T h e Da il y T e x a n Student N ew sp ap er a t The University of Texas a t Austin Thirty-Six Pages Vol. 78, No. 179 Copyright 1979, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (USPS 146-440) Austin, Texas, Monday, July 16, 1979 Carter urges national confide. WASHINGTON (U P I) — Keyed up and speaking in boom ing tones. P resident Carter told A m erica Sunday night it is w allow ­ ing in a “crisis of con fidence” and m ust pull out of its tailspin by follow ing him, now, in a strict, sacrificial “ w ar on en erg y .” In a 33-minute speech that am ounted to a m oral state of the union address, Carter con fessed in his own leadership, accused A m ericans of falling into a self-indulgent “m oral and spiritual c r is is ” and announced a 10-year plan to free the nation of relian ce on foreign oil producers. failures to And he m ade it clear the strength w ill not com e from the White House alone, “ but from every house in the nation.” I w ill do m y best, but I w ill not do it a lon e,” he said. “ Let your voice be heard W henever you have a ch an ce say som ething good about our country.” A good blend of the spiritual and practical them es in his Oval Office address cam e when he sm acked a balled fist into the palm of his hand, glared into the television cam era and said: “ Beginning this m om ent, this nation w ill never use m ore foreign oil than w e did in 1977! “ N ever! “ FROM NOW ON, every in crease w ill be m et from our own production and our own conservation ... Our relian ce on foreign oil m ust be stopped dead in its tracks, right now, and then reversed as w e m ove into the 1980s.” Going down the list of his practical proposals for achieving that in loud, stern tones —• “ Point O ne,” he would say ... “ Point Two" — the president announced plans to m ount a nationwide drive to produce 2.5 m illion barrels of syn th etic fuel a day by 1990, create an Energy Mobilization Board to lead that drive, force industry to shift to the use of coal regard less of en­ vironm ental consequences and other points. But in the long-awaited speech that resulted from —■ and tried to justify — his retreat from public life during the 10-day Camp David d om estic sum m it, C a rte r stre sse d his b elief that the energy crisis is m erely a sym ptom of a m uch d e e p e r so cia l il­ lness “ that is a fundamental th re a t to A m erican d em ocracy. “ It is a crisis of confidence, It is a cr isis that strikes at the very heart, soul and sp irit of our natio n al w ill. We can see this crisis in the grow ing doubt about th e m eaning of our own lives and in the loss of unity of purpose for o u r nation. he said. “ THE EROSION OF our confidence in the fu tu re is threaten ­ ing to destroy the social and political fab ric of A m erica “ Initial reaction to C arter's speech w as positive, w ith m any (See CARTER, P age 6.) S W S i XX ‘ « « ¡ M Q C ^ r C + f X O £ [ ,DDI .wSSoW"™ 0 w V U l I ^ Fifteen Cents News and Editorial: 471‘ 4 ® |¿ Display Advertís,ng: 471-1865 8usmess Office and Classified 471-5244 sacrifice President’s talk draws immediate praise, criticism ( U P I ) W A S H I N G T O N - T h e politicians who w ill m ake the final decision s on P resid en t C arter’s energy program generally agreed Sunday night that the president gave the best speech of his presidency, but m any of them — including a sm attering of 1980 rivals — got in a few d igs a g a in st sp e c ific proposals.- F orm er Texas Gov. John Connally, am ong the frontrunners for the GOP nom ination, said Carter “ w as ab solute­ ly correct in setting forth a crisis in con­ fid en ce,” but he said C arter’s own inac­ tion has caused the crisis. “ HIS SPEECH tonight w as alm ost a repeat of w hat he said in the spring of 1977,” said Connally. California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. criticized Carter for not addressing the issu e of nuclear power. “I think he should have taken a very firm stand against the expansion of n u c le a r p o w e r. T h is is a s e r io u s problem for this country and he said nothing about it.” But for the m ost part, m em b ers of C ongress and others who have the fate of C arter’s program s in their hands said that he w as im pressive and they prom is­ ed to work with him. “ IT WAS O N E of the str o n g e st sp eech es I have ever heard and the best sp eech he has m a d e ,” said H ouse Speaker Thom as O’N eill. “ I am confi­ dent the A m erican people w ill respond with the n ecessary sa c rific es and that C ongress w ill pull together in this tim e of c r is is .” Sen. R ussell Long, D-La., a key con­ gressm an on energy and tax m atters, said he w ished Carter had stressed in­ creased production of conventional oil and gas as w ell as coal. Sen. Harrison A. W illiam s, D -N .J., called the p resident’s speech “ a strong first step down the road to national recovery ... This w as a very convincing call to A m erica to search for A m erica .” HOUSE REPUBLICAN leader John Rhodes, R-Ariz., said Carter “ has final­ ly heard what w e R epublicans have been trying to tell him , nam ely that energy supply is the nam e of the gam e, that w e m ust stop depending on uncer­ tain foreign sources and start develop ­ ing our own sources of alternative en er g y .” Monday “ It w as a high sounding sp eech ,” said Rhodes. “ But his proposals w ill require a great deal of follow-through with the Congress, and I w ant to se e what the sp ecifics w ill look lik e.” Sen. Henry Jackson, D-W ash., and Sen. Mark H atfield, R-Ore., resp ective­ ly chairm an and ranking GOP m em ber of the Senate E nergy C om m ittee, said the main thrust of C arter’s energy program is already em bodied in leg isla ­ tion now before their panel. JACKSON P R E D IC T E D the b ill, which carries m ajor provisions for solar and synthetic energy as w ell as the National Energy M obilization Board, will pass the Senate by Aug. 3. “ I com m end the p resid en t,” Jackson said. HATFIELD SAID the speech w as one of C arter’s b est and he “ certainly w as the president of all the people in that speech. “ I think it w as his m ost forceful speech to d a te ,” said H atfield, adding that Carter had “ forced the issu e” of the nation’s dependence on foreign oil. But H atfield added, “ I think the real test of Jim m y Carter is in the follow- through. I think the people want to see policy m atch the rh eth oric.” Sen. Edward Kennedy, D -M ass., a potential political rival for Carter, said he thought the president “ set am bitious goals for a resolution of the energy problem ” and vowed to work with him. “ I LOOK FORW ARD to hearing the d etails of his program and I pledge to work with him to ach ieve the goals he has s e t ,” Kennedy said. Sen. W alter Huddleston, D-Ky., said Carter offered “ som e change in style that should be for the b etter” and called it “certainly one of his better perfor­ m ances sin ce he's been in public life .” Huddleston said he thinks Carter “ im ­ proved his standing” and depending on the public response, it could “ im prove the status of the D em ocratic m ajority.” Rep. P eter K ostm ayer, D -Pa., one of C arter’s strongest liberal cr itics in the House, said, “ I think you have to give the president credit for really trying I think he succeeded in conveying a sense of urgency. “ I’m not sure how much he closed the credibility gap ... but h e ’s tryin g.” President Carter addresses the nation via television. AISD district court hearing continues Officials fear busing possible in desegregation plan By MARY A N N K R E P S Daily Texan Staff Testim ony continues Monday in federal d istrict court to determ ine the appropriate rem edy to a circuit court finding that segregation p olicies ex ist in the Austin Independent School D istrict. A 5th Circuit Court of Appeals d ecision found the d is­ trict guilty of intentional segregation of M exican- Am erican students and negligent in ending segregation as m andated by Texas law. The U.S. Suprem e Court refused to hear the appeal July 2, letting stand the low er cou rt’s ruling that AISD discrim inated against M exican A m ericans in draw ing up its d esegregation plans. U.S. D istrict Judge Jack R oberts m ust now d eterm in e what course AISD should take to rem edy segregation within public schools. Som e local school officials think busing w ill be the rem edy determ ined by R oberts to ach ieve racial balance within Austin schools. In A u stin ’s 81 sch o o ls of a p p ro x im a tely 59,000 students, 15 percent are black and 23 percent are Mex- ican-American. The rem edy hearing began last Wednesday after an attem pt to se ttle the ca se out of court failed Tuesday. Hugh Eckols, district director of pupil services, testified for the district on AISD history, acquisition and description of land areas and noted how the d istrict a c­ quired each school. Eckols testified that housing patterns, over which the school district had no control, determ ined racial patterns within various schools. But when questioned by U.S. Ju stice D epartm ent lawyer Joe Rich on Friday, E ckols said the relationship b e t w e e n p r e d o m i n a n t l y m i n o r i t y s c h o o l s and neighborhoods could be self perpetuating The location of predom inantly Hispanic schools could have influenced the estab lish m en t of public m inority housing near the schools, he added Government and m inority law yers objected con­ tinuously to the presentation of the d istric t’s history, irrelevant and rep etitiou s.” arguing the testim ony was Rich em phasized the hearing is only to find a rem edy sin ce the circuit court already identified a past intent to segregate. In an effort to settle the eight-year d esegregation bat­ tle out of court T u esd ay, AISD r e p r e se n ta tiv e s negotiated with U.S. Ju stice D epartm ent and m inority plaintiffs. But spokesm en said a m iddle ground could not be reached in drawing up a desegregation plan. Registration ... once again Adds and drops for the second summer session will be held Mon­ day and Tuesday in departmental offices. Materials for late registra­ tion also will be available Monday at the Academic Center. Materials for late registration should be turned in at the registrar’s office between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday. Second session classes begin Monday. July showers ... Austin skies will be partly cloudy Monday with a 30 percent chance of showers and thundershowers during the day. Southerly winds will blow at 10-15 mph. High temperatures Monday and Tuesday will be in the mid 90s. The low Monday night is expected to be in the mid 70s. Kristen Burks inspects a boa constrictor. Terry Republic of India Prime minister quits after desertion by party members NEW DELHI. India ( UPI) — P rim e M inister Morarji D esai. d eserted by Cabinet m em bers and party aides, resigned Sunday in the m iddle of the bloodiest year In­ dia has experienced sin ce gaining independence. The 83-year-old prim e m inister, who ousted Indira Gandhi from power in 1977. called a sp ecial m eetin g of the Cabinet at his hom e and told them , “ I am ready to step down ” He then handed a letter of resignation to President Neelan Sanjiva Reddy, but can celed a scheduled broad­ cast in which he had planned to announce his d ecision to the nation R ED D Y ASKED D esai to continue in o ffic e a s head of a caretaker governm ent until national election s are called a governm ent spokesm an said D esai s 27-month-old adm inistration began to crum ble early last w eek. More than 60 m em bers of his Janata Party d efected in an attem pt to bring down the govern­ ment that has been described by politicians of all p arties as “ im poten t” and “ lack lu ster.” Labor unrest, a m ajor police m utiny that D esai put down with the arm y, and racial v iolence m ade this year the bloodiest sin ce India achieved independence from Britain in 1947 LAST WEEK opposition leader Yashwant R ao Chavan called for a confidence vote in parliam ent A debate on the m otion w as scheduled for Monday and Tuesday, but because of D esai's resignation it w as not expected to take place. Throughout the week, D esai persistently refused to step down We will em erge stron ger,” he said of the parliam entary crisis. D efen se M inister Jagjivan Ram — considered by political ob servers as a likely candidate to succeed D esai — spent m ost of the weekend trying to persuade the prim e m inister to resign ONLY HOURS before D esai stepped down. Industries M inister G eorge Fernandes announced his own resigna­ tion Fernandes had been a loyal D esai supporter from the t i me D esai defected from the C ongress Party governm ent of Gandhi • You will have a new governm ent soon, very soon,” Fernandes told new sm en afterw ard "It will be a viable governm ent.” UT researchers test new energy options By MARILYN HAUK Daily Texan Staff U niversity research ers hope to obtain three types of econom ical energy after prelim inary testing of a 16,500-foot-deep experim ental w ell in Chocolate Bayou, south of Houston R esearchers think the test w ell will yield natural gas and electricity through heat and steam energy. The Chocolate Bayou w ell penetrates th e s e v e r a l g e o p r e ss u r e d , on e of geotherm al zones along the Gulf Coast, said Dr Myron D orfm an, director of geotherm al studies at the University. G eopressured, geotherm al zones o c­ cur at least 8,000 feet below the earth ’s surface w here sandstone squeezes salt w ater and natural gas togeth er at tem peratures as high as 300 degrees F aren h eit under e x tr e m e p ressu re, Dorfman said D espite the ex trem e depth, the high pressures force the w ater-gas com bina­ tion to flow on its own accord. Dorfman said “ NATURAL GAS can be separated from the w ater, with production,” he added T ests showed potential flow rates of at least 30,000 barrels of salt water daily with 20 to 25 cubic feet of natural gas per barrel At a pressure of 4.500 pounds per square inch, tem peratures w ere at least 200 d egrees Farenheit Test results are based on a lim ited rate of 2,500 barrels in a 24-hour period at a depth of 14,704 feet R esearchers had hoped to obtain as much as 40 cubic feet of natural gas per barrel, but D ep artm ent of E nergy spokesm an Jam es Cotter said. I do not consider the prelim inary findings to be a disappointm ent ’ Dorfman said if further tests prove successful, m ore natural gas could be available for in­ dustrial parks could be built around wells to tap w ater and heat energy industrial use and A 200-MAN TEAM from the U niver­ s it y ’s G eo th erm a l D iv isio n of the Center for Energy Studies is conducting the research The geotherm al division will not be affected by the $990,000 w hich Gov Bill C lem ents axed from the Center for Energy Stu dies’ appropriation “ We operate on a $6 m illion budget provided by the D epartm ent of Energy and private industry,” D orfm an said. The initial work for the project, coor­ dinated by Dorfman w as begun in 1974. The next two years o f research at Chocolate Bayou w ill be spent testin g the reliability of flow and gas-saturation rates and dev eloping equipm ent cap ab le of withstanding extrem e tem p eratu res and pressures involved, D orfm an said IF EXPECTATIONS ot the test w ell prove valid, the w ell may be the first in a series of geopressure, geoth erm al zone research projects along the c o a s ts of Texas and Louisiana We will have three or four other w ells in the next year O ver the next five years w e w ill probably have 20 to 25 more w e lls,” D orfm an said Dorfman said he is not w ildly op­ tim istic at I’m not this point, but p essim istic either I w ant to test it. I would say w e have ach ieved all our ob­ jectives to this point Now w e go into the testing program ” KLRN-TV officials reject offer of employee in corporation Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, July 16, 1979 PROBLEM PREGNANCY INFORMATION A b o rtio n ? Free P reg na ncy Testing & R e fe rra ls Call (512) 4 7 4 -9 9 3 0 600 W. 28th No. 101 A u stin, T X 78705 J.D. BRITTON, M.D. is pleased to announce the relocation of his o ffic e fo r the practice of G E N E R A L PRACTICE to the Cannon Professional Center, Suite 303. 1110 W illia m Cannon Dr. A u stin, Texas 78745 Hours by A ppointm ent 441-4708 FCC rules By DIANE JANE MORRISON ^ N Daily Texan Staff KI.RN-TV o ffic ia ls hav e re je c te d the U niversity’s offer to incorporate the public television statio n 's staff into the UT staff. In early June, a U niversity com m ittee recom m ended to the executive co m m ittee of the Southwest Texas Public B roadcasting Council th a t all KLRN sta ff m e m b e rs become UT employees. The council’s executive com m ittee T hurs­ day turned down the U niversity’s offer on the advice of its lawyer, who said that such an arran g em en t would violate F ederal Com- m unciatons Commission rules. The council is the license holder for KLRN as well as its sister station KLRU in San An- 1C T T T tonio. If UT took over the station, it would mean that the license holder had given up the sta tio n ’s operation, a authority over violation of FCC rules. 1 , 4 AN FCC attorney, how ever, said Ju ne 12 that the SWTPBC could delegate the m anage­ m ent of the station to UT a s long as the coun­ cil m aintained the licen see’s pow er of veto. In its April 20 rep o rt to the SWTPBC board investigative co m m ittee of trustees, re c o m m e n d e d th e relationship between the two, saying, ” ... one of the problem s at KLRN is the lack of a clear delineation betw een U niversity of Tex­ as em ployees and theiT functions and KLRN em ployees and their fu nctions.” th e c o u n c il re v ie w the The two entities a re engaged in a com plex Campus Capsules "This Christmas I'm takina off..." ' M a y b e a tub lo the Islands or Palm Beach. So i f you w an t Christ snas Theater stages ‘Trouble’ Alyce Smith Cooper and Ken W ashington, two d ra m a tists, will visit the U niversity to p a rtic ip a te the p ro du ctio n of A lice C hildress’ “ Trouble in M ind,” scheduled to run Thursday through Sunday in the C abaret T heatre. in The com edy-dram a is set in a Broadw ay th e a te r of the 1950s and is perform ed by a largely black cast. The play was recently produced in New York City and San Diego. Play perform ances will be at 8 p.m . Admis­ sion is $4 for students, $5 for others. R e se r­ vations m ay be m ade by calling 471-1444. Bel Geddes tour set designs and for bringing stream lining to industrial design. the concept of E x h ib it ite m s w e r e b o ro w e d fro m H um anities R esearch C enter collections. Singers tour Europe Dr M orris Beachy, U niversity d irecto r of choral activities, is leading a 140-member choral group this m onth in a E uropean tour organized by the U niversal A cadem y for Music. The group is composed of high school and college-aged singers from around the United States. They a re scheduled to perform in several European nations including England, F ran ce, Sw itzerland and Italy. The group also will perform in C arnegie Hall. A public tour of N orm an Bel G eddes’ th eatrical and industrial designs will be con­ ducted a t noon Monday in the M ichener G allery of the H arry R ansom Center. Geddes is noted for his innovative th e a te r F riday the group particip ated in a service at the N otre D am e C athedral in P a ris, as p a rt of F ra n c e ’s B astille Day celebratin g that co untry’s independence, according to a news release. DROP/ADD 1. D epartm ental D rop/A dd w ill be held M onday, July 16, and Tuesday, July 17. 2. July 18 and 19, Drops and Adds are initiated in your Dean's Office. details. 3. See your Summer Course Schedule, page 12, for further THURSDAY, JULY 19 is the LAST DAY to drop a second term course w ith a refund. OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR Come to our second annual CHRISTMAS IN J U L Y SALE All w eek long. Lots o f goodies on sale, (iet cool a n d get a j u m p on Santa. Unicorn Gallery and Gift Shop in Dobie Mall Mon-Sat: IO-9 477-0719 GROK BOOKS Astrological Com puter Printouts $2 and Under ! i L relationship, with som e staffers being KLRN em ployees and som e U niversity em ployees. I T T i r AN EX A M PLE of the problem s in the relationship is the case of KLRN G eneral M anager H arvey H erbst. H erbst officially holds three positions un­ der a 1961 co n tract between UT and the coun­ cil — general m an ager of the station, d ire c to r of the U n iversity ’s com m unication c en ter and president of KLRN-KLRU. He is listed as an em ployee by the U niversi­ ty, but H erbst serv es both the dean of the com m unication school and the broadcasting council. . __ ____ _____________ T he C o m m itte e to S av e K L R N /U is petitioning the FCC to investigate the “ actual working relationship” betw een the station and the U niversity. ALSO AT Thursday’s m eeting, the ex­ ecutive com m ittee, of which H erbst is a m em ber, voted to accept the confidential “ bill of p a rtic u la rs” supporting recom m en­ dations from the investigative com m ittee that both H erbst and Station M anager L arry White be fired. The “ bill” will now be passed to U niversity officials to give them fu rth er inform ation in deciding how to a c t on the recom m endations. Union board meets today The Texas Union Board of Directors will meet at 5:30 p.m. Monday in the Union’s Stahrles Room, 3.208, to discuss the facility’s budget for the 1979-80 fiscal year. The board had made a preliminary budget, based on a proposed increase in the Texas Union fee. However, University students Tuesday voted down the increase. As a result of the vote, the fee will remain $10 for the long session and $5 for the summer session. Board members said they will have to rework the budget, possibly cutting back ser­ vices, because the fee was not raised. It would have added $200,000 to the Union’s $3.9 million budget. The meeting is open to the public, and board members have urged students to at* tend. ■ -''¿A ■ Three move after fire Fireman burned slightly in dorm blaze least At th re e U niversity students who lived a t the El Campo Student House, 1912 N u e c e s S t., h a v e m o v e d following a Saturday m orning fire. T he ho u se re c e iv e d a p ­ proxim ately $12.000 dam age when a fire, believed to be caused by an electrical short th e c ir c u it, b ro k e o u t southeast corner of the house. “ T here w as w ater dam age fo rm e r e v e ry w h e re ,” said in r e s i d e n t J o e M o r e n o , a G raduate School of Business student. “ I had to w ash all m y th e c l o t h e s b e c a u s e of sm oke,” he added. Moreno said he was the only person at the p rivate dor­ m itory Sunday afternoon, ad ­ ding he was to rem ove his belongings. th ere only “ I had to m ove ... there is a big hole in the floor of m y room ,” he said. None of the eight residents, all of whom a re UT students, w ere injured in the fire. H o w e v e r, a f ir e f ig h te r , received m inor T erry Hill, burns on the head. He was tre a te d and re le a s e d from B ra c k e n rid g e H o spital, an A u s tin F i r e D e p a r tm e n t spokesm an said Sunday. F ire m a n re p o rte d ly con­ the blaze within 45 trolled m inutes. Happy B irth day to Eben Price N o te d Film Critic Cosmic L a w S tu d e n t S o rry, th ere u xu n ’( a p a p e r F riday. Z im m e rm a n n 's DISCOUNT FLORIST LONG STEM ROSES $ 1 5 ° ° dozen 705 West 24th 478-6225 The Daily Texan a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications, Drawer D. University Station. Austin, TX 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday, and Fri­ day. except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin, Tex News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591). at the editorial office Texas Student Publications Building 2 1221 or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A 4 136i Inquiries concerning delivery and classified advertising should be made in TSP Building 3 200 < 471-52441 and display advertising in TSP Building 3 210 1471-1865» The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Communications and Advertising Services to Students. 6330 N Pulaski. Chicago, IL 60646 The Daily Texan subscribes to United Press International and New York Times News Service The Texan is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Southwest Journalism Congress, the Texas Daily Newspaper Association, and American Newspaper Publishers Association Copyright 1979. Texas Student Publications THE DAILY TEXAN SUBSCRIPTION RATES Summer Session 1979 By mail in Texas By mail outside Texas within U S A One Sem ester (Fall or Spring) 1979-80 Picked up on campus — basic student fee By mail in Texas ... By mail outside Texas within USA Two Sem esters (Fall and Spring I 1979-80 $ 9 50 .......................................... 10 00 65 16 00 ..................................... 17 00 $ By mail in Texas $29 00 31.00 By mail outside Texas within U S A Send orders and address changes to TEXAS STUDENT PUBLICATIONS. P O Box PUB. NO. 146440 D. Austin. Texas 78712. or to TSP Building. C3 200 476-0116 GIANT SHOE SAvJ?! VALUES TO 55.00 CLOSING OUT THE LATEST STYLES, ALL FOREMOST BRAND NAME SHOES* HURRY WHILE THEY LAST. THIS IS YOUR CHANCE TO BALANCE YOUR SHOE BUDGET A L L SALES F I N A L , P L E A S E *( N ot all sto c k in c lu d e d ) Sweet Somethings by Maidenform Soft and silky sleepwear b a h A m y & In soft pink or faw n brown w ith lace t r im and side slit accents. In petite to m e d iu m Long gown, 19.00 Baby doll, 16.00 2406 G U A D A L U P E • O N -T H E -D R A G on-the-drag at 2 4 0 6 G uadalupe h a J u d U j Inflation fighters watching UAW, Big 3 to start contract talks DETROIT (U PI) — The United Auto W orkers union and the Big Three U.S. autom akers open con tract talks this week against a backdrop of soaring gasoline prices, an industry sales slum p and national econom ic uncer­ tainties The opening of talks wall be carefully w atched by governm ent inflation fighters anxious to save shaky federal wage guidelines. Some industry experts predict there will be a strike when cu rren t c o n tracts expire. A NUMBER OF analysts believe the strik e ta rg e t will be G eneral Motors, w here the two sides square off Mon­ day. The UAW has ruled out only financially ailing Chrysler Corp. and both sides express hope of settling without a walkout. The UAW, representing 750,000 U.S. auto w orkers, heads to Ford M otor Co. to open talks Tuesday and goes to C hrysler on W ednesday. The UAW’s three-y ear con­ tra c t with all three expires Sept. 14. L ittle progress on key econom ic dem ands is expected until a strike ta rg e t is se t — probably late in August — and talks a re concentrated on one c a r com pany tow ard a pattern-setting contract. Money is the key issue. Not since 1958 have the auto firm s and UAW bargain­ ed collectively against the backdrop of a recession. One industry negotiator pointed out th ere was no strik e that year, but union m em bers worked th ree m onths w ithout a contract. Union P re s id e n t D ouglas F r a s e r a ttrib u te s the cu rren t auto sales slum p m ostly to gas shortages and prices — circum stan ces he said could change rapidly. “ Why should we m ake a decision on the econom ics at the bargaining table based on the condition of the m ark et in August or on Sept. 14?” F ra s e r asked. “ Conceivably the m ark et could get well. “ We could have p retty good gas availability and th at could change the ball gam e overnight.” INDUSTRY EXECUTIVES a re not exactly pleading poverty despite a decline in c a r sales th a t began in M arch They sim ply a re n 't buying any a tte m p t by the union to do so. Cost of living allow ances for assem bly line w orkers have kept them ab re a st of inflation, while negotiated step increases for re tire e s have boosted their incom es as well, industry officials say. Thus the industry alread y re je c ts a key labor dem and — cost of living allow ances for retirees. F ra se r concedes his w orkers have kept up with infla­ tion — but disputes that they a re getting a real annual wage im provem ent “ WHAT HAS H A PPEN ED is that inflation has eroded our rew ard for increased productivity,” he said. The role of governm ent anti-inflation guidelines call­ ing for a 7 percent lim it on w age settlem en ts also will be uncertain Industry officials say they support the guidelines, but F raser, who e a rlie r w arned the governm ent to “ stay the from the talks, said they have been stretched hell aw ay beyond recognition by e a rlie r m ajor national labor agreem ents. “ You just wonder w hat the 7 percent is any longer,” F ra se r said “ You look a t the T eam ster settlem ent, the (United R ubber W orkers) settlem en t, it’s very unclear what the form ula is any m o re .” UAW M EMBERS a re am ong the best-paid industrial w orkers in the nation. GM says its em ployees earned an average of $472.03 per week in the first q u a rte r of this year, com pared with a national blue-collar av erage of $262.77. Monday, July 16, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 Wright expects Carter to be bold in crisis (U P I) W ASHINGTON - H ouse D em ocratic leader Jim Wright said Sunday A m erica is facing its biggest challenge since World W ar II and he ex­ pects P resident C arter to be as bold as Franklin Roosevelt and John Kennedy w ere in tim es of crisis. W right said th e p u b lic e x p e c ts something big irom the president a fte r his long re tre a t at Cam p David and if C arter excites the nation with his proposals. The A m erican people will follow him to the very gates of e te r­ n ity .” IN AN IN TER V IEW on ABC’s “ Is s u e s and A n s w e rs ” p ro g ra m , W right said C arter m ust take the sam e approach Roosevelt did in 1942 when he to e m b a rk e d on a c ra s h p ro g ra m develop sy n th etic ru b b e r and th a t Kennedy did in 1961 when he decided A m erica would send a m an to the moon bv 1970. Although C a rte r has no th in g as dram atic as a w ar to bring people together, W right said he thinks it is still possible in Americans. in spire c o o p e ra tio n to I th in k th e y e x p e c t of t h e i r leadership the kind of inspiration, the kind of challenge that will lead th em , the public, to do w hat this nation can do,' Wright said. “ I think th a t’s w hat the president will offer. I think th e Congress and the public will follow. I think it will be a bold, d ra m a tic , im ­ aginative, innovative approach.” BECAUSE THE United S ta te s is dependent on foreign oil controlled in p a rt by p o te n tia lly hostile fo rc e s , Wright said. “ We face a challenge un­ paralleled since World War II “ He said the sacrifices required will be less severe “ but longer en d u red ” than those required during the w ar. Gas leak reportedly exceeded forecast KANSAS CITY, Mo. (U PI) - The am ount o f an inert radioactive gas released during the T hree Mile Island nuclear accident was 21 tim es g re a te r the than federal officials predicted, K ansas City Star reported Sunday in a copyright article. found governm ent The new spaper said docum ents it ob­ tained regulators have used one theory for m ore than 10 y ears to calculate the expected release of radioactive Xenon gas for all nuclear plants. T hat outdated theory was used to calculate Xenon releases a t the Penn­ sylvania plant. ‘ THE N EW SPA PER said this finding m eans federal officials m ay be required to in crease the a re a around all nuclear is p la n ts prohibited from entering. in to w h ic h th e p u b lic Xenon-133, the inert gas involved in the accident, is produced by fission. It was released, the new spaper said, when a portion of the Zirconium shielding around the re a c to r fuel broke down a t Three Mile Island, E X PER TS DISAGREE on the cancer risk factor of Xenon exposure. The gas reportedly poses a danger only when in­ side a human lung or surrounding the body. While it does not collect in the hum an body, it does decay into a form of iodine that settles in th e body. W illiam K reger, a ssista n t chief site analyst for the N uclear R egulatory Commission, said th a t a t w orst, the Xenon release would cause one ad ­ ditional can cer case in an a re a expected to record 370,000 can cer cases from other causes. The NRC had calculated th at 600,000 curies of Xenon would be released. The com m ission now believes 13 million c u rries of Xenon-133 gas escaped when contam inated steam was vented from the stricken plant. Carter, Móndale to help stop no-busing proposal WASHINGTON (U PI) - P resident C arter and Vice P resid en t Móndale have agreed to spearhead a drive to defeat a proposed constitutional am end­ m ent th at would bar forced school bus­ ing, Rep Don Edw ards, D-Calif., said Sunday. “ They have told m e they a re ready, anxious and a b le ,” E dw ards said. C a rte r and Móndale probably will an­ nounce th e ir participation this week, a fte r E dw ards and Rep. P e te r Rodino, D -N.J., decide how they can be m ost effective, E dw ards said. in the House w ant “ THEY JUST w ant to fit into our op­ position plans any way the leadership here to b e," E dw ards said. “ They a re w holehearted­ ly opposed to the am endm ent and a re going to urge the overw helm ing defeat of sa m e .” it “ The announcem ent will be som e tim e in the m iddle of the week, I think,” E dw ards added. R o d in o , w ho c h a i r s th e H o u se Judiciary C om m ittee, and E dw ards, chairm an of the subcom m ittee on con­ stitutional rights, a re indignant because 218 House m em bers — a m a jo rity — signed a petition to force a House vote. The chairm en had intended to bottle up the proposal but the petition, a rarely successful device for bypassing a com ­ m ittee, m eans the m easu re will com e up for debate July 24. TH E AMENDMENT, introduced by Rep. Ronald M ottl, D-Ohio, requires a tw o-thirds vote in the House and Senate and ratificatio n by three-fourths of the states. “ We h a v e a h a rd v o te c o u n t,” E d w a rd s sa id . “ W e’ll d e f e a t M r. M o ttl’s a m e n d m e n t. We feel v ery strongly about this. We think it is a bad, divisive resolution.” The resolution says no student shall be com pelled to attend any school other than the one n e a re st his hom e that provides the course of study he w ants. Sen. W illiam Roth J r ., R-D el., and Sen. Je sse Helms, R-N.C., plan to in­ the the sa m e p ro p o sa l tro d u c e Senate. However, Senate rules will not allow petitions to bypass the opposition headed by Sens. E dw ard Kennedy, D- M ass., chairm an of the Ju diciary Com­ m ittee, and Birch Bayh, D-Ind., who chairs the Constitution subcom m ittee. in U.S. team to examine bits, pieces of Skylab SYDNEY, A ustralia (U P I) - A five- te a m of space and m an A m erican governm ent officials arrived Sunday to exam ine the charred rem ains of Skylab and denied speculation that the dying space station w as deliberately dumped on A ustralia last week. The officials plan to fly to Kalgoorlie, 400 m iles east of Perth, where one of the largest pieces of Skylab discovered so fa r is on display in the town hall. ROBERT GRAY, d irecto r of the of­ fice of advanced technology in the State D epartm ent, said even in Skylab’s dying m inutes, the N ational A eronautics and Space A dm inistration had no idea where the crippled space station would come down. “ All we could anticipate w as the orbit it would com e dow n,” said Gray, the delegation leader. “On the last orbit, it could have com e down alm ost anywhere on a track alm ost 4,000 m iles long.” Angry residents e a rlie r said that Skylab w as steered tow ard A ustralia and an editorial in the Sunday Telegraph said the country w as “ alw ays a prime ta rg e t” so NASA could la te r retrieve the debris. GRAY SAID the te a m would like to tak e som e pieces back to the United S tates for testing, but th at “ the large m a jo rity ” would be returned to the finders with “ som e so rt of c e rtific ate or note of appreciation from NASA.” “ T here is no way we will be running around like a bunch of law yers. We are hardly in a position to be n a sty ,” said Gray. In Kalgoorlie, a battle for possession of the piece on display is likely to develop this week. Police said the debris will be taken into their custody until ownership is determ ined between the three men who found it, the K algoorlie town council and the W est A ustralian state govern­ m ent. Two m o re la rg e p ie c e s of metal thought to be p a rt of Skylab have been f a r m s near fo u n d on s e p a r a t e E sp e ra n c e , 400 m ile s southeast of P erth. Mayor aids governor — UPI Telephoto Cleveland Mayor Dennis Kucinich removes a park­ ing ticket from California Gov. Jerry Brown’s car dur­ ing a political convention Friday. Kucinich then sm il­ ed (bottom) as Brown returned to his car. News Capsules By United Press International Cosmonauts set orbiting record MOSCOW — Two Soviet cosmonauts aboard the or­ biting Salyut 6 space laboratory set a space flight en­ durance record Sunday of 140 days, a feat hailed by the Red Army daily Krasnaya Zvezda as “another victory for our people.” Mission commander Vladimir Lyakhov and flight engineer Valery Ryumin, who were launched into space aboard their Soyuz 32 capsule Feb. 25, orbited their way into the record books early Sunday. At that tim e they shattered the old m ark of 139 days, 14 hours and 40 minutes, set last November by Soyuz 29 cosm onauts V ladim ir Kovalenok and A lexander Ivanchenkov. Plane use may violate U.S. law MANAGUA, N icaragua — The T-28 airplan es recently used by N icaragua’s national guard are of U.S. origin and may constitute violation of the U.S. N eutrality Act, a U.S. Em bassy spokesman said Sun­ day. Fighting was generally light across Nicaragua Sun­ day with m ost attention focused on finding a political solution to the country’s civil war. The heaviest fighting was at Matagalpa, where San- dinistas seemed on the verge of overwhelming the last guard holdout force at the Picado Lyceum, a hilltop schoolhouse outside of town. Army test baffles recrult-hopefuls NEW HAVEN, Conn — An estim ated 70 percent of the city’s men and women seeking to join the U.S. Army cannot pass the entrance exam which all recruits must take to enter any of the four service branches, Army officials said. Sgt. Robert Mizell, an Army recruiter, calls the situation “ alarm ing,” but despite the high failure rate on the test, he adds he has no trouble enlisting a high volume of recruits. The test, designed for persons with a 6th grade education, examines general knowledge, m ath skills, vocabulary and technical and mechanical skills. Pennsylvania braces for gas strike PITTSBURGH, Penn. — Pennsylvania motorists Sunday braced for the critical week ahead as the strike by gasoline service station dealers kept pumps dry at hundreds of independent stations. Monday was expected to be a test day as motorists in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh returned to the pumps for gas to drive to work. M embers of the Pennsylvania-Delaware Service Station Dealers, representing about half the 8,000 stations in Pennsylvania and about 150 stations in Delaware, went on strike Friday in a dispute over profit margins and federal fuel allocation plans. Steinem says she's feminist first CINCINNATI - Gloria Steinem told 2,000 cheering delegates a t Sunday’s closing session of the National Women’s Political Caucus convention that she is a feminist before she is an American S tein em also lab eled P re s id e n t C a rte r “ in­ com petent” and said the world may be ready for a “ feminist and humanist revolution.” However, another convention speaker, form er Rep. , Bella Abzug, D-N.Y., chided women for continuing to linger “ outside” the American political structure and suggested that females support “ favorite daughters at next y ear’s D em ocratic and Republican presiden­ tial nominating conventions. No lunar visit expected for 10 years WASHINGTON — The first men to walk on the moon set out on their historic expedition 10 years ago Mon­ day. Space officials say it will be at least another decade before Americans return to the moon. