are also problems. They re­ flect the energy of incoming waves and scour away the sand.” Because sand moves parallel to beaches and away from river mouths, he said, sea structures built perpendic­ ular to the shore will catch sand on one side and scrape it away on the other. Texas gulf beaches north of Corpus Christi have been losing about 400 acres a year. No one has yet tried the to determine monetary loss or what kind of protection is needed.’ Kent Butler Assistant professor of architecture Butler said his research will mea­ sure the rate of erosion of beaches from the Louisiana border to the cen­ tral Texas coast around Matagorda Is­ land. The study will suggest recom­ mendations about how far back shoreline structures should be placed, study financial incentives such as tax breaks used in other states that limit development of beachfront property, and study the feasibility of beach nour­ ishment — a process where sand is brought in to rebuild the shoreline. “ It (shoreline nourishment) is very expensive, but it may be feasible in areas like Galveston Island,” Butler said. “ If they can build the beach back up, they could make a profit on tour­ ism in the area.” The process has proved successful, he said, as one project in Corpus Christi recently with­ stood Hurricane Allen. Much of the preliminary studies done on beach erosion were made by the UT Bureau of Economic Geology, and Butler credits them with providing a basis for his study. He said that if successful, his research ultimately should provide guidelines and policies for federal, state and local officials. “ Local governments are not doing an adequate job. There continues to be erosion damage and property loss,” Butler said. He plans to establish a Shore Erosion Policy Advisory Com­ mittee that will be made up of federal, state and local officials. The project will continue until fall 1982. 1 F O R R E N T 2 F O R R E N T F O R R E N T F O R R E N T Now, Austin, You Can Rent it in A Minute! Improve your lifestyle with the latest in Home Electronics from Custom. No hassles, no problems. Custom makes renting fun. Come discover a whole new world of exciting name brand Electronics that can be yours It's easyI Just say “I want to rent it!” We 're here to serve you and the most affordable rental rates in America! RENT A COMPLETE STEREO SYSTEM •SCOTT 25 watts par channel. •SCOTT AM/FM tuner with accurate 3-LED center tuning. •SCOTT Semi-automatic turntable, belt drive, pushbutton speed change. •E C I Three way speakers, 12” woofer. ONLY PANASONIC VIDEO RECORDER! • 6 hours recording time! • Digital clock-timer! • Records while you’re away! • Digital memory counter! O N L Y t Q W Wm A D A Y , 2 week minimum rental * No C r e d i t C h e c k s ! * R e n t to O w n ! * N o L o n g T e r m O b l i g a t i o n s ! * N o S e r v i c e H a s s l e s ! 2017 E. RIVERSIDE 447-4028 Wednesday, November 11,1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 15 A&M gay group seeks status, continues four-year court fight By W. GARDNER SELBY Daily Texan Staff A four-year-old skein of courtroom confrontations could come to a close Mon­ day when a gay students organization faces off against Texas A&M Uni­ in U.S. District versity Court in Houston. The issue — whether gay groups have the right to be registered on campus — arose in November 1976 af­ ter A&M Vice President for Student Services John Koldus rejected the Gay Student Services Organiza­ tion’s request for official on-campus status. The group had requested the registered status part­ ly as an exercise of consti­ tutional rights, then-presi- dent Michael Minton said, and partly because off- campus rent and mainte­ nance costs were too high for its 20 active members. In the written rejection, however, Koldus wrote, “ Homosexual conduct is illegal in Texas, and there­ fore it would be most inap­ propriate for a state insti­ tution officially to support a student organization which would be likely to in­ cite, promote and result in acts contrary to and in vio­ lation of the penal code of the state of Texas.” An A&M spokesman Tuesday said the universi­ ty will probably present the same or a similar case to Judge Ross Sterling next week. The 1:30 p.m. hearing will be Sterling’s second time around. After a pre­ liminary hearing in 1977, he rejected the suit, ruling in favor of A&M lawyers who said the university, as a local governing body, could not be sued for monetary damages. The for GSSO had asked $10,000, the minimum al­ lowable for federal civil suits. The plaintiffs, three A&M students, appealed Sterling’s ruling to the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. That court last February overturned the decision, referring to other applica­ ble court rulings. In one such case, Gay Alliance of Students vs. Virginia Commonwealth University, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 1976 ruled that any student organization with legal ob­ jectives cannot be denied campus status because school officials disagree with the objectives. At A&M, the upcoming court date has resulted in charges and counter­ charges concerning the homosexual community. Letters to The B attal­ ion, A&M’s daily student newspaper, center on GSSO’s contention that 10 percent of the student pop­ ulation is homosexual. A member of Gay Student Services, who withheld his name from publication, said the estimate is a na­ tionally accepted statistic. In response, junior Ken­ ny Ray, who could not be for comment reached Tuesday, wrote if members of GSSO identi­ that fied themselves to him on campus, he and 99 frigpds would “ beat the hell outta the GSSO aod its kooky* queers.” In turn, wrote A&M phi­ losophy associate profes­ sor Larry Hickman, “ I feel threatened by Ray and his friends. I feel threatened by this ignorance of the way a democracy works. ... I feel threatened that there are even 100 among our student body who have so little regard for person­ al liberty and so little un­ derstanding of what it means to be a member of a university community, that most free of all free institutions free state.” Hickman also could not be reached for comment Tuesday. in a UT Austin has one simi­ lar organization, the Gay Students Organization, in­ cluding 60 dues-paying members. Established last fall, the group encountered no problems in registering, faculty sponsor and UT psychologist Mike Menefee said Tuesday. Around Campus Former UT president to talk Former UT President Lorene L. Rogers will speak on “ High­ er Education in Texas” at a noon luncheon Wednesday at the Central Christian Church, 1110 Guadalupe St. Rogers served as UT interim president in 1974 before serving as president from 1975 to 1979. She taught chemistry and nutri­ tion at the University from 1949 to 1974. Rogers sits on the boards of directors of Texaco, Gulf States Utilities and Texas Bank and is a research consultant to the Houston-based Clayton Foundation for Research. Memorial scholarship offered The College of Liberal Arts will award a $100 Cynthia Walker. Pena Memorial Scholarship to a student concentrating in the new women’s studies program in spring 1982. A committee from the Office of the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and faculty members teaching women’s studies courses will select one award recipient each year. Students should apply in writing to the dean’s office. Pena, a degree plan evaluator in the College of Liberal Arts, died of cancer Oct. 13. She was 26. Talent acts sought for show Students, faculty and staff are eligible to sign up for audi- tions for the Nov. 19 Texas Tavern Talent Extravanganza at the Texas Union Building. Participants can sign up at the Union Program Office until 5 p.m. Wednesday. “ We will audition anything and everything; but not every­ thing will make the show,” said Clyde Parrish, Tavern pro­ grammer and Special Events Committee adviser. Auditions will be in Calhoun Hall 100 Wednesday and Thurs­ day. Auditioners will be divided into novelty and serious acts, Parrish said. Performers who previously have appeared at the Union are ineligible. Expected under the novelty category are: comedy skits, fun­ ny dance routines, pantomime and imitations of celebrities. Auditions need be only 10 minutes long. Prizes will be awarded for outstanding talent in both cate­ gories. For serious performances, top prize will be a contract date at the Union Building in either the Santa Rita Room, the Cactus Cafe or the Tavern. The winner in the novelty category will receive $30. Also, performers of “ outstanding talent or ability” for honorable mentions will receive Union T-shirts, free bowling coupons and other awards. Judges are Jerry Dean, associate professor of music; De- Loss Dodds, director of men’s athletics; and Wally Pryor, an­ nouncer at Longhorn football games. Uncontested • No children or property $70 • With children..........................$135 10% off w/this coupon Law Offices of Professors to discuss energy A symposium on “ What is the U.S. Energy Future?” will be held at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the Sinclair Suite of the Texas Union Building. James McKie and Stephen McDonald of the Department of Economics and Allen Jacobs of the Department of Finance will lead a discussion about the economic feasibility of nuclear pow­ er, synthetic fuels, oil and gas as future energy sources. A question and answer period will follow the presentation. The symposium, sponsored by the Liberal Arts Council, is USE TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS 116 E. Main Street, Round Rock, Texas 78664 2 5 5-4440 open to the public. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 29.77 2 9 7 7 * ^ 3 0 0 0 30 24 1 1 -1 1 -8 1 n . 30.00 PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz '-fAsfc,®, y>l M I N N E A P O L I S \ Í BOSTON ^ . T > , CO O LER NEW YORK EVERY VETERANS PAY I 60 OYER TO BILL MAULDIN'S HOUSE... WE SWAP DAR STORIES, A N P LAU6H ANP CRY.. '-----«0T A N P PRINK CHEAP ROOT BEER .' U PI W EATHER FO TO C A ST <&i The Wednesday forecast for Austin calls for fair weather. Temperatures will be In the upper 60s, decreasing to the near 40s. The national forecast calla for wideapraad ahowora from northern California northward Into the atete of Washington. Elsewhere, deer to pertly cloudy akles ahould provall. B . C . by johnny hart ACOTRDlNfe TP THIS, HE KOGGIAkIG ARE. OAlMlNé’ CREDIT ffcR Tf\E METRIC Gy*STeM. em 'e m a c e n t im e t e r , THe / L l TAKE A KILOMETER. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 A Reiner 5 Secrete 9 Dispatch 14 Askew 15 Chemical suffix 16 Scan a sentence 47 Jointly 49 Fails to win 51 Future VIP 54 Umbra 58 Fall behind 60 Existed 61 Insect repellent 63 Greek letters 64 Producer: Suf. 68 Asian gulf 65 Jacob's son 66 Solemnity 17 Mixer 18 Make impure 20 Cruise 21 Tease 22 Time of year 67 Grumpy 23 Soothes 25 Horatio — 69 Caledonian 27 Manger 29 Very long time 30 Barter 34 GIs’ mail drop 36 Soup 38 Atoll base 39 Envy, sloth, DOWN 1 Status 2 Assembly 3 Find again 4 Jumper 5 Attend 6 Subcontinent 7 Twofold: Var. 8 Pipe fitting 9 Weapon 10 Golf norms 11 Was: Lat. 12 This: Sp. 13 Elk’s kin 19 Numeric suffix etc.: 3 words 42 Entreaties 43 Pyromania 44 Letter 45 Spanish artist 46 Liner: Abbr. UNITED Feature Syndicate Tuesday's Puzzle Solved 3 3 3 J 3 3 3 3 □□□□□ 3 3 3 3 03133 □□□□□ J 3 3 3 a a a a c □ 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 □ □ a a a o a n a 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 0 0 3 3 □□□ □□□ 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 s n a a 33333 saa aanna 0 3 3 3 uaoaaaaaoj □ 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 □□□£□□ 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 □□□□□ 3 3 3 0 3 D 3 0 a 0 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 □□□□ 24 Omens 26 Merchandise 28 EmbryS 30 Trouble call 31 School subject 32 Channel 33 Otherwise 34 Snakes 35 Hawaiian goddess 41 Farm sound 48 Implanted 48 Soars 49 Nuts 50 Medication 52 Clio’s kin 53 Adjust anew 54 “On your way!” 55 Charter 58 Monkshood 57 MHd oath 59 Profit 62 Guido’s note 37 Foods 38 Misanthrope 40 Consume 10 11 12 13 * 16 1 r22 Minimum 30 days rental. CUSTOM RENTAL CENTERS wiMfo Amurtcu Runts! A D IV IS IO N O F C u s to m H I-F I D ISCO UNT CSNTSHS H E L P W A N T E D H E L P W A N T E D S T U D E N T S - JO B S a v a ila b le Above a v ­ erage earnings, flexible hours M ust be neat, and of good ch ara cter Car helpful Call 4S4 2679 noon 5 p m P A R T T IM E cashier F rid a y , Saturd ay, and Sunday Hours 5-10 30 p m M a tt's E l Rancho, 303 E 1st 472 5566 W A N T E D A T T R A C T IV E fun outgoing persons to sell roses in nightclubs M ust start im m ed iately H a ve own transpo r­ tation 447 9342 E S L IN S T R U C T O R needed im m ed iate­ ly E x p e rie n ce d only need apply Send resum e to Intensive E n g lish Dept , P O Box 1626, Austin, T X 78767 D R A F T S M A N F U L L and part tim e. A rch ite ctu ra l, H B A C , structural, pip­ i n g , c i v i l Round Rock location 255 2589 P A R T T IM E receptionist la w y e r's off ice A few m ornings each week from 8 30am Ipm 474 0772 W A N T E D package help Apply Thum b 206 E Bee Caves Rd P A R T tim e checkers and in person Tom M A L E A N D fem ale disc lockeys wanted for m obile disco M ust be aggressive, neat appearance 445 2881 T O K Y O S T E A K House is hiring a busperson and parking attendant Call 453 7482 after 1 30 p m ________ P E R S O N A B L E P E R S O N lor Iron; desk position Typing, shorthand, dictation equipment, 10-key, light bookkeeping Send resum e to Pa se In ­ vestm ent, III8 A W 6th, Austin, T X 78703 476 6616 M onday F r id a y 8-5 filing, and J O B S - Su m m e r,ye a r O V E R S E A S Europe, S A m er , A ustralia, round A sia All S500-SI200 monthly. Sightseeing F r e e info W rite IJC , Box 52 Tx2. Corona del M ar, CA 92625 fields P A R T T IM E Ser retar y needed M onday T hursday 3 30-8 00 p m Hours not fle x i­ ble Call Austin B a lle t Theatre a fter 3 30 p m 478-9957 ___________ P A R T T IM E help needed days, eve n ­ ings and Sa tu rd ays for gourm et coffee shop Apply In person Cafe De Jo u r, Highland M ali B A R T O N S P R IN G S Country Club, Ba r ton Springs at R iversid e, now accepting applications for night cook position. Ap­ ply in person 2-5 p m. L I V E IN S I T T E R wanted lor 4-mo and 10-yr old R eferences 255-611) or 458- 4 1 7 4 __________________________________ I'M LOOK IN G lor a part tim e secretan a l/ c le ric a l person with an eye on bigger things Good typing, organizational, com m unication skills 12-5 M onday-Fri- day P re fe r college graduate. Call 327- 7010 a fter 1 p m . W A N T E D D O W N T O W N law firm needs bright individual for P A R T T IM E (20 hours/w eek) C L E R I C A L position with light bookkeeping duties, M-F Good typing skills a must S a la ry and hours negotiable 476-4346 Les Amis Cafe is now h irin g for a ll positions A p p ly 3-5 p .m . 24th and San A n to n io PART T I M E SALES fo r c o lle g e s tu d e n ts . Id e a l S a la ry or c o m m is s io n . E a rn $500-$1000 by C h ris tm a s . C all 443-2839-sm all a p p lia n c e s D iv . of Cons. Foods. a p p lic a tio n s S H A L IM A R R E S T A U R A N T is accept ing fo r e x p e rie n c e d w aitperson A pply in person 9-10am or 2- 5pm at C ap ital Plaza. A C C E P T IN G A P P L IC A T IO N S for store m an ag er P r e lim in a r y In terview s Nov. 16-20, 9am-noon P rev io u s experience not necessary Serious only need apply- no students K inko 's Copies, 2200 G u a ­ dalupe 476-4654, ask for Nancy. P E R S O N TO teach cre a tiv e dance in d a y c a re center, 5 hours/week. 478-9416. M A Í l T r E W O M A N student for a p a rt­ m ent rent. P le a se ca ll 346-1437. R E S P O N S I B L E P E R S O N needed to provide w eekday ch ild ca re in our home, 8 blocks from cam pus. S a la r y negoti­ able C all 454-1442 or 472-7767 for m ore inform ation. V IV A C IO U S W A I T P E R S O N plus a m a ­ ture bartender, part tim e. M ust be a v a ila b le through upcom ing holidays and 3 30 and 8:30 shifts as needed. See M r O verton between 3:30-5 p.m. The D raug ht House, 4112 M ed ica l P a r k w a y U N I V E R S I T Y A R E A needed, 12-5 M o n d a y- Frid ay. 472-9275. florist d river S I T T E R W A N T E D in m y home for W y e a r old g irl Housekeeping resp onsib ili­ ties, w ill consider live-in or daily. On bus route. C a ll 467-9028 after 6 p.m. job7 Clean N E E D A good part tim e house and look after m y son. 9am-lpm two d a ys a week. Ann A ndrew s 258-4680. W A N T E D F U L L or part tim e salesp er­ sons Good com m ission, easy sales. W ill furnish leads. 345-4939. B E V O 'S L A W N Se rvic e needs part tim e w orkers. C a ll 477-4539. P A R T T IM E positions a v a ila b le at P aul In terio r's, H ighland M a ll and Barto n C reek Sq u are Apply in person, P a u l's Interiors, Highland M a ll lower level P A R T T IM E w aitperson needed Apply in person, C hiu's Restaurant, 7310 B u r ­ net Road D E L I V E R Y P E R S O N and general off ice help for rea l estate a ppraisal co m p a­ ny. Convenient to cam pus. Afternoon hours Dependable transportation re ­ quired Call Peggy 478 9991 W A N T E D IN S T R U C T O R S for A rthu r M u r r a y D ance Studio. P a r t tim e em ­ ploym ent. T ra in evenings W o rk at a fun job and put yourself through school A p­ ply in person 1-6 M o n d a y- Frid ay 8776 B R esea rch B lv d No ca lls please. A P P L I C A T I O N S N O W being accepted for friend ly, a ttra c tiv e waitperson. No experience necessary $5/hour m in i­ m um Y unnan D ynasty Restaurant, 2900 Anderson 454-6677 MONTGOMERY WARDS Barton Creek We are now accepting applications for tem porary Christm as sales positions and C afeteria waitress. Apply Mon.-Wod. 10-12, 2-4 Fri. 5pm-8pm & Sat. 10am-Noon at the Barton Creek M a ll Store 2901 Capitol of Texas H ighw ay IfwW Op p f fmWy f m|U»yr Story by Scott Lind Photos by Steve Goodson They have come more than a thou­ sand miles from small, war-torn El Salvador, looking for political and economic freedom. Now the refugees wait in Los Fresnos to be returned to their own country. ym et afternoons are spent in the shade of covered picnic tables More than 3,000 Salvadorans have passed through Los Fresnos in the past year Inmates line up for the daily head count by INS guards ot afternoon sunlight pours down the long, enclosed cement yard of an abandoned air­ field just outside Los Fresnos, a small town in the Rio Grande Valley. The television cam eras placed strategically around the compound show the scene to be tranquil. Shabbily dressed men gather close to the double barbed wire fence and sit in the shade of a guard tower. Others wander aimlessly before low, squat buildings painted an institution­ al green. Soon, if the Immigration and Naturalization Service com­ pletes its duties, most of these men at the Los Fresnos Detention Center will be on a plane to their homeland — El Salvador. It is impossible to pinpoint the number of Salvadorans who have fled the killings, street shootouts, epidemics and poverty of their country; estimates have ranged as high as 300,000. Many of them find their way through Mexico to Texas, where, like other illegal aliens, they are subject to surprise roundups by the INS. Those arrested are divided by age and sex, regardless of family ties, and processed into separate detention facilities. Women are placed in Valley-area maximum security county jails. Children end up either in a Brownsville juvenile center or Catholic social service centers. Males are taken to Los Fresnos, through which more than 3,000 Salvadoran teen­ agers and men have passed in the past year. Families are reunited upon their return to El Salvador, according to the On the recent weekend that Daily Texan reporters visit­ ed the camp, Los Fresnos held 236 illegal aliens, 89 percent of them from El Salvador. INS officials permitted reporters to walk through the detention center but forbade the taking of photographs inside the compound. Life inside the barbed wire is an exercise in patience. For recreation there is a soccer ball and a volleyball net, or a color television in a building next to the m ess hall. For reading material there are religious pamphlets and anti­ communist tracts donated by local evangelistic organiza­ tions. Most of an inmate’s day is spent outside on the tree­ less cement expanse, where they cluster around covered picnic tables. At 7 p.m. they are called back to the double bunks of the sleeping areas. Most refugees spend an average of three to 25 days at the facility before being flown back to El Salvador, said John Luvender, INS official in charge of Los Fresnos. INS provides inmates with such items as soap and tooth­ paste. But Harlingen attorney Lisa Brodyaga, one of