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration doesn’t even have plans to send automated spacecraft back to the moon to fill in some of the scientific blanks left after six Apollo landing expeditions____________ U.S. public transit unable to cope with new demand * 1979 New York Times WASHINGTON — Long lines a t the gasoline pum p and ad ­ m inistration agonizing over energy have pointed up one of the great ironies of postw ar dom estic policy. A m erica’s public transportatio n sy ste m s, once m odels of efficient and far- reaching service, have shrunk and d e te rio ra ted to the point w here m any tra v e le rs, seeking alte rn a tiv e s to the autom obile, now have now here to turn The reasons for wholesale neglect of m ass tra n sit through m ost of the y e a rs since 1946 a re c le a r and fam iliar. The country got rich; m ore c a rs and m ore roads to c a rry them becam e econom ically possible, socially desirab le and, ultim ately, a politically irresistible and self-justifying econom ic force. It was not until this decade that tran sportation officials again took seriously the idea th at there w ere other w ays to go WHAT IS NOT clear is w hether the long-term th ru st of governm ent policy will change d rastically , even under the cu rren t pressures to save fuel and unclog the highways. R ecent­ ly the D epartm ent of T ransportation allowed that the private autom obile will likely dom inate the tran sp o rtatio n system through the last two decades of this century — and suggested, therefore, that a realistic policy would be to build m ore roads and help m ake certain that c a rs of the fu tu re a re safer and less w asteful to encouraging and endorsing Some critics contended this position went beyond a relu ctant acceptance that the autom obile will continue to breed (even if the offspring a re sm aller and lighter than their progenitors), and amounted four-wheel proliferation To them , it seem ed irresponsible th at officials w ere talking of trim m ing A m trak, the national passenger rail system , when A m trak was turning aw ay m ore would-be riders than it was carry in g; and absurd that, a t a tim e when people in such unlikely places as Long Beach, Calif , w ere turning in droves to buses, the governm ent had done little to encourage bus production AT THE CEN TER of these criticism s a re difficult questions about the proper nature and extent of governm ent involvem ent in, and financing of. transpo rtatio n system s. In defense of current policy, for exam ple, transportation officials say it has not been dem onstrated that leaving A m trak intact (or expan­ ding it) would be a cost-efficient, perm anently significant p art of an overall solution T ransportation S ecretary Brock A dam s’ position has been that the long-term needs ot public transportation, which may be considerably less d ra m a tic than cu rren t shortages indicate, m ust be m et in a m easured way He holds that alte rn a tiv e s may it would be foolhardy come to stay (or fade - the vogue for bicycle paths during the 1974 oil em bargo is an exam ple) but that the strong preferences of the public and the heavy investm ent in the auto and roads, indicate the hoped-for “ reinvention of the c a r and other highw ay-oriented projects. By this way of thinking, it is not for the T ransportation D epart­ m ent to brand the auto a social evil, but m erely to m ake sure that the public’s chosen form s of transportation work as ef­ ficiently and econom ically as possible. The m ore m o derate c ritics agree with the assessm en t that the c a r is inevitable, but wish m ore would be done for m ass tra n sit anyway. to abandon AS IT IS, the auto 's relativ e sh a re of passenger-m iles tra v e l­ ed has declined since the oil em bargo, and precipitously so d u r­ ing this su m m er’s gasoline crisis At the sam e tim e, a national th e ir association ol bus operators recently reported patronage has increased rapidly and would continue to do so a t the ra te of at least 5 percent for the next several y e a rs Thus the tim e m ay be right, m ass tran sit advocates feel, to capitalize on a trend and actively discourage auto use as a m a tte r of national policy. that No legislation to assist public transportation was passed until 1964 when the Urban Mass T ransit A ssistance Act allocated about $150 million annually to various pro jects Not until 1970 did Congress approve larg er sum s (and then only for the purchase ot equipm ent and operating facilities; operating assistance to deficit-ndden lines was approved five y e a rs la te r) And even though $400 m illion was m ade available in the first year of the 1970 program , it w as distributed on the basis of two federal dollars to one local dollar, w hereas the highway aid ratio was 10 to 1. TH ER E HAVE been occasional signs th a t the C a rte r ad­ m inistration perceives m ass tran sit as an energy-saving a lte r ­ native for trav el, but to date, no consistent policy c o m m itm e n t to the idea Last m onth, Adam s called the opening of th e new Atlanta subway system “ an event whose significance rise s w ith the price of gasoline E a rlie r, he prom oted the c re a tio n of a 5- cent gasoline tax to finance a m ass tra n sit tru st fund, a c o u n te r­ balance to the bankrolling of road system s; but congressional opponents easily defeated the plan, in p art because the W hite House had m ade no concerted effort to sell it. Lately the adm inistration has floated the idea of tapping som e ol the proceeds, an e stim ated $300 m illion a year, from the proposed windfall oil tax to assist m ass tra n sit But transit oflicials say this sum , even if it could be approved, would be in­ adequate ENTOGAIS * Editorial policy explained Means o f expression offered It is a n e w s p a p e r ’s d u t y to p r i n t the n e w s an d r a is e hell. T he C h ic a g o T im e s , 1861 That sim plified definition of a newspaper’s duties remains basically true today with som e qualifications. A newspaper’s primary responsibility is to present the news as fully, accurately and fairly as possible. The news m edia also must provide analysis and com m ent on the world’s events to promote greater understan­ ding of our com plex social and physical environment. Finally, a newspaper must offer a forum in which its readers m ay debate a lim itless range of issues. The Daily Texan offers to students and others in the University com m unity a highly visible means through which they can express opinions — guest columns and F irin g L in e letters on the editorial pages. The difference between columns and letters is not just word-count and writing ability. Column writers should provide their readers with a concise but thorough ex­ amination of a particular issue while developing a cogent, personal com m ent on it. Letters, on the other hand, are m ore generally reactions to what others have written (or have neglected to write about). COLUMNS AND LETTERS must be in good taste, accurate, free from libel, m alice and personal con­ troversy. Since we receive many more written con­ tributions than can be printed daily, columns and letters may be edited for brevity and clarity. Columns should be 70 typed lines (60 character lines) or less; letters, 20 typed lines. All m aterial submitted for publication on the editorial pages must include the author’s name, college status and telephone number. Mail columns or letters to the Editor, The Daily Tex­ an, P.O. Box D, Austin, Texas 78712, or drop them by the basement offices of the Texas Student Publication building at the corner of 25th Street and Whitis Avenue. Since we strive to make news stories free of editorial slant and comment, The Texan depends on its readers to submit columns and letters which identify questions and criticism s regarding people and events in the news. That is why we need your help and response. Send us your view s, and help the Texan raise hell. Beth Frerking Strong energy medicine needed The N ew York Tim es said in an editorial Sunday, July 15: The president has been playing dou­ ble or nothing. Having bewildered ..everybody by scheduling and then canceling an important speech on the | country’s energy fix, he has spent the last week insuring that the ultimate I speech would be ever so much more | Important. What started as a desire to go fishing and get away from it all soon turned into a panoplied Domestic Sum­ mit. President Carter has by now sum­ moned enough people to come chin with him to make mass transit for Camp David worth thinking about. The conclusions that finally emerge I in speeches Sunday night and Monday I may not, despite what Jody Powell said >o exuberantly the other day, lay out an energy policy for generations to come. But for all the hoopla, hot air and ^trumpet voluntaries, what Jimmy Carter says about energy will be deadly serious. It may well determine who will be the next president — and of what kind of country. It may, indeed, ;-not be serious enough. THE UNITED STATES has turned >itself into a helpless baby, suckling at ¡the OPEC teat. That gives OPEC a grip «ion our dollars, our economy, our foreign policy, even our national ; nerves. Comes an interruption of supp­ ly, like Iran, and we turn, swearing, into lunatics gasping for mercy at the ¡gas pump. is That dependence intolerable. Worse, it is unnecessary. Americans can reduce their need for imported oil enough to loosen OPEC’s grip and they can do so with little real sacrifice. The time has come for all of us to make that sacrifice. Half the public thinks that high gas­ oline prices are the problem. On the contrary, higher prices are the solu­ to dis­ tion. Americans need ways cipline their lavish, unthinking use of oil — especially gasoline — and the sur­ est way to get people to use less of something is to charge more for it. That is why Congress should act im­ mediately to reduce the amount of gas­ oline consumed by the public by, say, 10 percent. SUCH A REDUCTION could be achieved with a new tax to raise the price to $1.50 or even $2 a gallon. Or it could be achieved through rationing. The method is much less important than the result: a significant reduction in oil imports — now. Most people would be barely in­ convenienced, so long as they could decide for themselves how and when to cut their gasoline use. Yet conserving 10 percent nationally would save millions of barrels of imported oil and billions of exported dollars each year for a long time. Anyone who doubts that this would tame OPEC doesn’t unders­ tand supply, demand or oil ministers. With that new protection in the short run, the nation could gain time to deal with the true scarcity that is certain in the future. An energy mobilization board with emergency powers could break bottlenecks that now block the use of fuel already available. A new public corporation could hasten com­ mercial production of new synthetic oil. And Washington could meanwhile work to insure that solar and other renewable fuels are not thus eclipsed. But not even all these steps, taken together, compare in importance with reducing gasoline consumption now. A POLITICIAN - perhaps Jimmy Carter — might look at these prescrip­ tions and see one word: “Suicide.” An energy board might be feasible. A syn- fuel corporation might be attractive. But how could a president responsible for $2 gasoline survive? How could a p re s id e n t su rv iv e a f te r pushing coupons — palpable symbols of federal interference — into every voter’s life? And how much masochism can be demanded of a president who bravely stuck his neck out for energy policy proposals in 1977 and 1978 only to see Congress shred them, while the public went to sleep? High gas prices or rationing, a political analyst might say, make sense only for someone who would rather be right than president. True enough. But being right may be the only way that Jimmy Carter can re­ main president. What do voters think of him? They say they vastly prefer Ted Kennedy, possibly even Jerry Brown. And Carter has even fallen behind Republicans Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan in the polls. What is it that troubles people? He appears weak, many say, vacillating. On June 29, for example, he angrily condemned OPEC for increasing oil prices, by July 9, he was heaping America’s gratitude on the Saudis, the leaders of OPEC, for increasing oil production that is not political moonshine to It believe the American public yearns, even if grudgingly, for strong medicine on energy People do not have to like the taste of that medicine to un­ derstand the need for it People do not have to like the doctor to vote for hyn. clf7l New York Time* T h e Da il y T e x a n Editor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editor A ssistant to the Editor News Editor A ssociate N ew s Editor Sports Editor Arts and Entertainm ent Editor Photo Editor Im ages Editor ( ampus A ctivities Editor General Reporters Beth Frerking Melissa Segrest Mark Dooley Harvey Neville Charlie Hose Mark McKinnon Jeff l^itcham Marion La Nasa Keith Bardin Anne Telford Suzy l^impert Alice Anderson Marilyn llauk Dianna Hunt Mary Ann Kreps Diane Morrison Shonda Novak Joe Tedino. Joel Williams Issue E ditor............ News Assistant Editorial Assistant Sports Assistants Make-up Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Artist Photographer .................................................. Clare Hagerty ......................................................... Jenny Abdo ............................................ Robert McDonough David King. G Chris Chavez .................................................. Deborah Swift .......................................... Tom Baker Mary Phillips, Tai Vega. Mike O'Neal, Paul Wilson, Diane Ballard Scott Bieser Terry Gregston £ .... ,. Copyright ffZ* Texet StoWM PutttteWant Reproduction o‘ en» pen o* •*» puts cat on >s pron.cxteo * mout ffw •«press •• sss><~ of me Os y T«x«n eo tcx Op ix>s ««press*} in The Os y Texan are moee o> trw eo to* or me writer at me an cle ana are not •nceesa'-'v ttwee at me Jn-*ere*ty or ed*"'- st'eho*- me Board erf Regents or me Texas Student Puptceaone Board o> Opere1 'g Trustees THE DAILY TEXAN Monday, July 16, 1979 Page 4 'AH'MSEZ THIS SH I/CAM „ , , GÍYEAM) 1 / ~ iff ^ 1/ ° I O f ' o - r o s' O , i A- I L W W W ■ O N E " J sbscRSl Jiring line Selection procedure autocratic The Chicano Law Student Association would like to ex­ press its concern over the events leading to the selection of a new dean. We respectfully concur with statements already voiced by representatives of the Student Bar Association and the majority of the law school faculty, because we feel that very serious implications may flow from these unfortunate events. The law school experience constantly thrusts upon us the importance of establishing objective procedures and follow­ ing them. It is ironic and particularly alarming that Lorene Rogers and the alumni are prepared to disregard the es­ tablished system for selecting a dean in such an autocratic fashion. We strongly feel the national reputation of the law school can only be hurt by what appeared to be the quintessence of “good ‘ol boy” procedure — an attitude totally inap­ propriate in our law school setting. We do not pass judgment on the person who ultimately accepts the deanship. Our judgment will be based on perfor­ mance and not on the disconcerting circumstances surroun­ ding the appointment of the new dean. David Mindex Chicano Law Student A*sociation Law dean selection a circus A circus has arrived in Austin, and ticket booths are being manned by Lorene Rogers and some faceless members of the UT law school alumni. Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! Come see the remarkable metamorphosis of ivory tower teachers who angrily point fingers at impotent procedures while refusing to taste the bitter sauce of substance. Pay your price and stand in line! Our student bar president is about to lead an angry mob of three disgusted students into the center ring. Move this way, folks! See the fat and beard­ ed lady (law school) teach her children that justice is real while she callously feeds them predetermined hypotheticals that give rise to fleeting rules of law. Test your strength against the Great Suttonian, who stands upon the crystal pedestal with both hands tied to the Deanship Cup as the Lovely Lorena covers his face with a Machiavellian veil! As they walk through the “ hollow” wings of Townes Hall worrying about shepherdizing 40 cases, nothing really matters to students who don’t have time to give a damn. “As long as we make the grade ...” ...And another Circus Caravan trudges out of town as the dust settles on a soon-to-be-complacent bearded lady and her Margarito G. Rodriguez cotton candy children. Law Musical comedy serious stuff It was difficult to pinpoint what exactly Harvey Neville was driving at in his, uh, editorial column (“ Who can judge artistic m erit?” Texan, July 10). A short outline then: First, Neville described the women peacefully picketing The Robber Bridegroom at its last performance; and quoted them as objecting to the beatings and rape. He admitted, sensibly enough, that many women are physically abused off the stage. Then Neville proceeded to define dramatic com­ edy as “ ... the degredation of individual characters or violent acts against their imaginary.” All the world’s a stage, eh? I guess I just never realized it could be so FUNNY! Until now I thought that a playful rape, a humorous beating were contradictions in terms. Oops. That was artistic censorship. I was “dictating acceptable values.” I have no right to be offended because in 1852 Uncle T o m ’s Cabin folded. Uh, yeah. But now the burning question, “ By whose social or moral standards can a work of art be judged acceptable?” I know, I know. Whoever decided to stage the offensive thing in the first place was exercising plenty of artistic judgment when they chose that script over another. That student tuition and fees partially covered the rights seems somehow incidental in the face of the producers’ free exercise of their personal social and moral standards. And what did they get? Inflamed rhetoric. (Gosh, Wally, that’s the worst kind.) Maybe they can avoid all the fuss next year with a musical adaptation of Stephaaie Carnet the rape in Deliverance. American Studies ‘Robber Bridegroom' is political Harvey Neville’s editorial column on the Women United protest of The Robber Bridegroom would have us believe that the issue is one of artistic merit. Although the editorial is otherwise apparently well thought out, Neville has missed the issue. The dispute centers not on the play’s intrinsic worth as a work of art but rather on the play's function as a political tool and the right to fight political expression with political expression The inclusion of the N ew York H e ra ld ’s review of Uncle Tom s Cabin in Neville’s article recognizes the political nature of the situation In that excerpt, the reviewer classifies the staging of Uncle T o m ’s Cabin as a blunder for political reasons: it might tear apart an already shaky Union The reviewer recognizes theater as having political effects, and that problem is the one the women’s protest ad­ dresses Neville claims that “ so many musical comedies < c a rry ) no social message ” In what sense can this be true? We recognize communication as a social instrument, carrying not only the explicit message, but also implied com­ munications of our view of the way things are and the way they should be When we talk about someone “ bitching’’ or “Jewing down’’ or “ Indian giving," we do not mean just “complaining’’ or just “ bargaining;” we are making statements about the way we believe the world is — that women are always complaining. Jews are always bargain­ ing. Indians are always stealing Thus The Robber Bridegroom is not merely a piece of entertainment It is a piece of political statement that our world allows the beating of women to be granted impunity — or even worse, laughter. The fact that this is a comedy apparently misleads Neville into thinking that it is therefore “not serious.” Yet behind the laughter hides a social meaning which is highly political. It is a message of who is master and who servant, who beats and who is beaten — the most purely political issue. Far from being harmless and innocent, the comedy is perhaps one of the most dangerous kinds of political statement, for it causes its audience to laugh at a facade which masks a state­ ment of tyranny. Such diverse sources as the University’s own Professor Robert Twombly, Sigmund Freud and Roland Barthes all agree: Humor is serious communication in clown-face. The issue is not artistic censorship. In fact, it is difficult to see how this issue could be construed even marginally to be one of censorship. Not only did the protesters not demand that the play be burned or changed, they did not interfere with its performance. The question is not one of “dictating,” as Neville would have it, but of the full exercise of democratic politics. The show presents one view; the protesters another. They ask only that the audience “ think about the violent premise,” in clear contradistinction to the play, which, as comedy, asks the audience not to think, but Brad Elbein to laugh and accept. Law Nedra McCloud Aaatia Editor’s note: McCloud was a paid member of the Cabaret Theater company. Reality suspended in ‘Bridegroom’ There are people who seem to have never developed that childlike sensitivity (so easy to be had), that slight suspense from reality, which allows one to be properly taken into that human realm of the fine arts or electronic media. These peo­ ple will ask, after a few showings of Gilligan’s Island, “Why don’t they just put Gilligan away somewhere since he always gets in the way, then they’re sure to be rescued.” Or, after reading Faust, “ So this here writer fellow wants us all to sell our souls to the devil.” In this recent Robber Bridegroom controversy we might have run across a few people with such insensitivities. I have not seen the play, but from the synopsis it sounds as if it could very easily have quite a different interpretation than that the protesters give it. Let us recall that in The Great Dictator Chaplin is not advocating totalitarianism, nor could we realistically say the intentions of Hogan’s Heroes were to make us all Nazis. Now, it is conceivable that the play in question is not trying to make us all male chauvinists but could be using a device called hyperbole, that makes everything more exaggerated than in real life, to show vivid­ ly, even luridly, how disgusting male chauvinism in fact is. Though the play doesn’t sound very appealing, it could possibly be utilizing this common device. The Spanish Inquisition didn’t seem to like to weigh the possibilities either. I know people who had been burglarized yet still laughed through Take the Money and Run without thinking Woody Allen was trying to make us all into thieves. Laati Miller Liagaistic* Texan India coverage biased The news coverage of a bride being burned to death by her mother-in-law, in New Delhi, India came as a surprise and a shock . Recently the news about India as reported in the Tex­ an is not only prejudiced but seems to be directed at projec­ ting a very poor image of the Indian people, society and government. Burning a woman to death can be considered an act of brutality, and there are laws to take care of that. While there are several other political, social and inter­ national activities of interest going on in India, reporting only brutal acts, bus accidents or some religious practices is not only a poor choice of news but is unfair to the Indian com­ munity in Austin. By the way, I personally think that the news of a woman being burned to death daily is incorrect and should have been verified. How would the Americans in general, and Austinites in particular, respond to a news item in an Indian paper, saying, “ Every other day a helpless woman is mugg­ ed in Austin or every other month a brutal rape takes place around UT campus?” If you read Indian newspapers (they are available in the PCL) you will find that they report about Carter’s Middle East summit, energy policy, etc. instead of a man being mugged in New York every minute! Deepak M ikilikir Mechanical Engineering New Arab mythology created I wish to comment on Anne Royal’s editorial column of July 9 (“ Historical bias inevitable” ). Although the “orientalist” approach to history and the trendier “ societal” one are defined as alternatives by Royal, she leaves us in no doubt as to which alternative she prefers. The suggestion to “monitor’’ Abraham Marcus’ teaching thus becomes a call to watch him for any departures from the right, i.e., left (-wing) attitude. In the process of demythologizing history, the new school has created a mythology of its own which includes the absurd picture of the silly old Orientalist calling the East “ inscrutable’’ and “ bizzare” (terms found only in popular literature) and not using Arabic sources (which is simply un­ true) Hence also Royal’s misinterpretation of certain ac­ tions which are regarded by Israel as vital to its security and which are certainly not undertaken under the pretext of “civilizing the natives.” I and many other Israelis do have a bias, however. In con­ trast to both Marxists and old-fashioned chauvinists, we believe that the quest for civilized living should and will prevail over ethnic, religious and social differences. Sm J Migren UT empieyee Monday, July 16, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page BTi Police seek rape suspect Group wants disciplinary action By JOE TEDINO Daily Texan Staff A U niversity w om en's group has criticized w hat it calls the U niversity’s lack of action in a case involving a t lea st three m em bers of Kappa Sigma fra te rn ity in the alleged ra p e of an 18-year-old D allas woman. Austin police a re seeking a fourth suspect in the case, and in­ vestigators said Sunday they a re not com pletely sure of his identity. However, police expect to apprehend the man before all four suspects a re arraigned in approxim ately 90 days, said Austin Police D epartm ent Sgt. John R ussell. DR. DAVID H. McClintock, a ssista n t dean of students, said Monday his office was not taking p a rt in the investigation of the case and no violation of U niversity policy had occurred. Although the offense reportedly occurred a t the Kappa Sigm a house, McClintock said, “ I am not a w a re of any rules the f ra te r­ nity, as a cam pus organization, m ay have violated. It a p p a re n t­ ly did not involve an organizational a c tiv ity ,” he said. taken against the fra te rn ity in the Kappa Sigm a case. K athryn Korniloff, spokesw om an for the cen ter, said the group w ants the U niversity or the fra te rn ity to take action against the th ree m em b ers involved in the case. The group ask ­ ed th at action sim ilar to th at taken in the ATO ca se be taken in the Kappa Sigma case. MCCLINTOCK POINTED out th a t U niversity rules do not provide for such action. “ It is hard for m e to conclude that w hat m ay have happened was an organizational violation. It w as ra th e r an individual violation. T here is no ap paren t violation of the U n iv ersity’s rules for o rg a n iz a tio n s /’ M cClintock said. Korniloff said her group thinks the U niversity has a respon­ sibility to the students to take disciplinary action against the fraternity. “ We feel th at Kappa Sigma should be punished for the actions of its m em bers. It seem s th at ATO w as only disciplined because it w as a m an instead of a w om an,” K orniloff said. Korniloff said the U niversity’s failu re to tak e action against the fra te rn ity is seen by the group as condoning rape. The U niversity W om en's C enter, how ever, thinks the U niver­ “ T heir silence has condoned the (alleged) ra p e ,” Korniloff sity should take ad m inistrative action against the fra te rn ity . said. M em bers of the cen ter m et w ith McClintock T hursday to ex­ press th e ir opinions. CITING THE 1978 Alpha Tau O m ega case involving the alleg­ ed sexual assau lt of a m ale freshm an, m em b ers of the c e n te r told McClintock the U niversity is being capricious in its involve­ m ent in the two cases. In the ATO case the fra te rn ity w as heavily criticized, te m ­ porarily suspended by the U niversity and placed on term in al probation by ATO national head q u arters. No action has been McClintock said the ATO case involved an organizational event, pledge week, and th erefo re any m isconduct by any m em bers w as a violation of UT rules. If investigation by his office indicates a violation of U niversi­ ty rules, individual disciplinary action will be taken, he said. “ The U niversity does not condone rape or any violation of the law. There is a feeling of outrage tow ards a ssa u lt or violence tow ard all people. The U niversity will not h e sita te to pursue a c ­ tion against guilty individuals,” McClintock said. Four falcons cause fury in capital WASHINGTON (U P I) — Four baby peregrine falcons have stirre d up quite a public reaction from th eir perch on the In te rio r D ep artm en t roof. Pigeon lovers, am ong others, a re furious. “ People thought th a t when we opened the cage, the falcons would burst out a t 200 m ph and grab a pigeon in each claw, dripping blood over governm ent w orkers eating lunch in downtown W ashington,” said falconer Tom Allen. In reality, Allen said, “ T h e re ’s no way the falcons can m ake any kind of dent in a c ity ’s pigeon population.” The governm ent, aided by a p riv ate w ildlife fund, is trying to re ­ establish the endangered peregrin e species in W ashington and other E a st Coast cities over the next 15 y ears. Transportation Enterprises Inc. shuttle buses. Terry Gregston, Dally Texan Staff New University shuttle buses reduce chances of leg cramps C h a n c e s of d e v e lo p in g n a u s e a , deafness or leg cram ps by regularly riding U niversity shuttle buses a re decreasing as old vehicles a re g rad u al­ ly replaced. A pproxim ately 15 im proved buses a re now in service, said Ja m e s Wilson, the vice president for assistant business a ffa irs and spokesm an for the UT shuttle bus service. to “ They a re m uch quieter, the seats a re m ore com fortable and th e re ’s a buzzer for ringing when getting off the bus,” he said. F o u r to fiv e b u s e s a r e b e in g transported weekly from Richm ond, Ind., and by the fall sem ester all 60 vehicles will be replaced. Wilson add­ ed tation E nterp rises Inc and the shuttle bus d rivers union signed in October. W alter D resslar, union president, said Sunday that the new buses now on cam pus w ere asigned to the E R . RC and IF routes. The buses this week will be assigned to the E R route. The new buses a re assig n e d to to s e n io r ity , T h e b u s r e p l a c e m e n t s w e r e stipulated in a co n tract th at T ran spor­ o p e r a to r s a c c o rd in g D resslar said Marchers protest U.S. actions Sandinista government advocated p re s e r v e th e N i c a r a g u a n national guard and Som oza's L ib eral P a r ty , in ­ suring the continued su ppres­ s i o n of t h e N i c a r a g u a n people,” V ittori said. th e re b y “ In effect, they w ant the sam e forces the co un try,” she said. “ The U.S. is not going to let (Somoza) su ffe r.” to control The Somoza fam ily owns one-third of the ara b le land — land able to produce food — and 26 of the larg est com ­ panies in N icaragua, V ittori said “THIS WAS able to happen because of support in dollars from the U .S.,” V ittori said. E m b ree predicted a San­ dinista victory is a t hand. “ I t’s ju st a m a tte r of tim e until Somoza is o u t,” she said. Evenings at Hillel M onday — Open House — 7-10 p.m. P in g Pong, Pool, M o n d a y N ig h t B ase b a ll Wednesday - Israeli Dancing - 8 Friday - Sabbath Services - 7:15 Hillel Campus Jewish Center k2 1 0 5 S a n A n to n io 4 7 6 - 0 125i By CLARA TUMA Daily Texan Staff The Sandinista provisional governm ent is the only viable f o r m of g o v e r n m e n t in N icaragua, a spokesw om an for the Austin C om m ittee for Human R ights in Chile said Sunday. Gail V ittori m arched with a re p o rte d 40 d e m o n s tra to rs F riday from the T exas Capitol to to the F ed eral Building protest U.S. intervention in N icaragua. The d em o n strato rs handed le a fle ts to b y s ta n d e rs and chanted, “ I t ’s all about U.S. out; i t ’s all about Somoza o ut.” “ We a d v o c a te th e se lf- o f d e t e r m i n a t i o n t h e N icaraguan people,” said Vit­ tori, a m em b er of the hum an rights com m ittee, which co­ sponsored the m arch with the Austin C om m ittee of Solidari­ ty with N icaragua and the El S a lv a d o r S o lid a rity C o m ­ m ittee. “ The only ap propriate role for the U.S. is to support the provisional governm ent by the Sandinistas and not to force ch anges,” said Alice E m bree, a m em b er of the hum an rights com m ittee. try Sandinista rebels a re engag­ ed in a revolt in N icaragua to overthrow the governm ent of P resid en t A nastasio Somoza D ebayle, whose fam ily has headed m ore than 40 years. the governm ent for s u p p o rts ALTHOUGH TH E U .S . g o v e rn m e n t th e resignation of Somoza, it does so only because it is no longer to support a m an feasible hated by the people, V ittori said. “ (Somoza) is so m uch an enem y of th e people. Too many people equate him with the en e m y ,” she said. She a c c u s e d th e U n ite d S t a t e s of a t t e m p t i n g to gu arantee Som oza’s p resence in s u re his long enough re p la c e m e n t w ith a group f a v o r a b l e t h e U n i t e d States. t o to “ The U.S. is atte m p tin g to i n f V HENNA SPECIAL $12-$l 7 478-4667 509 W. 24th % PHOTOGRAPHS G. AlEX McALMON TEXAS U N IO N JULY 16-27, W EEKD A YS 7 a.m.