four Valley lawyers who do free legal work for refugees, said supplies given by the INS are constantly running short. For that reason, religious associations and outside agencies such as the Austin branch of the Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador — a group opposed to U.S. military aid to the nation's governing regime — have recently begun providing such services an average of once a week. e don’t force them to stay,” said Los Fresnos guard Felix Conde. “ Very few ac­ tually want to stay here (in the United States).” Most refugees, Conde said, have demonstrated their desire to return to El Salvador by signing a “ voluntary depar­ ture order.” The order, written in English, is presented to illegal aliens after their arrest. INS officials, however, have been accused of misleading aliens about the order’s contents. A persistent rumor among refugees in Los Fresnos during the summer was that offi­ cials forged signatures of those who refused to sign the form. Brodyaga said several of her clients claimed they never signed it. Luvender denied these charges. The few refugees with immediate family members legal­ ly residing in the United States have been able to remain, Brodyaga said. Others give economic and political reasons for leaving. But the U.S. government, which officially sup­ ports the current regime in El Salvador, accepts neither reason, and does not consider the Salvadoran refugees to be endangered by their return to El Salvador. In spite of U.S. policy, Brodyaga encourages her clients, particularly draft dodgers and those expressing anti-govern­ ment viewpoints, to seek political asylum on the grounds that they will be in danger in their own country. None of the Los Fresnos refugees who applied for political asylum have won their case, but those of Brodyaga’s clients who applied for such status since 1980 have yet to be re­ turned to El Salvador. One Salvadoran woman told her she would rather spend an indefinite time in an American jail than risk death upon return. Of the Salvadorans in the camp, only two consented to an interview. The others, according to an INS guard, feared retribution. Alvaro (not his real name), a 19-year-old who worked in the capital of San Salvador after graduating from high school, said he found himself in the middle of several gun- fights as war reached the city streets. When you walk in the city, it’s not merely a question of walking calm ly,’ he said. “ You have to look around at all sides to be aware of what’s going on and exercise extreme caution. At about 6 p.m. the streets are already silent with the beginning of curfew. You start to hear the bombs going off and the shootouts.” Alvaro said he decided not to attend the city’s Catholic university because he was fearful of being caught breaking curfew while returning home from school. “ It’s possible to lose your life because police assume most students to be the revolutionary type.” His plans to work in the United States and attend a univer­ sity ended when he and two compañeros were spotted by INS helicopter lights as they ran from an abandoned house outside San Antonio. Alvaro acquired a lawyer when offi­ cials placed the voluntary deportation form before him, and he has fought attempts to persuade him to sign. “ They said, ‘Why don’t you go back to El Salvador. It’s very calm there. Those who are saying there’s trouble are the ones who aren’t there.’ Yeah, they were trying to con­ vince me everything is calm ,” Alvaro said. “ But coming from El Salvador, one understands how things are.” Like many refugees, he has heard rumors of what hap­ pens to Salvadorans who return to their country. “ I know because I read the Salvadoran newspapers and not through what I have seen with my own eyes, that persons who are returned to El Salvador — three or five days after arriving at the airport — have been found dead on the sides of roads.” nother refugee at Los Fresnos voiced similar fears. “ If the Salvadoran authorities should learn that I have spoken to you about my support for the guerrillas, and if I have to go back to my country, I will not see the light of day again,” said Ernesto (not his real name), who served in the government police of Salvadoran President Jose Napoleon Duarte. Ernesto left two children behind when he came to Texas. While Alvaro characterized the fighting in El Salvador as taking place between leftists, the extreme right and the gov­ ernment, Ernesto said the government itself was to blame for the country’s misfortunes. He blasted the United States for giving military aid to Duarte, saying it only exacerbated the hunger and epidemics in the countryside. As the Duarte regime stepped up its war with the guerril­ las, Ernesto found the police officer’s role in society chang­ ing. “ I didn’t agree with the functions I had to do,” he said. “ I started realizing a lot of little things going on — question­ able procedures, injustices — which through time became quite a large bulk of my activities. It didn’t fit in my con­ science any more. ’’ He and other police officers began to view anyone ap­ proaching them as a potential enemy. “ An old woman ap­ proaches you to ask a question and instinctively you hold your weapon in front of you,” Ernesto said. During the time that he served with the police, Ernesto said he came to believe through conversations with leftists that reform measures instituted by the Duarte regime failed to address the fundamental problem of distribution of wealth in El Salvador. These were people I met in my police work, and through them I came to recognize their cause as the just one,” he said. That is why I don t want to go back to my country because it would cause me great problems. Over there no one can make this kind of declaration because there are no liberties to free speech and the country is in a state of siege.” Characterizing his leaving El Salvador rather than joining with the guerillas as a “ cowardly approach,” Ernesto said he will return to his family and fight in the future But the first thing I intend to do is to finish what I set out to do in the United States — to put together a small fortune for my family,” he said “ It’s a responsibility I cannot evade.” ACADEMY IS HEADQUARTERS FOR HUNTING AND FOUL WEATHER GEAR Choose from 2000 Parka Jackets For adults and children Just $ | £ 6 6 ■ w and up Choose from 5000 Back Packs Canvas or nylon With or without frames Just $ 2 88and up Choose from 5000 B la n k e ts $ « 1 9 8 and up Choose from 5000 Electric Heaters l l « 8 ■ and up Repeat of a sellout Just received 3000 40 piece socket sets Made to sell for $15.00 Super special s o s s Choose from the largest assortment of Federal Ammo Size 30.06 and 30.30 Rifle shells 1 0% OFF Our regular low price Just received 2000 Western Hats $ | j 88 and up Choose from 2000 1 0 0 % Dow n Filled Vests Made to sell for $35.00 Just $2288 Choose fro 2000 1 0 0 % Down Filled Jackets Made to sell for $50.00 j . » * 3 8 8 Choose from 5000 Sleeping B ags All fills and fibers including U.S. government style All at V l Price Choose from 5000 pair of B oots Vietnam jungle boots Made to sell for $25.00 Choose from 3000 pair of Insulated Cover Alls Choose from the biggest assortment of Tents 2 man nylon mountain tents made to sell for $25.00, only Just For men, women and children $ 198 8 $ 2 4 88 and up Choose from the largest assortment of Binoculars Size 7x35 With hard case and straps. 0 * 0 Super special 8 824 Motorcycle Jackets For aduht and thHdran * ! 6 6 6 and up Choose from 2000 i Bom ber Typo Jackets For adults and children * 1 and up Choose from 10,000 pieces of Rainwear Heavy duty 3-piece vinyl rainsuits $«t88 Only and up Choose from 3000 J o g g in g Su its For adults and children s i g a s and up ACADEMY 4 Big Stores to Serve You The M ost Interesting Store / Open All Day Sunday 1 0 % Discount to Retired Senior Citizens VISA 4103 N . I H 35 603 E. Ben White Blvd. 8103 N. Research Blvd. 6601 Burnet Rd. 4 m % AV * ; I i > • ' >, Í ■ B If • Vff ; v # i- ' M i r I # » WmM :*&:W Advertising Supplement to The Daily Texan Wednesday, November 11, 1981 Restorers turn old books to art ey to preserve their history.” Through the art of restoration, the folks at Hill Bookbindery can strengthen and revitalize that dusty, tattered, old family Bible passed to you from your forebears. And all the while, they help preserve histo- ry. Hill Bookbindery, 2409 Manor Road, special­ izes in the restoration of Bibles and rare books. “ Most of the books we restore are 125 to 200 years old,” said Bill Duckett, vice presi­ dent of marketing and overseer of restoration processes. Duckett, who does most of the restoration himself, estimated that only 50 to 75 people in the United States can restore books properly. “Restoration, from my viewpoint, is becoming a lost art because so many people have gotten out of it the last few years,” he said. The books most often brought to Hill for res­ toration are large family Bibles containing geneological records. “Other than that, it’s varied,” Duckett said. “I’ve got one 100-year- old spelling book that we re-did.” He said a woman once brought in an original manuscript with set designs from Gone With The Wind and had no idea of its value. “ It had the signatures of most of the actors and set designers,” Duckett said. He dated the oldest Bible that Hill has re­ stored to the early 1700s. “It’s very rare that we get an old family Bible which is less than 100 years old,” Duckett said. Quality and preservation are ideas that go hand in hand. “ If all we’ve got in an old Bible is a handful of crumbles of the spine, we want to take the time to put those back together.” Restoration is expensive and may not al­ ways be the route for everyone, Duckett said. The customer’s decision must be whether to restore or rebind an old book. Duckett estimated that the typical old book costs $35 to $50 to rebind and $100 to $500 to restore properly. “The vast majority of people who walk through the door will spend the mon­ Duckett emphasized the importance of ap­ proaching restoration with an eye toward p re -. serving the natural quality of a book as much as possible. “Your attitude toward restoration has to be Story and photos by Jett Grlttln one of absolute preservation of all aspects of a manuscript. A lot of times we’ll have to take pages that are crumbled and work a jigsaw puzzle.” The first step in restoration involves study­ ing the condition of the book to determine its needs. “ You paint a picture of what the book looked like in its original state and what you can do to capture as much of that authenticity as possible,” Duckett said. “You always start with the inside of a book. Your primary concern is going to be the inside edges of the pages because you have to have something durable to fix the pages together. “After the inside is repaired, you go to a fixing process and determine if the book can be oversewn by machine,” Duckett said, citing that as the best method. If machine oversew­ ing is not possible, he uses a gluing method known as the double-fan glue process. Hand- sewing is another alternative. The book then moves on to the “backing” stage, where a cotton supercloth is used to de­ crease the amount of pressure on the newly affixed pages. The next step is the “cover process,” during which an “end sheet” is used to strengthen the exterior. “All are handmade to blend with the natural color of the book,” Duckett said. He uses the original front and back cover whenever possible and adds the end sheet for stability and durability. “ Many times the During each step of book restoration, employees at Hill Bookbindery believe quality and preservation are ideas that go hand in hand. Mildred Neely (left) meticulously separates original sections of an old book to preserve them. David Cortez (right) in­ serts a book’s inside pag­ es into a round-end back­ ing machine to give the book a new backing. (below) Karen Schultze finishes the cover-stamp­ ing on a new book spine. Hill Bookbindery's Bill Duckett lieves he is one of only 50 to 75 gently lifts an aging book cover to people in the country who can insert a new spine. Ducket be- perform this delicate restoration. hardbound cover is deteriorated. Then we skin the book,” he said. The original skin is then remounted on a new surface. The final step in the restoration process is treating the cover. An oil-based shoe polish is used to put moisture back into the cover. Rub­ bing helps blend the old and new m aterials to­ gether. Before customers take their restored books home, they are instructed on the care and maintenance of the books. Duckett recom­ mends taking them off the shelf every six months and rubbing them with lanolin. Hill Bookbindery employees consider their work as art, and they are willing to turn any old books into masterpieces. Rustle Up Some Books This special book section is a combined effort of the Texas Student Publications Advertising Department and students in the Department of Journalism at The Uni­ versity of Texas at Austin. Robert Buckman served as editor. Students enrolled in Journalism 324, N e w s p a p e r Editing ahd Layout, did the design and editing for the section un­ der the supervision of Griff Singer. Rob- P a.vm a°d Richard Goldsmith coordi­ nated editing and makeup of the section. Sue Foss designed the section cover. Other J324 students participating were Karen-Ann Broe, Pam Brown, Richard Fairlie, Deana Holmes, Robert Neely, Robin Rorapaugh, Joel Rubenstein, Kathy Ryan, Mark Singer, Gina Spada and Du­ ane Story. Stories were written by students en­ rolled in reporting and feature writing classes. I UT writers mix work with science fiction By STEVEN T. LEVINE Most w riters are devoted to their craft and spend little tim e doing anything else But two area science fiction authors have duties in ad­ dition to their writing they work at the Uni­ versity Chad Oliver, chairm an of the D epartm ent of Anthropology, wrote science fiction before he taught or even studied anthropology. Since his first short story was published in 1950, he has produced a steady stream of novels and sto­ ries. Though he never has won such science fiction writing aw ards as a Nebula or Hugo award, some of O liver’s w ritings — including .Reservation, his most recent work — have been nominated “ R eservation" mixes local flavor with that cross-cultural theme. Set in an Austin of the future, it appeared in the April issue of A n a ­ log. The story refers to many recognizable lo­ cal features: Congress Avenue, the Mo-Pac, the Legislature, San Marcos and even the UT Longhorn Band. or it doesn’t in term s of its im pact on the read­ e r .” He considers T he S h o r e s o f A n o th e r Sea and S h a d o w s in the S u n to be the two of his science fiction novels which worked best. S h a d o w s takes place in Crystal City, Texas where Oliver grew up Only about half of his fiction has an anthro­ pological background However, O liver’s spe­ cialty, ethnology, is the basis for his sto ries’ central thread. Much of his work focuses on the contact and conflict — between different cultures. Meanwhile, astronom y professor Ed N ather uses science fiction to heip teach astrophysics. During the 1950s, he wrote science fiction while working as a nuclear engineer a t an atom ic weapons plant in Hanford, Wash. Two of N ather’s novelettes w ere published in A s to u n d in g S c ie n c e F iction. His inspira­ tion cam e after he witnessed and cleaned up a nuclear waste spill a t the plant. A versatile author, Oliver won a writing aw ard in 1967 for a book of a different genre. The W o lf is m y B ro th e r,a novel about the Comanche Indians, received the W estern W rit­ ers of America Golden Spur Award. Oliver enjoys reading older w riters like Ar­ thur C. Clarke and Theodore Sturgeon. He con­ siders them p a rt of his personal “ golden ag e” of science fiction. “ I learned to w rite by read­ ing (Robert) Heinlein and (Ray) B radbury,” he said. "Good fiction is m ore than ju st a fictional­ ized essay,” Oliver said. “ A story either works C o u n te rsp y dealt with the possibilities of nuclear sabotage. But in R a d ia tio n , N ather told the story of a fictitious nuclear power plant leak. N ather claim s that many science fiction readers “can look beyond the curren t social scene here. This open-mindedness helps stu­ dents in his Astronomy 325 course, “ Astrono­ my and Science F iction,” understand concepts that otherw ise can be quite bewildering. In class, N ather concentrates on authors who “do it rig ht." He looks for stories whose prem ises draw on astrophysical theories and whose plots do not deny scientific facts. We now have a huge selection of NEW hardbacks in over 150 different categories — all at price or less! 1514 LAVACA M-S 10-10 Sun 12-6 6103 BURNET R D ./1914 E. RIVERSIDE M-S 10-9 Sun 12-6 We buy anything printed or recorded Auto accident, landlord dis­ pute or m erchant rip-off got you down? Call the O f­ fice of the Students' A t­ torney for appointm ent and w alk-in tim es 8 a .m . to 12 noon and 1 to 5 p.m . M on­ day through F rid a y . The O ffice of the Students' A t­ r e p r e s e n t s U T t o r n e y in c iv il Austin students m atters and offers counsel­ ing, re ferrals and a sym ­ pathetic ear. 471-7796. OR SH I THING! ’classified ad in with The Dail •Texan. Call the hotline: 471-5244... and say, "Charge it!" (SUftJCCT TO TSf CREDIT KX ICItS.) BONANZA BOOK SALE This is only a sample o f the many titles ju st arrived. c 0 0 K 1 N G H 0 R T 1 C U L T U R E > ; j j h 5 < - n o r O p < WATSON & COMPANY BOOKS OPEN TU ESD A Y -SA TU R D A Y 1 0-6, AND OPEN ON SUNDAYS 10 -4 604 BLANCO STREET (PECAN SQUARE) 472-4190 G/\BNEB&iSMITH ' s r a ' CD TTY FOR THE DEAF 2116 GUADALUPE 477-9725 best setter. J Here’s an edition for everyone’s library! Official 1981-82 Student Faculty/Staff University Directory ’ • w i l i U n i v * n i f y FI!DU ,,V ^S , 0 f f Available n t JESTER CENTER STORE UNIVERSITY COOP W a l l a c e b o o k s t o r e RAYMOND’S DRUG NAU’S DRUG UNION INFORMATION DESK TSP BUSINESS OFFICE Mysteries popular By LYNNE CRESPY If the super sleuth on your Christmas list is leaving clues that what he wants most for Christmas is an addition to his m ystery collec­ tion, consider yourself lucky. Local bookstores offer a good selection of classic titles, new favorites, and books with gift-giving appeal. New mysteries continue to roll off the presses, and by purchasing a new offering, you can probably avoid the frustra­ tion of hearing Aunt Edna say, “ What a thoughtful gift. I stayed up all night to finish this book when I read it last M arch.” A number of books are available for fans of Sherlock Holmes. T he E n cy clo p a ed ia Sher- lockianna, by Jack Tracy, is an illustrated guide to the great detective. Another choice in the Holmes genre is The S h erlo ck H olm es E ncy clop ed ia . The C om p lete S h erlo ck H olm es contains all of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s novels and short stories about the famous detective. T he A nnotated Sherlopk H olm es, a more expen­ sive two-volume set, can fill you in on all the scholarly details about the detective stories. For those who wish to know a little more about the personal lives of the fictional detec­ tives, G rea t D e te ctiv e s — S ev en Original Investigators, written by Julian Symons and illustrated by Tom Adams, provides biographi­ cal information on several famous sleuths. Avon offers a boxed set of five paperback novels by Dorothy Sayers, an enduring favor­ ite with m ystery lovers. The recipient can en­ joy those long homework-free hours between Christmas and the spring semester with B u si­ n essm a n ’s H oneym oon, Unnatural D eath, Strong Poison, M urder M ust A d vertise, and Clouds o f W itness. Fans of Raymond Chandler might enjoy The R aym ond C hand ler O m nibus. This volume includes T he Big Sleep , F a rew ell My L ovely, T h e H igh Window and The Lady in the L ake. M ystery cases that have stumped police, in­ cluding the unsolved Texas m ystery concern­ ing the death of Joan Robinson Hill, are told in G reat U nsolved M y steries by James Purvis. For readers who take an active approach to m ystery solving, Mayflower Publishing offers a packet which contains a file of evidence from a fictional murder, including letters, maps, press reports and photos. Billed as a crime dossier, the kit lets the reader solve the m ystery, and contains *a sealed section which reveals the name of the murderer(s). Hie Uni­ versity Co-op carries two of these dossiers: T he M ulinsay M a ssa cre and Who K illed R obert P ren tice? Another unusual m ystery offering is the N ero W olfe Cookbook, based on the culinary secrets of the portly detective. The book in­ tersperses excerpts from the Nero Wolfe mys­ teries with gourmet recipes like Roast Quail Veronique. New m ystery titles are offered every month, and the University Co-op has a few copies on its shelves. Ruth Rendell’s newest mystery, issued in mid-September, is D eath N otes. A recently published collection of m ys­ tery stories by P.G. Wodehouse also is avail­ able. So for those who want to match wits with some of the greatest and most devious crim i­ nal minds — but don’t want to track their au­ thor any farther than Guadalupe Street — the bookstores may have the solution, iW W lH tmmmmam - \ Texas W est o f the Pecos the to 12 m id n ig h t. is now The Texas Union open on Sundays fro m 11 In a .m . order to serve the U T com­ m unity better, In fo r­ m ation Desk, Rec Center and G arden G rille w ill open at 11 a .m .; Eeyore's and the Texas T avern w ill open at noon; and the T exas Union Theatre w ill show film s at varying tim es dur- ing the day and evening. .V* » * fS Z p P \ / • dteiaer W h # . k - C Jfe-e- w ... / . tf&i / "/ tí tv.y: .