-12 p.m. Shoe Shop JÜUzi SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF Capitol Saddlery VISA* 1614 lavoco Austin, Texas 478-9309 PREREGISTRATION FOR FALL July 16 and 17 1. Pick up materials at the Academic Center. 2. See advisor for course approval. 3. Return preregistration materials to the Academic Center. Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. A photo ID will be required. 4. Pictures for ID cards will be taken at the Academic Center. 5. Bills will be mailed in late July. 6. IDs, parking permits and fee receipts will be sent to you by ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN mail. Office o f th e Registrar SAVE BUCKS ON BOOKS AT TEXAS TEXTBOOKS (BRING IN THESE COUPONS FOR VALUABLE DISCOUNTS) 1.00 OFF Brown Chemistry Cbem 301 & 302 Hrebiniak Complex Organizations BA 282S Bailard Personal Money Management 2nd ed. HI 322 Fraser College Algebra & Trig. Math 305G Thomas Calculus & Analytic Geometry Alternate ed. M 60818 ’2.00 OFF Kelly Biology BI0 301M Lipsey & Steiner Economics ICO 302 & 303 Johnson Management Systems & Society MANG 336 Buss Psychology 2nd ad. Psy 301 Wheelor Modern Math 2nd td. M 603A Summers Intro, to Accounting Decision Making & Control ACC 312 ’3.00 OFF O P E N 8 A M T O 10 P M M O N D A Y REG. H RS. 8 A M TO 6 P M V IS A & M A S T E R C H A R G E Adelstein Writing & Commitment E 300 Irmisher Holfguide E 307 FREE P A R K IN G 24th T E X A S T E X T B O O K S > r- m < u>> Z > ★ z o z 5 -4 TEXAS TEXTBOOKS, INC. 1 tf Floor Castilian Coi.ier of 24th & San Antonio St. 478-9833 BEAU TY B E C O M E S YOU w i t h i n d i i ¿ d u a l i ze d s k i n var.e b y E r n o L a s z l u No. 5 Jefferson Square call 452-8846 Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. July 16, 1979 Barrientos criticizes officials on bilingual attitudes By JOEL WILLIAMS daily Texan Staff M A M exican -A m erican le g is la to r F rid ay blasted Gov. Bill Clements and the governor’s appointee, Secretary of State George Strake, for their attitude toward bilingual Texans. Rep. Gonzalo Barrientos, D-Austin, said the State officials view the Spanish language as a 5 handicap to be overcom e and are responsible for the high degree of voter apathy in the Mexican ' American community. * “The reason so few vote is because too many politicians bombard the com m unity with 'patronizing slogans at campaign tim e, then forget us, or insult us once in o ffic e ,” Barrientos said. C le m e n ts u sed th e c a m p a ig n slo g a n , ’‘Estam os de acuerdo” (We are in agreem ent, we a re in accord.) while cam paigning in M ex­ ican A m erican areas. ‘E stam o s de acu erd o ’ in N ovem ber — ‘no recuerdo' (I do n't rem em b er ) the re st of the tim e ,” B arrientos said. B A R R IE N T O S ’ S T A T E M E N T S w e r e prom pted by S tra k e ’s call W ednesday for a “ serious, h onest” debate on bilingual education and bilingual voting. The legislator challenged the se c re ta ry of s ta te to deb ate “any tim e, any place. We will even deb ate Mr S trake in English, so he fully understands w hat we a re saying .” Strake said recently the sooner Mexican- A m ericans a ssim ila te into an English-speaking world, the b etter. B arrientos accused S trake of fostering a m en tality that is harm ful to the Mex­ ican A m erican com m unity. “ The sooner you get (M exican-A m ericans) into an English world, the b e tte r it will be for them , ' S trake said W ednesday. STRAKE WAS responding to a F ed eral E lec­ tion Commission rep o rt showing officials in ‘ . pol i t i ci ans b o m b a r d t h e c o m m u n i t y w i t h p a t r o n i z i n g sl ogans at c a m p a i g n t h e n forget us, or insult ... t i m e , m any a re a s of the s ta te did not com ply ad e­ quately with regulations for bilingual ballots Some officials, p a rtic u la rly in ru ral a re a s of West Texas, w ere openly hostile to the use of Spanish at the polls, according to the report. “ The reason is sim p le ,” B arrientos said. S tra k e ’s office supervises elections in Texas. T see a connection betw een the m en tality of sta te officials in the past 20 or 30 y ears and the local e le c tio n o f fic ia ls ,” a c tio n s of B arrientos said Sunday. “T heir inaction gains indirect support from sta te m e n ts such as those by S tra k e .” th e se B arriento s said som e local election officials responded, when asked if they com ply w ith guidelines for bilingual ballots, by saying, “ No we don t do that and w e’re not going to do it.” THE LEGISLATOR said the larg e Spanish­ speaking population in the s ta te is an asset, not a handicap. He said people who speak Spanish should learn to speak English, but people who speak E n g lish also should to sp eak Spanish. le a rn ‘Texas is a bilingual s ta te .-' Spanish-speaking citizens could help Texas and the United S tates a tta in b e tte r relations with Mexico and other Latin A m erican nations, he added. But this will be im possible, he continued, “ if we tre a t our own citizens who speak Spanish as if they have a te rrib le handicap. ’ “ The C lem ents adm inistration needs to learn that you do not score points with foreign officials when you cannot pronounce th eir n a m e s,” B arrientos said. “ They need to absorb the fact that if sim ple pronunciation ot a nam e like Portillo instead of Por-tilly-uh, is so difficult for them , then the problem s of Texans who speak only Spanish are ju st as great when they confront E nglish.” Remarks retracted Brown apologizes, cites ‘influence of anger’ T exas A griculture C om m issioner Reagan Brown apologized Friday for offensive racial com m ents he made after tem per during a meeting with a group of farm ers Tues­ day. losing his “ There are m ore niggers on a Houston street than there are farm ers in T exas,” Brown reportedly said. “ You didn’t put m e here and you can’t get m e out.” During the sam e se c r e tly taped meeting, Brown reportedly called Tex­ as Farm Bureau President Carroll G. Chaloupka “a goddamned Bohem ian.” Gov. Bill Clements said Friday he couldn’t believe Brown m ade such statem ents. “ I think he m ade a bad m ista k e ,” C lem ents said. “He had an a ttitu d e th at is contrary to the responsibilities of his office.” The nine fa rm e rs m et with Brown to a sk fo r h is e n d o r s e m e n t o f an A m e ric a n A g ric u ltu re M o v e m e n t proposal to establish a pro d u cers’ ad­ visory board. Brown, who does not support the ad ­ visory board proposal, reportedly lost his tem per. In the five-paragraph sta te m e n t of apology issued F riday, Brown accused the fa rm e rs of “ previously planned pressure and h arassm en t ta c tic s being employed to force m e to take actio n s which I did not consider to be in the best in terest of Texas a g ric u ltu re .” the “ U nder influence of illogical a n g e r,” the sta te m e n t continued, “ I said things for which I am deeply so rry and which do not in any way re p re se n t my tru e feelings about individuals or groups.” He said he would not discuss the ethics of the fa rm e rs secretly taping the m eeting. Brown acted surprised P’riday when told of the se c re t taping. The D allas M o rnin g N e w s, h o w e v e r, S u n d ay reported House Speaker Billy Clayton told Brown of the recording W ednes­ day. S ta te R ep. E l F r a n c o L e e , D- Houston. said Sunday B row n's com ­ m ents a re sim ilar to those of E a rl Butz, a g ric u ltu re s e c r e ta r y u nd er P resident G erald R. Ford. Lee, who has a 70 p ercen t black H ouston c o n stitu e n c y , said B row n should resign like Butz, who left office in 1976 soon a f t e r m a k in g so m e rem ark s about blacks. -JW 25 TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS’ I f WORTH FOR TWENTY-TWO FIFTY 10% O F F ALL FOOl) AND DRINK WHEN YOU PURC HASE TEXAS UNION FOOD COUPON BOOKS E»ch c o u p o n b o o k » «old for $2 2 50 a n d I* w o rth $ 2 5 00 in d ira c t e x c h an g e fo r all food and beverage* aerved a t Taxaa U nion F o o d Facilities, in clu d in g th aae in th e U nion B uilding, th e i.aw S c h o o l, G ra d u a te S ch o o l o f Buainaa*. and th e V a n ity C a fe te ria sESER1* " > l ¡ rl'_ v",itv Cafeteria. 3 at the Texas 25 rerry Gregston, Dally Texan Staff Opportunity for another chance... Don Wofford rolls the dice in the playoffs of a M onopoly tourna­ ment at the Austin Hilton Inn. The tournament raised money for Bryant House, a halfway home for delinquent teenagers. crepes L«*s A m i s S i d e w a l k C a f e 2 fth A San An t o n i o FREE IQ TEST THE AUSTIN TEST CENTRE offers for a limited time free intelligence and personality tests. Your IQ, personality and aptitude determine your future. Know . them. N o obligations. 2804 Rio Grande Austin, Texas S ponsored by th e A ustin Church o f S cien to log y Carter... (Continued from P age I.) congressmen calling it the best speech of his presidency. However, many of them had specific criticism of Carter’s ideas, or had ideas of their own that they plan to press, indicating that Carter’s program faces a long summer and fall of con­ gressional deliberations. The speech had been billed as “a turning point” for his faltering presidency, a gam ble that would turn his political fortunes around or bury him deeper under a backlash of public disappointment. It also had a personal, ironic edge for him, coming three years alm ost to the hour from his triumphant presidential n o m in a tio n s p e e c h to th e 1976 Democratic convention — and he used that fact to swing back into the type of stirring populist oratory he used then, but with hard-nosed toughness clearly intended to reinforce his tattered im ­ age as a forceful national leader. WITH ILL-CONCEALED distaste, he traced the roots of A m erica’s energy gluttony by saying, “ too many of us now tend to worship self-indulgence and consumption. Human identity is no longer defined by what one does, but by what one ow ns.” “We are at a turning point in our history,” he said. “There are two paths to choose. One is the path I have warn­ ed about tonight — the path that leads to fragm entation and self-in terest. Down that road lies a mistaken idea of freedom .” The right path, he said, is “ the path of common purpose and the restoration of our values. That path lies to true freedom .” In a voice that ranged from soft con­ ciliation to an alm ost angered shout, Carter said, “ I will lead ... I will a ct.” PRESS SECRETARY Jody Powell told reporters that the White House “Comments Office” received 85 per­ cent “favorable” telephone calls in the first half-hour after Carter’s speech. FREE G A S Six M onths Free G a s Beat the Big O il Ripoff with ,§a work machine”■ MOPED Get up to tSQ-phn per Gallon a fun machine‘ I COME SEE; The Sach. Moped 1 WEST GERMANY'S FINEST MOPED COME AND TEST DRIVE ONE. 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In this co u n ­ try, true professional skin care spec ialists are few and far bet ween Most of th e places that c a ll t h e m s e lv e s sk in c a r e salons are chains operated by people w ith tra g ic a lly little train in g or experience My salon is different. First o f all. I've had som e o f th e most exactin g skin care training in th e world, at the W arsaw Col­ lege of Skin Care and in Paris I’ve also had 23 years o f e x ­ perience, 13 o f them ir. Europe My talon featu res a highly per -onat. individualised approach app roved m eth od s and p ro­ ducts. Som e o f the products I use in sa lo n t r e a t m e n t s are a lso availab le for home application. They are th e sam e high quality as my services In fact, most of them are m anufactured in my own laboratory Most im portant o f all, my salon is a totally professional o p e r a tio n 1 e x a m in e e a c h patron's skin and determ ine the appropriate treatm ent, in­ c lu d in g p r o p e r h o m e c a re . If you are troubled with acne, blackheads, w rinkles or dry s k in — or if you simply w ant to protect your com plex ion against prem ature aging and dam age from the sun, call me for an appointm ent. The in itial consultation is free and without obligation , I m ake no elab orate prom ises, but I do assure you that your first treat- m e n t — a n d o n e t h e r e a f t e r — will br i ng i m m ediate, visible, lasting results. —Mnrw* Malina Pradzymki e v e r y I've tr a in e d my a s s is t a n t s carefully, and I supervise each treatm ent m yself, using scien lifically based, derm atologist EXPLORER II Women’s Lightweight Rugged and lightweight for women hikers and backpackers The Happy Hiker! The hiking boot made sp ecially for women. iue t£ e Moumíüím 6go¿¡ RED WING S H O E ST O R E H A LIN A 5401 ( lav Avenue EU RO PEAN SKIN CARE • lo c a t e d just oft Burnet Rood • SI 2 /4 3 2 - JSlH) Austin, Texas 5404 Bumat Rd. Ph. 454-9290 Open 9-4 Mon.-Fri. Sat. 9-5 VISA" Free Fountain Coke! ( f r e e co k e w ith a n y p iz z a ) I f y o u ' r e e v e r m the dark about w hich pizza place to call Rem em ber D o m in o ’s delivers co n tin u o u sly from 4-1 00 weekdays, and 4-2 00 w eekends We deliver ou r Pizza within thirty m inutes anyw here in our delivery area At D o m in o 's y o u get a Pizza covered with fresh ingredients, a thick french-bread-like crust, co m b ined with n ature's best buttery cheese Pizza and C oke* N o Joke, we II give you two c u p s of ice cold C o k e F R E E Just ask for your " N o Joke. Free C o k e " w hen y o u order your D o m in o s Pizza Free D elivery We accept checks for Pizza purchase with a valid Texas Driver's License We reserve the right to limit our delivery area Drivers only carry $20 cash Cam pus Guadalupe 476-7181 * 474 7676 * 447-6681 • 458 9101 Riverside Enftak) o z ^ J M Z Z O I D P I □ s By ROBERT KING Daily Texan Staff SAN ANGELO — It’s often said th at the interio r of a house — its decor and atm o sp h ere — is a reflec­ tion of the housew ife's personality. I t ’s certainly tru e of the decor of the free agent rookie Hoston O ilers' c a m p and its h o u s e w ife , Bum Phillips. to T h e ro o k ie s a n d fr e e a g e n ts reported the O ilers' sum m er tra in in g cam p a t Angelo S ta te U niversity in San Angelo on July 2 and have been involved in two-a-day workouts since July 4. The w orkouts culm inated Saturday night in a con­ trolled scrim m age. W ednesday night the O ilers travel to K ansas City to tak e on the C hiefs’ rookies in w hat will be th e ir m ost im portant outing before the O iler v eteran s a re scheduled to join the w orkouts Thursday. WHILE THE D allas Cowboys’ cam p in Thousand Oaks, C alif., is “ all business,” a reflection of the approach and m an n er of Coach Tom Landry, the O ilers cam p is cowboy hats, Lone S tar in the lounges and w hat one veteran of sev eral NFL training cam ps called the “ m ost laid back atm osphere in the p ro s.” T raditionally rookies a re expected to keep low profiles and m aintain stoic behavior — b e tte r seen than heard until you m ake the ro ster. But the Oilers have been molded in the Bum Philips approach which is “ to stay loose.” “ T here is enough p re ssu re on these boys,” Phillips said. “ They know they a re going to get th eir sh o t.” COMING OFF a season when they fell ju st one gam e sh o rt of the Super Bowl, the O ilers a re now one of the m ore solid franchises in the N FL. As opposed to p ast train ing cam p s, w h en th e c o a c h in g s t a f f w a s searching for an e n tire offensive line or five or six running backs, the concentration in^this y e a r’s cam p is third q u a rte rb a ck on solving situation and finding som e good specialty team players. the More than 8,000 fans showed up for the rookie-free a gent sc rim m ag e last year. But the stands w ere only p artly filled Saturday night, the a n ­ nouncer estim ated 3.000. As one fan was overheard explaining to his wife, “ it’s because of the energy shortage, there is no EC this y e a r.” Not only was th e re no EC, E a rl C am pbell, th ere w ere few “ nam e p lay ers” the public’s a tte n tio n . V e te ra n q u a rte rb a c k s to a ttr a c t SPORTS THE DAILY TEXAN Monday, July 16, 1979 Page 7 Oilers’ camp reflects Bum’s touch G if f o r d N e ils e n a n d T o m m y Duniven reported to cam p early, aw are that the O iler caoches had stated over the w inter that they w ere interested in stabilizing the backup quarterback situation they from recieve Nielsen and Duniven m ay find the attention the coaches shortened even before s ta r­ ting q u a rte rb a c k Dan P a sto rim rep orts to cam p Both Nielsen, who had seven c o m p letio n s in eight a ttem p ts, and Duniven, who w as five for nine, w ere overshadow ed in th e s c r im m a g e by c o n v e r te d quarterback Guido M erkens. M erkens is a second-year pro from Sam Houston State who was listed as a wide reciever and defen­ sive back for the O ilers last y e a r but w as featured m ostly on the special­ ty team s. “ WITH THE ra te of injuries and the lim ited ro ste rs it is hard to c a rry three q u a rte rb a ck s,’’ Philips said. “ If Guido can do the job it will allow us a little m ore flexibility. He did a darn good job in there to judge “ I t’s really hard in­ dividuals right now .” Phillips said. “ HELL, EVEN Cam pbell didn’t look too good last year until the C ow boy e x h ib itio n . Two fo rm e r T e x a s L onghorn lin e b a c k e r n e m e s e s , O k lah o m a Daryl Hunt and running back Kenny King, have draw n high praise from the Oiler coaches as have offensive lin e m a n Jo h n S c h u m a c h e r and Wesley Phillips. Houston’s top d raft choice, two- tim e all-Big Eight defensive end Mike Stensrud. was a hold-out for the first 10 days of the cam p. The 6-5 the O ilers Stensrud signed with T h u r s d a y a n d d e s p i t e b e i n g overweight and out of condition he im p re s s e d his c o a c h e s d ur i ng workouts Friday and the scrim m age Saturday night. The best com petition m ay h a w occured a fte r the gam e as the m a­ jority of the players w ere standing on the stre e t outside the stadiurp, equipm ent in hand, trying to hitcto rides back to their d orm itories. t But Phillips didn’t have any trou­ ble getting back to the dorm. Fiye m inutes a fte r the gam e he w as back in his room, where he had been *11 day, playing dominoes and drinking beer with old friends. How ever, he graciously stopped the gam e whdn reporters arrived for som e post­ gam e analysis. “ Darn, I wish you boys had com e earlier when I was losing,’’ Phillips the w riters. “ I ’m on a hot told streak now The head Oiler turned to one of his assistant coaches an(l added. “ We’ve got to get this timing down Remind me to work on it next w eek.’’ America’s Melanie Smith clears a hurdle. —UPI Telephoto Riding ends Games U.S. takes SAN JUAN, P u erto Rico (U P I) — The 1979 P an A m erican G am es ended Sunday ju st like they had sta rte d two w eeks e a rlie r — with the United S tates winning a gold m edal. The last U.S. gold m edal cam e in the in­ dividual grand prix show jum ping equestrian event, raising its total to 126. M ichael M atz, 28, a farm forem an from Plym outh M eeting, P a., riding J e t Run, plac­ ed first in the jum p with two flaw less rounds p ast 12 obstacles, including a trip le jum p, a double, a w all and a pool of w ater. T H E S IL V E R M E D A L in th e ju m p , traditionally the la st event a t O lym pics and Pan A m erican G am es, w ent to G erarado T azzer of M exico on Butch Cassidy w ith eight penalty points The bronze m edal w ent to Ian M illar of Canada on B rother Sam. I m m e d i a t e l y t h e h o r s e jum ping event, the 34 nations particip atin g in f o llo w in g Final medal standings ................................... United States C u b a ................................................... C anada............................................... Argentina ........................................... Brazil................................................... M exico............................................... Puerto Rico ....................................... C h ile ................................................... Venezuela ......................................... Dominican Republic......................... Jamaica ............................................. Guyana............................................... Panama ......................................... Bahamas ........................................... Peru ................................................... Colom bia........................................... Ecuador............................................. Dutch Antilles..................................... ....................................... El Salvador Belize ............................................... Virgin Islands..................................... Q 126 64 24 12 9 3 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 B T o t 94 44 264 37 45 146 42 71 137 35 40 38 21 11 10 14 5 3 3 1 3 9 2 1 1 1 1 7 16 13 18 6 29 9 10 4 6 4 5 5 9 1 4 1 2 2 1 1 0 1 2 1 8 0 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 last of gold the G am es m arched down the field a t the H iram Bithorn baseball stadium one m ore tim e for an em otional “ adios” to P u erto Rico in the closing cerem onies to extinguish the Pan A m erican flam e. It will be lit again in C aracas, Venezuela in 1983. Matz' feat closed out a sterlin g p erfo r­ m ance by A m erica’s athletes ag ain st the best of the re st of the W estern H em isphere. WITH TWO new sports — softball and rollerskating — added to this y e a r’s schedule, th e A m e ric a n s n o ta b ly th e ir m edals conquest com pared w ith four y ears ago. when they won 115 golds, 83 silvers and 47 bronzes for a total of 245. in c re a s e d The second-place Cubans also increased their achievem ents from 56 golds, 45 silvers and 34 bronzes — a total of 135 — in 1975 to this year s 64 golds, 37 silvers and 45 bronzes for a total of 146. But the Cuban C om m unist school of produc­ ing ath letes no longer seem s to be gaining on the United S tates and som e of th eir older s ta rs a re fading with no one com ing on the scene to take th eir place. World record holder A lejandro C asanas of Cuba suffered two defeats — in the 110 m e te r hurdles to M aryland U niversity sensation Renaldo N ehem iah and in the 4 x 100 m e te r relays. Cuba also suffered th re e defections during the gam es — a tennis player, a soccer re fe re e and an equestrian coach — m arkin g the first tim e five y ears Cuban a th le te s have defected during sp orts events. in ’ LATE REGISTRATION ALL STUDENTS WILL BE ASSESSED A *1 5 .0 0 LATE FEE 1. P ick up a Dean's Card and R e gistra tion P e rm it at the ACADEMIC CENTER 8 a.m . to 5 p.m. J u ly 16 and 17. 2. See ACADEMIC ADVISOR fo r signed a p p ro va l of courses. 3. O btain PUNCHED CLASS CARDS fro m d e p a rtm e n ts in w hich you take courses. 4. R eturn Dean's Card, R e gistra tion P e r m it and Class Cards to M a in B u ild in g 16 before 5:00 p.m . J u ly 17. 5. STUDENTS WHO LATE REGISTER MAY NOT PARTICIPATE IN DEPARTMENTAL DROP/ADDS. Office o f the Registrar Tim Wentworth, Dally Texan Staff Ex-Texas Tech quarterback Tommy Duniven sets up for a pass. Ü FOOTGEAR’S SUMMER SALE A WHEEL OF A DEAL! SA V IN G S U P TO 75% OFF Boots ............................. 10% off Clogs ...................15% to 25% off Sandals ..............10% to 75% off S h o e s.................... 15% to 75% off j» . . . f ^ FOOTGEAR Drag Geared to Comfort and Q uality V - V \_ \ - \ - A - A - V - V- V- \_ v - V . Y - V - V-u. A . A . V \ - Y . X . Y. V V A "W HY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Psalms 2:1 and A cts 4:25 Th# answer to this quaatlon which Is the opening words of tha 2nd Psalm of tha Blbla, God Almighty’s Ravalatlon of Hlmsalf to man, Is found In tha words Immediately after the question: They rage to gat rid of God’s Commandments and orders given to tha creatures of the Creator for their own good, profit, protection, benefit and blessing: BLESSED IS THE MAN THAT WALKETH NOT IN THE COUNSEL OF IN THE WAY OF THE UNGODLY, NOR STANDETH IN THE SEAT OF THE SINNERS. NOR SITTETH SCORNFUL. BUT HIS DELIGHT IS IN THE LAW OF THE LORD: AND IN HIS LAW DOTH HE MEDITATE DAY AND NIGHT. AND HE SHALL BE LIKE A TREE PLANTED BY THE RIVERS OF WATER . . . 1st Psalm. There are places In the Bible where God says of some of His people they were worse than the heathen. Maybe that time is here now! Whose fault Is It If we are not “that blessed people whose God Is the Lord?” What is your personal attitude and actions regarding God's Commandments and orders to man? God has condensed His orders and Commandments Into what at times Is called T h e Ten Words.” They were written “with the finger of God” on two tables of stones. God made Himself to be His own messenger to deliver them to mankind. Nearly four thousand years ago He came down from Heaven upon Mount Sinai, where several million men, women and children were gathered before the Mount. They beheld, and they heard as the mountain trembled and rocked with earth­ quake, cyclones, furious storms, all being enveloped in a great and terrible fire. When the noise and fury of the scene quieted, they heard the voice of God speaking out of the midst of the fire His Ten Words which He had written with His finger on two tables of stones, latter given to Moses. God wrote, God spoke these words audibly to several million men, women and children, and afterwards delivered the tables of stone to Moses. Nearly 2,000 years after Slnal, God came again to the earth In Christ Jesus, who was bom of a virgin without human father. In fulfilling His ministry, In the 16th chapter of Luke s Gospel, Christ revealed the flight of a human soul after death Into hell fire! When this soul found there was no way out he entreated heaven to send to the earth and warn his five brothers least they also come in his abode In torment. The answer came back, T h e y have Moses and the prophets; let them hear th em . . . If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the deadl Christ arose from the dead on the third day for the the salvation of His people— praise God! Moses and prophets are the schoolmaster to bring us to Christ. The right use and faith concerning the Ten Words will bring the soul to Christ and His Salvation. You folks, and even denominations, who neglect or reject God’s Ten Words, but talk much about the reeurectlon and New Testament would do well to meditate day and night on these words to Christ: “If they believe not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead.” P. O BOX 405 DECATUR. GEORGIA 30031 LIBERTY IS HERE DAY IN/DAY OUT “ Liberty 1 is new freedom for Credit Union savers. Money in a Liberty Account earns dividends from the day of deposit to the day of withdrawal Withdrawals may be made anytime without penalty. Declare your independence with a Liberty Account available now at your Credit Union. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ M t l f I V * UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION 476-4676 * NCUA West 30th and Cedar Streets Serving University faculty and staff. Cardinals pop Astros; Royals edge Rangers Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, July 16, 1979 to Jerry eighth on a walk to Jerry American League West, have eighth on a walk American League West, have Mumphrey and a double by won just two of their last 16 Hernandez off J. R Richard, games and are 44-47 on the 7-10. The Astros had a chance year in the sixth when singles by Richard. Terry Puhl, and a walk to Cruz loaded the bases with two out. Fulgham retired Enos Cabell on a liner to first to end the threat. Paul Splittorff, 10-8, allowed only five hits, including solo homers by Bump Wills, Buddy Bell, and Jim Sundberg. Todd C’ruz knocked in the other two Kansas City runs in the fifth w ith a do uble follow ing singles by John Wathan and Willie Wilson. ★ ★ ★ By United P r e s s International ed P r e s s Internationa! HOUSTON - John Fulgham pitched a five-hitter and Terry Kennedy, Mike Phillips and in Keith Hernandez drove runs Sunday, helping the St. Louis Cardinals score a 3-1 victory over the H ouston Astros. Fulgham, a rookie right­ hander making his sixth start of the season, improved his record to 3-2. He struck out six and yielded Jose Cruz’s solo homer in the ninth in handing the Astros their eighth loss in the last nine games. Kennedy had the gam e- winning RBI for the fourth time in the 19 games he has played with a second-inning fielder’s choice grounder that scored Hernandez. A walk to Hernandez and a single to left by Dane Iorg set up the run The Cardinals added a run in th e on K en O berkfell s double and a single by Phillips s e v e n t h St. Louis sco red in the " 11 " ——... Standings in KANSAS CITY - George Scott doubled in one run and in D arrell P o rter singled another the sixth inning Sunday to enable the Kansas City Royals to snap a seven- game losing streak with a 4-3 th e T e x a s v ic to r y o v e r Rangers. Amos Otis drew a one-out walk in the sixth off loser John Henry Johnson, 4-10, and Scott doubled him home to snap a 2- 2 tie. After Cowens singled Scott to third. Porter singled home what proved to be the winning run. The R oyals, th re e -tim e defending champions in the A M E R IC A N L E A G U E N A T IO N A L L E A G U E • r United M m intem rttemrf Ewl M Balttm ors Boston Milwaukee W L Pet 856 59 31 636 32 56 587 32 54 533 43 49 500 Detroit................... 45 45 /n Cleveland.............. 42 48 ,467 I# Toronto................. 29 64 .312 311* 2 6 11 14 17 %-klew York Weal W L Pot í ! » California............... 55 38 .591 52 39 .571 41 539 Mmneeota.............. 48 {e‘ Texee ................ . M neaeClty 44 47 .464 451 , 41 50 jj^ Chicago an 2 5 10 13 15V* 30 V* AT Seattle................... 40 54 426 69 266 5 Oakland 25 •wnday'e Reeuita Mmneeota 9. Toronto 4 Detroit 14, Chicago 5 Milwaukee 10, Cleveland 4 Kansas City 4, Texas 3 California 5, New York 4 Boston 3, Oakland 2 Baltimore 8, Seattle 1 Pot 588 553 549 541 512 430 Pet. .574 .516 484 448 429 387 QB 3 3 4 ev* 13V* OB 5V* BV* 12 13V* 17V* Iky United Preee International Beat W L M ontreal................ 50 35 47 38 Chicago Philadelphia 50 41 Pittsburgh 46 39 44 42 St Louis New York ... 37 49 Houston ..... Cincinnati San Francisco Sen Diego Atlanta Los Angeles West L W 54 40 48 45 45 48 43 53 39 52 36 57 Sunday's Results Philadelphia 10, Los Angeles 3 Montreal 4, San Diego 0 San Francisco 4. New York 0 Cincinnati 7, Chicago 1 St. Louis 3, Houston 1 Pittsburgh 7, Atlanta 3 Reds 7, Cubs 1 C IN C IN N A T I - D av e Concepcion singled, homered and drove in four runs Sunday, helping Tom Seaver win his seventh game in a row when the Cincinnati Reds scored a 7-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs. The victory was the ninth against five losses for Seaver, who struck out seven, walked three and gave up five hits before Doug Bair relieved in the ninth innning. Rookie H a rry S pillm an singled home one run and Ray Knight doubled hom e two more off loser Rick Reuschel, 8-6, in the first. A walk and an e r r o r by T ed S iz e m o re preceded Concepcion’s ninth homer as the Reds took a 6-1 lead in the fourth. Ken Griffey came home on Concepcion’s sacrifice fly in the sixth for the Reds’ final run. K n ig h t’s e r ro r on Ivan DeJesus’ grounder, a single by Ken Henderson and Jerry M artin’s fielder’s choice gave the Cubs their only run in the first inning. Angels 5, Yankees 4 ANAHEIM, Calif. - Bobby Grich — who drove in all five California runs — reached Ron Guidry for a two-out, two- run homer in the bottom of the inning Sunday, giving ninth Tonight ALVIN CROW Longest Happy Hour in Town Double Shots — 2 for 1 — 11 am-8 pm NEVER A COVER CHARGE PUT IT BLHIND YOU the Angels a 5-4 victory over the Angels a 5-4 victory over the New York Yankees and a sweep of their three-game series. Guidry, 6-7, had struggled into the ninth with a 4-3 lead, but Tom Donahue drew a one- out walk and one out later, Grich hit a 1-0 pitch over the right field wall for his 19th home run of the season. Reliever Jim Barr, who pitch­ ed three perfect innings, up­ ped his record to 7-4. Chris Chambliss followed Thurman Munson’s one-out single in the first inning with his third homer in two games. Then Jim Spencer lashed his ninth hom er with G raig Nettles aboard on a single to open the second. Grich singled in a California run in the third and doubled in two in the seventh. Expos 4, Padres 0 MONTREAL - Ellis Valen­ tine cracked a two-run homer and Andre Dawson added a pair of solo shots Sunday to back the combined five-hit pitching of Scott Sanderson and Elias Sosa and lead the Montreal Expos to a 4-0 triumph over the San Diego Padres. The Expos took a 2-0 lead in the fourth inning when Gary Carter hit a two-out single and Valentine followed with his 12th homer, a shot over the center field wall. Dawson hit his first homer of the game in the sixth inning off loser John D’Acquisto, 6-6, and added his 16th home run in the eighth off Rollie Fingers. Sanderson, 6-5, pitched the first five innings for the win, but was forced out of the game while he was batting in the fifth. He was hit on the right hand on a foul ball play and was taken to the hospital for x-rays on the index finger of his pitching hand. Tigers 14, White Sox 5 CHICAGO — Steve Kemp stroked five hits to raise his average to .326 and Lance Parrish added four hits to lead a 20-hit assault Sunday and power the Detroit Tigers to a 14-5 rout of the Chicago White Sox. Detroit took a 4-0 lead in the fourth when Lou Whitaker’s RBI sin g le knocked out former University of Texas pitcher Richard Wortham, 9- 9. K e m p ’s s i n g l e and Parrish’s double accounted for two more runs. In the sixth, the Tigers sent 11 men to the plate, scoring six times. Kemp had two singles in the inning and an RBI, Whitaker a two-run single and Tom Brookens, Alan Trammell and Jason Thompson an RBI each. Giants 4, Mets 0 NEW YORK - Mike Ivie BOOK./ i! BIKE./ DAY PACKS WHOLE. 