‘fe'Sy'l f f t w .. ¡ i , V 1 . • ■ i +’ - j • . A new Texas A4M University Press book, with fu ll co lo r photographs and text by noted lex as nature, photog r«a phej- Jim bones 8% * |0 7/ft 136 pp. 9 6 color 11 tus hardback * 2 9 .9 5 A limited number of autographed copies are available. WHOLE EARTH F PROVISION COMPANY 8 6 S 6 R s s s a k c w I 2410 San ÁMTOMto 4 7 S -I5 7 7 496 mmt 'J cash you need could be right under your nose. That's right. Just look a- round and w e'll bet you find all sorts of unwanted items that can be turned into ins­ tant cash. How? By selling them in the Texan Classi­ fieds To place your Classifie d ad, come by the Texas Stu­ dent P u b lic a tio n s Business O ffic e , 25th an d W h it is , 8 30 a m. to 4 30 p m w e e k ­ days, or call 471-5244 «I 9ood fan thought. Written as a powerful and explosive work on the culture shock called " E lv is " . The eagerly awaited blockbuster biography of E lv is Presley makes obsolete the trendy books spawned by his death. It is the definitive E lv is — a biography of a star and a symbol, an American dream and an adolescent illusion, the story of an era of energy and excess. $14.95 GJML Overcoming the Crises of Adult Life and Fir Your Own I foWett-Bemg The new landmark work that goes beyond the author's phenomenal bestseller, Passagas. It poses and answers the crucial question: Why do some of us successfully overcome life's crises while others do not? Through inter­ views, analysis, case histories and example, the author shows the qualities of personality that fortify Pathfinders in seeking uncommon solutions to common life crises. And she explains, too, how each of us can become Pathfinders in our own lives. $14.95 THE GREEKS Kenneth Dover A Walk Atrats Amarka ended in New Orleans, Tha Walk Watt opens as Barbara & Peter, now married, set out for Texas and eventually reach the Pacific. Here is the rest of the walk, the joyous, exultant journey that Am erica $14.95 took to its heart. In this wide-ranging sequel to his best-selling Origins, Richard Leakey surveys what has been happening in the various fields concerned with human prehistory, giving us an inside view of the astonishing techniques scientists employ to understand what our ancestors were like, and how they lived and evolved. He also relates how his own unorthodox career in paleontology began. $24.95 In this stimulating introduction to the legacy of ancient Greece a world-renowned Hellenist provides a readable and informative account of Greek history, literature, art and philosophy. Over forty color and black & white illustrations supplement the text, which is based on the four-part B B C television series to be broadcast in 1982. paper: $8.95 cloth: $17.95 By MICHELLE ROBBERSON Writings before the advent of the printing press usually bring to mind carved pictures on crumbling clay tablets and illegible scrawling on yellowing papyrus scrolls. Yet, handmade, medieval manuscripts make up the best-preserved and most numer­ ous examples of writing before the printing of the Gutenberg Bible in 1452. In addition to owning one of 47 existing cop­ ies of the Gutenberg Bible, the University houses approximately 40 medieval manuscipts from Western Europe in the Humanities Re­ search Center. The Gutenberg Bible was the first book printed on a movable-type printing press and marked an important change in the course of history and literature. Dr. Karen Gould, UT history lecturer and specialist in medieval manuscripts, teaches The G u te n be rg Connection, a history course that focuses on the Gutenberg Bible’s importance in the move from pen to press in literature. The HRC does have some examples from antiquity, including a few clay tablets with cu­ neiform writing and a few pieces of papyrus rolls. However, Gould said, these items do not constitute a collection as do the manuscripts. The University’s manuscript collection rep­ resents the quality and geography of books made during the two centuries preceding the printing press, Gould said. The handcopied, decorated and bound manu­ scripts date from about 1125 A.D. to the print­ ing of the Gutenberg Bible, Gould said. “Most are standard or average in quality,” she said. “They are not sumptuously illumi­ nated (decorated with gold) as is widely as­ sumed. Most of the manuscripts come from Italy, Germany, France and England.” One reknowned item in the collection is a manuscript containing the text of Geoffrey Chaucer’s The C anterbu ry Tales. “The Chaucer manuscript is a fairly aver­ age production, probably made by a commer­ cial stationer, but this copy is not very sump­ tuous,” Gould said. “It is clearly a book that was meant to be read, not just purchased and put away.” Manuscripts illuminate Two Bible manuscripts are the most recent additions to the collection after the Univer­ sity’s $2.4 million purchase of the Gutenberg Bible in 1978. “The Bible manuscripts are a particular help in teaching since they provide a compara­ tive example to Bibles from the century pre­ ceding the printing press and to the Gutenberg Bible itself,“ Gould said. The collection of Italian manuscripts in­ cludes a copy of the text of' Francesco Petrarch’s C anzoniere and a book of Renais­ sance poetry. A German manuscript copied in 1125 in a monastery is “an outstanding item ” in the collection, Gould said. However, most of the collection is made up of manuscripts containing the B o ok o f Hours, a medieval prayer book for the laity. These manuscripts are the most illuminated in the collection. The UniVersity’s collection is considered small when compared to the manuscript col­ lections at Yale and Harvard, but it is about average for other universities Gould has “al­ ways maintained that this is an excellent teaching collection because it shows the range and variety in pre-Gutenberg manuscripts.” One of the advantages of the manuscript col­ lection, Gould said, is that it helps students to understand the impact of printing. “You can see what these books (before printing) were like Students can really see the effort put forth in the writing, decorating and putting together of books before the printing press made multiple, identical copies possi­ ble.” Almost all of the University’s manuscripts are in good condition and written on parch­ ment, although some were copied on paper. They are written primarily in Latin, but some are written in Italian. Texas Monthly’ offers holiday list By KATYA McCALL Under the spreading live oak branches of Scholz’s Beer Garten, the twilight air was warm and the ambience was heady. T e x a s M onthly was hosting an autograph party that brought together more than two dozen of the state’s best authors. Publisher Michael Levy invited 7,000 read­ ers and writers to share beer, nachos and con­ versation. A long row of tables supported stacks of books that rapidly diminished as au­ thors signed and chatted. The garden party may well become a tradi­ tion for publisher Levy, whose phenomenal success with T e x a s M o n th ly has spawned the Texas Monthly Press, a publishing subsidiary. Riding the wave of regional and specialty pub­ lications, the press offers Southwestern read­ ers a selection of books that heralds the urban future while acknowledging a rough-hewn pio­ neer heritage. This fall’s Christmas list from TM Press of­ fers folk, art, fiction, cooking, Texas trivia and lifestyle, travel, football — and general fun. H ow To B e a Texan, by Michael Hicks, is a current local bestseller. It provides the last word on how to act if you are a Texan or dream of becoming one, in much the same way that T h e P r e p p y H a n d b o o k national­ ized New Haven, Conn. Text and illustrations discuss such topics as how to measure a Texas cockroach, how to dry your boots in a hot oven and hurricane surfing on the Gulf Coast ($6.95). T he Only T e x a s Cookbook, by Linda West Eckhardt, is a cook’s joy and a cookbook read­ er’s treasure. Warm memories and lively re­ cipes fill the 320 pages and prove that Eck- hardt’s extensive research and good judgment really deliver what the title promises: the oftly Texas cookbook you need ($15.95). T he G a y P la c e is a reissue of Billy Lee Brammer’s celebrated novel about power and politics in Texas ($9.95). T e x a s F o lk A rt, by Cecelia Steinfeldt, is an authoritative and immensely beautiful and readable art book. It celebrates more than a century of “people’s art” and is likely to be one of the most praised and given books in Texas ($65 in hardback; $150 in limited edi­ tion, slipcased and signed by the author and painter Fannie Spelce). T he A g g ie s and the H orns, by John D. Forsyth, chronicles 86 years of bad blood and good football between the two sides of Texas’ greatest college rivalry. More than 200 photo­ graphs accompany a lively, anecdotal text that covers the great and the obscure, the coura­ geous and the laughable, and the legendary events and personalities of these two teams ($15.95). T e xa s, by Richard West, surveys seven unique areas of Texas — from Highland Park, where luxury is the norm, to Houston’s Fifth Ward, where life is a daily lesson in dignity and struggle — in an extraordinary volume of essays on Texas geography and lifestyles. Three of the essays have won the National Magazine Award for 1981 ($17.95). CUSTOM SHIRTS For You, Your Group, or Team Come By To Get A Quote! You will be surprised with the best Quote In Town! BEVO'S 824 E . 26th St. 476-4633 2304 Guadalupe 476-7642 \M T - * “ Every rime you use the j f want ads -Daily Texan í \ JUST CALL 471-5244 Have something to buy or sell? One phone call to us is like dialing our entire circulation...person-to- person! Place your Want Ad today! £ JB]' jST T h e Da il y T e x a n BOOKSTORE Need help w ith reading, w ritin g , m ath, study skills, graduate school exam prep? RASSL has group and self- paced, individualized program s - and th e y 're free. A332 Jester ... 471-3614. Give Christmas a woman’s touch Pag* £ By BARBARA MERCER Wondering what to give your favorite femin­ ist for Christm as0 Check out the women’s sec­ tion of your local bookstore Women write books -on countless aspects of the female experience, from psychology and sexuality to history and politics. And, except for recent publications, most are available in affordable paperbacks You’ll find a variety of books on women's health and fitness. Our Bodies Ourselves, by the Boston Women’s Health Book Collective, is a classic and remains the most popular of its kind How to Stay Out of the Gynecolo­ gist's Office and Lisa Lyon’s Bodybuilding Book also are popular in Austin. Women’s psychology is a strong selling topic at most local bookstores Maggie S carf’s Un­ finished Business is currently a best seller. She writes about women's experiences with depression at different life stages. My Mother, Myself continues to sell after several years in paperback In it, Nancy F ri­ day discusses the mother/daughter relation­ ship and its implications for fem ale identity. Most bookstores will have at least a few books on lesbian topics. Sunday’s Woman: Lesbian Life Today by Sasha G. Lewis has been selling well. Two new anthologies edited by Elly Bulkin are available: Le bian Fic­ tion and Lesbian Poetry Anything written by Adrienne Rich is a good bet. Of Woman Born is about motherhood as both an experience and an institution. Her lat­ est book of poetry is called A Wild Patience Has Taken Me This Far. Controversy surrounds two new books that are selling well nationally and locally. Colette Dowling s The Cinderella Complex argues that in spite of liberation, most women secret­ ly fear independence. Betty Friedan’s The Second Stage also has been criticized by many feminists as being reactionary. Friedan contends that the first stage of the women’s movement is over and that women now need to resolve the polarity between feminism and the family Both books are still in hardback. Other popular new titles include Ellen Good­ m an’s At Large and sociobiologist Sarah Blaffer Hardy’s The Woman That Never Evolved. The Coming Matriarchy, by Eliz­ abeth Nickles with Laura Ashcroft, tells how the authors believe women will gain the bal­ ance of power. Women’s fiction, such as novels by Toni Morrison, Doris Lessing, Rita Mae Brown, Virginia Woolf and May Sarton, are popular. Books turn learning to child’s play By LINDA J. DAVIS If there is a little boy or girl on your shop­ ping list, chances are that you are in for a surprise if you decide to go book shopping. There is no more Little Red Riding Hood, Humpty-Dumpty or Three Billy Goats Gruff. What you will find instead is education and motivation. For the pre-school set, there is the S e n e s of Chubby Board Books. The books are five- inch squares of thick, shiny cardboard. Inside are colorful pictures with simple words de­ scribing things to wear, look at, play with and eat. Speaking of ABCs — do you want to teach your little friend the ABZs? Then get Shel Silverstein’s Uncle Shelby's ABZ Book. Un­ cle Shelby, born in Chicago, never has gone to school but loves children. He tells the kiddies that “ E ” is for egg, “ full of slimy, gooey white stuff.” The ABC Bunny was written with more traditional youngsters in mind. The black and red cover surrounds a more serious alphabet — A is for apple and B is for bunny. A song is printed in the front and illustrated for the al­ phabet Did you ever hear of a six-year-old who owned a dictionary? What else could he want for Christm as? My First Dictionary, an American Heritage dictionary, has almost 1,700 main entry words in large print. More than 600 of the words are illustrated with full- color drawings. Another dictionary, MacMillan’s Magic World of Words, offers alm ost 1,500 m agic words. But the difference in this dictionary is the illustrations. They represent conceptual words, not objects. Want to teach your young friend what it’s like in the real world? Then try Jan e Sarnoff and Reynold Ruffins’ That's Not Fair. An older brother tries to teach his younger sibling that not everything is fair. Remember coloring books? You probably won’t recognize them. What happened to color­ ing books filled with big beach balls and little puppies? TTiis year you can buy The Fourth Anti- Coloring Book by Susan Striker. In the intro­ duction, Striker charges that most of today’s toys “ stifle a child’s self expression” and that children get “ fatter and duller a s their toys get cleverer and do more for them .” In Striker’s coloring book, the child does all the work, including using his imagination. The book even contains personal testimonials from children who have colored in the previous books. One of the most attractive books on the shelves is Great Moments From the Films of Walt Disney This full-color volume con­ tains 43 scenes from such Disney classics as “ Pinocchio,” “ Snow White and the Seven Dw arfs,” “ Bam bi,” “ Dumbo,” “ Cinderella” and “ Sleeping Beauty.” You can even find feminist science fiction, such as Elizabeth Lynn’s Chronicles of Tor- nor trilogy and Pamela Sargent’s Women of Wonder series. Whoever accused feminists of not having a sense of humor has never read Pulling Our Own Strings, edited by Gloria Kaufman and Mary Kay Blakely. Other humor books include Nora Ephron’s Crazy Salad and Nichole Hol­ lander’s cartoon books, such a s That Woman Must Be On Drugs (Warning: men often do not find these books funny, so don’t try to give them to your brother.) Another Hollander title reads Ma, Can I Be a Feminist and Still Like Men? The answer: “ Sure, just like yob can be a vegetarian and still like fried chick­ en.” For people interested in feminist history, Ellen Carol DuBois has edited a new paper­ back, Elizabeth Cady Stanton/Susan B Anthony: Correspondence, Writings, Speeches. Also notable is Sim one de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, which still is popular after almost 40 years. Carol Kleiman’s Women's Networks and Mary Scott Welsh’s Networking aim to help women in their careers. For shy friends, Self- Assertion for Women, by Pam ela E. Butler, would make a nice gift. And to learn to climb the corporate ladder, there is Games Mother Never Taught You, by Betty Lehan Harra- gan. If you can’t find what you want at a general bookstore, try Bookwomen downtown on Sixth Street. It has an entire store of women’s books as well as feminist jewelry, T-shirts and magazines. Don’t expect to find any Harlequin Romances here. Ms. magazine once noted, “ There’s a lot to be said about being a woman.” So spread a lot of merry, non-sexist cheer this Christmas. Italian Folktales Selected and retold by ITALO CALVING With black-and-white illustrations “ Som e day it m ay well be that Italian Folktales is what people rem em ber about 1980!’ That rem ark in The Washington Past c a p tu re s the in stan t and ov erw h elm in g e n th u sia sm w hich greeted the hardcover publication of this m assive, m agnificent volume. Bringing together 200 traditional tales, Italo C alvino, one of m odern Itajy s m ost adm ired writers and a m aster story­ teller, h as becom e for the world the Italian equivalent ol the Brothers G rim m . Unanim ously chosen as one of The New \. “ T h e lx>ok is im|x>ssible to recom m end t liighK Every school and public library ought toow n it. so should everv parent, and so should every reader who loves stories ...S ta n d s with the (John G ardn er, The Xetv best folktale collections anywhere York Times Book Review*); “ We have never had more deligh t­ ful, ram bunctious, aw esom e | tales | to re a d ... m esm erizing ( The Chicago Sun-Times); “A |msitive joy. It is for readers ol any age and ideal for reading aloud....M r. C alvin o has created a master- work and put generations to com e in his debt (The Wall Street Journal); “To read it is to plant feet in the soil, and to 11 v (Time). The Pantheon Fairy Tale and Folklore I ihrar\ Folklore Reference; 0-394-74909-X IX 81-47338 ( IP tV ," \ 4 '4". Sun pp The Lively Eclectic UT Campus Bookstore! 2302 Guadalupe 474-2982 Cochran'sBOOKS Monday thru Saturday 10 am til 10 pm Sundays 12 noon til 7 pm Diet books aid in fat fight By MARTHA ANDERSON ’Tis the season for turkey and dressing, chocolate fudge, fruitcake, coffee cake, min­ cemeat pie, sugar cookies, egg nog and an abundance of other holiday foods. But alas, ’tis also the season when many people put on extra, unwanted pounds. ’Tis diet time. A variety of books on the market can guide dieters and offer advice for maintaining an ef­ fective weigh t-loss program. One of the hottest-selling diet books is The Complete Scarsdale Diet Plus-Dr. Tar- npwer’s Life-Time Keep Slim Program by Dr. Herman Tamower and Sam Sinclair Baker. Macabre though it may be, the popular­ ity of the Scarsdale diet stems partly from the publicity surrounding the fatal shooting of Tar- nower and the trial and conviction of his lover, Jean Harris. However, the diet stands on its own merits as an effective way to lose weight. The Scarsdale diet promises a way to lose 20 pounds in 14 days. It explains some simple basics of diet chemistry and formulates strict meal plans. The book provides five complete 14-day menu plans and several diet-variation menus. Dieters are advised to follow the meal plans to the letter to insure the effectiveness of the diet and are warned that it may become expensive. The book also offers a program for maintaining a healthy weight. The Pritikin Permanent Weight Loss Manual, by Nathan Pritikin, is another best­ seller, according to local book store managers. The Pritikin plan, which also features a 14-day menu, is based on four-calorie intake levels. The book contains more than 200 recipes for such non-diet type foods as stuffed breast of chicken with lemon-wine sauce, Veracruz red snapper and pineapple