2410 5AN A N T O N IO 5T. 478-1577 1715 GUADALUPE 5400 BURNET RD. FEATURING OUR NEW DRIVE-IN WINDOW 4411 S. LAMAR i n 2 M y s WITH CHEESE $J8 5 HOT ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES 79 | M f t I I ( good for 6 ta n d w k h m ) I hot roast beef sliced wafer thin piled high on II an oven fresh sesame seed bun j g expires Aug. 5, 1979 1 MOO AT A ll AUSTIN AMY'S. ■ | ( good tot 6 tan dw kh m ) tender roast beef sliced wafer thin piled high on an oven fresh sesame seed bun with a slice of Kraft cheese. expires Aug. 5, 1979 I I I I I I I I I III j .J H —UP! Telephoto St. Louis’ Ken Oberkfell scores as Houston’s Alan Ashby waits for throw. drove in two runs with a homer and a double and three San Francisco pitchers com­ bined on a shutout Sunday, enabling the Giants to snap New York’s five-game win­ ning streak with a 4-0 victory over the M'ets. San Francisco forged ahead in the first against starter Craig Swan, 8-8. Bill North singled, stole second, went to th ird when c a tc h e r John Stearns threw the ball into center field, then scored on a s a c r if ic e fly by D a r r e ll Evans. In the third, Evans walked and Ivie doubled him home. In the sixth, Marc Hill hit his third home run of the season. Ivie hit his 13th homer in the eighth, giving the Giants their fourth run. Ed Whitson, 3-4, pitched into the sixth, giving up three hits while walking four and striking out none. Phil Nastu relieved after Lee Mazzilli opened the sixth with a walk and got Richie Hebner on a fly ball. Steve Henderson singled, but Nastu struck out Willie Montanez. Pedro Borbon then came in to strike out Stearns. Brewers 10, Indians 4 M I L W A U K E E - B e n •Oglivie capped a seven-run se­ cond inning with a two-run double Sunday to back Larry the Sorensen and en ab le * Milwaukee Brewers to record their fifth straight victory, a 10-4 d e c i s i o n o v e r t h e Cleveland Indians. The f i r s t t wo r uns off S o ren se n , 11-9, c a m e on homers by Del Alston in the third and Andre Thornton in the fourth. Sorensen walked two and struck out one and was replaced by Bob Galasso to open the ninth. In the second. Oglivie walk­ ed and Lem Barker, 0-3, hit Sixto Lezcano with a pitch. After Sal Bando and Robin Yount tripled back-to-back for three runs, Buck Martinez doubled in Yount and moved to third on Jim G antner’s single. Phillies 10, Dodgers 3 PHILADELPHIA - Bob Boone went 4-for-4 and keyed an eight-run third inning with tw o-run single Sunday, a c a rry in g the P h ilad elp h ia Phillies to a 10-3 romp over the Los Angeles Dodgers and a sweep of their three-game series. The Phillies sent 12 men to the plate in the third, taking advantage of wildness by los­ ing pitcher Bob Welch, 4-6. A fter yielding a single to winner Randy Lerch, 5-8, Welch walked Bake McBride, Larry Bowa and Pete Rose to force in a run. Boone then singled home McBride and Bowa, knocking out Welch and sending the Dodgers to their fifth straight loss. Del Unser then doubled off reliever Jerry Reuss to score Rose and Boone. After a walk to Greg Gross, Manny Trillo si ngl ed h o me Un s e r and Gross. Trillo scored when Reuss threw Lerch’s sacrifice bunt into right field for an error. Twins 9, Blue Jays 4 T O R O N T O - D a v e Edwards belted his first grand slam. Butch Wynegar sm ash­ ed a solo homer and John Castino drove in three runs Sunday to back the combined eight-hit pitching of Geoff Zahn and Mike Marshall and lead the Minnesota Twins to a 9-4 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays. in Wth Minnesota trailing 2-1 the third inning. Glenn f i f t h , A d a m s , Wynegar and Jackson drew walks followed by Edw ards’ th e In to reliever grounder back B alor M oore, who forced Adams at the plate. Castino then doubled to center, driv­ ing in all three runs. Wynegar belted his sixth homer of the season in the seventh for the final Twins run. Pirates 7, Braves 3 ATLANTA — Willie Stargell and Bill Robinson hammered back-to-back homers in the sixth inning Sunday night to power the Pittsburgh P irates to a 7-3 victory over the Atlan­ ta Braves. Red Sox 3, A’s 2 OAKLAND — Jim Essian, D a v e C h a l k a n d M i k e Edwards committed defen­ sive blunders in the ninth in­ ning Sunday, allowing the Boston Red Sox to score two runs without getting the ball out of the infield for a 3-2 vic­ tory over the Oakland A s. Orioles 6, Mariners 1 SEATTLE — Ken Singleton drove in three runs with a homer and double and Dennis Martinez pitched a four-hitter Sunday, leading the Baltimore Orioles to a 6-1 victory over the Seattle Mariners. John B a rry W illiam s, D.D.S., Inc. announces the association of J O S E P H H. EAAAAERT, D.D.S. In the Practice of General Dentistry 4213 Burnet Rd. B y A ppointm ent O nly 454-9691 24 Hour A n sw e rin g Service (fi& W $ tf. THE ABBEY ' BEER NOTICE TO NON-U.S. CITIZEN STUDENTS AND FACULTY the Im m igratio n and N aturalization Service. If you# desire more information, contact Paul Parsons, At-J ♦ torney at Law, at 477-7887. ♦ J M e m b e r A sso cia tio n of Im m ig r a t i o n and N a tion ality L a w y e r s BU R G E R S S / / \ A casual atm osphere just right for socializing over your favorite tap beer and the best char-broiled burgers in town. The A BBE Y h as darts, shuffleboard, foosball, and the latest in electronic gam es. ♦ _ i 2 1 0 0 B E. R IV E R S ID E D R IV E 4 4 2 -9 9 6 7 STUDENTS The fo llo w in g is an e x c e rp t fro m The U n iv e rsity of T exas a t A u s tin 1978-79 G eneral In fo rm a tio n B u lletin : Sec. 9-201 1. "Directory Inform ation" it defined o* a student's name, local and permanent address, telephone listing, date and place of birth, major field of *tudy, participation in officially recognised activities and iports, w eight and height if a member of an athletic team, dates of attendance degrees, aw a rd s and honors received and the meet recent previous educational institution attended. 2. Directory Information is public information and will be m ade available to the public except as noted in Sec 9-201 (3). 3 A currently enrolled student m ay request that all Directory Information not be made public by com­ pleting in person on appropriate request (Reg. form 507) in the Office of the Registrar no earlier than the first day of class and no later than the twelfth day of class in a semester or fourth class day in a summer session. This request will remain in effect for the duration of the semester or the summer ses- s»on In the event of such a request, these data will be treated as Student Records Information. Sec 9- 202 (1) (a); and in response to public inquiries, the University will verify only whether an individual is currently enrolled at the University. — OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR — 3 A i < 3 G t r E Q S W O L L S N O W THREE L O C A T IO N S C e-O p /G u ad alu p e 2 1 st and L ittlefield Fountain 11224 M iddle Fiskville Rd. (IH 35 and Broker Lane) H om e m ad e S a igo n E g g Rolls have been the best selling E g g Roll in Austin since 1976. In order to sh ow our appreciation to our patrons a n d to satisfy the g ro w in g customer dem an ds, w e are ex p a n d in g our business. At our n ew location, w e are receiving phone orders a n d offering carry-out foods at prices everyone can afford. Telephone orders accepted from 8 a.m . to 8 p.m M o n d a y through Saturday. Large E g g Roll ...................50* M a i Tran — O w n e r V egetarian E gg R o ll ............ 5 0 ‘ phone 836 -02 79 Fried W on Ton ............... 2 / 2 5 ‘ 11224 M id d le Fiskville Rd. A n order of $40 or more delivered free of charge. Monday, July 16, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 9 Sports Shorts By United Presa International Oriole bid faltering BALTIMORE - An effort by 32 Baltimore investors to purchase the Baltimore Orioles from owner Jerold Hoffeberger is dis­ integrating and near collapse, the Baltimore News American reported Sunday. The newspaper reported several of the potential investors are frustrated by lengthy delays caused by the inability to raise the $12 million Hoffberger wants for the team. Some investors are simply no longer in­ terested in owning a major-league baseball team while others are unhappy with reports of a possible joint Washington-Baltimore franchise, the newspaper quoted sources as saying. The group was organized by banker W. Wallace Lanahan in an effort to keep the team in Baltimore. Alzado to select career DENVER — Denver defensive end Lyle Alzado, who lasted eight rounds «with a somewhat merciful Muhammad Ali Satur­ day, says he’ll decide Monday or Tuesday if he will leave football to seek a career as a professional boxer. Alzado, an all-AFC lineman, said after the fight Saturday he would report to camp this week along with other Broncos’ veterans, but he has not yet signed a contract for the 1979 season. Alzado won 44 fights as an amateur before devoting his time to football. Ali said he believed Alzado’s greatest strengths in their Saturday exhibition bout were his defense and his sense of judgment. “He’s not easy to hit, and you can’t ]ab him,” said the former World Boxing Associa­ tion heavyweight champion. “He’s got the potential to be a great fighter.” Canadian athlete injured PONCE, Puerto Rico — A Canadian yachtsman in the Pan American Games was seriously injured in a car accident early Sun­ day, apparently because he was riding in a car with his legs sticking out of the window. Puerto Rican police identified the athlete as Eddy Martin, 21, of Montreal, who had just finished fourth in the Laser class of the Pan American yachting competition. The sailor suffered fractures in both legs and in the left foot and was taken to the Damas Hospital in Ponce, where he un­ derwent an emergency operation. The police report said Martin, who was the only person injured in the crash, was travel­ ing with his legs outside the car. Police said they took blood-alcohol samples on both drivers but the tests turned out negative. Vilas wants im provem ent WASHINGTON — Guillermo Vilas of Argentina has not had much success in his last two tournaments, but he’ll have a chance to shake his slump in a $175,000 stop on the men’s professional tour in the nation’s capital. Vilas, who lost in the second round at Wimbledon and in the first round at a tourna­ ment in Gstaad, Switzerland, has been made the top seed in the tournament, which begins Monday. ★ FOR ENTIRE MENU REFER TO THE STUDENT DIRECTORY “ I I Birgers « 3 ^ Super-Bert 9 w / t h e * s * FOR 1.99 Save 59* COUPON REDEEMED IN STORE ONLY (U T Area O nly) Special void on deliveries free DELIVERY EXP IR ES 7-30-79 10:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Daily • 3303 N. Lamar • 452-2317 Taste Alternative Dobie Mall , Featuring Dannon Yogurt Strawberry • Banana I ! Johnston Yogurt i i -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1 The “Alternatives” Chocolate • French Vanilla W« offer a variety of good feeds: Quiches • Shrimp A Egg Salad Sandwiches • Vegetarian Sandwiches • Homemade Breads i Cakes Soup • Salad • Smoothies • Yogurt Shakes • Natural Juice Bar • Bagels * 9 • QUICHES • CAKES & BREADS TO ORDER • LOWEST PRICES IN AUSTIN • 2 ^O An Alternative to the other* on the second level — right across from Ginny's 9-9 Mon.-Fri. 10:30-9 Scrt. A N N O U N C I N G HIGH R I S E SIZE ! I I I I I I I I I I Calvin Peete celebrates after sink­ ing a birdie putt. —UPI Telephoto Peete’s record score leads to first tour win FRANKLIN, Wis. (UPI) — Calvin Peete, a former clothes salesman who didn't touch a golf club until he was 23, shot a final round 65, seven under par, and pulled away to a five-stroke victory Sunday in the $200,000 Greater Milwaukee Open. Peete, who had just one bogey in four days, set a meet record of 269, 19 under par, on the 7,010 yard Tuckaway Country Club course. It was his first victory in four years on the tour. Vic Regalado, who had shared the third round lead with Ed Dougherty, bogeyed the final hole for a 71 and finished in a tie for second with Lee Trevino and Jim Simons at 14 under. Trevino, troubled by three bogeys on the front nine, shot a 70 and Simons a 67 in sweltering 90 degree weather. DOUGHERTY, plagued by a cold putter, failed to mount a charge and shot a 70 to tie John Lister for fifth at 275, 13 under. “Putting definitely was the key,” said Peete, 35, a Detroit native now living in South Bay, Fla. “ I changed my stance at last week’s Western Open (he tied for 10th) and I’ve been rolling the ball well ever since.” The victory was worth $36,000, but Peete seemed more ex­ cited about winning a one year PGA exemption. “No m atter how bad I play they can’t take my card away for a while,” he said, grinning. Peete, one of the few black players on the tour, took charge with four birdies on the front nine and added three more on the back. “IT WASN’T UNTIL I birdied the ninth hole for a 32 that I really felt I was going to win,” he said. “ I think I only looked at the leader board twice all day. I’d never been in that position before, and I figured the less I knew the better off I’d be.” Peete’s winding road to fame reads like a Hollywood script. He was one of 19 children and quit school in the eighth grade. He said he thought golf was “a silly game” until some friends tricked him into playing a round in 1966 while he was living in Rochester, N Y. “They told me we were going to a clam bake,” he said. “ But they drove to a golf course and told me either I was going to play or I’d have to wait four hours until they were done. I didn’t feel like waiting.” Peete’s 65 matched the best round of the tournament and was two strokes shy of the course record set in 1973 by Dave Stockton. Earlier Sunday, Chi Chi Rodriguez had fired a 65. Les Amis Sid*-*ulk I air San \n tn n in 2 1th Britz earns Open title Massey’s comeback falls short bogeys on the front nine. Britz had two birdies and one bogey on the front side to finish at one over par, which tied her for the lead at that time with Sally Little. FAIRFIELD, Conn. (UPI) — Jerilyn Britz, refusing to buckle in the face of a gallant comeback by Debbie Massey, finally earned her first LPGA win by the U.S. ta k in g Women’s Open Championship Sunday with an even-par 280. “ This is what I ’ve been working for for a long time and it’s an extra bonus to have it happen in The Open,” said Britz, who had earned a bridesmaid image on the tour for near-wins. Britz fired a 2-under-par 69 to finish the tournament at even par. Massey, who double bogeyed three holes, finished at two over par, tied with San­ dra Palmer. Massey and Britz were tied after 17 holes at even par, but Massey left her approach shot short, chipped to within 10 feet, and then three-putted for a six. Britz hit the green in two and missed a 12-footer for a birdie. But, after watching Massey three-putt, she con­ fidently knocked in the two- footer for her first tourna­ ment win. BRITZ EARNED $19,000 for the victory. Massey started the round with a three-stroke cushion o v e r B r itz b u t saw it evaporate quickly with a bogey and two straight double winner Nancy Lopez shot her fourth straight 73 to finish at 292, eight over. “ I told my caddy when we got to 18 that th ere was nothing to worry about,’’ Britz said. “ I put my faith in God and let Him have all my worries.’’ MASSEY, pumped up and charging, saw her drive on 18 land in a divot. Her approach shot was sh o rt and she chipped 10 feet past the cup. After missing her par chance, she missed a short bleeder coming back for her third dou­ ble bogey of the day. “When I saw that ball in the divot, that took the heart out of m e,’’ said Massey. “ I really had to take a swing at the ball and I was worried about hur­ ting my hands. But give credit to Jerilyn. She shot a great round and that's the way to win. But we made it exciting, didn’t we?’’ Massey made no excuses about her dismal front nine. She also bogeyed the first hole and continually left putts short. “ It felt like I was playing in a Tuesday Ladies Day. I just don’t know what went wrong. I w a sn ’t n e rv o u s ,” said M assey, who along with Palmer earned $9,200. Britz held a four-shot lead over Massey after 11 holes but Massey began her charge with a birdie on 12. Two holes later Massey saved par with a 20- foot putt and then reeled off consecutive birdies on 15 (12 feet), 16 (30 feet), and 17 (15 feet) to forge the tie. Britz had two birdies on the back side and two on the front side in breaking par for the third time in four rounds. PALMER, the one veteran among the leaders, shot a final round 70 to finish tied with Massey. Palmer had two birdies and just one bogey in her round. Little, who had held the lead at one point on the front nine, faltered on the back side with consecutive bogeys on 13 and 14. She finished alone at 287, three over par. Susie Berning headed a group of three at five over 289. Also in that group were Mary Dwyer and Jo Ann Washam, who had a final round 67. Two-time defending champ Hollis Stacy finished at 293, nine over, and leading money- Dibbs outlasts Solomon in hot Forest Hills final —UPI Telephoto Eddie Dibbs down, Solomon continued. Dibbs was relentless, recording five aces, and swept through the final games, taking the one hour, 39-minute match on a surface winner. The final set took only 22 minutes. “ I ’M A LI TTLE S T R O N G E R physically,” said Dibbs. ” He seemed to get tired, but I was serving and volleying a little better. I tried to move him around the court, but he’s a great competitor. I have a tendency to overhit, but I knew I had him even if he won a couple of games in the second set.” Prior to the final match, WCT Director Lamar Hunt announced that next year’s event, which will be called the Tourna­ ment of Champions, will have a total purse of $500,000 — making it the world’s richest tournament. FOREST HILLS, N Y. (UPI) - Eddie Dibbs, who bypassed Wimbledon to prac­ tice in the southern Florida heat, earned the biggest payday of his tennis career Sunday over tiring Harold Solomon in the finals of the $300,000 Forest Hills In­ vitational. Dibbs won the m atch 7-6, 6-1 in temperatures up to 90 degrees. The victory marked the last singles final under the present invitational format. Beginning in 1980, the tournament will dis­ card its round-robin play and increase prize money, making it the world’s richest tennis tournament. Dibbs, the seventh-ranked player in the world, earned $100,000 for the win and avenged an earlier loss to Solomon in the tournament’s opening match. The victory boosted Dibbs’ earnings to $161,010 while Solomon came away with $40,000. AFTER TAKING the first set by virtue of a 7-0 decision in the 12-point tie-breaker — with a service ace to close out the set — Dibbs jumped to a 3-0 lead in the second set. After Solomon held serve in the fourth game, Dibbs cruised past the weary Solomon to score his 11th victory in their last 12 matches. The two clay court battlers, playing before a crowd of 5,715 at the West Side Tennis Club, exchanged two service breaks in the first set to force the tie­ breaker. The sweltering heat — which soared into the 90s — took its toll on Solomon, who wore an Australian flop hat to shade him from the sun after falling behind 4-1. The 26-year-old from Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., complained of leg and arm cramps, but after his trainer gave him a brief rab- £★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Bill Rodgers & Company * NOW AT * * i *9 Í + * Í * * * * * * * * * * Í * * * THE JOCK SHOP J ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ "ON THE 4 VISA WELCOME ff, -vr-- MNIVER5ITT B-K5ELLER5 a p ric e s o w : 2200 G U A D ­ A L U P E W N - S A T 9 : 9 0 - 9 .9 0 5BLJI — = v We' re proud to announce fall improvements to our usual fine formula. This summer Tri-Towers undergoes extensive renovation with com plete re- painting, miles of new carpeting and many new furnishings. If you're a young U.T woman shopping for that special kind of apartm ent, you ow e yourself a careful look a t the NEW Tri-Towers. Long the best and, this fall, GETTING EVEN BETTER JRITOWER5 801 West 24th Austin T e x o s 7 8 7 0 6 151 2) 4 7 6 - 7 6 3 6 Page 10 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Monday, July 16, 1979 UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED A P A R T M E N T S ^ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES C L A S S I F IE D A D V E R T IS I N G R A T E S 15 word m in im u m Each word one time Each word 3 tim es Each word 5 tim es Each word 10 tim es Student rate each tim e 1 co¡ x 1 nth one tim e 1 col x 1 >nch 2 9 tim es 1 col x t inch 10 or more times S3 75 S .14 * 32 * 39 $ 6 4 S 9 0 $ 4 . 3 9 S3.96 D E A D L I N E S C H E D U L E M o n d a y T * » a n F r i d a y .2 0 0 p m . T u e s d a y T e x o n M o n d a y . 1 1 0 0 a .m . W e d n e s d a y T e x a n T u e s d a y 1 1 : 0 0 a m T h u r s d a y T e x a n W e d M i d o y 11 0 0 a .m . F r id a y T e x a n T h u r s d a y 1 1 0 0 a .m . " I n t h e e v e n t o l e rro rs m a d e In a n a d v e r t is e m e n t , i m m e d i a t e n o l i t e m u t t b e g i v e n a t th e p u b l i t h e r t a r e r e s p o n s ib l e fo r o n l y O N E in c o rre c t i n s e r t io n A ll d o l m t for a d j u t t m e n t t t h o u l d b e m o d e n o t la t e r t h a n 3 0 d a y t a f t e r p u b l i c a t i o n " S T U D E N T F A C U L T Y / S T A F F R A T E S S 90 15 word m inim um , each day E a c h additional word each d a y* 0 6 1 col x 1 inch each day S 3 . 15 "U n c la ssifie d *." 1 line 3 days $1 00 (Prepaid, No Refunds) Students, faculty and staff must pre­ sent a current I D and pay in ad­ vance in T S P B ld g 3 200 (25th 8. to 4 30 p.m. W hitis) from 8 a m M o n d ay through F rid a y AUTOS FOR SALE 1975 F O R D P IN T O , only 46,000 ml., stan dard transm ission, good running condi­ tion, radio, new tires. 454-1869 __ '73 M A Z D A RX2, new Factory engine, I yr /12,000 mi guarantee, low mileage, 4- speed, A M - F M , grea t g a s m ile age, SI600 472-4802 '75 L ^ A v TÑG ST A T E S . 1972 V ega, engine under 10,000 m iles Runs well. SIOOO, best offer. Brenda, 477-0567, 476- ___ ____ 5372 72 ¡ M P Á L Á for sale. For m ore In form a­ tion, 477-8550__________ ___________ __ '71 S K Y L A R K AC, dependable S650 472-4622 after 6, keep fry in g . _________ 1977 H O N D A C IV IC , radial tires, $2950 After 5 p.m. 836-2595. A C L A S S IC ! 1971 O Ídsm o b lla Cutlass Suprem e convertible White with black interior M otor and body perfect. Top and tran sm ission need work. 81000. 478- 2282 after 1.00 p.m. _ _ 1976 A S P E N , 4 dr sedan good mpg, AC, 24,000 miles, excellent condition. S2900. 471-4170, 271 7701.____________________ 1976 C H E V E T T E , good condition, $1900 452-3867 8 10 am, M on-Sun or after 5. M O V IN G 1971 V W Squareback. Looks good, runs well. S1000 Leave m essage for Susan 471J128, 476-03KL__________ '65 D O D G E , needs work, 472-4727. 19/Í V E G A , 68,000 miles, 4 cyl., $400 or m ake otter. 477-2516, 1972 V O L V O 144, dark green, AC, 4- speed, F M -A M , new radial*. *1600 477- 4102 afterJ5:00 ___ 1971 M A L l BU, 2-dr , PS, AC, good condi­ tion. M u st sell, SHOO 345-0702 FOR SALE M o t o r c y c l© -F o r S o l * 1977 S U Z U K I 750, water cooled, 9500 miles, beautiful condition. Konls, Dunlop *1690, negotiable. K91s, m any extras 443-5337 after five __ ;______________ 1979 Y A M A H A 750 Special. Custom tour­ ing version. M a tch in g black, gold fa ir­ ing, saddle bag, trunk, m a g wheels, c r a s h b a r s , p a s s e n g e r b a c k re st, nytrogen shocks, 3500 miles, m int condi­ tion $4200 original cost. W ill sacrifice $3450firm Tim, 443 8551 weekedays, 892- 2794 after 7 pm. B ic y c l© - F o r S a l © B I C Y C L E F O R sale Fu|l 12 speed, ex­ cellent condition, lightweight, licensed, $90 472-5420 after 6 00 ___ ______ S t a r * © - F o r S o l © F R E E S E R V I C E A n y Satu rd ay until August, Circle Stereo will test your home tape deck while you wait. Flutter and speed, frequency response, transport. Reel or c a s s e tte o n ly. C h e c k our specials, parts, accessories, tape Circle Stereo Inc 1211 Red River, 476-0947 T E A C A2300S reel to reel 1400 Pioneer C e n tre x ste re o /8 tra ck , $135 A nd cla ssica l records 477-4970 2-5, 453-3505 6- 8 . _____________________________________ _ M u s ic a I-F o r S a l© M U S T S E L L ! W ood-carved Victorian upright piano, $295, Indo-Orlental 10' x 12' handwoven, negotiable 476-3242, 451* 7672 Y O U R M I N D needs Uncle S a m 's used records 9-6 Fri. Sat Sun. 601 E. 5th, Downtown F lea M arket. __________ F O R S A L E : H ayn as flute. Standard model - c-foot. $1200 or best offer. 443- 3164 evenings ______ E X T R E M E L Y R A R E G L Stiles hand­ made, solid body guitar Fender twin reverb w / J B X L speakers. Evenings, Stephen, 478-1503. V IN T A G E P IA N O 7 e c e n tly restored at A m ste r's Piano Barn C irca 1914 Hobart cable five foot upright, burled walnut, very good condition. $1300 To arran ge for playing, call H arvey Neville, 474- 9262 H o m a s - F o r S a l © ______ TÓ W N H O M E N E A R UT, restaurant, l ’ z BA, theater, shopping, bus. 2 B R fireplace, private patio, with trees *41,- 000 Cali V irgin ia Chandler, 345-7300, 451- 2455 G ra y 8, Com pany in A liándole 3-2-2 with B Y O W N E R study, super condition. W ill consider lease with strong com m itm ent to buy 452-0086, 447-0613 For S o l a - G a r a f © H A I R D R Y E R . V A C U U M , l a d l e s ' clothes, ironing board, etc. Saturday 4-5, 3964 M ap le w o o d M i * < © lla n © o u » - F © r S a l© ____ N E L S O N 'S G IF T S . Established 1945. Indian Largest selection reservation ¡ewelry 4502 South Congress *44-3814. Closed M o n d a y s ______________ _____ S O L IT A IR E D I A M O N D wedding set, 733 Kara* Appraised value *750 Wilt sell $500 C all Jackie, 451-5533 after 5 pm N O R T H F A C E superllte m u m m y Dag, $50 File cabine* new $40 477-4970 2-5, 453 3505 6 8 Í5 F T V I P E R sailboa» $950 H ighland galvan ised trailer, $295 478-1200 474- 6898 s m a l l tinting firm . L IQ U ID A T IO N Liquidating inventory silver reflective and sm oke window tinting, as $1 00 sq ft Andy after I 00 p m , 459-9001. D E S K $25, couch $45, book shelf $25, coffee fable *20, stereo cabinet $30 454- 1826 L U G G A G E R A C K for V W Bug, *15 00 Kathy, 451-3213 Y U C A T A N M A T R I M O N I A L ham m ock, yellow orange, blue, brand new, *35 478 4778 TW O B L U E parakeets and cages *15, 2 blue sectional sofas *20, pm g pong table $40 All in good ¿ t s g a 458-8083 L A R G E 2 B R , 1 BA apt, in 2 story house near cam pus. Hardwood floors, celling fan, AC. Su m m er rates - $295 plus E , lease 8- deposit. Jack, 452-2517, 452-9559. W .E. A ssociates a f f w 2 B R s left for fall. N e a r shuttle. G a s heating, cooking, and hot water paid. Furniture available. 442-1298. E S T A B L IS H M E N T - R E T R E A T cam pu s area Efficiencies leasing for fall. Clean, colorful apartm ents with professional m a in t e n a n c e an d m a n a g e m e n t at re a so n a b le rates for you A ls o d is ­ hwasher, pool and laundry. See K im " In the afternoon" at 4400 A ve B, 451-4584 (476-2633) B a rry G lllln gw ater Co. O N E B E D R O O M , u n fu rn ished fro m *180 1919 Burton Or 444-1846 . ________ E F F I C I E N C Y U N IT S from *170, 1919 Burton Dr. 444-1846. FURNISHED HOUSES A T T E N T IO N ! M A R R I E D students! M u s ic students! 2 B R cottage In U T area Call Sheffield, 4/2-9533, evenings. last July- C H E A P H O U S E for rent August. *175 A cro ss from IF shuttle, 4505 Speedway, 459-8907 UNFURNISHED HOUSES L A R G E S T O N E house on 14 a cre s Preferred 2 females, but m u sicia n s con­ sidered. 472-8481, Bob Watson. _____ N O R T H . 3 B R , excellent condition, C A - CH , fenced large yard, school, shopping. M u st see 836-6886, leave phone. N O R T H W E S T 3-2, C A -C H , co u n try kitchen, garage, privacy with patio, fenced and landscaped yard. Lease *350 837-4457 August 1. FURNISHED APARTMENTS E F F I C I E N C Y A P T ., *165 /m o A ll utilities except electricity paid. Now accepting applications for su m m er and v i l l a E s p e r a n z a . f a l l s e m e s t e r M a n a ge r, No. I l l , 454-1416 W A L K UT. 1-1 *149 Quiet, sm a ll c o m ­ plex. N o pets, children Unexpected vacancy 3Ó4 E 33rd 478^928, 472-8648 S E P T E M B E R 1 P R E L E A S I N O M J159/E. Shuttle, U T west Quiet N o pets, children 700 H e a rn, 476-0953 _ _ _ O L D M A I N A pts now leasing efficiency and I B R G & W paid 25th and Pearl. 478-1971, B u ild e r Re alty, G a lle r y of Hom es U N I V E R S I T Y C A R R E L S - g r e a t location! Large, clean IB R , carpeted, C A -C H , cable, d isp o sal, stu d y desk. Shuttle 1200/E 2812 Nueces, 472-6497, 472-2097 *130 P L U S E. Sum m er rates. We are looking for quiet, conscientious student Interested In a large efficiency near the shuttle, CH -CA , laundry, deadbolts, d is­ posal, 476-2812 G R E A T S U M M E R rates! H a v e Fur­ IB R s , large lB R s nished efficiencies, and 2 B R s for the sum m er 3 blocks from U T with sw im m in g pool Call 474-17)2 or com e by between 12-6 dally 2907 West Ave. S U M M E R S E M E S T E R - fantastic loca­ tion L a r g e cle an 2-2, C A -C H , pool, sundeck, cable $300 plus E. G reat Oak. 477 3388, 472 2097 F A N T A S T IC A P A R T M E NT o ffe r! F ree rent July, just pay August, *195 plus E. 2 B R . 447-3672 ______ __ E F F ., *159 plus E. A vailab le Im m ediate­ ly Call 459-3493, 345-0772 or 451-2986 404 W 35th, Sunwest Apts. S P E C IA L LO W sum m er rates - 1 B R Í *155 plus E 2 BR , $170 plus E Shuttle bus, pool 3212 Red River. 477-2104 W A L K TO UT, JÍ45 plus E Nice I BR. from July 14th to August 31st 477-2792 L A R G E É F F I C I E N C Y Close to shuttle. $150 plus electricity. 4209 A ve B 458- 3078 or 453-0298 N E A R S H U T T L E , 2 B R , 1 BA, partially furnished, no large pets 453-16)4 after 5 00 S A C R IF I C E . E X C E L L E N T 2 B R . G reat tor plants Ony *215 plus E ! 930 sq. ft. O ak Knoll. 620 S 1st, 444-1269. E F F I C I E N C Y I j N I T S from *170 1919 Burton D r *44 -I846 1 B E D R O O M furnished from *180. 1919 Burton Dr. 444-1846 í BR . F U R N A P t T w a Ik UT. A p p ly 1518 M a n o r Rd. S U M M E R R E D U C T IO N S 1 & 2 B R Apts Swimming pool Cable TV 1st shuttle stop P re le a sin g for su m m er or fall 442-9720 S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E Now leasin g for sum m er and fall New carpet, new drapes, freshly painted, on shuttle route 1 B R *220, furnished or un­ furnished. 4504 Ave. A 458-5301 (N e w M a n a ge m e n t) C A Y W O O D P R O P E R T I E S E F F I C I E N C Y - 5 1 5 9 Sh a g Super north ce n tral carpet, all built-in kitchen, C A -C H , pool laundry, close to IF shuttle, H ighland 700 M a l l , a n d C o m m e r c e P a r k F ran klin location Central Properties Inc 454 8429 451-6533 5 BLOCKS WEST OF CA MP US Efficiency, fully carpeted, g a s (stove), water, cable included paneled livin g room, walk-in closet Su m m er rates *150 8> $155 2104 San Gabriel R E D O A K A P T S. 477 5514 476 7916 E N G L I S H A I R E A P T S Special Short Term Su m m er Leases A vailable! Efficiencies, 1, 2, and studio apts., fu r­ nished and unfurnished Wafer, trash, sewer cable T V provided, on shuttle. 2 sw im m in g pools, 2 handball/racquetball courts, 2 central laundries, lighted ten­ nis courts, near Riverside and Oltorf, of­ fice hours 9-6 Mon-Sat, 12-6 Sunday 1919 Burton Dr. 444-1846 Going B A N A N A S W E R E N T A P A R T M E N T S A L L O V E R A U S T IN F R E E P a u l M e is le r s R E A L W O R L D P R O P E R T I E S cam pus — 443-2212 We b u y j e w e l r y , e s t a t e jewelry, diamonds, and old yold Highest cash prices paid. C A P I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N. La m a r F U R N I S H E D D U P L E X E S 5 M I N U T E S UT C h arm in g brick 2-2 fenced New ly pa nted and carpeted yard $275, lease and deposit 4/8 8 8 1 1 . P A R K S I D E APTS 4209 B U R N E T R D 2 B R fu rn ish e d $250 2 8 R unfu rn ish e d $215 I B R furnished $185 Swim , jog, or play ten on a c ro ss the s tr e e t in R e m se y P a rk ideal tor faculty or se riou s student No pets, on ch ildre n 1 year lease re quired W ater & g a s paid M a n a g e r Apt 107 . 453-1340 If no answ er, 454-3251 S U M M E R R A T E S M au na Kai 405 E.31st W alk to ca m p u i, shuttle, and city bus Efficien cies - »154 50 , 2br-2ba $235. 472-2147 C a d o r R l d g © A n t © . Near Highland Mall • City Iv t • Pool 1 -1 * 1 9 0 A 8, t u r n 3 -1 ft * 2 4 0 A E, t o r n A S I 3 6 IO M M C at* Mgmt. O u r se n so rs detect d w e llin g s for A u stin l i f e f o r m s w i t h sh u ttle s co n sta n tly p a ssing byl C o m e to Habitat in D o b i e H u n t e r s Mall. W e'll find you the living space you w a n t at no charge! ¿ R B O R Advantageous Adult Apartments • All Bills Paid • Beautiful Pool • Shuttle Stop • Off Riverside 1500 Royal Crest 444-7516 APARTMENT JUST MAKE ONE CALL M IN G CA LL DAY O R MIGHT 472-7201 A U STIN 'S O LD EST "WE HAVE THE APABTMENT FOB YOU FU R N ISH ED - U N FU RN ISH ED D U P L E X E S • TOWNHOUSES • E F F IC IE N C IE S • HOME REN TALS ( b n i r r M a l i ’s J \ | j a r t n i r i i t T L u c a t o r s 324 S. C O N G RESS T U r x la * Auxin Sln c n I S M B & * * FREE TRANSPORTATION * NO CHARGE TO YOU * OPEN SU NDAYS p i i i i i i i i i i i i i N i i i i i m i m i i i i i i i i i i i i i i m i i i i i i i i i i i i i i H i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i g | I End of Summer SPECIAL 1 Efficiency a n d 1 Bedroom Apartm ents I ¡ From $170.00 ¡ S . I H Some Utilities Paid 3 FRES Shuttle Service i| FREE Racquetball and Lighted Tennis Courts 3 § I See one of Austin’s FINEST APARTMENT COMMUNITIES 1 919 Burton Dr. i ENGLISH AIR E R Illlllt llt lllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllf llllilllilliliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit iiiiiiiiif F UNFURN. APARTMENTS UNFURN. APARTMENTS Step into Guess w h o 's pre- leasing for Fall? °o/ Sum m er Eff. 142.00 1-1 146 00 2-1 164.00 2-2 174.00 Fall Eff 2 1 5 .0 0 1-1 2 2 5.00 2-1 2 8 5 .0 0 2-2 32 0 0 0 Don't w ait and pay high rent price*. Com a *«© ua! MON. FRI. 9-6 * ' > i £ V • ^ c 10-4 University Area A B P Sm all 2 B D R M . -S199. W alk or shuttle to campus, AC, 2211 Leon - Sum m er rates. C O M P L E T E L Y R E M O D E L E D New paint, carpet and furniture. Big pool, preleasing. 1 B R for fall, $225 plus electricity Located at 3304 Red River C a ll 472-2645 after 5:00 S U M M E R RATES W a lk to ca m p u s or shuttle bus. I B R 8. ef­ fu rn ish e d . C A -C H , s h a g fic ie n c ie s carpet. A C T III, 4312 Speedway, $145 & $175 plus E M a n a ge r 453-0540 A C T IV, 33U Red River, $165 plus E. A C T VI, 2801 Hemphill, $165 plus E. M a n a ge r 474-8125 M a n a ge r 476-0411 A C T V III, 2808 Whitis, $165 plus E. M a n a ge r 474-5650 A C T IX, 2803 Hemphill, $165 plus E. M a n a ge r 476-0411 A C T X, 301 W 29th, $165 plus E. M a n a ge r 474-5650 T H R E E O A K S , 409 W. 38th, $160 plus E. M a n a ge r 453-3383 P E C A N S Q U A R E , 506 W. 37th, $160 plus E. M a n a ge r 459-1597 W E S T E R N E R , 2806 Hemphill, $150 plus E M a n a g e r 472-0649 2711 & 2721 H E M P H I L L P A R K , F O U R P L E X , 2808 Hemphill, $175 plus E. $150 plus E M a n a ge r 472-0649 M a n a ge r 472-0649 Ed Padgett 454-4621 W E 'V E GOT 'E M Houses, duplexes and apts. Free - Caywood Locators 458-5301, 345-5003 M A R K T W A I N 1106 W. 22nd Quiet, modern apt. - walk to campus. Su mm e r rates $ 1 7 5 - $ 1 8 5 J a c k -452-9559 W.E. & Associates A B P E F F S , I B R s f r o m $ 1 5 5 L easin g for M a y 1, sum m er and fall. 5 blocks to cam pus, shuttle C H A P A R R A L A P T S . 2408 Leon 476-3467 University Area A B P Lg. 1 B D R M - $199, shuttle or wal k to cam p u s, AC, d i s ­ hwasher, disposal. 2212 San G ab riel Sum m er rates III M O N T H " LOW RATES G reat cool fun, LeM arqu ee Apt., 302 W. 38th, all sizes, turn., unfurn. 453-4002 910 W 26th, efficiency 472-6589 6607 Guadalupe, 454-3414 1-1 S U IT E M A T E , 1 block UT, S)20/mo. l-l efficiency near UT, $160 478-0911, Flem ing, Nichols & Roley, 442-4807 P A R A Q O n ¿ P A R t m e n t Lo c a t o r s Bobby s'*err* Lee Vi(k. Tony Herb //> S h e r r y CENTRAL OFFICE f t 'Z 4 7 7 - 6 6 8 8 : ^ NORTH OFFICE ' ’ 452-6688 UNFURN. APARTMENTS K iss your landlord good-bye. At Council Ridge you'll discover a unique and affordable alternative to apartment leasing And landlords. Don't think you have to be stuck with renting, or that you can t afford the place you want Council Ridge offers flexible hnanc mg plans to meet a variety of needs: • 90 < owner financing at 9 V • 30 year loan plans • minimal closing costs interest Not to mention the solar heated indoor swimming pool, bay windows, porches, patios, and a rolling creek to go with our clubhouse Conveniently located on the UT Shuttle Bus Route, Council Ridge is just minutes away from the heart of the city. With an assortment of floor plans to choose from, you’re sure to hnd something to suit your style and your budget. So stop renting and start owning — at Council Ridge 3 Bedrooms from 52,500 2 Bedrooms from 49,500 Gouneil Rkke CONDOM INIUM S L J 739 Oltorf St. 444-9191 R O Y A L CO -O P: attractive house, quiet neighborhood, excellent food, member controlled, shared labor. 1805 Pearl, 478- 0880 V E G E T A R I A N , N O N - S M O K I N G household. If you desire a very positive, supportive environment and consider yourself a responsible individual, there's hope. 476-7905. S H A R E L A R G E 2 B R house, bike To campus, $150 plus Vt bills Call Bill, 476- 6953, 6 to midnight. Keep trying. L A W S T U D E N T needs female room ­ mate with apartm ent or house for fall. Call Sharon collect, 316-276-2675. H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D share west A ustin house, shaded yard; quiet area, near hike and bike trail, Town Lake $125 plus utilities. 474-2015 evenings. Keep trying. ü T S T U D E N T wanted to share private home. 5706 Brookhollow Cove. 453-1608 or (214 ) 348-5023._____________________ R O O M M A TE N E E D E D to share nice duplex north. 15 minutes from Capitol. Call Dave, 454-7951, evenings. M A L E R O O M M A T E needed. Large, quiet, 3 B R house, 4 blocks north of law school. $133 plus bills, 447-6068; after 5 00 478-2165.__________________ _ F E M A L E T O share 3 bedroom home W /D , convenient 1-35, $145, Vi electric!- ty. 441-1075 after 5 30 _______ N E E D E D : M A L E student to share 2-2 apt. for tall, 1979 with junior pre-med student Call or write J im m y Caplan, (713) 729-5649, 9611 Moonlight, Houston, T X 77096 N E E D R O O M M A T E tall, spring. For 2-1 apt. $135 plus Vi E. RC. Call David, 443- 9441 H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D 2 B R house near 45th, Red River. *112 50 plus >/a bills. 459-9939. ________ 2 N D S E S S IO N & fall, spring, responsible fem ale only. F or lovely West Austin hom e. M a n y w indow s, h ard w o o d s, remodeled, quiet neighborhood. 453-0352. H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D . 5 BR , 4 BA house near campus, $90/mo. plus 1/5 b ills $50 deposit. 