cheesecake. Pritikin offers a practical exercise program to supplement the diet plan, tips on “ free­ form” dieting for those who dislike adhering to menu plans and recipes, and special “ no fuss” menus for non-cooks. There is also a chapter addressed to health professionals, in­ cluding medical documentation and a nutri­ tional analysis of the Pritikin diet. The book concentrates on attitudes and hab­ its which cause overeating and weight gain and attempts to correct them by creating a more positive way of thinking about the body and the food you put into it. Simmons has designed a series of tests and quizzes to help recognize bad eating habits and the psychological reasons for eating. There is also a quiz for overweight couples. Besides examining the psychological as­ pects of losing weight, the book contains a body correction program diagraming various exercises, including several five-minute morn­ ing warm-ups and 32 exercises geared toward specific problem areas. For the person who wants to shed some pounds but doesn’t want to sacrifice gourmet food, there is Craig Claiborne’s Gourmet Diet. The world-renowned food writer devel­ oped the diet after being told his health was endangered by high blood pressure. • Claiborne offers more than 200 specially de­ signed recipes which are elegant and appeal­ ing, yet effective for weight loss. The secret of the gourmet diet is recipes low in sodium and modified in fat and cholesterol. Claiborne stresses foods prepared with less salt, fat and sugar, and he offers tips on how to create ap­ petizing dishes with substitute flavoring. A new book on the bestseller list is Jane Brody s Nutrition Book. Brody, a science writer and personal health columnist for The New York Times, answers questions about the need for vitamins supplements, the quality of “ fast foods,” and which foods are best for children. Chapters are devoted to the special food needs of pregnant women, babies, adolescents, children, the elderly and athletes. A weight- control section examines the causes of obesity, the failures of fad diets and sensible approach­ es to eating well. Also included are basic calo­ rie and nutrient charts, sample menu plans for special dietary needs and recipes for people older than 50. These books and countless other manuals and guides are available in Austin bookstores. Texas cookin' Cook’em Horns, published by the UT Ex-Students Association, fea­ tures more than 700 recipes, in­ cluding favorites of Dallas Cow­ boy coach Tom Landry, Lady Bird Johnson and other distinguished alumni. The book is available through the Ex-Students Associa­ tion for $16.95. Texas cookbooks emphasize home-style fare By MARTHA ANDERSON In the year when it’s chic to be Texan, talk Texan and dress Tekan, you can eat Texan, too. Several local civic organizations have pub­ lished cookbooks with distinctively Texan re­ cipes from some of the finest, kitchens in the Austin area. Several include recipes from the kitchens of reknowned Texans. The Junior League of Austin has published The Collection, which sells for $8.95 at local bookstores. It contains more than 600 recipes from the kitchens of area homemakers. Each recipe was tested four times for accuracy and ease of preparation. The League selected recipes calling for only fresh ingredients and that are successful for entertaining when the hostess is also the cook. Enjoy is published by the Women’s Sym­ phony League of Austin to benefit the Austin Symphony Orchestra. It contains recipes from families and friends of the league. The book also features a section of recipes from such well-known Austin restaurants as Green Pastures, the Quorum, Galleria and Ricco’s. These recipes were tested twice for accura- cy. Enjoy also gives a new twist to its subdi­ visions by naming each section with musical terms, such as “ Medleys” for casseroles, “ Chorus” for vegetables, and “ Encores and Applause” for desserts. The book sells for $12.50 in local bookstores. A Texas Hill Country Cookbook was compiled by members of the Blue Lake Deerhaven Club. Among the many recipes are several dishes from the kitchen of Lady Bird Johnson and other well-known Hill Country hostesses. The book features recipes from the early days in the Hill County in a special section. It is available at bookstores for $9.50. The Old Bakery Cookbook, by the Heri­ tage Guild of the Heritage Society in Austin, collects recipes used at the Old Bakery and other Austin kitchens. The Old Bakery is a renovated bakery at 1006 Congress Ave. that was restored with the help of the Junior League, the Heritage Society and other civic organizations. It con­ tains a hospitality center and a coffee kitch­ en operated by the Heritage Guild. Besides an assortment of recipes for baked goods, including breads, coffee cakes, sour­ doughs and appetizers, the book offers an Heirloom section of recipes from some well- known area hostesses. Included here is Lady Bird’s recipe for L B J Ranch deer meat sau­ sage, a luncheon menu from Janey Briscoe, UT System Board of Regents member and wife of former Gov. Dolph Briscoe, and a dinner menu from Nellie Connally, wife of former Gov. John Connally. The book sells for $7. AUSTIN BOOKSELLERS OUTSTANDING ,, SELECTION!! • SCIENCE FICTION • ADVENTURE GAMES • COMICS • MOVIE POSTERS • FILM TV BOOKS • MAGAZINES • CIGARETTES, ETC. 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Ideal for any occasion-ONLY 3.95 k PTD Tickler-(as seen on national TV) Tickle anyone with this fun bouquet- 7.95 & I P ★ ROSES, ROSES, ROSES Columbian and California grown Single 1.25/stem Dozen 8 .9 5 /carry out only limited quantities available Thur»da\ Dozen 11.95/carry out only TH E A FFO R D A BLE FL O R IST FO R A LL A U STIN IT ES WHO EN JO Y FR E SH CUT FLO W ERS, EVERY DAY! CARRY OUT PR IC ES LISTED . HAPPY FLOWER HOUR EVERY DAY! L6PM Carnations: SCL a stem Daisy Pompoms: 75' a stem Mini Carnations: 75' a stem 835 W. 12th STREET AUSTIN, TEXAS 78701 477-1153 TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS ¥gratefully acknow ledges the Students Faculty and Staff of the Department of Journalism for the efforts which have ssésbil- o n t ; : ^ d . d this book section LBJ in retrospect: books focus on the man, times Old cartoon books abound By JOHN DONNELLY For historians, the study of Lyndon Baines Jq)mson has been as forbidding as the times during which he governed. Sensitive to the vio­ lence that rocked the urban streets and college campuses, and to a foreign policy most would just as soon forget, writers in droves have avoided studying the 1960s. But now, more than a decade later, scholars say they finally are gaining the objectivity necessary to study the period and are realizing that perhaps the most important figure of that decade largely has been ignored. “Johnson has been neglected, and of recent presidents he has been the least studied and understood,” said Robert Divine, UT profes­ sor of history. “He has been avoided because people associate him with bad times.” Dr. Robert Divine Although Johnson was sandwiched between two presidents who have received much atten­ tion — maybe too much — he never has re- cieved the notice most writers now say he de­ serves. But with a controversial multivolume study by Robert Caro now being excerpted in The Atlantic Monthly and the arrival of sev­ eral studies designed to encourage interest in the man and his administration, the 1980s may be a time when the 36th president of the Unit­ ed States gets as much scrutiny as his peers. Editor of a collection of eight essays on Johnson published by the University of Texas Press in October, Divine said his book, E x ­ ploring the John son Y ears, should act as a catalyst for further studies about Johnson. The book contains articles by seven professors from different universities, and each exam­ ines a particular aspect of Johnson or his ad­ ministration. “We wanted to place Johnson in historical context,” Divine said. “Concern over Vietnam has obscured his accomplishments in civil rights, the War on Poverty program and other areas. “Most of the literature on Johnson has been biased because it was written while he was alive,” he said. “The books are either sympa­ thetic or very critical. Johnson had a way of polarizing people.” Two of the essays discuss facets of John­ son’s personality, but others look at his admin­ in Vietnam, civil istration’s rights policies and the War on Poverty. involvement The book also examines what has been done in the field of research about Johnson and what can be done with materials available at the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library at the University. Of the several recent studies of Johnson, Caro’s “The Years of Lyndon Johnson,” now being excerpted in the Atlantic, has raised the most eyebrows. Published in the October issue, the first of five installments caused an uproar among Johnson cronies with its charges that the for­ mer president accepted bribes and maintained a secret hotline to Texas to keep an eye on his Dr. Emmette Redford business investments. His three-volume work on Johnson will be published by Knopf during the next five years; the first volume won’t appear on bookstore shelves until next fall. Caro won a Pulitzer Prize in 1975 for The P ow er B ro k e r: R obert M oses and the F all o f New York. Unlike Johnson’s friends, scholars are reserving judgment on Caro’s work until they have a chance to read all of it. Said Divine: “ It is unfortunate the way it’s being excerpted, with the introduction (ex­ cerpted in the October A tlan tic) to all three volumes appearing first.” Experts will have to wait until the final vol­ ume is published before they can determine whether Caro has sufficient documentation for the sweeping claims he makes, Divine said. Though he said Caro “has done an excep­ tional job of portraying Johnson as a hard- driving, ambitious man,” Divine has reserva­ tions about Caro’s method of relying on the memories of Johnson’s aides for the substance of the book. “Some may be confusing a younger Johnson with how he was when he was president,” Di­ vine said. If only because it attracts attention to LBJ, Caro’s work should stimulate more scholarly interest in the former president. Some would welcome a more scholarly and less sensational approach to Johnson and other former presidents. Emmette Redford, politi­ cal scientist at the LBJ School of Public Af­ fairs, saw the first of 13 volumes on Johnson’s term published under his direction in October. Involving 15 scholars from nine institutions and published by the University of Chicago Press, each volume of An A dm inistrative History o f the Joh n son P residen cy will cover a significant part of the management of the ex­ ecutive branch during the Johnson administra­ tion. “It will be the most comprehensive study of a presidency that has been made,” Redford said. Topics such as civil rights legislation, man­ agement of foreign policy, the United States’ involvement in the Vietnam War and macroe­ conomic policy will be discussed in detail in volumes appearing during the next several years. The first volume, Organizing the E x e c u ­ tive B ranch, written jointly by Redford and James E. Anderson, professor of political sci­ ence at the University of Houston, takes a broad view of the Johnson years. “In a period where there are so many poorly documented studies of the Johnson presidency, it is worthwhile to provide a solidly document­ ed account,” Redford said. “There is a need for getting a more solid base for understand­ ing the presidency.” Redford said he agrees with Harvard profes­ sor Hugh Heclo, who said the field of presiden­ tial studies to date has been an “overwritten wasteland.” Geared to students of the presidency and public administration, Redford said his book will lay the groundwork for future pieces on Johnson by providing a thoroughly document­ ed and footnoted work. “There is more interest in the administra­ tive aspects of government than in the past because, since the New Deal and the Great Society, government has come to have a more intimate effect on people,” Redford said. “And there is an awareness that the Great So­ ciety has caused some administrative prob­ lems we are now having to deal with.” Redford and other writers agree that as the emotional memory of Vietnam begins to fade, more attention will be paid to the domestic issues of the 1960s, where Johnson achieved his greatest successes. Traditionally, American manufacturers pro­ duce a new batch of whatever it is they’re trying to sell in time for the Christmas mar­ ket. But only a few new cartoon anthologies are being released this year. However, Howard Zener of Cochran’s Books said two books on order that counter the “preppy” movement instigated by The P r e p ­ py H andbook should arrive by Thanksgiving. The titles of the books are 101 Uses fo r a D ead P reppy and S ave an A lligator, Shoot a P reppy Jim Barlow at the University Co-op book de­ partment said 101 Uses fo r a D ead P reppy is expected there, too Meanwhile, the Co-op has many other well selling cartoon books that have been on the market for a while and that fit almost any taste, Barlow said. Also available are Doones- bury anthologies, including a collection of four classics for $16. Barlow said a few copies of Berke Breathed’s second edition of “The Academia Waltz” cartoons, The A ca d em ia W altz: Bowing Out, are still on hand but that these are the last available because the publisher is no longer printing the books. Ben Sargent, syndicated editorial cartoonist for the Austin A m erican -S tatesm an , is an­ other local cartoonist whose anthology, T exas S tatehou se Blues, is available at the Co-op. Other cartoon books available at the Co-op are Bob Kliban’s books Cat and W hack Your P orcupine. The L atest H erm an, by Jim Herman, also is on sale. A new Ronald and Nancy Reagan paper doll book, with lots of clothes to choose from, is available for $4.95. “Garfield,” by Jim Davis, has become quite popular, and a stuffed animal likeness is being sold in many stores in the Austin area. Prices range from $8 for a six-inch doll to $19 for a 12- inch doll at Grandmother’s House, a children’s is selling clothing store. Walden’s Books bookmarks of Garfield with his sarcastic observances for 69 cents. Jim Davis has published three Garfield car­ toon books: G arfield at L arg e, G arfield Gains Weight, and G arfield B ig g er Than L ife. Garfield desk calendars also are on sale at most bookstores. The last remaining copies of car­ toonist Berke Breathed’s second anthology, The Academia Waltz: Bowing Out, are available at the University Co-op. When not play­ ing with his pet python. Breathed the syndicated “Bloom draws County” strip. Will Van Overbeak Letter eases writers’ woes Austin-based guide offers hope to free lancers By RICK ESPITIA If your new book isn't on the bestseller list or even on the market, you’re not alone. Writ­ ing isn’t the easiest thing in the world, and getting someone to pay for it is even harder. An Austin-based firm, Circle Publications, Inc., publishes F reela n cer's N ew sletter, which may be of help to those hoping to get the published. Published newsletter is a combination marketing aid and information center. Established 1969, F r e e l a n c e r ’s N ew sletter was marketed from the East Coast until May 1980, when Jo Ann Bardin bought it and moved the operation to Austin. twice a month, in “I saw an ad for it (the newsletter) in anoth­ er publication,” Bardin said. “We negotiated and finally bought it. It’s not a big dollar busi­ ness, but it’s growing.” Yet the name of the game is dollars for the 500 to 550 writers who subscribe to the the newsletter. Bardin emphasizes newsletter is designed basically for those writ­ ers who have had previous material published and are, in effect, already professionals. that “We took a survey of our subscribers last summer to see how much they earned through free-lancing,” Bardin said. “Of those who an­ swered, which was about 48 percent, the in­ come ranged from $100 to $10,000 a year.” But the newsletter doesn’t ignore those look­ ing for a break. It often will offer advice to those searching for the answer to certain prob­ lems. Bardin also recently completed work on a computer resume system through which edi­ tors around the country can find free lancers in their area for any specific assignment. “The resume service was offered before we purchased the newsletter,” Bardin explained. “But I felt that the service should be compu­ terized. This way, we can search through our files by geographic location and specialty.” The computer resume service is free to newsletter subscribers. Subscriptions cost $39 a year for 22 issues. A sample copy can be obtained by sending $2 with a self-addressed, to F r e e l a n c e r ' s stamped envelope N ew sletter, Dept. R., 307 Westlake Drive Austin, Texas 78746. UT displays fine books Things just aren’t the way they used to be. Lot* at fast foods, or disposable razors or paperback books. They all have something in common: mass production. But the Special Services Department at the University Perry-Castaneda Library has something for people who still seek and appre­ ciate quality. The staff has prepared an exhibit of beauti­ ful books with students in mind. “ We want stu­ dents to see the emphasis on fine book making of the past,” said Mary Seng, head of special services. The display, “Fine Printing and the ’80’s,” is sponsored by the Rounce and Coffin Club of Los Angeles. It features 43 books exemplifying fine printing and book design from publishers in the Western states. The exhibit will be in the PCL lobby through Nov. 15. Seng said today's emphasis on book produc­ tion has switched from quality to “rush and get it out in a hurry.” Changes in graphics and book printing have occurred, of course, because of technological development. The skilled craftsman who once set and printed books by hand used only the finest materials. Today, computers and lithographic presses rapidly are replacing compositors and letter- pressmen. Speed and flexibility of computers, coupled with rising costs of printing materials! are making these skilled craftsmen obsolete. Fine books still can be found, however. This exhibit contains winning books noted for choice of paper, type, text and typographical design. Among the 43 books are three published in Texas. Michael J. Curley’s translation of Phy- siologus and Howard Barnstone’s The A r­ chitectu re o f Jo h n F. Staub are published by the University of Texas Press. The T exas G u l f Coast — In terpretation s by Nine A rt­ ists is published by the Texas A&M University Press. This traveling display returns to the PCL each year. “ It is one of the few traveling hibits we have,” Seng said. Former President Lyndon B. John son and Lady Bird Johnson listen in tently at one of the many conferenc- area tourist attraction. es held at the LBJ Library at the The library is a major University. Contributing authors to Divine’s and Red­ ford ’s books conducted most of their study at the LBJ Library, which many feel has been ignored right along with Johnson. But renewed interest in the former presi­ dent may put the library on the map. Harry Middleton, director of the LBJ Library and former Johnson aide, said 268 researchers vis­ ited the library in October, compared with 137 during October 1980. About 60 percent of the library’s 31 million papers are now open to the public, as are vir­ tually all of the presidential papers. Half of the originally one million classified documents are now open, but the rest must wait for ap­ proval by the appropriate legislative agencies. Increased access to these papers and the publication of Divine’s and Redford’s works should advance even more studies of the man and his times. Another would-be Johnson author — T exas O bserver publisher Ronnie Dugger — thinks the new interest in Johnson is “nothing spe­ cial.” Dugger, a frequent political adversary of Johnson during the 1950s, has been working on a multivolume historical biography of Johnson since 1967 but has temporarily shelved the project to concentrate on a book about Ronald Reagan’s pre-presidential politics. “There is less interest in the presidency now than there was in the ’60s,” Dugger said. “Vietnam attracted interest to the presidency because questions were raised about an unde­ clared war. But after Ford and Carter, inter­ est in the presidency has died off.” But Divine said the 1980s will see an in­ crease in both scholarly and popular interest in Johnson because enough time will have passed for historians to view the period of his administration more objectively. “Johnson was a central figure of that time,” Divine said, “and people will be wondering what exactly happened back then.”