4309 Bellvue, 458-5663 F E M A L E T O share 2 B R house near C R shuttle Rent $80, Vi bills. Call 458-2705 after 5 pm. W O M A N - S H A R E large house on park - w alk UT. Prefer tidy, reliable, working wom an. $160/mo., Vi bills. 477-8528 evenings.___________________ __ S H A R E L A R G E Duval house, large liv­ ing areas, kitchen, $90 mo. plus $50 deposit, plus Vi bills 476-1137. lib e ra l, a th le tic U R G E N T ' N E E D fem ale for luxurious 2BR. N R shuttle. 471-2839, 472-5369. $127.50. M o rn in gs, keep trying!_________________________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed for Aug. 1 occupancy to share 4 B R apt. fur­ nished. Own room, $115 plus E. Call 474- 1369 after 6.________________ ________ N O N - S M O K E R TO share 2 B R apt. Star­ ting A ugust Pool, cable, yard. N e a r C R . $95 Mike, 454-1522 S T U D IO U S , _N O N S M O K I N G fem ale graduate student desires sam e to share furnished house After A u gu st 15. $110 plus Vi bills. 452-1711. R E S P O N S IB L E , L I B E R A L room m ates needed. $75'*125 Great 4-BR house, fireplace 1803 Enfield Righ t on shuttle stop 477-2934 __ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to share duplex. Close to U T $87, Vt bills $75 deposit 474- 1344 after 6 ________ R E S P O N S I B L E , T ID Y , m ale Sense of humor, share townhouse with liberal, In­ dependent m ale S. fem ale 928-4085 N E E D M A L E room m ate for 2 8 R apt. In SW H o u s to n . B e g in n in g A u g . 20. $ 1 6 0 /m o . S t u d e n t Ir a , 444-2671 preferred. M A L E N E E D E D , August, for tall and spring. Large attractive duplex, own room. $116.65 plus Vi bills On shuttle, preferably nonsm oker 443-4827. _____ M A L E R O O M M A T E for 2-1 apartment near cam p u s and shuttle. F all/sprin g. 451-1848 ROOMS W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E UT, sh ag carpet, C A C H , kitchen p riv ile g e s Su m m er rates, $100 & up University House, 2710 Nueces, 477-9388 2 B L K S TJf! nicely furnished rooms, ef­ ficiencies and apts. Sum m er rates, $90 8. up. The Lyle House 2800 Whitis, 477-7558 ________ 2 R O O M S available. House on creek, pay Vi bills, no smokers. M ik e Taylor, 454- _____________ 9578_ S E N E C A C O -O P emphasizes fem inism involvement Fem ale and dem ocratic double and single rooms available 477- 0225 2309 Nueces _______________ ____ R O O M IN friendly vegetarian household for rent. A va ila b le July 15th for $68/mo. plus one-third bills Phone 477-5233. UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES 3-2, $325! Carpeted, fenced yard, CA-CH, lots of storage space, children, pets W alk to Jr. school, shopping center. Utilities room. S. 1st & W illiam Cannon, 441-4001 N O R T H E AST, L A R G E 2-1 Vi, 2-Story, fireplace, C A -C H , carpet, $295 327-4095 O L D E R S P A C IO U S , clean 2 1 Dining room, porches, fireplace, A /C. M arried Couples. $300. 1804 W 6th 472-2097, 478- 5 7 3 9 . _____ ____ SO UTH . S H U T T L E , luxury 2-2, CA-CH, carpet August 1st $300. 327 4095. ROOM AN D BOARD SERVICES T r r r r INSTANT PASSPORT RESUME APPLICATION PHOTOS While You Wait Royce Studios 2 4 2 0 G u adalu pe 4 7 2 -4 2 1 9 I l i i n Get Y o u r Eyeglasses In ONE HOUR At ALPHA OMEGA OPTICAL 451 -2 Q 2 U 1 2 7 0 5 R e s e a r c h PASSPORT PHOTO s i RESUME PHOTOS APPLICATION PHOTOS ~ Just Walk In — — Ready in 2 minutes THE THIRD EYE 2530 Guadalupe 477-5555 G i n n y 's C o p y i n g S e r v ic e Theses, Dissertations a n d Professional Reports. 4 4 Dobie M all 4 7 6 -9 1 7 1 Y O U N E E D A R E S U M E I will take the tim e and trouble to shape your resum e to your exact needs at a reasonable cost. Call 474-9223 for infor­ mation. P R O B L E M 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 & F R E E P R É G N A N C Y T E S T IN G Texas Problem Pregnancy, 600 w. 28th, Suite 101. M F, 8 30-5 00 474-9930 F R E E P R E G N A N C Y TESTS Co u n selin g on all pregn an cy a lte r­ natives. birth control m ethods and wom en s health concerns W alk-in basis, M o n Fri* 9-5, W o m e n 's Referral Center, 1800B Lavaca. 476 6878 A R T 'S M O V IN G and H auling any area 24 hours, 7 days. 447-9384, 477-3249. ______________ _________ register for the new Austin Babysitter Directory. Call 472-2904. A L T E R A T IO N S , M E N 'S 8. women's Z ip p e rs, m e n d in g 8, cu sto m m a d e clothing Call Paula, 451-2593 MISCELLANEOUS P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F r e e pregnancy testing and referrals 474- 9930 S E R IO U S B E G I N N IN G women writers te a c h e rle ss in terested writing class, call Christine, 477-0225, 474-4652 M u st oe willing to com m it to ten, 2-3 hours/week sessions fo r m in g in C O U R T Y a R D SW I m T and tenni* club m em bership for sale 458-3604 E N C Y C L O P E D I A B R IT A N N IC A. 1910, eleventh edition, 29 volum es complete $150 Mike. 476-4368 LOST & FOUND L O S T , W H IT E G e rm a n Shepherd Answ ers to " B a b y , " 7 years Reward. Nina, 478-5043, 477-6306. ___ M E N A N D women sum m er only. Good m eals 1905 Nueces, 2 blocks from c a m ­ pus. 478-0470. F O U N D O N Burton Drive Young gray s'riped m ale kitten No collar Call 443- 2526, 441-3641 C O M F O R T A B L E F U R N IS H E D nomes provide cooperative living at reasonable cost Seven houses to choose from 510 W 23rd. 476-1957 S E N E C A H O U S E Co-op^ 2309 Nueces, in­ vites fem inist women to ooard E x ­ cellent m eals 477-0225, 474 4652 TUTORING T U T O R IN G undergrad-grad General studies, test taking, G R E preparations Specializing In A rt History. Qualified 4 7 7 2 4 4 / L O ST B L A C K puppy, look lab, choke Is not full breed. Please cha n only. return, reward. 454-9915. LO ST P U P P Y 3 months old, par fla b , blond short-haired female. Call 474-7759. UNCLASSIFIED lOspd good cond 476-8590after6 *95 Rew ard need E317 2nd term 451-0558 Tarof readings or lessons 477-0913 Lps, S.F B k s ,M e n s P a nts33-4 r Í 4 54T522 lOspeed $20 as is 476-6128 after 2 SERVICES SERVICES *5 BONUS (on first donation only) BRING IN THIS AD & I.D. WITH PROOF OF AUSTIN RESIDENCE, OR STUDENT ID Austin Plasm a Center 2800 Guadalupe 474-7941 *8.00 — First Donation *10.00 — Second Donation *10.00 — Bonus on 10th Donation TYPING Z I V I E Y S TYPING, PRINTING, B IN D IN G The Complete Professional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2707 HEMPHILL PK. Plenty of Parking • • • • • • • • • « • • • • • • • • a : econotype j : econocopy : Typing, Copying, Binding, Printing IBM Correcting Selectric Rental & Supplies * « NORTH Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 • J • 37th & Guadalupe • 2 4S3-54S2* ó I SOUTH a w u i n Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 • * • I. Riverside «. lakeshore • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 443-4498 • T Y P I N G E r ft Typing Transcribing Typesetting S E R V I C E 474-8333 815 Brazos Mon..Sat 472-8936 Dobie Mall C o m e d isc o v e r for y o u rs e lf the ch e e r fu l a tm o s p h e re an d profession al service o ffe r e d for all y o u r T \ P I N G an d C O P Y I N G needs. 504 W. 24th 477-6671 " H f t k x t Q vakfy Aksekrtely G— r— > i x ( * * ’CREA T IVE SERyiC.ES REFORTS, PAPERS Proofread, typed $1.00 page (O ver 20 P a ge s) • RESUMES Composed, typed $9.95 (Job Letters $3 95) Proofreaa, typed $2 95/page Down the block from Coop 2200 Guodolup* • Suit* 228 • 471-3633 W O O D S T Y P I N G Service. A ll w orK guaranteed, reasonable prices. T yp in g and typesetting 2200 Guadalupe, 472- 6302 T Y P i N G : T H E S E S , dlssertattons, term papers, reports, etc. Experienced, IB M Selectric. N ear Northcross M all. 458- 6465 P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P IS T ^ w lt h tx - perlence and know-how. Dissertation*, theses, professional reports, etc. B a r ­ bara Tullos, 453-5124. T E R R Y 'S T Y P I N G Service. Typing, ty p e se ttin g. Th eses, t r a n s c r ib in g , resumes, all business and University work 815 Brazos, 474-8333, or Dobie M all, 472-8936. typlnia P R O F E S S I O N A L Q U A L IT Y IB M Sam e day and overnight service Correcting Selectric II Helen, 836-3562. T Y P IN G , A L L fields Including science and m ost foreign languages, tran scrip­ tions, drafting 477-1768, 472-4196 T Y P I N G reports, etc. South Austin. 444-9419. T H E S IS , d is s e r t a t i o n , C E R T I F I E D 1ST c la s s a d v a n c e d 80" pg Overnight pick-up 957pg Please call before noon/after 6:00 pm, 477-1983. G O O D C H E A P T Y P I N G y o u ~ n a m e lL we'll type It 451-3663 afternoons and evenings D E E 'S T Y P IN G S e rv ic e • north location. Mon-Sat 8 00 am-10 00 pm, Sunday 1-5. 452-6312 RESUMES w ith or without picturos 2 Day Service 2707 Hemphill Park Just North of 27th a t G uadalupo 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 PERSONAL A T T E N T IO N F O R M E R Peace Corps and V IS T A volunteer»! Som ething's u p - a big reunion in Austin and more Con­ tact A u s tin R e c r u itin g O ffice , 515 Congress Room 1414, 397-5925 A M A T E U R A U TH O R/N O VELIST M ale 41, doing relaxed three week tour s o u th e rn F r a n c e C h r i s t m a s N ew Y e ar s re se a rc h in g b ack gro u n d for crim e novel chase would like to invite lady who elegant literate educated would enioy exploring winter Fran ce for posh hideouts W nte p o Box I I E E . San Antonio 78201. with full personal par­ including recent photograph ticulars References gladly excnanyed of course Ph ysical beauty an asset but not a re quirement H ELP W A N T E D HELP W A N T E D HELP W A N T E D HELP W A N T E D W A N T E D M E N T A L H E A LT H WORKERS SOUTH AUSTIN W orkin g with em otionally disturbed children at the Oak Treatm ent Center of the Brown Schools All shifts available Start $2.90/hour, with good benefits Call 444-9561 or 478-6662 E .O .E C L A S S R IN G S , gold lewelry, old pocket w atches, currency, stam ps wanted High prices paid Pioneer Coin Com­ pany, 5555 North Lam ar, Bldg. C-113 In Com m erce Park, 451-3407 B U Y IN G W O R L D gold, gold lewelry, scrap gold, old coins, antiques, pocket w atches P a yin g fa * m ark et price Capitol Coin Co 3004 Guadalupe, 472- 1676. P h ilip Nohra, owner. D M V IR S WANTED • BEST PART TIME JOB IN AUSTIN • FLEXIBLE HOURS A DAYS • MUST HAVE USE OF OWN CAR • S2.9C PER HOUR BASE PAY • PLUS TIPS • BONUSES DOMINO'S PIZZA Apply in Person • 4115 Guadalupe • 4 0 4 W . 2 6 Hi S». • 2 0 1 1 E. R iv« r* id « • 1 1 1 0 l y n n 438-9101 4 7 4 - 7 1 * 1 4 4 7 - 6 4 1 1 4 7 4 - 7 6 7 6 I MAKE MONEY ! Bt a Paragon Apartmont Locator We are now expanding a n d n e e d l i c e n s e d agents. E a rn money e v e r y d a y . We p ay draws and advances on commissions. Call H«rfe Eagan 477-MU Mon.-Sat. t AM-5 PM Sun. 1 PM-5 PM GRAD & LAW STUDENTS CASH REW A R D S $100 for LEADS $500 FOR SALES Of the most cost effective word process­ ing computer on the market. For more information, call Dr Bottorff, 454-8721 $3.10 FOR O N E HOUR Need males to participate in r e s e a r c h . C a l l 471-3627 between 9-12 noon for more in­ formation. + Experienced, attractive é leasing agent wanted. Í A s k for Margaret. ♦ i K in g S g a t e ♦ 447-6696 i . + ♦ D IE T A R Y AIDES fo r p a r t-tim e Im m e d ia te openings dietary aides. Contact personnel depart­ ment for additional information. Shoal Creek Hospital 3501 M ills Ave 452-0361 Equal Opportunity Em ployer A L L Y O U F O L K S that need e x tra money can sell flowers with The Original .. 11()£ . M A T U R E , R E SPO N SIB LE child sitter. For 12 and 9 year olds. 3 days per week. H ELP W A N T E D HELP W A N T E D A C T IV IS T S S ocial ch ange w o n 't co m e easy b u t w ith o u t hard w o rk in g w om en and men, it w o n 't com e a t a ll ACORN is h irin g sta ff If you can liv e on a s ta rtin g salary of $120 per week and lik e the kin d ot job we a re d o in g , c a ll 442-0934 Monday th ro u gh W ednesday fro m 9:30 a m .-noon fo r in te rv ie w M A T U R e T r E S P O N S IB L E sitters need- ed. August 5-13 Must have experience, own transportation. 441-6414 after 6. ly with housekeeping Cell 476-5856. H ELP W A N T E D Your Foley's w ill open July 26 Foley's Highland Mall is now interviewing for Extra On-Call Salespeople. Come by Foley's personnel office (see map below) 9:00-5:00 Mon.-Sat. An equal opportunity employer To Foloy'c P o rk o n n o r th » d « o f b u ild in g . E n to r t h r o u g h A i w c i o l t t E n tr o n c o ( n o x t t o D o c k ). Milton Hotel fde^s Hew Wing Aeaociate Entrance # ¡ l \ Dock I Penney'a highland Hall Blvd. C o a w u n it y Bank Sage U N F U R N . A P A R T M E N T S ■ U N F U R N . A P A R T M E N T S ■ U N F U R N . A P A R T M E N T S ■ U N F U R N . A P A R T M E N T S K ir t n g ■ M j h l H l l l l SPECIAl CONSTRUCTION RATES AND STUDENT LEASES PIP YOU HEAR THAT CHARLIE BROWN IS IN THE H05PITAL? rzr AN ALL ADULT, OWNER MANAGED APARTMENT COMPLEX IN BEAUTIFUL NORTHWEST HILLS. EASILY LOCATED ACCESSIBLE TO DOWNTOWN. CONVENIENT TO ALL OF INCLUDING NORTH AUSTIN'S MAJOR SHOPPING AREAS, TWO LARGE MALLS. U/HAT'5 THE FIRST THIN6 WU THINK WHEN YOU HEAR THAT A FRIENP HAS 60NE TO THE HOSPITAL? ALSO AVAILABLE • TENNIS COURTS • CLUB ROOM • W ASHER/DRYER CONNECTION • URGE BALCONIES & PATIOS WITH STORAGE CLOSETS • FIREPLACES • SWIMMING POOL STARTING JEWELRY Starting position available with local jewelry near cam­ pus. No experience necessary. O p po rtun ity to learn about precious stones, metals, and m an ufa ctu rin g techniques. Call 472-0102 A C T IV IS T A CO RN is hiring both year round and su m m er staff for e n try le ve l non­ partisan, political and economic impact. Hardworking women and men needed for progressive social change. Must have commitment to people's politics. S a la r y begins at $120 w e e k ly plus benefits. Travel opportunities and ad­ vancement. To set interviews, call 442- 0934, Mon-Wed, between 9:30 and 12:00 P S Y C H O L O G Y M A J O R w a n te d T weekend childcare work with disturbed boy». Houteparent relief position In a ru ral setting. Wages, experience and benefits. IV» days. Call Charlie, 1-858 4254. E .O .E . B A B Y S I T T E R N E E D E D for 2 small children - part-time. Hours flexible. Call 443-9353._______________________________ F O R SCHO O L year, caring and respon­ sible person for after school child care for 3 children 5, 7 l 9, Must have own transportation. Andrews School area 453-4103 after 6 p.m. F U L L T IM E help wanted. Apply In per­ son, Capitol Coin Co. 472-1676, 3004 Guadalupe. S A L E S P E R S O N *wanTed~ WIH "train* apply In person. The B e rry Tree, 1307 Highland M all. G IF T SH O P clerk. Fu ll or part-time. 45T 5757 or 474-9611, ask for gift shop. F A T H E R W IT H son, 6 years old, living in highrlse apt. Desires person for child care Hours 3:00-7:00Mon.-Frl. $3.00/hr. 327-3666 Monday only. T U T O R ~ N E E D E D in a ig e b ^ lo T h lg h school student. Contact M rs, Smith, 345- 3061.______________________________________ $3 50 TO $5.00 per hour. W ork In pleasant office, beautiful hours, Mon-Frl, 12:00 to 7:30; Sat. 9:30 to 2:00. Apply in person 2200 Guadalupe. Upstairs Suite 223. L IG H T D E L IV E R Y~~Ecoño m I c a I car and good knowledge of Austin area re­ quired. Fu ll and part-time, great hours, 12:00 to 8:00 Mon-Frl and 9.30 to 2:30 Sat. Apply in person. 2200 Guadalupe, upstairs Suite 223. M A T U R E , R E S P ON S IB L E couple to manage and maintain student dormitory In UT area. 1 persom must not work or go to school, husband must be able to make minor repairs. No pets, child in­ fan t o.k. Fu rnished 1 B R apt. with utilities plus $100/mo. Call Barb ara, 385- 8832. C A R IN G , R E S P O N S IB L E person for after school child care for child age 9. Must have own transportation, w ill con- slder llve-ln. 452-0086 F E M A L E F A C U L T Y person seeks house-sitting position for fall semester. Call San Antonio, 826-4457.______________ D E S I R E la w n maintenance workers. 20 hours/week. Call 443-2690 and leave number. P A R T - t Tm e T H E P E R F E C T summer |ob. If you like plants and people and have a car and phone, call Jo, 836-7826 P A R T - T IM E M A T H /scle n ce In stru c­ tors. Must have high M C A T or DAT scores. Call Mon-Wed, 10-3, 472-8085. E N G L I S H T U T O R ~ - v o c a b u la r y ' w riting , g ram m a r. En glish grad or other well qualified. R ick y at 454-4037 or 345-8980 Monday, July 16, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 11 U.S. crime rate up 17% FBI reports Texas follows trend By JOE TEDINO Dally Texan Staff During the first quarter of 1979, violent crime in the United States increased 17 per­ cent over the comparable period in 1978, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has reported. From Jan. 1 to March 31, violent crime went up 17 percent, with robbery up 19 per­ cent, aggravated assault up 17 percent, forci­ ble rape up 11 percent and murder up 9 per­ cent, as indicated by F B I statistics. The statistics show that while the total crime index has risen 11 percent over last year’s index, the rise follows a 4 percent in­ crease for the last half of 1978 compared to the last half of 1977. ALTHO UGH C R IM E has risen in all geographic locations, the highest increase was in the South, where crime increased 15 percent compared to 13 percent in the Northeast, 8 percent in the West and 6 per­ cent in the North Central region In Texas, Houston had the highest total of reported crime, increasing 18 percent from last year. Houston had 35,008 reported crimes from January to March 1979, compared to 29,- 616 during the same period in 1978. Dallas showed a 19 percent increase in reported crime, rising from 18,451 in 1978 to 21,969 in 1979. Austin’s total reported crime increased 10 percent, from 5,505 in 1978 to 6,- 064 in 1979. SAN ANTONIO showed only a 5 percent in­ crease from 1978 to 1979 despite a 28 percent increase in murder and a 39 percent increase in rape and robbery. Of the seven major crimes listed in the F B I report, aggravated assault increased the most in Texas, rising 64 percent in Houston, 34 percent in Fort Worth 14 percent in Dallas and 9 percent in Austin and San Antonio. The total reported crime on the University campus dropped 30 percent, decreasing from 266 reported crimes from January to March 1978 to 206 during the same period in 1979. DURING T H E 1978-79 school year, the number of students arrested on campus in­ creased to 74, twice the number arrested dur­ ing the previous term While the number of students arrested has increased, the majority of persons arrested on campus are not students, said Ralph R. Ravenburg. University police administrator. Of the 353 arrests made on campus between September 1978 and June 1979, only 74 of the arrestees were students, according to police records. Students generally are arrested for mis­ demeanor offenses including drunken and dis­ orderly conduct and minor thefts, Ravenburg said Russian eyes capitalist cure FOR RENT M IN I- S T O R A G E S O U T H C o n creta block construction *12.50 up monthly. 444-241 1, W o o d la n d 's A A A M in i Warehouse. 2 S T U D IO S P A C E S for rent. $105/mo and SlOO/mo For more Information, call Genny, 473-1773, or Yvonne, 345-3698 M U S IC A L IN ST R U C T IO N E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O / G U I T A R teacher. Beglnners-advanced. U T music degree 471-7583 mornings. A fter 2 pm 459-4082, 476-4407 ______ P R I V A T E V O IC E , piano, music theory instruction. Music, drama, and studio recording offered 327-1780 " L E A R N I N G M U S IC In C reative P la y , " music instruction for young children; small classes. 327-1780 J O B W A N T E D P R O F . N E E D S place to house-sit. Ju ly 20 to August 10. 459-9696 after 6. TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 MOSCOW (U P I) - The finance minister of the Soviet Union’s richest republic Sun­ day suggested an old-style capitalist cure for inefficiency and corruption in industry — Interesting go Facts ‘ Brought To You Every W eek By The University Co-Op The nation of M on aco , w here P rin c e R a in ie r and the fo rm e r G ra ce K e lly rule, is s m a lle r than Cen­ tra l P a rk in N ew Y o rk . M onaco is composed of 370 acres. C entral P a rk has 840 acres. The only m e m b e r of the B ritish House of C om ­ mons who is not allo w ed to speak is the m an called the Speaker of the House. hitting wasteful senior of­ ficials in their own pocket- books U s i n g qu otes f r o m Bolshevik leader Vladim ir Lenin and Soviet President L e o n i d B r e z h n e v , the minister. P. Ananiashvili, suggested in the Communist Party daily Pravda that the Georgian authorities should “ induce with the ruble and punish with the ruble’’ to cut public spending and raise labor productivity. “ Perhaps if industry of­ ficials . did not receive a cer- tain percentage of th eir they would be s a l a r y , ( w i t h publ ic ‘ m e a n e r ’ money),’’ Ananiashvili said in a long editorial. In a society that claims to shield its citizens from the economic laws of capitalism, a proposal to reintroduce such “ carrot-and-stick” tactics is highly controversial. the Although Ananiashvili s ar­ ticle ostensibly applied only to G e o r g i a , S o v i e t authorities clearly intended to provoke wide discussion and give it the widest possible publicity by publishing it in Pravda, the country’s most authoritative newspaper with nationwide circulation. The article recounted a re­ cent case in which a six-man sanitation departm ent in Georgia was discovered to have conspired with bank of­ ficials to embezzle “ hundreds of thousands of rubles’’ by f r a u d u l e n t l y c l a i m i n g salaries, travel expenses and pensions. ★ * ★ ★ ★ * k it it it it it D u ffel bags a re nam ed a fte r the town of D u ffel, B elgium , where they w e re firs t m ad e. Campus News in Brief The largest body of fresh w a te r In the w orld is Lake Superior. Th e dollar sign o rig in a te d fro m tak in g the a b ­ b re via tio n of the U n ited States — the U. and the S. — and placing one on top of the o th er. L a te r, the bottom of the " U " was dropped for fo rm the present design of the d o lla r sign. in te re s tin g A nd, h ere's a n o th e r f a c t ,... T he U n iv e r s ity Co-Op w ill be u n d erg o in g s e v e ra l d e p a rtm e n t changes and fac elifts this sum m er. Please excuse our scars. W e 're try in g to provide b etter service to you. GRE review offered RASSL Learning Services w ill sponsor a free, informal G R E Verbal and Math Review Session from 2:30 to 3:45 p.m. Tues­ day in Jester Center A209. Self-paced materials for G R E preparation are available in R A SSL’s Self-Help Lab. Late registration for free, non-credit short courses in Study Techni­ ques and Faster Text Reading continues Monday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Jester Center A332. The drop-in writing workshop con­ tinues to meet from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Thurs­ day. For more information, phone 471-3614. ANNOUNCEMENTS TEXA8 MEMORIAL MUSEUM will display the exhibit Cloisonne and Champteve Enameis ot the Far East: 19th and 20th Centuries" through Oct 15 The museum is open to the public trom 9 a m. to 5 p m Monday through Friday and (rom 1 to 5 p m Saturday and Sunday Ad­ mission is free TEXAS UNION FILM COMMITTEE will present Born Yesterday at sundown Monday on the V , SA M a s te rC h a rg e Union Building patio Admission ia free Free 1 hr. Parking w /$ 3 .0 0 Purchase Perry-Caslaneda Library 1 124 Qfu TEXAS UNION RECREATION CENTER will sponsor bowling lor 25 cents a game from 11:30 a m to closing Monday v S EM IN A R S THE GENERAL LIBRARIES will sponsor Solving the Information Puzzle at 2 p.m Monday in A C RO SS 1 •— Well 5 Plow parts 10 — Bede 14 Bard 15 Son s spouse 16 Knott/ — 1? Antiquing 18 Necroman­ aid cers 20 Nonmigra- tory 22 Showy flower 23 Extreme 24 Insect 25 Menace 28 The Green 32 King Fr 33 Abate 2 words 35 Murder 36 Formerly 38 Overly fond one 40 Being Sp 41 Young years 43 Norse god 45 Prized thing 46 Gas i 2 3 * 48 Balloters 50 Rumanian city 51 Brief note 52 Semblances 55 Tedious 59 Remands 61 TV static 62 Metal 63 Gladden 64 Diminutive suffix 65 Vocalized 66 Estimated 67 Stage — DOWN 1 O n ----- with 2 Theater box 3 Dregs 4 Gait 5 Deflected 6 A hole — 7 Niche 8 Bounder 9 Syncopes 10 “ Pretty as 11 Menu item 12 Not for 13 Chaos UNITED Feature Syndicate Wednesday's Puzzle Solved: iron nnnnn nnnn 1 B b b d r r n o n e 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 -mmU U U U U IX U U 44 Alaskan city 47 Leg slapper 49 — salad 51 — Carlo 52 Eye part 53 Hindu "Olympus ' 54 Biblical king 55 Vessel 56 Aware of 57 Con — : Mus 58 Pitcher 60 Dockers’ org >1 i r T T 19 Talk publicly 21 Phone 24 Gawked 25 Loyalty 26 Sweet fluid 27 Sieved 28 Don: 2 words 29 Extent 30 Oleate 31 Looks 34 Hauled 37 Making mad 39 Transposed 42 Afflictions 7 I !! 1 6 19^ 29 30 31 I * 21 26 27 ■ 32 ■1 ■3é ■ 46 36 41 50 52 53 54 6 7 8 ■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■51 ■ U 17 ¿0 62 65 ■1 39 ■1 44 ■ 56 ■61 64 67 ■ !1" DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau DUANE, THE BOSS iS REAL­ LY STARTING • ID FEU THE HEAT, BUDDY, ÍM0NTT.6RAY. I CALLEO A PRESTS CONFERENCE FOR THIS AFTERNOON. / HOW ARE YOU PLANNING ID EXPLAIN JER- RTS ASSOCI­ ATION MTH KORSHAK7 WELL, I THOUGHT iv swim mm IS INTRIGUED BY JhE MAFIA ONLY AS / A SOURCE OF IDEAS. TLL POINT OUT THAT ORGANIZED CRIME IS ONE OF THE FEW LABOR INTENSIVE INDUSTRIES JO BE BOTH SELF REGULA TORT AND COST- EFFICIENT. SO LUE A LL HAVE MUCH TO LEARN, E 7 C ? % exactly, t THOUGHT IV SHOW SOME FLOW CHARTS / Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, July 16, 1979 Energy plan Clements pleased with response to rationing program By JO E L WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff Gov. B ill Clements said Friday more than 2.000 Texas gasoline stations under the odd- even rationing plan have signed up for an in­ centive program providing each station that remains open on weekends an additional 10.000 gallons of fuel In a press conference dominated by energy matters, Clements said the response from stations was much better than he expected, adding the response would benefit the driving public. Shell, Gulf and Exxon report 80 to 90 per­ cent of their normal retail outlets in the Houston, Dallas and Fort Worth areas w ill re­ main open on weekends with the additional allocation, Clements said. “ W E ’R E NOT trying to market gasoline in the sense that this is a big sales day,” Clements said. “ What we re trying to do is get enough of the stations to stay open so the m o to ri s ts w i l l not be und ul y i n ­ convenienced ” The average extra weekend allocation is 5,000 gallons To qualify, stations in the odd- even areas must stay open for at least four hours between 8 a m. and 6p.m. either Satur­ day or Sunday. Another Texas county began odd-even sales limitations Friday The addition of Parker County near Fort Worth brings the total to 17 areas with restricted sales. C LEM EN TS AGAIN said that success of his energy program is dependent on the sup­ port of individual citizens. “ If the public is not going to buy it, it’s not gomg to work, ’ the governor said. “ We can’t have a policeman looking down the neck of every business and every citizen.” Clements criticized Sen. Ron Clower, D- Garland, and others who maintain that oil companies have created a shortage by deliberately holding production down and said Texas Railroad Commission records in­ dicate the companies are acting in good faith. Producers in Texas are pumping at 100 per­ cent of capability, he said. “ W E A R E ON a decline curve,” Clements said.“ We cannot produce what we formerly produced. We are satisfied that we are producing to a point that we are hurting some of our reservoirs." Commenting on alternate forms of energy, Clements said he supports research and development, particularly of fuel alcohol for making gasohol. He again referred to gasohol as “ exotic” fuel Friday, saying the present research at Texas A&M University is important but will not solve any problems soon. He said his veto of the $225,000 gasohol bill sponsored by Rep. Dan Kubiak, D-Rockdale, “ is not important in that context.” Addressing nuclear waste concerns, Clements said it is inevitable that Texas citizens consider the problem soon. There are no licensed sites in the state for storing the highly radioactive byproducts of nuclear power plants. On the energy policies of the Carter ad­ ministration, Clements said he is waiting for realistic proposals from President Carter. Gov. Bill Clements Specially designed for a nar­ row face. Tempered glass lens, large purge valve in nose pocket. AMF, V0IT, B55BKS, $13.95 “ Medalist” Total vision de­ sign with a super flared com­ fort fit edge. Overlapping blue Duro-Nyl pressure rim. Pose- Lock adjustable rubber strap and basket weave housing. MARK SPITZ by Elton, #601, $4.95 “ Ultra” Smart aviator styled mask with super soft double feather edge contoured to fit perfectly. Tempered is entirely encased in a protec­ tive styrol for added rim strength. Full nasal pocket with non-return purge valve. MARK SPITZ, by Elton, #630, $19.95 lens Wide Vision mask. Comfor­ table, positive double face seal and finger wells for equalizing pressure. Neoprene rubber body and split non slip strap. tempered Large vision. lens provide wide $22.95 A M FV0IT, B59BKS rectangular Soft flared edge provides ex­ ceptional face seal. Finger wells aid in equalization. Fea­ include tures large purge large tempered glass valve, lens, stainless steel band, and rubber body. AMF V0IT, $13.95 B18BS “ Baja” Easygrip nose pocket for equalizing pressure. Stain­ less Steel rim around lens V0IT, encasement. $20.95 2M70 AMF, Designed tor kids aged 5-10. Features high strength plastic lens, non-slip strap, and flared fit. skirt for $2.25 A M FV 0 IT , B50, comfortable Easy “ Butterfly” swim mask. Pop­ ular square vision model with slanted design. fit, flared, comfort edge. Adjust­ able rubber strap with ribbed edges and side basket-weave housing. MARK SPITZ by $3.70 Elton, #507 Swimaster wide view mask. Fast, one-way clearing with large exhaust valve. Neoprene sponge seal for superior com­ fort and fit. Excellent for use with corrective lenses. AMF $31.95 V0IT, 2M35 Competition mask. Comfor­ table, positive double face seal. Optional one-way valve in nose pocket for easy purg­ ing. Lens positioned close to face for excellent vision. Neo­ prene rubber body with stain­ less steel outer mask band. $23.95 A M FV0IT, B60BKS Minimal air displacement and closeness of lens to face pro­ distortion-free vides wide, field of vision. Easy grip nose pocket for equalizing pres­ sure. Double edged construc­ face seal. tion Split head strap. AMF V0IT, $22.95 2M69 for perfect “ Freestyle” design. Universal oval design with flared con­ toured edges for comfort fit. Contrasting white Duro-Nyl Pressure Rim for watertight­ ness. Wide rubber strap with cleated edges and stainless steel buckles. MARK SPITZ $4.95 by Elton, #600 Juicy concept computer hit market Look closely at the next grapefruit you see — it may be a computer. Tit- IBM reportedly is developing the fastest computer ever, and it will be the size of a grapefruit, according to an article in the June issue of Scientific American, This new citrus-size computer will be made with sej on-junction devices, which are superconducting switches. Talk about cold fruit: the computa* will operate at the temperature of liquid helium. Silicon will be ihe main ingredient of the computer, which requires an entirely new electronic technology, but will operate several times faster than other computers, according to the article. IBM laboratories In Yorktown Heights, New York and Zurich have developed some of the necessary stages, but it will be a few years before the actual computer is JUST BEAUTIFUL 3 Vz * copies Fast Friendly Service W e Copy Anything! kinko*s 2 2 0 0 G uadalupe (Lower Level) 476-4654 3 LOCATIONS T H U N D E R C LO U D SUBS ... ó, . H r ' “ rThe B est Sandw ich In T ow n ” PH O N E ORDERS W ELC O M E 32nd & Guadalupe 452-5010 1608 Lavaca 478-3281 201 E. Riverside 441-5331 WALKING SHOBT5 COOL, CO/A PORTABLE* AN O TRAIL TESTED FOR DURABILITY. \0 0 % COTTONS AND COTTON/POLYESTER OLENOS MEM's 4 $ 1 0 2 ? t o WOAAENS» » V / WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2410 SAN AN TO NIO ST - A U S T IN - 478-1577 PLENTY VF PARKING THURSDAY NIGHTS $ SATURDAY , t t * — * E ar P iercin g and j 14 K t . G old Earring s O nly $1 0 00 ♦ It s fa sh io n a b le , q u ic k , and p ain fre e ! J ♦ É * P - T ^ ♦ ♦ i “ Champion” Professional MARK SPITZ by Elton, #721 J-type snorkel. $2.95 For the young diver or swimmer who wants the same thrust as the experienced diver. Black floating rubber for easy recovery. Fea­ tures full foot pocket and open toe. Sizes S (1-3), M (5-7), and L (5-8). AMF, A8 $11.95 “ Marine” Flexo-accordian model with non­ crimping rubber hose. Hangs free when not $3.95 in use. MARK SPITZ by Elton, #722 Large interior tube dimensions and mouth­ piece opening makes this style AMF Voit’s most versatile snorkel. Extremely comfortable and efficient design. AMF V0IT, #2520 $6.95 ROOSTER ANDREWS 3 9 0 1 G uadalupe A nd erson Lane at S h o a l C reek ________ 30% off 14 K t . earrings S e le c t fro m o v e r 600 p airs! ♦ U n iv e rs ity Keepsake f ♦ f Diamond Center Upper Level Ddbie NUN 4 7 7 -ff43 F re e p a r k i n # in I h t h i e ( ' , ara#e u i t h p a r c h a n ♦ I MS** \f 24 ■ A C A D E M Y ’S *1.00 sid ew alk I WE MAKE CENTS AND YOU SAVE s ü n IDOLIARS Choose from 5000 King Size Brand SHIRTS Short or Long Sleeves, Values to $20.00 each ¿2 for ,500 Sizes 14 Vi to 22 k y r i ' 1 Choose from 2000 pair S U N G L A S S E S m a d * to m II for up to $2.50 a pair 9 * 0 0 Just a pair Choose from 3000 State Government PANTS SHIRTS All cotton Good condition Regular $3.79 Sale Price 9 | 00 each White Outside PAINT compare at $5.00 a gallon 2 G A L L O N S 00 fo r » 5 Choose from 5000 FISHING LURES values to $3.00 each • | 00 2 fo r Heavy Duty Plastic T R A S H C A N $*oo normally $3.44 Choose from 3000 pair b a s k e t b a l l or T E N N IS S H O E S including fam ous N.B.A. brand Regular $7.00 a pair 2 Pair for * 7 ° ° Choose from 3000 TENNIS DRESSES m ade to sell for $5.00 each special 00 each Choose from 5000 vinyl A I R M A T T R E S S E S Regular $2.79 sale price 00 • 2 each Choose from 1000 R O Y A L C H IN A IR O N S T O N E P L A T E S 1 0 " size value to $1.00 each 9 | 00 T w o fo r Choose from 3000 B L U E D E N IM R E C Y C L E D CU TO FF S H O R T S regular $2.79 •2 oo Sale Price Choose from 3000 pair King Size S H O E S o r B O O T S sixes 12 to 16, 4A to4E values to $50.00 00 a pair * 5 Choose from 2000 C U P S o r M U G S values to $1.00 each FOUR for 91 oo ACADEMY ■ 4 Big Stores to Serve You ' W The Most Interesting Store Open All Day Sunday 1 0 % Discount to Retired Senior Citizens i 4103 N. IH 35 603 E. Ben White Blvd. 8103 N. Research Blvd. q 6601 Burnet Rd. P u 11^ on Th e dr«g Starring, in alphabetical order: The Boy Problems Eddie and the InmSs The Explosives The Huns The Invisibles The Next The Re-Cords The Standing Waves and Terminal Mind by louit black The music mixes with the road, a thin trail of ink with the moon reflected off of it. The best half of a decade spent traveling, the radio turned up loud and tuned from station-to-station looking for rock ‘n’ roll. Cutting through the gunk, the crap, the Muzak, the bubble gum looking for the songs that soared, whose rhythm and energy matched the movement, the romantic vision fueled by a decade of “ On The Road.” Sometimes you would find the songs. Driving cross­ country from Cleveland to Denver and everywhere was Van Morrison’s “ Domino” and there was no way to hear it too many times. Sitting in a car eating burgers in a White Tower parking lot and hearing “ Somebody to Love” for the first time. Different bands in different places playing for different reasons. A basement in Vermont where some lousy rock band swung with an ambition and enthusiasm its music didn’t come close to. Some kid walks in and he has acne and is made fun of by the other kids at school and has been most his life. He walks in and nobody notices and he picks up a guitar and starts playing. It is one of those moments out of a Western when it tarns out that Jim m y Stewart, all-around dork, is really the fastest gun in the West Some kid walks in and picks up a guitar in an ill-lit cellar and suddenly he plays Hendrix and suddenly he plays the first “Moby G rape” album and it becomes obvious that he didn't realize it was three guitarists making that music as he plays them all at once. THERE IS SOMETHING ABOUT ROCK that when its back is up against the wall it goes for the dram atic. This is by way of an introduction to the Battle of the Bands at Raul’s last Tuesday and Wednesday. Whether punk/new wave musicians like it or not, they are rock ‘n ’ roll; they are a part of rock ‘n ’ roll; they are the descendants of rock ‘n’ roll. So nine Austin new wave bands battle it out for who is the best and there is something exciting in that and something that doesn't make sense in that. If there is one overriding aspect of new wave, it is variety—from the looseness (in every sense of the word) of the Re-Cords, to the power rock of Boy Problems, to the professionalism of the Explosives, to the dramatic intensity of the Huns— it is a variety of techniques, approaches, philosophies. The new wave is many kinds of music co-existing and in­ teracting. The idea of two bands being somehow better than the rest is a bit awkward to begin with. In a way you judge not only the bands but the kind of music they play—the approach to music they take. YET THE BANDS ALL AGREED to play. And not only did they agree but most played as though they were out to win; a sense of competitive spirit filled the air. And the audiences turned out for it. Not only did Raul’s sell out both nights, but there were reasonable crowds by 9 30 p.m., something that is unheard of at Raul’s, a place that often doesn’t begin jumping until 10:30 p.m. or 11 p.m. So despite the fact that some of the bands complained about the results and certain pedants and journalists were heard a bitching and a ’moaning out front during the breaks between bands, it was obvious in some way the punk/new wave/what-have-you community supported this event. The Facts: • Nine bands played during two nights to two sold-out houses at $4 per head (more than twice the usual Raul’s cover). • There were five judges chosen by the bands. They Photo by Ronald Cortes were Jeff “The Kid” Whittington, Gena Dagel, Joe Nick Patoski, Jerry Dean and M argaret Moser — all connected with the local music scene in one way or another. • How the bands who played were chosen is still a little unclear. The order the bands played in was determined by drawing numbers. The first night The Boy Problems, The Invisibles, The Explosives, The Next and The Re-Cords played. The second night Standing Waves, Terminal Mind, Eddie and the Inm8s and The Huns played. The winners were announced the second night. The Huns won with Standing Waves coming in second. The Next and Ter­ minal Mind were both given honorary mentions. The two winning bands will journey to Dallas to participate in a Battle of the Bands there. End of facts. AFTER THIS POINT everything becomes clouded in confusion, assumption and innuendo. Supposedly the win­ ning band at the Dallas battle will open for their choice of one of several m ajor acts. Supposedly there will be five judges with Austin well-represented. Supposedly it will be a real battle, as Austin’s was, and not a kangaroo court, but who knows. It will be a while before anyone finds out Back to Tuesday night, where The Boy Problems open­ ed the Battle. Opening up one of these kind of events is ob­ viously an uncomfortable place to be, though The Boy Problems handled it well. They turned in a good strong set but there was confusion over how long they had to play. There was also the problem of warming up an audience that had showed up hours before it normally does. This band in particular usually needs longer to get hot but it tried valiantly. The next band was the Invisibles, which turned in a nice set of ‘60s mystic-vision rock. They were followed by the Explosives, a band formed by local professional musicians including Jerry Jeff Walker’s drum m er This band managed to admirably split the audience, with half booing and half cheering. A lot of people resented the fact that these musicians had gotten together in an obvious bid for the Battle of the Band’s ample pot. However drum m er extraordinaire Tom Huckabee probably had the best comment when he somewhat sardonically said “ I think this will be a good sign if new wave bands begin to be booked at Soap Creek.” THE NEXT WERE THE CLEAR VICTORS of the evening turning in a powerhouse set of rock. The audience went berserk as the band performed, creating the first musical/audience-reaction highpoint of the Battle The conclusion at the end of the set was that The Next was ob­ viously going to be one of the winning bands. In a way the band combines the musical proficiency of Standing Waves with the neo-mysticism/cynicism of The Huns, though they are far different than either of those bands. The last band of the evening was The Re-Cords. It is with this band that one of the problems of this kind of event becomes readily apparent. The Re-Cords is, simp­ ly, one of the most important bands in Austin. The new wave, as rock itself, is more than music. It is an attitude, a lifestyle, an arrogance. The Re-Cords as a musical enti- t\ as not that extraordinary and is often downright mediocre But as a force in the community they are wonderful, innovative, funny, daring, outrageous and necessary. From playing in the capital to serenading on the Drag to bursting the pretensions that have begun to form among Raul s clientele they a re constantly challenging and reassessing the local music scene. In a Battle of the Bands done as a contest on the musical ther­ mom eter scale they virtually had no chance. But that is the poverty of such contests, certainly not of this band’s. 23 TRO UBLE IN M INO : University Cabaret Theatre will present this biting comedy at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Admission is $4 for students and $5 for the genera! public. EVENTS ESTHER’S FOLLIE8: Satirical revue at 9 and 11 30 p.m. Fridays, Saturdays and alternate Thursdays. FESTIVAL: Ninth annual classical music test in the Mary Moody Northen continues Pavilion on Festival HHI at Round Top. Concerts are Fridays, Saturdays and Sun­ days. EXHIBIT: Laguna Gloria Art Museum will show the exhibit "Artwork of Texas” July 28 through Aug. 19. MUSIC A U 8TIN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA: The symphony will present a free concert at 8 p.m. July 28 at the Zilker Hillside Theatre RECITAL8: UT Music Department will present recitals of music by Chopin, Beethoven and Bach at 3 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday ,n the Music Building Recital Hall. There will be a piano recital by Grace McFarland at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Music Building Recital Hall. INDIAN MUSIC: Welch Hall Auditorium will present a sitar concert by David Barsamian at 8 p.m. Saturday. Tickets are $2.50 for the general public. ria.ni ON CAMPUS i ms week s listings compiled by John Centu and ClnemaTexaa staff BORN YESTERDAY. 9 p m Monday. TEXAS UNION THEATRE Junk dealer Broderick Crawford wants his girl Judy Holliday. to gain a little culture, to he hi rea Wttiiam Holden as her tutor in this Pygmalion adaptation Written by G arson Kanin and directed by George Cukor; Holliday w e n t on to win an Oscar lor her hilarious performance TM * ALAMO. 9 p m Monday, BATTS AUDITORIUM John Wayne s first diractorai attempt (though rumor haa It that John Ford gave him a hand). If you don't know the story, you must be a stranger to thle part of the woods T H * ROMANTIC CNOLISHWOMAN, 7 and 9 15 p m Tuee day UNION THEATRE Michael Caine plays a successful novelist who is married to Glenda Jackson He invites Helmut Berger to their home to "generate'' material tor a screenplay he s writing. ISLAND OP LOST SOULS, 7 and 9 p m Tuesday, BUROINE AUDITORIUM Charles Laughton stars aa a mad scientist who changes his victims into mansters" by crossing man with savage beasts Also on the program la the 1978 Devo shod. In the Beginning Was the End." WAIT UNTIL OARK, 7 and 9 p m Wedneeday. UNION THEATRE Terrence Young haa had bettor days with Audrey Hepburn than the current "Bloodline'' would indicate In this film. Hepburn plays a blind woman who la terrorized by pay chotic Alan Arkin and hie henchmen. Richard Crenna and Jack Weston MIDNIGHT COWBOY,. 7 and 9 p m Wednesday, BATTS AUDITORIUM Jon Votght portrays Joe Buck, a naive Texas stud who moves to New York's 42nd Street In an attom.pt to become a big city hustler Dustin Hoffman turns In on# of he f nest performances as the crippled Rateo, a con artist who befriends the would-be tody’s man. Winner of an Oscar for best picture in 1969. this film was directed by John Schtosinger ™ B * a **» N Q S R , 7 and 9 15 p m Thursday. UNION EA RE. Jack Nicholson stars In this exetontia! narrative about an unauthentK TV reporter stationed in Afrtca who ex ’ anges identities with an Englishman who dee In their hotel The stunning cinematography of the film's enigmatic climax this is worth Michelangelo Antonioni masterpiece intermittent confusion rampant the In NATION, 7 and 9 p m Thursday. BURDtNE UM D W Griffith's epic treces the story of two amities during and following the Civil War a 1915 landmark in American film. TAKE T M I MONEY ANO RUN, 8 and 10 p m Friday UNION T H E A T R E W o o d y A lt o n 's f ir s t fH m ae diractor/wrttar/star e * semi-documentary' covering the career of a compulsive thief Narrator Jackaon Beck gets In toe beet toughs but Louise Leaser appears briefly T H t FRENCH CONNECTION, 8 and 10 p m Saturday UNiON t h e a t r e . Gene Hackman won an Oscar as toe tough-driving Popeye Doyle to tow 1971 WMUam Ertodkm classic about toe cracking of an international harotn ring The exciting car chase m this movie has yet to be surpassed end forces s somewhat estoy climax, but the tension never slackens "here are no good guys to tola movie, only bad guys and badder you decida who a worse, toe cope or toe robbers OFF CAMPUS fare ALIEN, CAPITOL PLAZA Mixed to what has bean "Star Wws" with the film'» spectacular technological characterized as an attempt to croas 'j a w s ” Despite achievements, its greatest flaw « that it takas itself seriously THE AFFLE-OUM FLINQ QANQ RIDES AQAIN, LAKEHILLS VILLAGE Tim Conway and Don Knotts return to a sequel to toe 1977 Disney comedy-Weatem Lots of stopcock and, un­ fortunately. stale jokes ORACULA, LAKEHILLS. VILLAGE Drac1s back for tng bu as Frank Langeüa puts toe vamp back into toa vampire While the commercial triumph won't replace toe 1931 classic. you’H be gripped from beginning to and With strong support from Laurence Olivier and Donald Rteaeence. to * « the tato of a nice guy who just happen* to drtnk a ifflto too much THE OEER HUNTER, FOX. Hardly anyone is neutral about to * fHm Depending on who you listen to. it's either the beet or worst movie of the decade At toe very least, it * beeutfful. stunning, powerful and confusing The locations to mid America and Thailand a rt great Robert DeNiro and toe reet of the cast are excellent and toe ctnematogaphy * brilliant THE DOUBLE MCOUFF1N. FOX, SOUTMWOOO, Ernest Borgnme stars in tot# mystery produced, directed and written by r «xan Joe Camp, whose chief claim to fama thus far has been "Benji," ESCAPE PROM ALCATRAZ, NORTHCROSS, WESTGATE The last time Don Siegel worked with Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry" was the result This time Clint plays a prisoner'who * determined to be toe first to crack Alcatraz. Also starring Patrick McGoohan PWsaence stars as toa doctor of a man who asrapet from a mental institution to pktoga toa town ha graw up m HARDCORE, AQUARIUS Paul Schradar ("Blua Cottar") doaa his annual r#maks of "Taxi Drtvar " A god-faartng Qaorga C Scott marchas from tha haartiand to ratcua h * la i igntar from audstda sm and pomoa. Ha and Saaaon Hutkay touching as tha pederaatttuta, walk toa strip and show how much alike God's children really ara THE IN-LAWS, NORTHCROSS AJan Arkin playa a dsntlsl whose daughter * «bout to marry Into toa CIA tn to# parson of Peter Falk Directed by Arthur Htnar ("Love Story") JUST YOU ANO ME. KID, AQUARIUS, HIGHLAND M ALI George Burns and Brook# Shiafda co atar in to * «.may comedy which is primarily an excuse to capitaliza on boto careers A 90-mmute runmog joke about how young ha la and how old she'a becoming A LITTLE ROMANCE, VILLAGE A genuinely romantic mile film about two 13-year-old ttar-croaaad Overt played by D to a Lane and Thelonius Barnard Laurence Okvter dekgh* as a debonair and blithe rogue who plays Godfather io than hap pmeee Eloquently directed by George Roy Htfi y NE MAIN EVENT, f o x , WESTGATE Ryan O'Neau and Barbra Streisand ("What's Up, Doc?") attempt to strike lightning agam m this comedy about a not-too ambmou# figh*» hw down-and-out manager MANHATTAN, FOX Woody Allan * back with an aimoat perfect blending of the humor of "Annie Hall" and the depths of "Interiors" m h it latest, Manhattan ** Allan examines America with a defines# rarely equaled Look for to * one to clean up at Oscar time MEATBALLS, RIVERSIDE T h * year's version of Animal House stars Bill Murray as toe senior counselor at summer camp Northstar The same type of Animal Houaa" ¡okas and yuks. MOONRAKER. NORTHCROSS Jamae Bond ng Fiiiott Gould Christopher Rummer and Susannah York, UP IN SMOKE, DOBIE RIVERSIDE Cheech and Chong -.aka then long #wilted (well, they must have soma fans out toara somewhere) film debut Undoubtedly to * film wilt do for toe maniuana ¡oka what Nixon did to th# presidency and if# •bout bma THE WARRIORS. DOBlE. RIVERSIDE A great dea becomes an unbelievably dumb movie Sat m toa near future, a New York City youto gang must make i from the Bronx to Brooklyn fighting hostile gang# and cope ait tha way Stupid fast sue. offensive. sex*t and moat of aH dun. dull, dun Director Waiter H*t deserve# toe credit tor th * mesa it * o r* continuous chase scene and not a vary good one at that SHORT RUNS RICHARD PRYOR; Lhre In Conoart. Mdmghter DOBiE Be prepared tor naughty language CARRIE, Mdmghter, DOBIE. Brian Oa Palma proves again that ha is tha matter of toe ahock cu t T h * «tm wM h#v# you sc'eammg and jumping out of your seat S*ay Space* gives a remarkably powerful performance aa a guf wtto strange powers Tha famt of heart and weak of stomach should not sea to * fHm T H * ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW, Friday Saturday Mdmghter. RIVERSIDE Forever? Or maybe it just seems that w jy t77to weak ROMEO AND JULIET and BROTHER SUN, SISTER MOON. Monday. VARSITY Franco Zeffirelli'# film versions of tha if# of S' Franc* of Aaswai and Shakespeare t star crossed lovers remain unequaled in their authenticity and heartfelt S*tor" * by Oonovwi and toe beauty Music m "Brother soundtrack n "Romeo and Julief' * composed by Nina Rota ( The Godfather") •IDOHARTHA and STERRtNWOLP, Tu**cl,y vARiSTY Two of Harman Hasse s poetic and philosophic* nova* have bean mangled an route lo toa aerean Sven NykvtoTs evocative t namatography « « plus for "Bkldhartha and I rning on location m India doesn't hurt, but the spirituality seams m.ssmg Max Von Sydow and Domtwqua Sarda give a strong try in StsopenwofT but Haaaa teems to ee*< translation to toe screen THE LAST WALTZ and LET fT BE. Wedneeday-Thursday VARSITY Marlin Scorceee filmed toe fin * concert of toe legendary "Band ’ Along tor toe nqa ware Nek Young. Bob Dylan, Ronm# Hawkins and Nek Diwnond? " ta t ft B a * a documentary look at a Beatles recording asearon THE FEARLESS VAMPIRE KILLERS and THE LOVED ONE, Frday and Saturday. VARSITY Romwi Polar**, directa ano stars m Vampira Kilter»," a spool about an mapt vem­ pire hunter who encounters every manner of toe bloodthirsty residents m old Tranayfvan* Jonathan winters stars aa to# ubiquitous Mr Joy boy In "Th# Loved One," a none too sub­ as chop at to# mortuary husmeas ALL SCREWED UP and T H * SEDUCTION OP M IM I, Sun­ day, VARSITY Mixed Lina Wertmuttar "AE Screwed Up* attempts to parody encuetan* confusion and totMy n con tomparary urban Italy, and fatts mtaerabiy On toa otoer hard Giancarto G*nmnm shmee m "SaduCOon of Mtrm, * the tale of one man # seduction by woman and politic» *ue story o* horror and remcam t u s " THE FRISCO KID, Gene Wilder s t^ s as a Polish rabb. trai across America to San Franc,sco b e fr*n d e d b y * Harrison Ford among others NORTH DALLAS FORTY Nick Nott, C° wt>0y ,n th . fHm vers Z rum t h e VILLAIN. H * Needham # ("Smokay and th# Bandk >‘m * a comedy Western starring Kirk Douglas Margret and Arnold Schw arzaoaooar ,U,! ’' * P0#r'* 10 Oast saiiar about. fic« in Texas THE WANDERERS. The exploits Of a Bronx straw gang i mtd 60t e tn a setting tor Phiiup Kaufman's (in v a a o r i Body Snatoher»') new film I'H IS W E E K ART ANCIENT CERAMIC8:"Animal Ceramics of Ancient Peru," a collection of ceramics and textile images of animals from three ancient cultures of Peru, is on exhibit at the Texas through September Memorial Museum Hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Admission is free. ART CLA88E8:The Elisabet Ney Museum will offer classes in life drawing and ceramics July 23-26 and July 30-Aug. 2 from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. The $40 coat does not in­ clude materials. Also an eight-session course in primitive clay forming and firing will be offered from July 24-Aug. 18 from 7 to 10 p.m. The course will cost $35. AMERICANS IN QLA8S: Glass art objects some made by local artists, are on exhibit at Laguna Gloria at First Federal, 200 E. 10th St. The exhibition continues through Aug. 10 with an admission charge of $1. ARMANDO MORALES LITHOGRAPHS : An exhibit of color lithographs by artist Armando Morales will be on display at the Galerie late Ravel, 1210 W. Fifth St. through August.NAIVE TEXAS ART: Works by un­ trained folk artists are on display in “A Survey of Naive Texas Artists from 1849 to the Present." The show includes 19th century works by early German and French settlers and Mexicans, as well as present-day folk art. The exhibit is at Laguna Gloria Art Museum, 3809 W. 35th St. through July 22 Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday and 1 to 5 p.m on Sunday. Admission is $1 during the week and is free on weekends and Thursdays from 5 to 9 p.m. NORMAN BEL QEDDE8: A giant of American theatrical and industrial design, Bel Geddes produced innovative designs and mode is that often prophesied the future. The exhibit is on view on toe second floor of the toe Harry Ransom Michener Gallery Ip Center at 21st and Guadalupe streets Through July 22. PHOTOQRAPH8:47 Color and black and white photographs by G. Alex McAlmon, University graduate student, are on display in the Texas Union gallery through July 27. THEATER AUDITIONS: Auditions for "Hole in the Air " an original ragtime musical to be presented at Center Stage, will be held by appointment. Call 477-5233. CACTU8 CAFE: The Texas Union will present the following one-person theatrical perfor­ mances in toe Cactus Cafe at 8 p.m. Thurs­ day through Aug. 9: "Theatre in Black" and Malcolm X ,” Tuesday; "Frederick Douglass," Wednesday; "Richard III," Thurs­ day; "An Evening with Lenny Bruce," July 24-26; "The Belle of Amherst," July 31-Aug 2; and "Diaghaiev," Aug. 7-9. DEC I8IO N 8: UT drama students will present a reading of the play "Decisions" Tuesday D. rr' ln the Lab°rtory Theater, IO N E S C O P LA Y S : Two plays from Ionesco s Theater of the Absurd, "The Lesson” and “The New Tenant" will be presented at 8:15 p.m. Thursday through Sunday at Theatre in the Rye, 120 W Fifth St through July 26 m a n OF LA MANCHA: The City ol Austin arks and Recreation Department will pre­ sent ‘Man of La Mancha" at Zilker Hillside > heafre at 8 45 p m. through July 21. Admis­ sion is free For more information call 477- 5824 MI8TER ROBERTS: Zachary Scott Theatre presents this highly acclaimed comedy at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday and 2 15 p.m. Sunday, through Aug. 5. For more information call 476-0541. TAMING OF THE SHREW: Gaslight Theatre this well-known Shakespearean presents play at 8 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday through Aug. 4. Tickets are $4 for adults $3.50 for students and $2.50 for children. For more information oall 476-4536. * fi,*,’ ,* t i » • . HALLOWEEN, AMERICANA. AQUARIUS. OOBlE. Donald ) < • » . % L* j . /M't . 1 f , \ I' • of Carlos Santana’s finer moments. Although Taylor’s style is easily recognizable, there is little on this album to remind one of the Stones, save in the final, fading seconds of A Minor,” where he cryptically inserts a signature run from his Time Waits For No One” solo: a venial flir­ tation given the excellence of this work. The John Prine concert; Friday, July 13th; at Ar­ madillo World Headquarters. by paul cullum At about 3.30 on the afternoon of Friday the 13th, with something of a full moon scheduled for later the same night, while Ray Davies was probably still doing last- minute lingerie shopping in the bargain bins at Penney’s, some 1,500 individuals came to the rather remarkable realization that there m ust be m ore to life than decadence, and appropriately sold out the John Prine show at Armadillo. John Prine is consistently one of the best-received players in Austin, m et by if not capacity crowds, then at least fanatic ones. His shows at the Paramount are rumoured at somewhere near legend, and his followers are checking the area for their next temple site. So maybe it was poetic justice, but just when all the Kinks and Patti presented such temptation to the flesh, Mr. Prine was able to calmly walk on stage and blow the faithful away. Prine played two sets Friday, one short and one long, and was backed up by a full-size serious rock and roll band. Some songs - “ Sam Stone,” “ Hello In There” — demanded at least an acoustic pretense, but the band always seemed to sneak back in around the second verse. Whatever this music is — progressive folk, inspired coun­ try—it had to reckon with drum and flaming guitar for at least once in its life. Afashionados will be glad to see John went strongly for the Annie Hall look, tastefully attired in white shirt offset by thin black tie, loosely slouched from the collar in one of those industrious, hard-working Bobby Kennedy Populism-for-aFree-America a t­ titudes. Dear Abby and He managed to cover most of his old the favorites, not an easy feat when a lb u m s a r e n ’t pad d ed w ith m any throwaways, Sing-alongs pretty much took charge of Illegal Smile, and “ Please Don’t Bui y Me was all-parts/all people and an emotional peak. One high point, so to speak, was when Jerry Jeff Walker wandered on stage for a brief solo, which was equal parts whooping, benign smiling and trying not to fall off said stage. During the times when he remembered where he was, he wasn’t too bad. Prine came back on for one long encore. By the last song, Sweet Religion,” most of the band were catching up on their sleep for the long day of travel ahead, but guitarist Johnny Burns was just getting around to getting down, elaborately, ceremonially unbridling his spirit. An extended guitar solo changed the number from a 3-minute song to a 15-minute opus, and exhausted all involved. Sometime soon, John Prine and Delbert McClinton and maybe Randy Newman and probably a lot of people I haven t even thought of should band together and spawn a genre called heart-rock, or body-and-soul rock, or some other abomination of the hyphen, so that they can stop getting lumped those lesser than' them. If somebody like Prine could arrange his own category, maybe shows like this would become the natural order of things. And maybe once in a while somebody’d book the Kinks ... out of sympathy. in with notes on a guitar as easy as Billy Sol Estes could numbers on a ledger-sheet. Yeah, there oughta be a law against a cauldron of as diverse talent as goes into Partners In Crime, people like say. Julie Griffen, or Patterson Barrett, or Buddy Miller, respectively. But there ain't. And so their first album release, Par t ner s In C r im e ' on Criminal Records, is not contraband Partners In Crime, like many good bands, is in a cons­ tant state of flux. As the album has been in the making for two years it does not portend to represent the current Partners In Crime sound — personnel has changed and the music has been refined. Nevertheless, the made-in- Austin LP extracts the significant elements of raw talent and harnesses that sound on a record that P artners’ fans will consume and those uninitiated need take heed of. Diversity is the mainspring that keeps the P artners' watch ticking. Julie Griffen - to hell with the Ronstadt- Harris comparisons — is better than all of ‘em, pulls aces on anything she sings, but pulls up spades on country- blues and country-rock. On Bill Browder’s “ Everyone’s Dancing But Me,” her vocals are so powerful and convin­ cing one starts feeling sorry for this poor beautiful girl that is getting the cold shoulder. Her vocals are hypnotic. Buddy Miller, a recent and effective addition to the band, flat-out sings the hell out of a country song and makes most guitarists’ chicken-pickin’ sound like hen scratchin . Unfortunately, because of his late arrival, the album only features him on “ Wondering How.” But a lit­ tle bit of Buddy Miller is better than none at all. Patterson B arrett writes most of the songs and can usually be found behind a guitar, piano, pedal-steel, man­ dolin or bass. “ You Ain’t Cried Yet,” “ Run to Colorado,” and She s Just Got to be Free testify to his powerful song-writing ability. Partners In Crime, with Ben Cocke contributing his always-scorching lead guitar and quality production from Richard Mullen, have turned out an amazingly listenable and refreshing record bound to garner well-deserved attention. “ Mick Taylor” ; by Mick Taylor, by d av ld polley The Rolling Stones have released three albums since the departure of Mick Taylor almost five years ago. The first, Black and Blue, proved that there were a number of adequate guitarists ready to kill for his vacated posi­ tion. The next, “ Love You Live,” proved that the Stones were more interested in image than virtuosity, Ron Wood having been selected over the striking talents of Wayne Perkins and Harvey Mandel. The third and their most successful to date, “ Some Girls,” proved that the Rolling Stones could still be as controversial as ever - the jacket begged for lawsuits, and the lyrics seemed calculated to provoke that senti­ ment called outrage, even in the shattered 70s. The dubious Stones’ charisma has been sustained, but the release of this long-promised solo album brings home even to the hard-core Stones fanatic, the realization that their music suffered a certain loss when he left. When Jagger and Richards were putting together Honky Tonk Women,” they were striving for a Gram Parsons sound which they finally achieved with “ Country Honk.” But it was the influence of the newcomer Mick Taylor that gave the song its biting edge and placed it among the best-loved Stones singles of all time. So there is something quite apart from nostalgia that makes “Sticky Fingers,” “ Exile on Main S treet” and “ Goats Head Soup compare favorably to the band’s more recent efforts — the tasteful, fluidly conceived solos that made ballads like “ Winter” possible are no longer there. They are in no small supply on Taylor’s new record, however, where his fam iliar style immediately draws attention to itself. But the listener soon focuses on another instrument never exploited on a Stones LP — Taylor’s voice. He sings with expression one could hardly have guessed him capable of, judging from his long silence as a Stone. And the songs he has written here are as intelligent and unpretentious lyrically as they are musically sophisticated. Surprisingly, their complexity does not lie in any jazz- rock fusion experiments (in 1975, he had left to play with Jack Bruce and Carla Bley), but rather in his expert production. He plays most instrum ents himself, using a select few sidemen on piano, bass and percussion In fact the only other guitarist to appear is Little F e a t’s Loweli George on the instrumental “ Giddy-Up.” What makes this collection particularly enjoyable is the variety of genres in which Taylor is allowed to stretch out and dem onstrate his technical abilities. No cache of hit- bound singles, the album holds several rockers, two blues numbers and some instrum entals that are hard to pin down. The moody “ Spanish” features Taylor on guitars, synthesizer, piano and strings, with a sound reminiscent “Low Budget” ; by the Kink*; on AriiU Records, by chrls waiters Eight years ago Ray Davies recorded a searing howl of rage called “ 20th Century Man.” In that song, all his am ­ bivalent feelings about living in the brave new world of faceless bureaucrats and trigger-happy policemen pushed their way to the surface and emerged as raw anger, un­ adorned by his customary ironic wit. Davies had always yearned for the stability of old world traditions, but nothing in his previous work really approached the dis­ gust with modern life that came out there — he was furious at having to face death in a century he could bare­ ly stand living in. “Low Budget” is a delirious, tongue-in-cheek return to the spirit of “ 20th Century Man,” and its timing couldn’t be better. More precisely, Raymond Douglas Davies is back in his element. With “ Misfits” last year, the title track and “ Rock and Roll Fantasy marked a painfully personal ex­ orcisms of neurosis, the kind of self­ appraisal from which a return to introver­ sion would be no less than cowardice. And happily, nothing of the so rt happens on Low Budget.” “ M isery” evokes a power akin to the Kinkds of yesteryear, and “ P ressure” is so driven it almost breaks into Ramoges territory. < That’s a com pliment.) Davies is signing — and here rasping and shouting — about the need to keep a sense of humor above all else in the face of external crises. And there is crisis a-plenty to be had, for sure. Davies manages to mention just about every economic ailment you can think of, and in the title track he gives us an anthem of sorts for our times. ( h e a p is s ma l l and it i s n ’t s teep But best o f all, cheap is cheap C ircum stances have fo rc ed m y hand I m a cut -pr ice d person m a low-budget l a n d . ” Great music to balance checkbooks by. And since no Kinks album is complete without a Davies fantasy, there s Superman, where Ray, not the world's most physical guy, dream s of being a Man of Steel so he can do what the m akers of the movie were too dense to think of, i.e. save the world from garbage strikes and energy shor­ tages. It may be that the fact of everything falling apart gives him some secret joy from seeing his opinion of the 20th century verified so vividly, or perhaps he got drunk for the sessions, but whatever the reason, Davies’ singing hasn’t been this exuberant since “ Arthur” 10 years ago. Ray’s brother Dave has responded in kind by providing delightfully raunchy guitar throughout, and the rhythm section, led by the redoubtable Mick Avory, bashes away with gleeful abandon. Ray even treats us to a reprise of his Harry Belafonte routine. So the Kinks roll on, and it doesn’t seem to m atter anymore whether they roll uphill or down. “ Low Budget” puts them on precariously even keel. It’s the kind of good album that benefits greatly from not being a m aster­ piece. You can have fun with it, and take heart in the fact that Ray Davies will never run out of things to sing about as long as humans remain horribly, inevitably imperfect. “Partner» in Crime” ; by Partner» in Crime; on Criminal Records, by mark mcklnnon There oughta be law, but there ain’t. Yeah, there oughta be a law against deep-fried paralyzing vocals which belt from the gut of a girl who ex­ udes the innocence of a Baptist choir girl and the seduc­ tive air of a learned professional eoncommitantly — ex­ tracting the best qualities of each. There oughta be a law against the kind of kinetic character who would challenge any stringed instrument to defy his talent, write songs as subtle as hurricanes, eat music for breakfast and have the dubious distinction of hailing as the a re a ’s foremost slide-mandolinist. There oughta be a law against a guy who could make George Jones sound like he has a cold, and who could bend Above and bottom left is the irrepressible Phil Tolstead, with his friends the Huns Soor . Phil will go to Dallas to become famous. Photo by WW vm THE NEXT EVENING WENT much the sam e way. Standing Waves opened, turning in a good set, though not as eloquent as the band usually is. Terminal Mind proved to be one of the surprises of the evening with the power of its set. Eddie and the Inm8s were good, though not up to the bands that preceded it. Throughout most of both evenings, meanwhile, Neil Ruttenberg, KUT-FM’s Rev. Neil X and the bassist for Radio Free Europe, staged an impromptu performance. RFE not only was excluded from the Battle but was bann­ ed from Raul s as well. Ruttenberg was performing true guerrilla music as he ranged around the club screaming Radio Free Europe’ at the top of his lungs from various parts of the floor. He even managed to get small groups of people chanting for and against RFE at different times. Since the band’s repertoire is far more conceptual than anything else, this qualified as an efective R FE perfor­ mance, and it was perhaps somewhat surprising that the band was overlooked by the judges. AND THEN IT WAS TIME for the last band. Before the Battle began I was making predictions with another jour­ nalist and we agreed that the unknown quantity at this event was the Huns. They could at times be brilliant; however, they are also capable of being godawful — their performance last October in the Union Building ballroom was one of the worst musical events I ’ve ever seen. In the contest, I was honestly expecting them to be less than spectacular. It is an odd band with its emergence and growth intricately wound up both with the popular and media growth/coverage of the new wave scene in Austin. At times they seem to love their punkiest-craziest-kids- on-the-block image and at other times they seem bored. than Their performance musical and no one quite knew what to expect Wednesday night. What they got was the Huns whipping it out and playing like they’ve rarely played. When their backs were against the wall, when they had to put up or shut up, they came through. They scream ed, cavorted, stared, went manic and came back again. The ultim ate testimony is that I believed them. The best any culture form can do is make a connection where it makes sense to you and seems honest to you and the Huns did that. Despite the crowds and the heat and despite knowing most of the band members and despite the excellence of many of the other bands the Huns went the honorable way. They went is usually more dram atic berserk, they went crazy, they played mad music and I believed them. THE REAL TRIBUTE CAME afterw ard when the chic punk audience was standing on the dance floor waiting for more but coyly screaming “ No More’’ and booing. This was the reverse tribute of a perverse culture. The Huns waited. They were obviously and honestly playing the game on their term s and no one else’s, so after a few minutes of hisses and boos and catcalls with everyone standing and waiting, the crowd broke into applause and cheers and the Huns, now ready, cam e back for an en­ core. So now the event is over, the Battle of the Bands played out and The Huns and Standing Waves are getting ready to travel to Dallas. Perhaps this concert marked a com­ ing of age of the scene and perhaps it is a death knell. The bands were exclusively white and predominantly male and most had women waiting, with The Next sporting a whole table of carefully and garishly made-up female sup­ porters This is not to comment except to say maybe things with punk/new wave really aren’t that different anymore, and it is only rock ‘n’ roll after all. editor anne telford associate editors paul cullum elien walley assistant john cantu contributing «cUtora jeff Whittington louis black kwong hui ronald cortez will van overbeek randy orm sby tim wentworth jody denberg davld polley mark m ckinnon tim lyons cover photograph courtesy Arista Record s m a s th e a d d e s ig n by bartholomew ric h a rd Photo by Tim Lyons 4 South Lakeshore Laundromat f e a t u r i n g uash a n d f o l d service BRING THIS COUPON FOR ON! FREE WASH LOAD ( D r y i n g n o t i n c l u d e d ) Hours: 7 :3 0 a .m .-1 0 :0 0 p.m. offer expires July 1 1 , 1 9 7 9 A tte n d a n t on d u ty — a ll hours C o m e in a n d re g iste r for a fre e co lo r T V . 2« Dryers • Washers 49 (14 lb.), 4 (18 lb.), 1 (50 lb.) " 1 i i i i i i 447-9236J ■ c A u s t i n Civic Theatre presents M i l R O B E R T S s\f/ al ZACHARY SCOTT THEATRE CENTER Riverside & Lamar ' 1 1C* ^ ri _ e !> ‘i v C " A s u p e r la tiv e c o m e d y ” NEW YORK DAILY NEW S C urtain Times __ WED.-SAT. at 8:15 and SUN at 2:15 JULY 1 3 - A U G U S T 5 R (^ e t \ a t i o n sjs u ^ges ted 476-0541 0\ Texas Union SANTA RITA ROOM O pen for Lunch 11-2 Daily Texas Union Third Level y ^ Texas I nion Di ning Services The Texas Cattle Com pany NOW OPEN! Come in and try our Longhorn Special C ho pped Beef Sa n d w ich w ith one fixin' ( p o t a t o s a l a d , c o le s l a w , o r b e a n s ) Cold Drink 1.89 < * 1914 G u a d a lu p i ^ y - 4 7 7 -7 8 1 0 |p i ||p | ||p 1 A S'tylssi T u s r Lots o f C o l o r s % C o t t o n \ B o d y \ S u i t s A SHAMELESS BRIBE: and °™t '“ks ■’ GOOD FÓft FR^’ HAiftCüt- j I h T for °?e free hfllrrut I 06 for my first haircut I under- s U n d that cannot use it the sam e da\ and that e v I I offer is non-tranaferabie I n a m e STATE ZIP I A D D R ESS c r r t I I AGE lOptioaaD , I « I W C U L ^ j u v o C t l i C W U c t DELWOOOrEWna 3K S Y INTERSTATE 3i 1..... — T H E - ----------j G R A D U A T E wKLl. -ORK PEWO«MEO B- STUOewTSl - I I I ! 1 I 1 I I | r s eoine on 1918 E. R iverside Dr. Townlake Plaza So. 27 Dobie M all Upper Level V?SirEe»OUEGE 1 SCHOOt OF HAIR DESIGN / DELWOOD H« T t k !T ^ N ,NTMSI AIt■ " ■ * * » / Hr*. 8 . 3 0 - 4 : 0 0 Closed on Monday N o Appointment Necessary Breaker BeouHes Will Ghr. You Hot lint Feverl mw cwr,n, -itnr „ S t a r r in g A le x a n d r a • R ic h a r d B o lla r V a n e s s a D e l R io plus *. .it k b r o w n sms Pleasure so intense ifA; atrrXgt unbearable! — ------ ^ -------k ^ ___ ,> 2224 G u a d a l u p e • i ? r 19*4 O P f N A v K Q SY C flT « x RANCH f _____ Starring Somonthg Fox » Jo«y Civiro (X) M i a p,“’ Jtoneu Cup h o s t S S N S U O U S S s norte nonn r i t e * e v e n " ' Nmxt W eak "Misbehavin' " uncut uncensored 2130 S C o n g re ss 442-5719 O P E N || a M C K ,eeSr- I Late Sh ow s Friday & Saturday Sundays Open Noon Please Bring I D s Regardless Of A ge ,y N o 0 n e Under 18 A d m itte d Sunday television listings 5:45 6:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9'30 10:00 10:30 11:00 MORNING G 0 ) SACRED HEART Q 0 ) PTL CLUB O ® NEW SW ATCH PRESENTS O ® LIGHT OF THE W ORLD © ® CONSUM ER BUYLINE O © f f l ® CARTOONS O ® PTL CLUB © ® MISTER M AG O O © © ROBERT SCHULLER f f l (X T H IS IS THE LIFE O © CARRASCOLENDAS O ® d a y OF DISCOVERY © ® CLUE C LUB f f l (D R E B O P © ® REX HUMBARO O © DAY OF DISCOVERY O © O ® CD ® SUNDAY MORNING O ® JA M E S ROBISON O ® M IS T E R ROGERS (R) © ® RELIGIOUS TOW N HALL © © REX HUM BAR D f f l ® T H R E E STOOGES / A BBO TT A N D C OSTELLO © © THIS IS THE UFE O ® REX HUMBARO Q ^ E L E C T R IC COM PAN Y (R) © ® DAY OF DISCOVERY f f l X U A M ES ROBISON © ® IT IS W RITTEN 0:00 © © M O V I E A A "C hina G irl” (1943) Gene Tierney, G eorge M o n t­ gom ery. W orld W ar II China is the b a ckd ro p for adventure and rom ance betw een an A m erican p h otog rap her and a lovely Eurasian girl Q ® S T U D IO SEE V isits a kids' rodeo, a girl w ho tra in s do lphins and m ural artist Blue Sky. (R) © ® DIVINE PLAN © © ORAL ROBERTS f f l ® PEOPLE VUE f f i ® C A PITAL EYE © (ED CAPTAIN GUS O ® JERRY FALW ELL O ® ORAL ROBERTS O ® Z O O M (R) © ® DAY OF DISCOVERY © ® LET THE BIBLE SPEAK © © C ASTLE HILLS f f l ® K ID S ARE PEOPLE TOO S 3 ® THE w o r l d t o m o r r o w © © LA VIDA ABUNDANTE © Qj) EYES OF JULY O ® C ARLOS VELASQUEZ O ® Q U E PASA, U.S.A.? Adela brings a priest to counsel Cabmen and Joe after they sta rt doing yoga and eating m a cro b io tic foods. (R) © ® JIM M Y SW AGGART © ® IT IS WRITTEN © f ® CHRIST FOR THE W ORLD CD © PTL C LU B (Spanish) © © FACE THE NATION © ® ROBERT SCHULLER O ® T U R N A B O U T In The M a in stre a m " H andicapped people dem ­ on strate how they have learned to live and w ork with their d isab ilitie s (R> © ® H U M AN DIMENSION © ® HERALD OF TRUTH © ® CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP CD ® A N IM A L S A N IM A LS A N IM A LS "Im aginary A nim als” (R) © ® JIM M Y SW AGGART © © CONVERSATION G © MOVIE *'/t The Far F ro n tie r" (1948) Roy Rogers, A ndy Devine Roy Breaks up a sm uggling ring tha t is brin gin g crim inals into the U.S. in soybean oil cans Q ® FACE THE NATION O ® N O V A "E in s te in " The why and how of E instein’s thought p ro ­ cesses to his ea rth -sh a tte rin g conclusions are explained (R) © D © © FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH © ® FIRST M ETHODIST CHURCH © ÍX3G3 ® BAPTIST CHURCH © © BURBUJAS that brought him © © O ® MEET THE PRESS o ® DIALOGUE 11:30 AFTERNOON 12:00 © © MEET THE PROFESSOR G © SURVIVAL O 6 CD ® A CONVERSATION W ITH ÍTZHAK PERLM AN The noted Isra eli-born violinist talks with c ritic M artin B ookspan ab out his life and career (R) Q ® NOSOTROS O I © ® ISSUES ANO ANSW ER 8 © ® POINT OF VIEW Host: John W hitson © © NEW SMAKERS © J INTER-VUE © ® GUILLER M A OCHOA W ASHINGTON W EEK IN REVIEW (R) 12:30 © © TV 4 JOBS G © MOVIE ★ A "G u adalcan al O dyssey" (1974) D ocum entary. A c to r Leslie Nielsen re turn s to the site of the fam ous W orld W ar II ba ttle to exam ine how w ildlife has thrive d in a once devastated land O ® MOVIE A A 'A "T h a n k Your Lucky S ta rs " (1943) Eddie C antor, Dinah Shore. An im pe rsona tor hopes to raise m oney fro m a talent show by posing as a producer. O QDWALL STREET WEEK "U n ce rta in M a rket O ptions And S trate­ gies” Guest: Gary L. Gastneau. m anager. O ption s P o rtfo lio Service, K idder. Peabody & C om pany Inc. (R) © ® FACE THE NATION © ® FUN OF FISHING © ® © ® IS S U E S AND ANSW ERS 12:45 © © TO BE ANNOUNCED 1:30 2:00 2:30 1:00 © © A CONVERSATION W ITH ITZHAK PERLM AN The no ted Israeli- born violinist talks w ith c ritic M a rtin B ookspan ab out his life and career («) O ® MOVIE A A V , "T h e M an W ho R eturned To L ife " (1942) John H ow ard, Ruth Ford An accused killer is grante d a reprieve when his " v ic tim ” re tu rn s to tow n in the flesh after an eight-year absence during which he was believed dead O ® A M E R IC A AFTER VIETNAM A m erica 's D isrupted Lives ' Darnel S chorr m oderates an exam ination of how A m erica is helping the living victim s of the Vietnam war © ® MOVIE A A A "M o n e y From H om e " (1953) Dean M artin, Jerry Lewis A man is forced to stop the favorite horse fro m w inning an im p o rta n t race when a gangster takes care of the d e b ts the man owes © ® W ALLA C E W ILDLIFE © ® INSIGHT CD ® M O V IE A A '/* "T he M adw om an Of C h a illo t" (1969) K atharine H epburn. Charles Boyer The c o rru p t internation al m onopoly are lured to their deaths by an ecce n tric old w om an and her mad accom plices © ® TONY BR O W N ’S JOU R N AL leaders o f an i d / b " (1974) C harlton H eston. Karen Black A 6 MOVIE "A irp o rt m ida ir collision leaves the flig ht crew of a passenger-filled 747 jet either dead or incap acitated and a te rrifie d stew ardess at the co n tro ls (P G -1 h r.,4 6 m in .) O Í FLUOROCARBONS "T h e U nfinished A gen da" Fluorocarbons fro m air con ditio ners, indu strial processes and re frig e ra to rs affect E arth 's ozone layer and may cause skin cancer (R) © ® JU KEBOX Guests Alex Harvey Band. Be Bop De Lux, Pilot, the W alker B rothers © © MOVIE A A A "T h e Easy W a y" (1952) C ary G rant. Betsy Drake Loving parents of three open the ir hom e to several fo ste r children f f l ® DRAG RACING "C a iu n N ation als" © © G UNSM OKE © ® PTL C LUB Q (© E IN S T E IN 'S UNIVERSE Peter U stinov e x p la ins m any of E instein's theories w ith graphic de m onstration s, anim ation and special visual e ffects (R) f f l ® M OVIE A * * "R u n W ild, Run F ree" (1969) John Mills, M ark Lester A m ute boy regains his speech when his beloved co lt becom es endangered G (Ü) BEW ITCHED S am antha's new baby raises eyebrow s heavens and on Earth I D ® SILVER SAFARI "S o u th A frican Road R ace" in the 3:00 © @ MOVIE A * A "L ife b o a t" (1944) Tallulah Bankhead, John H odi- ak D irected by A lfred H itchcock The com m and er o f a G erm an U -boat loins the survivors of a fre ig hter he sunk in the ir lifeboat G 0) O ® C BS SPORTS SPEC IAL C overage of Part II of the W orld S peedw ay Team C ham pionships fro m Reading, England. W orld Dart C ham pionship fro m London, England; M r Universe co m p e titio n from A capulco; N ational T ra cto r Pulling C ham pionships from B ow ling Green. Ohio; W orld P rofessional S kateb oard C ham pionships fro m Carson, C alifornia O ® €D ® SPO RTSW ORLD Live coverage of a 10-round heavy­ w eight bout betw een Ken N orton and S cott LeDoux fro m the San Diego S ports Arena, Interna tio nal A m ateur A thletic Federation m ile run from Oslo, N orway © ® GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS CD © KN OCKOUT © © EN EL MUNDO 3:15 3:30 6 MOVIE "S m ba d A nd The Eye Of The Tiger ' (1977) P atrick W ayne. Jane S eym our The dashing hero b a ttle s unearthly cre atures and a deadly tiger to rem ove the curse tha t keeps a young prince fro m his ahtful place on the throne (G-1 hr , 53 mm ) ® © © © (D W ID E w o r l d OF SPORTS 4:00 O ® F )R IN G LINE "T h e Energy C risis Guest S enator H ow ard M etzenbaum (D -Ohio). © ® L 0 8 T IN SPACE W hen tiny m echanical men w ant the R obot as the ir leader, they im prove him by tra d in g the voice and pe rsona lity of S m ith fo r his © © MEXICO, M A G IA Y ENCUENTRO Host Raul Velasco © ® N EW 8W A TC H PRESENTS © ® HORSE RACING "R a in b o w F u tu rity " Live fro m R uidoso Downs the second leg o f Q uarter H orse R acing's Triple C row n © © O (ED NEWS Q ® BASS FISHING AM ERICA O ® C BS NEWS Q ® T H E ADVOCATES "S h o u ld P uerto Rico Be A C om m onw ealth, A S tate, Or An Independent N a tio n ? " (R) © ® © © f f l CDABC NEWS © ® D AKTARI Judy And The A s tro C him p © © O ® f f l ® NBC NEWS © V © ® CBS NEWS (1976) A nim ated An a d v e n tu r­ 6 MOVIE "J a c k And The Beanstalk ous young boy clim bs a giant beanstalk to a m agical kingd om governed by a greedy, tyra nnical giant (G-1 hr , 32 mtn ) o ® NEWS © © THE PARTRIDGE FAM ILY f f l ® P O P t GOES THE COUNTRY Guests Ronnie Milsap, Zella I ehr 4:30 5:00 5:30 EVENING 6.-00 O © O ® f f l ® W ORLD OF DISNEY My Dog. The Thief A heti- co p te r-b o rn e tra ffic re p o rte r (Dwayne H ickm an) discovers tha t his new o n -th e -jo b pa rtne r and room m ate, a giant St B ernard, is alsc a k le p to ­ m aniac (Part 1 of 2)(R ) G CD) O ® © ® «0 MINUTES © Q P N C ONCERT "N an cy W ilson © ® MOVIE A A A “ The Three M u ske te e rs" (1948) Lana Turner, Van Heflin In 17th-century France, three dashinQ ad ventu rers com e to the aid of King Louis XIII when they learn th a t his cra fty cleric. C ardinal Richelieu, is hatching a nasty plot against him © ® f f l CXJHAROY BOYS Joe is shocked w hen Frank runs away w ith a beautiful w om an involved in an elab orate plan to steal negotiable securities. (R) © © SIEMPRE EN DOMINGO H ost: Raul Velasco JULY 22. 1072 7:00 (1979) Tom © @ G ® f D ® N B C MOVIE A A Pleasure C ove island re sort Jones. C onnie Forslund A staff m em ber at a posh becom es ro m antica lly involved w ith a charm ing rogue, unaw are o f the m a n's crim inal inten tio ns (R) Q d i Q ® CD 4 ) AW- 'N t h e FAM ILY Archie convinces B arney H efner to give up on his philandering wife and intro duce s him to a w ealthy fnend o f E d ith ’s (R) 6 STANDING ROOM ONLY "D arede vils Incredible acts of death- defying d e rrin g -d o are pe rform ed by sw ord sw allow ers, high divers, w ild anim al w restlers and fire-eaters © ® E V E N IN Q AT POPS The m u lti-ta le n te d Joel Grey lends his inim ­ itable style to pe rform ance s of "C a b a re t by K ander f Ebb, S hort P eople” by Randy Newman, and songs by Cy C olem an and G eorge M Cohan © © f f l (D S A L V A G E 1 The Salvage crew encounter a deadly sp a o a l m eteor shower w hile tryin g to recover a go ld -enca sed satellite (P art 2 o f 2)(R ) 7:30 0 0 ) 0 ( 3 ) © ® ONE DAY AT A TIME Ann is offered the career op p o rtu n ity of a life tim e but qu estions the price of success (R) 8:00 G 0 > O ® ALICE A fter appearing in a children s the ater p ro d u ctio n A lice gets taint praise b u t Vera gets rave review s (R) 6 MOVIE “ A irp o rt 1975" (1974) C harlton H eston. Karen Black A m idair collision leaves the flig ht crew of a pa ssenge r-fille d 747 jet either dead or incap acitated and a te rrifie d stew ardess at the co n tro ls (PG-1 hr . 46 mm.) o ® M A S T E R P fE C E THEATRE Tiberius disap points the aging Ltvia w ith his tre ason ous reign, while Sejanus m aintains the real power in the em pire C laudius receives an odd request fro m his grandm othe r (R) © ( 5 © 16 fflG D A B C MOVIE a * * W ar Gam es (1970) Brian Keith, Tony C u rtis The co ld war betw een an arm y base and a n e ig h b o r­ ing tow n tu rn s h o i when tw o soldiers b o rro w a tank and w age a com ic war against the to w n 's priva te arm y I. C laudius Queen Of Heaven 8:30 G 0) O ® t h e JEFFERSONS When Louise fin d s ou t ab out a new clause m G eo rge 's w ill, she alm ost gives him cause to use it (R) © © O ® €D 4) PRIME TIM E SUNDAY G 0) O O' MOSES - THE LAW GIVER The Israelites ove rcom e their last pe rils and enter the P rom ised Land, but lose their leader M oses who sees his task is over and leaves them on their own (P art 6 o f 6) (R) Q ® T E N N IS W ashington S tar International M anuel O rantes. B nan G o ttfrie d . M a rty Riessen, H aro ld S olom on and Dick S to c k to n co m p e te for a $28,000 first prize in the finals of this event fro m W ashington 0 C s 16th and K S treet C ourts f f l ® MOVIE A A % Come Out Come Out W herever You Are (1974) Lynda Day G eorge. Peter Jeffrey W hen a young girt re p o rts her tra velin g com panion m issing, she is told that the girl does not exist O © G >1 0 6 O ® © 5 © to © 3 € D 4 NEWS 6 MOVIE "F irst Love (1977) Susan Dey. W iltiam K att A young c o u ­ ple finds it ha rd to establish a real relationship in the face of tod ay's casual m o rality (R-1 hr.. 32 mm.) Q ® CBS NEWS © 3 ABC NEWS 10.20 f f l ® FRANKLIN BUSINESS REPORT 10:25 f f l ® SPORTSTIME The lo c i* Inven ( 1974) Ken H ow ard Gary (1943) R obert Taylor, Thomas M itchell © © A L I S T A I R C O O KE’S AMERICA M oney On The Land tion, ingenuity and c ap ita l forge A m erica's raw m a terial w ealth into an urban indu strial em pire G f i t MOVIE A * , M anhunter w ood A w ar veteran, return in g hom e from China, is forced to search for a gang of bank ro b b e rs led by his sister © 6 ; DOLLY Guest Rod McKuen O ® MOVIE A * A Bataan A m erican GIs fight a gallant but hopeless ba ttle in the Philippines © ® MOVIE * A (1967) E dm ond O 'B rien Don Intrude rs M urray The death o f an Indian galvanizes a sheriff in to action against the Jesse Jam es-C ole Younger gang © $ DRAGNET Friday and Gannon show how the juvenile division deals with an ab andoned baby, a runaway boy and a youth high on a drug © 10 MOVIE A * A Back To Bataan Quinn C ut off fro m A m erican force%, a nos into a gu errilla arm y for a raid on the Japanese © ® M O V IE A A * The O rganization (1971) S idney P oitier B arbara M cN air A fu rn itu re com pany m anager turns up dead after a fo rtu n e in heroin is stolen from him f f l ® NBC LATE MOVIE a * * King (1978) Paul W infield Cicely Tyson Young M artm Luther King Jr re turn s to his S outhern hom e from a no rthe rn school and begins a ttra ctin g national a tte n tio n w ith his civil righ ts activisim (P art 1 of 3)(R ) 1 1945) John W ayne Anthony colonel organizes native F ilipi­ © 6 MOVIE * A * D-Day. The S ixth Day Of June (1956) R obert Taylor. Richard Todd As their roles m the N orm andy invasion loom closer, tw o m ilita ry officers each review their separate m em ories o f the girl they both love © f ) NEWS © fj REX HUM BAR D CD © HENRY B G ONZALEZ i 1947) Linda Darnell. C ornel in her quest for success in the c o u rt o f C harles II. a young © © MOVIE A * 7 Forever A m ber W ilde peasant girl finds she m ust sacrifice her loved one 6 MOVIE "C o rv e tte S u m m e r" (1978) M ark Ham ill A nnie P o tts A young car buff and a w ould -b e p ro s titu te |om forces to tra ck d o w n the thieves who stole his cherished a u tom o bile (PG-1 hr . 45 mm ) 9 00 1000 10:15 10:30 11:00 11:10 11:15 11.30 12:10 1 2 3 0 12:35 12:50 1:50 © ® NEWS O 0 ) PTL CLUB Q ® NEWS f f l ® P T L C LUB © ® PTL CLUB O ® PERKXXCO 20 JULY 21. 1879 M O R N IN G O 03) a B E T T E R W A Y O ® C A R T O O N S O ® A G R IC U L T U R E U S A. O 5 2 6 3 GD b a y c i t y r o l l e r s O ® N E W S W A T C H P R E S E N T S CD ® N E W S M A K E R S 5:30 6:00 S'30 7 0 0 7:30 9:00 9:30 10-00 10:15 10:30 O c e s UNTIL 6:00 MON. THRU FRI *) V I N K I T Y • : • R o m e o -Jl IJET Wvected by Fromcel by Nine Rota 6 30 ■ m m ■ y v ’ u iu . Brother Sun, Sister M oon t W i ^ f by France ZeffireM Mvmc by Denevon 9 00 $1.50 HRSTMATMB SNOWMGOMY I U 9 7 4 S H 4 7 TV 14» In space no one [R] can h e ar you scream. L A ............ I E N '749M9VJ97 49.9I» M"« U D f t t l i H t P B I R N W ~ Bf N G A Z Z A R A SIDNEY SHELDON 5 . B L O O D L I N E '7 49 7 J94i1 9 * 1 9 *4 9 4 » GEORGE BURNS J U S T Y O U A W M E , K I D e „ Q m n m m A j 710 I B c t W h il. . * 4 4 ¿ 296 BOX-OFFICE OPEN 8:15 ® C O L O R - P L U S VELVET VAMPIRE SHOWTOWN — EAST SOUTHSIDE — NORTH S o d on ( g o straigh t to see this m o vie ' C H E E C H & , C H O N G 'S . , á d u p i n SMOKE PLUS T H E S t A H i . T H E ARMIES O F THE NIGHT. H a l l o w e e n V ' \ 4 \ A X . V \ \ 4V * The Night He Come Home! 6 : 1 5 - 8 : 0 0 - 9 : 4 5 2:15-mS fclSMOrlS 4 4 2 - 2 3 3 3 ’ « 3 3 uu BEN w h it e b lv O ELLIOTT GOULOE AND CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER SILENT PARTNER 149HS-ÍTIS 5JM-7 4SV4SS H U O R C . K S C O f T f a v ' H A R D - . . . Jj**-rris MtiAts-ttji C O R E A PHANTASM_ J «car* ymm PLUS ¡S?*— * HALLOWEEN I 4VMVfflS M A74M 4S ESCAPE FROM ALCATRAZ PG LIS-? 1S-l-4S-7TtS 4IS)*-4Vt-45 SYLVESTER STALLONE TAHA SHIRE BURT YOUNG ROGER MOORE JAMES BONO 007’ MOONRAKER ttn-Mi-Mo m (TU s.4j) fc4 S *-J4 4 J9 l l i v i m M H a a B H i m — PLUS Pfcramuunl Ptrturn Prw*nO A Lou Adkr Production Up in 1 m o l ^ h h i i i e I s c r e e n s free parking in Doeti gaaam^^M DOBIf MAIL 477 1324 R R M M D O U B L E FEA TU R E i 4 i i 24 31 >f jf * ♦ jf jf * * jf jf * * Jf jf * jf jf Jf jf >f jf ♦ jf jf jf ♦ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ C I N E M A T E C A S S U M M E R S E A S C N 1 9 7 9 Second Session Tuesdays JULY 17 ISLA N D OF LOST SOULS (1933) C h a r le s L a u g h t o n , B e la L u g o s i. P lu s : " I n T h e B e g in n in g W a s T h e E n d , T h e T r u t h A b o u t E v o l u t i o n " W ith : D E V O . THE LAST LA U G H (1924) d F. W. M u r n a u . E m i l J a n n in g s . D e - BLONDE V E N U S (1932) d. J o s e f v o n S t e r n b e r g . M a r le n e D ie t r ic h , C a r y G r a n t . AUGUST 7 CITIZEN K A N E (1941) d. O r s o n W e lle s . O r s o n W e lle s, J o s e p h C otte n , A g n e s M o r e h e a d . Thursdays JULY 19 THE BIRTH OF A N A T IO N d. D W . G r if f it h (1915) L i lli a n G is h , H e n r y B W a lt h a ll. 26 STRIKE (1925) d. S e r g e i E is e n s t e in . AUGUST 2 THE RULES OF THE G A M E d. J e a n R e n o ir M a r c e l D a lto , N o r a G r e g o r , J e a n R e n o ir . (1939) 9 G EN TLEM EN PREFER BLO N DES (1953) d. H o w a r d H a w k s M a r i l y n M o n r o e , J a n e R u s s e ll 16 H IR O SH IM A M O N A M O U R (1959) d. A l a i n R e s n a is . E m m a n u e l l e R i v a , E ' i i O k a d a Jf ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ * Jf e ♦ ♦ 4 * ♦ » ♦ ♦ * jf jf * jf ♦ * jf ♦ jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf ♦ jf jf >f jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf ♦ jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf jf * * * U P - 6 : 0 0 - 9 : 4 5 W A R R I O R S - 7 4 5 14 O PEN CITY (1945) -------------------------------------T — FEATURES: $1.50 til 6:00, $2.00 after MIDNIGHTERS: $1.50 K Pauline Kael/The N e w Yorker X I I THE W A R R IO R S — " A real moviem aker's m ovie. B urstin g with energy. M esm erizing in its intensity. The literate shouldn't m iss out on it.'*__ “CARRIE* Sasrdonthe runaway best saltar! If only they knew she had the power. , U VM " stalling olooY SPACEK • Onetíed dv BRIAN DgPALMA MIONIGHTER H H 0 R cl4mOK) U V E IN C O N C E R T Under 17 not admitted without parent MIONIGHTER I * * * * ♦ ♦ * * If 2f Jf d. R o b e r t o R o s s e llin i. A n n a M a g n a n i , A ld o F a b r iz i. PLUS TW O N IG H T S J U L Y ° F C A R T O O N S 25 R e c e n t E x p e r i m e n t a l A n im a t io n M e l B r o o k s ' T H E C R I T I C , Wi l l V i n t o n ' s C L O S E D M O N D A Y S , P A S D E D E U X b y N o r m a n M c L a r e n , C h u c k J o n e s ' H E L L ­ B E N T F O R E L E C T I O N , m a n y o t h e rs ! a n d AUGUST ! A m e r i c a n S t u d io A n im a t io n W a r n e r B r o t h e r s & F l e i s c h e r B r o s . ; T e x A v e r y , B o b C la m p e t, C h u c k J o n e s. Jf Jf + Jf J All Films in BURDINE AUD. of ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ 6 T a o s | 2612 guadalupe austin, texas 78705 474-6905/478-4747 THE NEW DORM ON THE BLOCK O u r aim is to give the mature and independent U.T. student a special kind of place. Taos w ill be a concept housed in a virtually new building designed w ith the feel and facilities w e think you might be looking for. • free from shuttle bus or car hassles, w e're literally across the street from cam pus at 27th St. • w e re very affordable, especially since there's no need to buy expensive meal plans that may not fit your style or schedule. • practically a new facility w ith tasteful, efficient furnishings and co lo r schemes designed to give a luxurious feel you'll find surprising for the cost. • a floor designated for graduate students and, overall, an aim tow ard making a building com fortable for m odern students trying to strike the balance betw een serious study tim e and needed relaxation. For exam ple, w e'll be offering both a com fortable study area and a relaxing sun deck. DESIGN FOR LIVING INTO THE QO’s Taos 2612 guadalupe Ü The Bee Gees Story Monday,July 16th, from 10pm until midnight. Tuesday through Friday, July 17th through 20th, from 11pm until midnight. {«£ m jm L . ic n a o io • r m um iv ib « itv am n m u ter A u s t in m.a m a x nm m a u s t in . t s x a s t s t i b i s i i i « t i - i s i « This Week At Mon. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat. Sun. STUDINT MIGHT Free Admission with UT ID TOMMY HODGES INNOVATIONS STEVE DOUGLAS JESS DEMAINE THE ROUNDERS TEXAS S K O A L DEBONAIRES Beer, Wins, & Mixed Drinks Koenig In, at N. Lamar Behind Eagle J "LAST NIGHT I DREAMT I WENT TO 6 w e l FR O M A C E // (fine imported cheeses, good but inexpen- sixe uines. breads, prime fruits, glorious frozen entrees, delicious meats, liquor eheese eakes, stuffed m ushroom s and J a p a n e s e eggplants, H aagen -D azs c r e a m , Greek olives, ...) iee 2 6 D o o rs 1 2 0 6 W . 3 8 th COOL O F F THIS SUMMFR WITH THE HOTTEST EN TERTAIN M EN T IN TOWN! ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ U N IV ER SIT Y C A BA R ET T H EA T R E PRESEN TS TROUBLE IM MIND An O BIE Award-Winning Blockbuster ( ’omedy-Drama J U L Y 13 -1 5 , 19-22 A ll performances 8:00 p.m. Cabaret t heatre, U T Drama Kldg. Reser vat i ons: 4 7 1 - 1 4 4 4 Cabaret opens 7:30 p.m. Drinks served | Med. Arts Barbers 26th at Red River *1 OFF Any Haircut With This Coupon j Reg. Haircut ................ $4.50 . Style W ithout j W a s h ......................... $5.50 j Shoeshine........................ $ 1 .0 0 lim it Onm Pm Cvftmmmr TEXAS UNION COPY CENTER Complete Printing Services Including Copying Multilith Printing Postermaking Free Memo Pad With Any Purchase While They Last Summer Hours: M-F 8-4:30 y t i T E X A S UNION TEXAS TAVERN Mon. CINEMA UNDER THE STARS Tues. COLE PORTER EVENING w/pianist Bob Jones Wed DISCO Thurs. BEACH PARTY DISCO Fri. DISCO Sundown 8 3 0 p m 8:30 p.m. 8:30 p.m. 9:30 p.m .-1:30 a.m. friday television listings 5:00 EVENING 6:00 6*30 DAYTIME C H ILD REN 'S SHOW 5:00 O D S T U D IO S E E ' B e lu g a '' Belinda, a giant Beluga whale, trains at S a n D ie g o 's S e a World; two C h ica go kids run a skateboard shop; apple picking in New England. (R) DAYTIME M O VIES 1:00 CD (5) A * A 'M a t t e r Of H um anitie s'' (1968) Robert Young, Jam e s Brolin A young doctor is hired to assist an irrascible older doctor w ho is recovering from a mild coronary 6 "S in b a d A n d The Eye Of The T ig e r'' (1977) Patrick W ayne, Jane Seym our. The d a shin g hero battles unearthly creatures and a deadly tiger to rem ove the curse that kee p s a yo ung prince from his rightful place on the throne (G-1 hr., 53 min ) 0 @ Q © 0 ® Q ® © ® f f i Q (DLO W ELL T H O M A S REMEMBERS... CD ® BEW ITCHED W hen a beautiful m odel buys a ho u se in the neigh­ borhood, the other w om en becom e jealous. © ® NEW LYW ED G A M E f fl ® NBC NEW S ( D n e w s 0 ( 1 2 0 ® DATING G A M E Q © © ® FAMILY FEUD O ® PETTICOAT JUNCTION O ® M A C N E IL / LEHRER REPORT CD ® I D REA M OF JEANNIE Tony h as an unexpected reunion with his childhood sweetheart © ® THE M U PP ET S G uests: Roy R o g e rs and Dale Evans. © ® B E W IT C H E D E ndo ra enlists the aid of a warlock to wreck the S te p h e n s' m arriage 05 ® NEW S CD © ROSALIA 7:00 O (3) O ® CD ® DIFFR EN T S T R O K E S The new owner of M r D ru m m o n d 's apartm ent building sets up a "no children” rule. (R) Q © O ® INCREDIBLE HULK While w orking as a school gardener, David Banner befriends a young victim of parental abuse. (R) 6 R ACE FOR THE PENNANT: HALFWAY TO THE W ORLD S E R IE S The baseball se a so n to date is recapped and predictions of w hat's ahead for the major team s are presented O ® W A S H IN G T O N W EEK IN REVIEW © ® © ® © © O P E R A T IO N PETTICOAT The bum bling Lt B e n d ­ er is placed in tem porary co m m an d of the S e a Tiger while Lt. Cm dr. Haller un d e rgo e s surgery. (R) © ® ALIAS SM ITH AND JO NES H eyes and C urry are victimized by a beautiful but ruthless w om an w ho o w n s and runs K ing City CD © VIVIANA 10 AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL 7:30 O S O ® 05 ® RO CKFO RD FILES Jim b e com e s the target of an ex-convict w ho blam es the detective for his imprisonm ent. (R) O ® W A L L $TREET W EEK "Uncertain M arket O p tions A n d Strate­ gie s G uest G ary L G astneau. m anager. O p tions Portfolio Service, Kidder, P e a b o d v & C o m o a n v Inc © ® ® ® f fi ® W E L C O M E BACK. KOTTER Epstein and W a sh in g ­ ton enter a high scho o l talent competition, only to learn an old enem y has already fixed the contest (R) CD © EDUARDO MANZANO 8:00 G © O ® THE D U KES OF HAZZARD B o s s H o g g a c c u se s B o of robbery, while the real thief sw eet-talks D aisy into putting him up at the H azzard hom e (R) 6 MO VIE “The Exorcist " (1973) Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair The young daughter of a popular actress b e com e s p o sse sse d by a dem onic spirit which com m its evil acts through the occupation of her m ind and body (R-2 hrs., 2 min.) O ® t e x a s w e e k l y © ® MO VIE ★ ★ ★ "T h e O utsid e r” (1967) Darren M cG avin, S e a n G arriso n A private detective is hired to investigate a female embezzler © ® M A RY TYLER M O O R E M a ry accepts a date after being inter­ viewed by a new spaper colum nist © © f fl ® A B C MO VIE * * A "The Reincarnation Of Peter P r o u d " (1975) Michael Sarrazin, Jennifer O 'Neill A m an w ho dre am s he w as m urdered in a previous life visits the town of his dre am s and unle ashe s a terrifying chain of events. (R) 8*30 O ® LATINO C O N SO RT IU M © ® BO B NEW HART W hen the Hartleys entertain H o w a rd ’s son, they e n ga g e a beauty queen a s his babysitter CD © P ECA D O DE A M O R 9:00 O © O ® 0 5 ® N BC NEW S S P E C IA L REPORT John Chancellor. R oy Neal and former astronaut Alan Sh e p a rd com m em m orate the 10th anniversary of m a n 's first walk on the m oon G © O ® DALLA S A trio of kid nap p e rs planning to g ra b J R acci­ dentally captures B o b b y instead (R) Q 8 ESTA SEM A N A © ® MO VIE -k-k + '/t "E v il R oy S la d e (1971) Jo h n Astin, Edie A d a m s A mean, unrem orseful outlaw tries to reform when he falls for an innocent but gla m o ro u s schoolteacher CD © ARDIENTE SEC R E T O 9:30 10:00 10:15 O 52 Q © O ® Q ® © ® © ® © id f fi ® € D © n e w s 6 MOVIE "L e t ’s D o It A gain " (1975) S id n e y Poitier, Bill C o sb y A m ilk­ m an and a factory w orker engage in betting and hypnotism to raise fund s for their lodge (PG -1 hr . 52 min.) O ® D f C K CAVETT G uest W alter Terry. CD © 24 H O R AS © ® M O VIE (CONT'D) 10:30 O © O ® 0 5 ® t o n i g h t Host: Jo hnny C a rso n G uests: B o b and Ray, Jo e Namath, S u s a n Sarandon. G © Q ® HAWAII FIVE-0 M cG arrett u se s handw riting analysis to find the person who is writing a politician threatening notes (R) O ® C A P T IO N E D A BC NEW S © ® M O VIE "Jigsaw Two m en join forces to solve the m ysterious d isap pe arance of a dead girl © ® A D A M -12 33 3 S O A P D anny and Burt search for E la in e 's murderer, B e n so n and Je ssic a p o se a s h u sb a n d and wife to visit Eunice and Dutch, and Det D on ahue tells Je ssic a that C he ste r might be dead (R) (1968) Harry G uardm o. H ope Lange CD © R EPO RTER 41 10:50 11:00 © ® M O VIE ★ * "T h e R e ve nge Of Franke nste in" (1958) Peter C u sh - mg, Francis M athew s, Frankenstein enlists the aid of a G e rm a n doctor to m anufacture a m onster with a dwarf s bram © ® STR EE T S OF S A N FR A N C ISC O Sto ne finds his daughter helpful in tracking dow n the head m an in a teen-age prostitution ring CD © MO VIE El Profesor Hippie JULY 20. 1979 f fl D S T A R T R E K O 'i O ® C B S LATE MOVIE * * * A b o v e A n d B ey ond ( 1^53) Robert Taylor, Eleanor Parker The life of C ol Paul W Tibbets Jr , the m an selected to organize and execute the b o m b in g of Hiroshim a, is dram atized 12:00 O © O ■$. 05 4 MIDNIGHT SP EC IA L H ost Suzi Q uatro G u e sts Queen, David Bowie, D avid Naughton, R oge r V o u d o u n s C a n d i Staton. Paul W arren and Explorer 6 MO VIE B lo o d b ro th e rs" (1978) R ichard Gere. Tony L o B ianco A yo u n g m an da re s to break family tradition by w orking In a hospital ward for children rather than in the heavy construction b u sin e ss (R-1 hr , 56 min.) © ® IRO NSIDE A " B " girl sets Ironside up for a s s a s s in s to prevent his racket-busting efforts . © d )P T L CLU B © ® NEW S O 12 t h e g o n g s h o w G © M O V MOVIE * * H orror R ise s From The T o m b ' (1970) Paul Naschy, Vic W inner O ® MO VIE * k k ’ i ‘ The Fighting 69th (1940) Ja m e s C agney. Pat O 'B rie n The 69th Regim ent of W orld W ar I is helped by Father Duffy, who inspires co urage m a particularly sensitive recruit O ® NEW S 11:35 11:40 12:35 1:00 1:30 3:20 THE BRANDING IRON Fri. & Sat. 6 p.m. on ... Beef & Beach Buffet Prime Rib & Your Favorite Seafoods ALL Y O U C A N EAT 1 9 9 s Prime Rib Boiled S h rim p Fried S h rim p Stu ffe d S h rim p Stu ffe d C ra b B a k e d Fish C a tfish A la s k a n K in g C ra b O ysters Scallo ps Sh rim p Creole Frog Legs B a k e d P otatoes S a la d Bar N O W S E R V I N G COCKTAILS!- O ® W E E K E N D ROUNDUP — ~ - y — i ~i mil f o il O K M O L ( N B C ) San Antonio G K E N S ( C B S ) San Antonio O K C E N ( N B C ) Temple O K T B C ( C B S ) Austin O K L R N ( P B S ) Austin-San Antonio © K W T X ( C B S ) W aco Cable © Cable © Cable ® Cable ® Cable ® Cable ® © K T V T ( I N D . ) Fort Worth Cable ® © K S A T ( A B C ) San Antonio(w ith A C T V ) Cable ® © K V U E ( A B C ) Austin Cable ® ffl K T V V ( N B C ) Austin Cable ® 6 H B O (s u b s c rib e rs only) Cable ® (with 12) Cable ® io A C T V (c o m m u n ity T V ) 6 Mi miles past Oak Hill On Hwy. 71 West 2 63 -2827 'FOOTGEAR’S SUMMER- o SALE A WHEEL OF A DEAL! SAVINGS UP TO 75% OFF Boots ...................................... 10% off f* Clogs ........................ 15% to 25% off ^ Sandals Shoes ........................15% to 75% off r 10% to 75% off ......... j V t e x a s S T E A K S C O O K E D C OW B O Y S T Y L E ! CO O K E D OVER MESQUITE PORTERHOUSE • T-BONE • SIRLOIN STRIP For Buckaroos Under 12 O P E N 5 . 0 0 PM 7 DAYS A WEEK Kj ^ I 2 2 » 11 ' V Al ffittuvu t f " » F O O T G E A R geared to qu ality & cbmfort V ^ 9512 F M R D 2222 JU LY 19. 1979 D A Y T IM E S P E C IA L 11*30 £ = x zs s zjzz. D A Y T IM E C H IL D R E N 'S S H O W 5:00 * Ri C E KF O R ™ E 5:00 H A L F W A Y T O TH E W O R L D S E R IE S ahead tor the major team s are presented S8aSOn ,0 da,e 15 recaP P « * and predictions of w hat’s D A Y T IM E S P O R T S D A Y T IM E M O V IE E V E N IN G 6:00 ° h m t Td T f riE O nenteenng Thr new sport of onenteer.ng in R e m o n s t r a t e d visit Al Hartig, kite man, thoroughbred n o rse s are framed in Ocala. Fla (R) 1:00 •h n J * a " W “ ,her,n9 l i g h t s " (1970) A n n a Calder-M arshall. Tim ­ othy Dalton B ase d on the story by Emily Bronte A rich young wom an forsakes the love of a servant to m arry a social equal T IT L E D E E D M ARVIN 'S GARDENS o 12 0 (D O ® Q ® © ® f f l ® n e w s 6 THE O L Y M P IA D : THE R A R E O N E S The phenom enal achievem ents Í X S S Í " * inCred,b,y Qif,ed her0es ° f p a s ’ 0 , ^ P * C com petitions 0 1 L O W E L L T H O M A S R E M E M B E R S CD ® B E W IT C H E D E ndo ra helps S am an th a to buy a d re ss CD m N E W L Y W E D G A M E ®SS CD ® N B C N E W S Y 6:30 O H O X D A T IN G G A M E O Q l $25.000 P Y R A M ID O ® PE T T IC O A T J U N C T IO N 179 O (8 M A C N E IL / L E H R E R R E P O R T CD ® $100,000 N A M E THA T T UNE “ ' © © D A N C E F E V E R Guest C h a k a K han JEAN"'E have changed m a n 's view of the c o sm o s (R) ® ® M A R Y T Y L ER M O O R E M ary is given the task of m aking the "S ix O Clock New s m ore informal. 10 S U D D E N C H A N G E S 8:30 6 M O V IE Buck R o g e rs In The 25th C e n tu ry" < 1979) Gil Gerard, Pa m ­ ela Hensley After p a ssin g through an outer space time warp, an A m eri­ can asironaut aw akens 500 years later in the m idst of a futuristic plot to conquer Earth (PG -1 hr , 28 min ) C D ® ) B O B N E W H A R T The Hartleys are bom barded with legal h assle s ,asued by a patient and Emily fights a parking ticket © 1 0 f f l X B A R N E Y M IL L E R A n unem ployed C IA agent becom es convinced that Barney and his detectives are undercover hit men (R) CD © P E C A D O DE A M O R 10 P U P P E T S A N D P A T IE N C E 8:45 9:00 O ® 2 3 4 D A V ID C A S S ID Y D an S h a y p o se s as a w eapons buyer to nab a deadly arm s dealer (R) © ® M O V IE **■ '/ ? "A lo h a M e a n s G o od b ye (1974) Sally Struthers. Jam e s Franciscus W hen a p h y sic ia n 's so n becom es ill, a young girl with a rare blood type is sought a s a heart donor © @ f f l O f 2 0 / 20 CD © A R D IE N T E S E C R E T O 10 M E A L S O N W H E E L S 9:30 _ ^ _ 10:00 O © 6 1 1 O ® O ® © ® © ® © f® f f i T if f l ® N E W S 6 M O V IE "T h e B o y s In C o m p an y C " (1978) A ndrew Stevens. Stan Shaw A group of young Am erican soldiers m ana ge s to overcom e the terrors of the Vietnam W ar in their own, slightly offbeat m anner (R-2 hrs., 4 mm.) ' O ® D I C K C A V E T T Guests: Honi C o le s and the Copasetics. (Part 2 of CD © 24 H O R A S • Indoor plants great for your apt.or dorm • H an gin g plants for that empty corner • Exotic hand-m ade Mexican baskets • Relaxed atmosphere & friendly service • Austin's finest greenhouse 10% OFF with U.T. I.D. M. UOQP PUAXR SU M M E R H OURS J a c k in Mon.-Sat.8:30-6:00 6 o£ CLOSED SUNDAY phone451-6833 SOUND INVESTMENT 489. co m e s ■*>“ <° th . © ® M O V IE (CO N T 'D ) 10:15 CD ® N E W S CD © R O S A L IA n 7:00 O © FALL O F E A G L E S The A pp ointm ent” The m assa cre of B loody o ® when h e c o n sid e rs becom ing a conscientious objector. (R) ® 12 7H E W A L T O N S Ja so n is scorned by his brother Ben Pts N icholas to strengthen his police state l ® S v 'a í d m t í P B 0 J E C T U F 0 A student pilot sights a U F O and dives & T u c A r v the m ín n 0 F B U S T E R K E A T O N C lassic m om ents from the m any films (including the classic "T h e N aviga to r") of the silent- screen com edian with the pork-pie hat are presented 0 ® A U 8 T ' N C ITY L IM IT S "A sle e p At The W heel / B o b b y B rid q e r" C0 e xP uls,on when ho one believes her story f S f a p h? ? L 5 S 2 r T? a8 SWm9' BndQer P erform s The Call 1 ^ M fN D Y K lo rk 's d a y s are num bered unless he can get a power recharge from his m issing e gg-sh ap e d gleek $ ? 0 ? o í n ! í ? | 8 M r r H A N ° J 0 N E S H ey®s and C urry use a borrow ed To2£> S S Í S Ü " P110 961 back ,he mo^ He^ s 1051 a CD © V IV IA N A >0 A U S T IN C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E "Political P a rtie s" © CD B R E N D A S T A R R 7*30 © ® f f l ® I N F I N I T E H O R IZ O N S " S p a c e After A p o llo " Host Ray be lfkeU30 m in n 6 " 0® f'C,'° n wri,er lsaac As,m ov ,ook at what space will tists and N A S A o S b M e d 0n ,he P redicll° ^ of sc.en- CD © C E N T R A L S O N G F E ST IV A L 10 A U S T IN C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E "T h e N om inating P r o c e s s" _ _ 8:00 S . 5 ? n ° V I E , i V A " M * A ' S * H ’' ( T972) Donald Sutherland. Elliott G ould D uring the Korean War. a pair of zany su rg e o n s turns an A rm v medical post into m adcap ch a o s with their pran k s S h f t . ? ® ? ® M , S S U N , V E R S E P A G E A N T Helen O 'C o n n e ll B o b Barker and special guest D on ny O sm o n d are on hand for this annu- t a Z e Z Z c Z r 3 b“ > °' bSaU"“ ',0m ar°u"d "* • *** O ® f f l ® Q U IN C Y Q uincy d isco ve rs that four c o rp se s unearthed 10:30 O i ? O ® €D ® T O N IG H T Host Jo hnny C arson. G u e sts C harles N elson Reilly. Peter Strauss, D onna C ro ss, Dionne W arw icke ® S I O CX) M * A * S * H An officer trying to get out of the war and another eager beaver O ® C A P T IO N E D A B C N E W S © 5 f f l T S T A R S K Y & H U T CH A racketeer who fears H utch’s testi- looking for action show up at the 4077th (R) © © ' a D A M ^ ÍT 3Way h re S 3 b,t m an ,0 e,imina,e ,he de,ec,ive (R) CD © R E P O R T E R 41 10:50 11:00 CD 9 M O V IE -k-k'/t "B le s s The B e a sts A n d C h ild re n " (1971) Bill Mum y, Barry R o b in s S ix problem b o ys try to stop the se n se le ss m © 0 ST REET w OF S A N F R A N C IS C O Sto n e co nd ucts an intense investigation to clear his partner of ch a rge s of accidentally killing an unarm ed m an CD © M O V IE "E l A viador Fe nó m e no ” 11:05 b / ,reem9 a bord scheduled to be shot for sport. 7 y G © O ® C B S LATE M O V IE "R e b e c c a " (1940) Laurence Olivier. Joan Fontaine A sheltered girl m arries a wealthy widower w ho is preoccupied with the m ysterious death of his first wife. (R) _ 11:37 © (5 f f l X B A R E T T A While investigating a murder, Baretta uncovers deade (R°rrUP,l° n ’ m iSS' ng m on®y and a dead Person who isn ’t really 12:00 O © O ® CD ® T O M O R R O W Guests: W ard Hall and Joe M c K e n - non two veterans of the side sh ow world; Pete (The Sm iling Dwarf) Terhune; sw ord swallower John Trouwer © © IR O N S ID E Ironside repays a debt of gratitude to a Jap ane se veteran when he prevents the m a n 's murder f f l GDp t l c l u b © ® N E W S © ® R E U T E R S N E W S V IEW 12:45 1:00 1:42 them 9(R)ra,nS,0rm m ay be °arryin9 ,yPh° id but can on|y loca,e ,hree of O (8j V IO L E N T U N IV E R S E Robert M acN eil and Carl S a q a n take a fas cm ating look a, how revolutionary 0iscover.es in the ( 5 d S Is ír o n ó m y G © PTL C L U B Q ® N E W S The Yamaha CR-220 receiver. The Yamaha YP-B2 turntable. Advent Model 3 loudspeakers. An un­ beatable combination of sound and value The ex trem ely low distortion ratio o f a Y a m a h a re­ ceiver, c o m b in e d with the light tracking Y P -B 2 se m i­ a uto m a tic turntable a n d the superior so u n d in g A d vent 3 lo ud sp ea kers m a k e the $ 4 8 9 system a truly so u n d investm ent. For b u d get system or sup er system, at A u d io C o n ­ cepts we h old the sa m e basic p h ilo s o p h y -T h e eq u ip ­ m e n t we sell is the very best we k n o w of. A b o ve the rest. D o b ie M a ll 4 7 8 -7 4 2 1 N o rth cro ss M a ll 4 5 9 -3 3 2 AT A !e V ¿ / ¿ f t t i f í 3 1 H J W T H £ W £ u J Alfiés AUtHCHTIC CNCUSH O P t N I I A M - q P M 6ñT, MOM,- tU£D. l l f t M - I I F W T H U ^ S í P R L O 't’s T e e s w it h oug H om em Ase b a t t e r COLDCST IN TOtON i T O - G O O C D f c R S u a t L C o m e r 1 . » « L ^ Í S * 8 U B U é L 7 T W O R f f L S ‘ o C R f l W C by louis black There are times when the eyes are so -muddled from movies that none of them make sense anymore. When you forget why you're doing this. When you're removed from personal reaction and watching movies becomes an excursion into a career rather than the mad af­ fair insatiable appetite it started out as Nights when seeing movies becomes a chore and writing on them is work. It is a time without coherence and usually other things personal and romantic, go wrong as well. It happens to me a lot. I become too arrogant or forgetful, lazy or tired and the films blend into one movie before my eyes, when the purity and passion of when a film is right becomes lost in the garbage of the day to day. And it was that wjay several years ago when a friend and I piled into á car and reluctantly went to a drive-in to see “ Cag­ ed Heat” because of another friend s enthusiastic recommendation. T H E N IT became love, excitement and religion “ Caged Heat” was tough, vital and political; suddenly there were low budget movies to look at, and a rich vein of cinematic, social and political excitement to explore. Probably 95 percent of the drive-in movies were/are crap but there was something happening in the other 5 percent; and this was happening in (of ail p la ce s) the ghetto of c o m m e rc ia l American moviemaking—The Drive-In. But then praising drive-in product became party-lme and some of the initial energy became in the developed lost strategies of critical position. There were films, however, that burned through ex­ pectation to achieve their own integrity. B ecause there was something incredible going on in the exploitation film industry O N E O F T H E things about the exploita­ tion industry has to do with women In the Director s Guild of America out of several thousand members, less than a dozen are women. The same is true of the producer's organization^ When one thinks of women film directors during the last 10 years or SO, excluding 1979 when things are slowly beginning to change; outside of Elaine two films) and Joan Rivers (one May film there are no readily obvious ex­ amples. And both May and Rivers had made it in comedy before turning to direc­ ting Yet during this same time, in the drive- in exploitation field, there have been at least two i m p o r t a n t women directors. Babara Peters and Stephanie Rothman This week at the Southside and Showtime “ Halloween,” Drive-ins. along with Rothman s 1971 classic. “ The Velvet is playing without notice or V am pi re, special advertisement B E T W E E N 1966 and 1974, Rothman directed, and either wrote or co-wrote, seven films, all low-budget projects designed for drive-in trade sporting such titles as “ Student Nurses,” “ Terminal Island and “ Group Marriage.” All else aside, they were the o nly commercial American feature films to be directed by a woman that were politically and socially relevant, especially in terms of sex roles Not only were they a voice in a wilderness of male obsessions and condescension but they were funny, fast moving and cinematic as well V el vet Vampire is the story of a cou­ ple whose car breaks down in a desert by the residence of a female vampire and the interactions that occur as a result. If it is anything like Rothman s other produc­ tions it will be eclectic loose, erotic and humorous IN T H E PAST two years, despite the hoopla over feminism, women directors and women w rite rs; only three of Rothman s films have been shown in Austin. One on TV, one by a campus film series and one at the State on the bottom half of a double bill with “ Dogs.” While obviously there is no conspiracy, the reason they are not shown has more to do with their exploitative nature than the fact Rothman is a woman Still, when they have been shown they have been ignored and that is a shame Clerical-Technical-lndustrial • - TEMPORARY SERVICES 1507 G u a d a lu p e A u stin , Texas 78701 (512) 472-6916 EOE BIKINI TIME! Summer is here. Be ready w ith p e rm a n e n t hair rem oval. Bette Pritchett, Ow ner For Free Booklet or C o m p lim e n ta ry C o n su lta tion Day or Evening Call 477-40 70 UNIVERSITY ELECTROLYSIS 6 0 0 W . 28th Suite 205 " 12 v V i T »■ * . % v .. » y* , A * rtx * . v * '•“* •*.’ *- -j * . 1 -•, -*'• - < V.,- • -¿*3 < S e - * * .* X. : * ' r . V * a * * .A Tips on tape. W h e n V! n e e d s o m e o d v c e there s on easv r *Our ?here are more thor :< o t*. , r ► aoes to choose fro rT ,t^ h(J J/r" “ d a ° ? o aay to-day proo*ems s ^ ^ s t , o r ' i a b o u t l o t s * Here is a port,ai hjt 0t the t u „ rr r>iefe isrs are avakacxe at fh»< p.' unselmg C en ter WMOfc 303 a r < lO O 102 >04 90 493 I Study Difficulties Effective readrng How to prepare for an exam Reducing study anxiety Helping Others and Yourself Helping a friend Helping som eone in a suicidal crisis Communicating with Others friendship budding Fighting constructively Expressing negative thoughts and feelings Dealing with anger Jn d e r$tanding jeaiousy ona how to deal with it G am es people play Room m ate problems Becom ing open to others Dating skills Sed assertiveness Separation 60 Divorce, it could happen to us The d eath of a m arriage Understanding gnef Financial Concerns How to have tun in Austin on next to nothing Student Financio A©j How to h a n d le fears Building sett esteem ana confidence ^ e i a x o h o n e x e r o s e s Copng v y .th s tre s s Le jT'ung to a ccep t yourself Understanding and d e a im g w t h P o r e a o rr How to deal with depression Freshmen Thinkmg about home M eeting p e o p le at u T pratermt»es/sororities should I jc*rd Handicapped Students Resources for you Special services 45 432 Women's Concerns 503 504 -earning from broken relationships he divorced wom an or s^n9)e ogam cor v oreer and/or m arriage 521 W om en m non-traditional occupations ->24 Dual career couples Health Information 154 infectious hepafitus >60 Early signs of an alcohol problem >61 Responsible decisions about drinking 169 Birth control general considerations >62 Smoking W ont to qm P If you’re looking for som eone to talk to, there’s a number for telephone counseling. 476-7073. 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And we guarantee you'll reach your goal or we’ll treat you with additional charge until you do. Vacation time is here, so call today for a free, no­ obligation consultation. North 451-8258 South 441-6886 r - $50 SPECIAL SUMMER OFFER Coupon expires August 1, 1979 1 $50 Present this certificate at the time of your consultation, and you'll receive a REBATE of $50.00 toward your guaranteed weight loss program. nutri/system weight loss centers _ _ ‘Shrew’ is tamed b y « lion w alloy William S hakespeare’s works are acknowledged classics, not because of their clever dialogue or dram atic conflict but because Shakespeare knew people. And he was able to expose their motives so well that we are left with the sam e understanding he possessed, at the end of every play. Some current dram as seem to require much, but not all, of a perform er — a knack for delivering dialogue, a well-practiced and perfected gesture. But the perform er can hide behind his role, if he chooses. With Shakespeare, each character is so fully and com­ p l e t e l y d e f i n e d t h a t a n y o n e who a t t e m p t s a Shakespearean production m ust demand every bit of strength and acting ability from his perform ers. In the Gaslight Theater s presentation of “ The Taming of the Shrew,’’ director Arturo Ruiz Esparza almost succeeded. “The Taming of the Shrew” is a farcical comedy of a wealthy man who insists that his viper-tongued and spiteful elder daughter, Katharine, have a suitor before his much-desired younger daughter Bianca, may be courted. IN THE OPENING SCENE we are introduced to young, handsome Lucentio, a potential suitor of Bianca, and his wily servant Tranio. The necessary ingredients are there, but the timing is off. Lucentio (Danny Medina) and Tranio (Michael Slattery) rush through their lines, leaping around the stage, shouting, chortling, chuckling and punching one another with great energy. We are reminded of a medieval battle scene. After the din fades and the smoke clears we look cautiously around us, wondering what happened, what the outcome was. We wish they would slow down long enough to let us in on the fun. When snarling Kate (Debi Anderson) stomps out, we get our first taste of what we are in for. We lean forward, slowly warming to the action, ready to enjoy ourselves. But it is Petruchio, played by Rick Peeples, who solidifies the performance. He understands that the dialogue alone won’t carry him, or us, through. He turns himself inside out to make sure that we are with him every lusty, laughing inch of his way as he berates his ser­ vant, mocks his wedding guests and subdues the tempestuous Kate. And when he leaves we want to pull 1 Kate and Petruchio him back onstage for more. He is the life of the play. At the happy ending, the wedding feast of Bianca and Lucentio, we clap enthusiastically for the performers. They have worked hard to entertain us, and we know it. But go that one last step, we want to say, and give us all of Shakespeare. Don Quixote at Zilker The cultural arts section of the Parks and Recreation Deparment is performing “ Man of La Mancha” at Zilker Hillside Theatre. This is the 21st annual musical to be presented free in the park as sum m er entertainment. Perform ances are at 8:45 p.m. nightly. Don Quixote will chase his windwills through Saturday. The production is directed by Mauour- neen Dwyer, musical direction by Corky (La Falco) Robinson, with set design bv Lee Duron. "AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD The Only Mexican Restaurant ! I Open Around The Clock j On Weekends 1500 East 1st (5 Blocks East of IH 35) 476-72151 H O U R S : O p o n T u a s . - T h u r . 1 0 A M - 1 2 M i d n i g h t F r i . - S u n . O p a r t 2 4 H r > . I Bring Yoar Guests & Enjoy Daily Noon Hour P l e n t y o f F r w P a r k i n g C t o s a d M o n d a y * ! Entertainment • S T . - E l * . . BUY O N E , G ET O N E FREE! | | ON OUR MEXICAN DINNER ONLY ft IH35 5 lit / £ ^ _ _ f t ATTAYAC ■ 11 _ 1 INCLUDING: • C m p y Toco • G w o c o m o io So k id • C h o lu p o B W f O N t W AY * B n c M lo d m T O W N J A M Auyu,f to, 1979 • Dm » h (Unit 1 coupon par parson) 5 f t ! I I I I ■ ft e x p e n s i v e ? Not Necessarily Besides one-of-a-kind antiques, all o f our neu lines are automatically 10-15% o f f ... ... But nou most of our stock is 30-70% O ff H u rry u hiie selection lasts! WS4* V o n -Sat. / 1 -6 V t h & San A n t o n i o f t l i _____________ 5 y Wednesday television listings D A Y T IM E S P E C IA L 1:00 O 6 F L U O R O C A R B O N S The Unfinished A g e n d a ” F lu oro carbo ns from air conditioners, industrial p ro c e sse s and refrigerators affect E a rth 's ozone layer and m ay ca use skin cancer D A Y T IM E C H IL D R E N ’S S H O W 5:00 O Q D ST U D IO S E E “T u b in g ” C o w b o y D anny Sweitzer rides in a wild m ustang roundup; C ath y Sherrill tubes dow n Farm ington River. (R) CD ® ford A weird cult captures a radio detective * * * “W histling In The D a r k " (1941) Red Skelton, A nn Ruther­ The S e e k e rs 6 (Part II) (1979) G e o rge Hamilton, Brian Keith R om a nce conflicts with duty a s m em bers of the Kent family try to pave a path of freedom for their de sce n d an ts in the 19th century (PG -1 hr 45 mm ) D A Y T IM E M O V IE S 1:00 5:00 E V E N IN G 8:00 0 © 0 © 0 ® 0 ® f f l ® f f l O $ L O W E L L T H O M A S R E M E M B E R S .. f f l ® B E W IT C H E D The ne ighb orhood is outraged at the lack of traffic sign als at a nearby intersection. © ® N E W L Y W E D G A M E CD ® N B C N E W S G D n e w s 6:30 O (3) O ® D A T IN G G A M E O (ED CD ® t h e p r i c e i s r i g h t O ® P E T T IC O A T J U N C T IO N Q ( D M A C N E IL / L E H R E R R E P O R T ( D i ? I D R E A M O F J E A N N IE Jeannie tries to get Tony the Best H u s ­ band Award. © ® W IL D K IN G D O M “L e o p a rd s Of Saw ai M a d h o p u r” A family of le opard s lives in an ancient deserted castle. 0 9 ® B E W IT C H E D Darrin b uys a ga rag e d o o r opener to cover up S a m a n t h a 's witchcraft C D ® N E W S CD © R O S A L IA 7:00 O © O ® CD ® N B C M O V IE * * * * "Little Big M a n ” (1970) Dustin Hoffman, Faye Dunaway. A 121-year-old white m an w ho w as the sole survivor of Little B ig H orn recalls his life and loves on the W estern frontier (R) O © O ® T H E L O V E B IR D S A young w ife's insistence upon getting a job c a u se s h avoc in the family household 6 M O V IE “Airport 1975” (1974) Charlton Heston, Karen Black A m idair collision leaves the flight crew of a passenger-filled 747 jet either dead or incapacitated and a terrified ste w arde ss at the controls (PG -1 h r .4 6 m in .) 1 O f T H E L O N G S E A R C H " A Q uestion Of B a la n c e " A C onfucian respect for the past and ancestors, the cosm ic pattern of the Tao, the local g o d s w ho d isp en se justice, and the placating of g h o sts df the dead are som e of the asp e cts of Ta o ism investigated by R onald Eyre (R) ( D ® © 0® f f l ® E I Q H T IS E N O U G H N ancy d ro p s out of scho o l for the excitement and w ealth” of the w orking world (R) CD . 9 ¡ A L IA S S M IT H A N D J O N E S H eyes and C u rry are hired by a rich rancher to prove him innocent of a m urder charge CD © V IV IA N A 10 A U S T IN L IV E Jim Hightower, Editor, Te xas O bserver 7:30 ® © O ® G O O D T IM E S W illona is forced to take a stand when Penny s natural m other ap p e ars to reclaim her dauqhter CD © L A M U E N E C A R O T A 8:00 O QD Q ® C B S M O V IE * * * A Q uestion Of Guilt” (1978) T u esda y Weld, R on Leibm an The trial of a w om an accuse d of m urdering her young daughter b rings up the issu e s of morality and justice in co n te m ­ porary society Q S T H E R E S T L E S S E A R T H Filmed in 16 countries, this do cum e n ta­ ry co nte nds that Earth s crust co n sists of large “plates ’ constantly shifting, ca u sin g earthquakes, volcano e s and other disruptions (R) © 5 f f i © C D Q D C H A R L IE 'S A N G E L S Jill M u n ro e (Farrah Fawcett- M ajors) returns to help the A n g e ls rescue her kidnapped sister K ris from the clutches of a dem ented millionaire (R) © $ M A R Y T Y L E R M O O R E M a ry tries to keep an incom petent politi­ cian from looking foolish on a new s show. 10 A L T E R N A T IV E V IE W S N E W S M A G A Z IN E C a s e O fficer" (Part 1) Jo hn Sto ck well. Form er 8:30 ( D ? B O B N E W H A R T C arol de cide s to resum e her college career and becom e a psychologist CD © P E C A D O D É A M O R 9:00 6 O N L O C A T IO N Rich Little A n d The Great Pre te n d e rs” The M G M G ra nd Hotel in L as V e g a s is the setting for this sh o w c a se featuring the greatest im pre ssio nists in Am erica © ® © ® f f l ® V E G A $ A w om an secretly in love with D an m a s­ q uerad es as a male to kill his girlfriends (R) © ® M O V IE ★ ★ ★ "T h e Girl From Pe tro v ka” (1974) G oldie Hawn, Hal H olb rook A rom ance between an A m erican co rre spo nde nt and a non-conform ist R u ssia n girl is ultimately destroyed by the Soviet autoc­ racy, against which she is in constant rebellion CD © A R D IE N T E S E C R E T O 10 T H E B O T T O M L IN E "P e te r H arrell" 9:30 10 E S P IR IT U D E A Z T L A N Ru be n R a m o s A n d The M e xican R evolu­ tion” S S 1 J !_8JDfCK C A V E T T Guests: Horn C o le s and the C o p a se tic s (Part 1 of ® ® © f f l € B ® © ® N E W S i S H ? ® ® ® ü S CD © 24 H O R A S © ® M O V IE (C O N T ’D) 10:00 10:16 _ 10:30 O © O ® f f l ® T O N IG H T H ost Jo hnny C a rso n G u e sts D om DeLuise, Sheriff Katharine Crum bley, Deidre Hall, Dudley M o o re ® U O ® S W IT C H Pete is accuse d of killing a ste w arde ss w ho w as actually killed by her crew after she stum bled onto their plot to steal Federal m oney (R) 6 S T A N D IN G R O O M O N L Y “A bracadab ra! It’s M a g icf” Dick Cavett introduces m aster illusionists who perform classic tricks a s well as breathtaking new stunts which defy the laws of nature O K M O L ( N B C ) San Antonio O K E N S ( C B S ) San Antonio O K C E N ( N B C ) Temple O K T B C ( C B S ) Austin Q K L R N ( P B S ) Austin-San Antonio 0 D K W T X ( C B S ) Waco Cable ® Cable © Cable ® Cable ® Cable ® Cable ® CD K T V T ( I N D . ) Fort Worth Cable ® © K S A T ( A B C ) San Antonio(with A C T V ) Cable © © K V U E ( A B C ) Austin Cable QD ffl K T V V ( N B C ) Austin Cable ® a H B O (subscribers only) Cable ® (with 12) Cable ® io A C T V (community T V ) 17 JU LY 18, 1970 O ( 1 C A P T IO N E D A B C N E W S © lS ) S 3 3 P O L IC E W O M A N Pepper joins the m otorcycle division and b e com e s rom antically involved with a fellow officer (Part 1 of 2) (R) © © A D A M - 12 CD © R E P O R T E R 41 10:50 11:00 f f l $ M O V IE * * i The Other M a n " (1970) R oy Thmnes, Joan Hack- ett. A wealthy, beautiful w om an h a s an affair with a m ysterious e x ­ convict © © S T R E E T S O F S A N F R A N C IS C O W hen a pregnant girl is tricked into signing away her baby, the police uncover a black market ring dealing in illegal ad op tion s CD ® L U C H A L IB R E 1137 © 53 € D ® « A R E T T A A crim e b o s s blam es Baretta lor a raid on one of his oj^erations and puts out a contract on the detective s life (R) 11:40 e j o a C D k o j a k A desperate m an tries to clear his nam e by help­ ing Kojak find a ruthless loan shark (R) 12:00 O ® O 4 C D ® T O M O R R O W G u e sts H arry Begg. the first unw ed father to successfully sue for custod y of the child, Frank Nelligan who started a support gro up for children of divorced pa re n ls © © IR O N S ID E Det B ro w n 's reunion with an old flame s o u rs when her involvem ent with ga m b le rs is revealed f f l GD PTL C L U B f f l ® N E W S © ® R E U T E R S N E W S V IEW O © PTL C L U B O ® N E W S 12:45 1:00 1 33 bertij lunch Austin's only open-air dance floor is now open every night for live music and home-style meals Come enjoy our laid-back tropical garden at­ mosphere — fine wines & beers. Tonight STREET LEVEL Tuesday THE LOTIONS Wednesday FLACO JIMKNCZ Thursday BETO y los F A IR LA N Ef Friday and Saturday EXTREME HEAT Sunday LORD BRYN ER 405 West Second Street 477-0461 GRAND OPENING *5 - CALL TODAY . .. Receive a $5 discount with any color T V or color TV/stereo/ A M - F M radio combination rented between now and Aug. 5, 1979. 00 (w it h th is c o u p o n ) LOW WEEKLY or M O N TH LY PAYM EN TS With COLORTYME you g e l ... N o L o n g T e rm O b lig a t io n . D e liv e r y & S e rv ic e In c lu d e d . N o S e c u rity D e p o sit. N o C re d it o rs C h e c k e d . R e n t P a y m e n t s A p p ly T o w a r d O w n e r s h i p COLORTYME TV RENTAL 519 W. Oltorf 443-4901 "'We're going to change the w ay you look at rental TV" O p e n 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 2 2 2 2 R o se w o o d 474-8305 presents THE LOU C080N GONG SHOW Every Tuesday Night 9:30-11:30 Auditions Mon-Fri 5 p.m.-9 p.m. Prizes Aw arded P h a se s serves deliciou s sn a c k s in a b a sk e t n igh tly , b ro u g h t direct­ é 12t h ly to you r ta b le so you d o n 't m iss a th in g. M k I Ith 2 3 4 0 f 16 JULY 17, 1979 DAYTIME CHILDREN’S SHOW 5.-00 O (XSTUDtO SEE "Friends S cu b a d ivers N ico le ar d Dam ian Elde- m ire exp lo re (he Caym an Islands. C h ica g o G irl S c o u ts play ea rih b all (R) O i l ) A A A 'T h e Brow ning V e rsio n ’’ (1951) Je an Kent, M ichael R edgrave An English professo r is crushed to d iscover that his wife is unfaithful, but he receives inspiration from a young student. 190 © ® A A A "F itzw illy" (1967) Dick Van Dyke, B arb ara Feidon W hile her servants cover for her. a philanthropic old lady, not realizing she is actually penniless, contin ues to spread her wealth 6 The S e ek ers (Part I) (1979) G eo rge H am ilton. B rian Keith M em ­ bers of the Kent fam ily of co lo nial A m e rica fight for freedom and inde­ pen d en ce while copin g with internal co n flicts as well (PG -1 hr., 42 min.) DAYTIME MOVIES 11:30 5:00 EVENING •:0 0 o Oponl- *s '{il 9 p m I * «. ■ d r « # 4 t * 5 i l ( | < ■Ir 4 * Austin organizations to receive arts grants Ten Austin organizations, including the University’s Cultural Entertainment Committee, will receive a total of $25,977 from the Texas Commission on the Arts, it was recently announced. The CEC will receive $2,097 in underwriting to support a dance residency by Twyla Tharp The half-week residency will include lecture demonstrations, m aster classes and one public perform ance. Underwriting is a form of support granted to program s which generate income. The recipient m ay receive up to the amount designated to cover expenses which exceed income. Invisible Inc. and Spectrum American Deaf Dance Company will receive $4,000 for a joint perform ance and to add four new ballets to each com pany’s repertoire. Interart Works was granted $500 to support Project Gateway Arts for the Handicapped. The organization plans a series of a rts workshops and activities for m ental­ ly retarded persons from state institutions, halfway houses and private homes. University YM/YWCA Creative Rapid Learning Center will receive $5,000 for Project Start, an a rts learning program for truant, delinquent and learning disabled youths. The League of United Chicano A rtists (LUCHA) will be awarded $4,000 for its Conferencia de Artes Visuales whi ch wi l l f e a t u r e a s h o w c a s e of w o r k s by Chicano/Latino artists, workshops and forums for artists and community m em bers. Austin Repertory Theater will be granted $1,500 for a s e r ie s of th ree five-w eek g u e st re sid e n c ie s and workshops The series is designed to acquaint the entire family with the work of professional theatre artists LAGUNA GLORIA Art Museum will receive $5,000 to support an exhibit of Em erging T exas Photographers. The funds will aid in organizing and cataloguing the work of eight photographers Grants from the commission are actually contracts between the State of Texas and local organizations to provide arts services for the people of T ex a s,” Allan Longacre, commission executive director, said. All grants m ust be matched by local funds. Applications are received by the com m ission on Feb. 1 and Sept. 1 of each year and are reviewed by advisory panels m ade up of lay people and experts in the field Their recommendations are then reviewed by a grant applications comm ittee, with final aw ards m ade by the commission in Decem ber and June Non-profit organizations, educational institutions and units of government may apply for aid in sponsoring public arts program s. FREE CONSULTATION W it h the E x p e r t s at G IN NY'S CO PY IN G SERVICE Guaranteed Grad School Copies K J O Q E O D D Silver Dollar North 9102 Burnet Rd. Tuesday Student Night Pitcher* $1.75 Students admitted free with Spring or Summer I.D. A LITTLE BIT OF TEXAS Silver D ollar South 5337 Hwy. 290 W. (Hwy. 71 W.) Thursday Student Night Pitcher* $1.75 Student* adm itted free with Spring or Sum mer 1.0. SILVER CREEK with Frances Ann Kyle 24 Hour Schedule Information 837-1824 D al* McBrid* — July 2 0 — Silver D ollar South “Getting Over You Again” John Wesley Ryles — July 21 — Silver D ollar N orth “Liberated Woman” Plus all the Required Bindings 10 reverb reverb reverb by jeff Whittington I tell ya, there's no experience quite like judging a New Wave Battle of the Bands. Thank God. Late Thursday night I had the honor of announcing to the suspense-filled crowd at Raul’s, “ the runner-up is Stan­ ding Waves, and the winners are the Huns!” — and promptly had a pitcher of beer poured over my head by a severely disgruntled Reversible Cord Well,' you can’t please every body. Anyway, Standing Waves and the Huns w ill sojourn to Dallas later this month to compete in a statewide New Wave B a ttle of the Bands. The D allas-based Nervebreakers, winners of last year's contest, w ill also compete, along with at least two other Texas bands. Just so a disgruntled world won’t rain frogs on us for the selections, let me explain how the winners were chosen At a confab at Raul s on July 2, representatives from all of the competing bands met to decide details of the battle, including the judiciary. The five judges were selected by a vote from the band reps; three of them were voted in almost unanimously. (I wasn’t one of them. Harrumph). The bands then decided on the criteria and voting pi ocedure: judges were to rate each band on a scale from one to ten on each of three criteria — stage presence, originality of the band s concept and quality of music* W inners would be highest total point-scorers. All of which would have made the final tally easy enough, except that there was a virtual four-way'tie for the top spot: the Next and Terminal Mind were right up there with the Huns and Standing Waves. The judiciary did a runoff vote to try to narrow the field a bit. The firs t vote was so close that if there had been a difference of two points in the voting — two points, out of 929 point- votes cast — it would have been the Next and Terminal Mind heading for Dallas. The reason I ’m pointing this out is that I feel a bit un­ easy over the fact that the two winners were the two bands that were already the best-known — after the show several people expressed a concern that the winners simply ran away with it because of their notoriety. As it happened, though, no one ran away with anything' There was no easy choice; the four top-scoring bands were rated highly by all the judges. We just added up the numbers and let the chips fall where they may. And it s not over yet — there is a wild-card position in the statewide Battle which w ill be filled by a band to be chosen later by promoters John Bartlett, Danny Eaton and Jimm y Page and Bartlett has stressed repeatedly that all of the bands from the Austin contest are eligible for that position In view of the closeness of the voting I cannot the Next and Terminal Mind be carefully considered — after all, thev are among the best New Wave bands in Texas, and it would make it a more interesting as well as a more meaningful competition it one of those bands was present too strongly recommend that Ice Cream made daily with only fresh in-season fru its and other real flavors. Sweetened on ly with honey. Hours: 11:30 a.m.-M idnight - E v e ry Day (3 Blocks N o rth o f Memorial S ta d iu m ) 2821 San Jacinto • 477-9965 Robert Fripp talks, notes on *kA d the Battie simply underscored the fact that the Raul s scene is generating the most creative, original and interesting live music in Austin. Not one of the bands gave a had performance - all had something to offer stm I Z h h S1T PlL be WFitten off’ And Raul s boas*s still more bands who didn t participate in the confab, the i orvells, the Mistakes, the Shades and others. Tom Robinson, active in British New Wave from its inception the punk capital of the country” - and called Austin easy to^see w h\US,° n 30(1 dlversity of bands at Raul's i t ’s All of which may be a bit diffic u lt to accept since Raul s is part of the woodwork in this citv - i t ’s hard to m 3 CJb0,000 in buried loot. © (5 ALIAS SMITH AND JONES Heyes and C urry are in the strange po sitio n of not only helping the ir captors, but w antm q to CD © VIVIANA 10 AUSTIN COM M UN ITY COLLEGE CLASSES 7:30 Q 8 FLUOROCARBONS The U nfinished A gen da" Fluoroca rbo ns from air con ditione rs, indu strial processes and re frig e ra to rs affect E arth's ozone layer and may cause skin cancer (R) CD © ESTA NOCHES OLGA 8:00 O © o © M * A * S * H Father M ulcahy w rites a le tte r hom e de tailing the general feeling of depression at the 4077th as C hristm as approach es (R) 6 MOVIE "L e t's Do it A g a in " (1975) S idney P oitier, Bill C osby A m ilk ­ man and a factory w orke r engage in be tting and hypnotism to raise funds fo r their lodge (PG-1 hr., 52 min.) O i © M A R IE CURIE M arie is aw arded a second Nobel Prize , takes h e r m obile x-ray units to the W orld W ar I b a ttle fro n t and w itnesses h e r daughter s discovery of the firs t m anm ade isotope before dying of aplastic anem ia in 1934 (R> CD ® MARY TYLER MOORE A handsom e architect who has com e to sketch M ary s buiid ing invites her out on a date CD © SUPER ESTELAR M USICAL 10 FRACTURED FABLES 8:30 O @ O (.6 © 4 NBC MOVIE * * “ The Last Of The M o h ica n s" (1978) Steve Forrest, A ndrew Prine A w hite hunter and his tw o Indian blood b ro th e rs he'p a B ritish office r escort tw o w om en through hostile Indian te rrito ry. (R) © © 0 © ) W KR P IN CINCINNATI Johnny Fever becom es an insta nt father when a young w om an leaves her baby on the ra dio sta tio n 's do o rste p (R) © ® BOB NEW HART Jerry's depression turns to joy when an e x­ flam e re -enters his life and proposes m arriage CD © PECADO DE AM O R 8:45 10 PUPPETS A N D PATIENTS Pat Fiske and her Seasoned C itizens _ 9 0 0 © © O 2 LOU GRANT Rossi w rites a c o n tro v e rs ia story which sets o ff firew orks in the city room . (R) O ® M A S T tR P IE C E THEATRE "P o ld a rk " W hen the breach between him and his relatives widens, a drunken, rejected Ross is c o m fo rte d by Demelza. (Part 3 o: 16* (R) © ® MOVIE * * * A noth er Thin M a n " (1939) W i l l i a m Powell, M yrna Loy Nick and Nora C harles investigate a bizarre series of incide nts includ ing Irish w olfhounds and a burned bathhouse CD © ARDIENTE SECRETO 10 THE BOTTOM LINE L e s H irro n d e le s D e b u ta n te n .il!" 10 C A PITA L EYE 9:30 10:00 10:15 10:30 O K i © n o 6 o 2 © ® © ® ) © ® f f i 3 0 2 4) NEWS 6 THE OLYMPIAD- THE 800 METERS Jesse Owens hosts highlights fro m various con tests in several O lym pic co m p e titio n s in this lo n g -d is­ tance endurance event O ® D IC K CAVETT Guest Leon Edel (Part 1 of 2) © © 24 HORAS © ® MOVIE (CONT'D) O 12 O iff © 1 TONIGHT Guest host Diana R © I I O 2 ROCKFORD FILES A sm a ll-tim e pro qu arte rback im pii cates R ockford in a blackm ail schem e that unleashes both po lice and gangsters on the detective Q ® C A P T tO N E D A C NEWS © ® S 3 © P O L IC E STORY The professional and personal life of a 20-year veteran watch com m ander is detailed © i f f A D A M -12 CD © REPORTER 41 10:50 15 JULY 16, 107Q 11:00 6 MOVIE "T h e Boys In C om pany C " (1978) A ndrew Stevens, Stan Shaw A group o f young Am erican soldiers m anages to ove rcom e the te rro rs of the Vietnam War in thetr own, slightly o ffb e a t m anner (R-2 hrs., 4 min.) (1939) Mickey © ® MOVIE * * ’ j A ndy H ardy Gets S pring Fever Rooney, Lewis Stone. A ndy falls in love w ith an older w om an and alm ost qu its school. © 10 STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO W hen the k iller o f his son is freed on a legal tech nicality, an irate father sets out to punish the c rim i­ nal him self CD © PEARTO DE M A N O LO FABREGAS 11:40 © I f O 2 CBS LATE MOVIE * * * " C r is is ' (1950i C ary Grant, Jose Ferrer An A m erican d o cto r on his honeym oon in Latin A m erica is kidna ppe d and fo rc e d to pe rfo rm brain surgery on the c o u n try 's tyra n ­ nical leader 12:00 © ® © ® 0 3 4 TO MORROW Guests P hilip A nglim and C arole Shelley, cast m em bers o f the Tony A w ard-w inning play "T h e Elephant M a n " f f l 10 IRONSIDE €D ® PTL CLUB O $ NEW SW ATCH PRESENTS f f l 13 NEWS © 10 REUTERS NEWS VIEW 12:36 1:00 1:36 © IJJ PTL CLUB O 2 ) NEWS HOW TO MEET MORE BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE? Learn how to dance at ELI'S Club, during happy hour 4 -8 . Classes w ill be taught by a Professional Dance Instructor for FREE. Classes start at 6:30 p.m. DO SOMETHING DIFFERENT AND JOIN OUR CLASS FOR A LITTLE FUN 6528 N. Lamar 453-9205 I E \ UNIQUE OMELETTES, G I \ C E R G R E A D 4 \ l ) WOULD YOl BELI EV E I M) H O I SOI P 1)1 JO! R. S t \ / > B l( HI ' a HOLE U H E AT PA \ C A K E S , COLD SALADS . H E R B AL TEAS A ND H OMEMADE PIES 4 \ D CAKES; WI T H \ O T H I \ G OVER THREE DOLLARS. Pool Pong Shuffleboard Foosball Pinball Electronic G arnet MONDAYS - ■1.75 Pitchers TUESDAYS - 35* Longnecks WEDNESDAYS ■1.50 Pitchers HAPPY HOURS $1.75 Pitchers G reek Night 75* Highballs 7. 1 1 p.m. 3/M .00 7-11 p.m . 75' Highballs. — Mon-Fri 3-7 75' Hiballs NEVER A COVER 3 blocks west of G u a d a lu p e on MLK Blvd. O IX J L IA S. YOGA A N D YOU (R) © ® © ® © GDGENERAL HOBPfTAL 0 © C A R A S Y G E 8T 08 (MON) 0 ® TORNEO DE E8TRELLAS (TUE, THU) 0 (CD C O M P LIC A D ISIM O (WED) 0 © BA8TA (FRI) 10 AUSTIN COM M U NITY C O LLEG E (TUE, THU) © © © ® M * A * 8 * H (R) O GDVILLA A LEG RE (R) 0 © CEP1LLIN 2:30 360 © ® G U N SM O K E © © O ( I: LOVE OF UFE © ® THE BRADY BUNCH O (D S E S A M E 8TREET (R) © ® © ® © ® E D G E OF NIGHT 0 ® POPEYE AND FRIEND8 © ® C ARTO O N S © © A L E J A N D R A 3:30 © © THE F U NTSTO N ES O ® LEAVE IT TO BEAVER O ® M ARY TYLER M O O RE © ® © ® B U G S BUNNY AND FRIENDS 0 ® HANNA BA RBERA C ARTO O N S © ® L U C Y SH O W 4< » © © MY THREE S O N S O © I LOVE LUCY O ® © ® GILLIG AN 'S ISLAND O ® G U N SM O K E O (D M IST E R R O G E R S (R) © ® BEVERLY HILLBILU ES 0 ® BANANA SPLIT S © ® FAMILY AFFAIR © CDSTAR TREK 0 © LO S H ER M A N O S CORAJE © (S) G ILLIG AN 'S ISLAND © © SA N FO RD AND SO N O ® MY THREE S O N S O ® E L E C T R IC C O M P A N Y (R) © ® ANDY GRIFFITH 0 ® 8U PERM AN © ® MARY TYLER M O O RE © ® M C H A LE’S NAVY 4:30 5.-00 O (© STU D IO SE E © ® © ® A B C N EW S 0 ® LEAVE IT TO BEAVER f fl ® EM ERG E N C Y ONEI CD ® EL CHAPULIN C OLO RADO (MON) 0 © ENRIQUE EL POLIVOZ (TUE) © © Ml S EC RET AR IA (WED) 0 © EL CHAVO (THU) 0 © LA CRIADA BIEN CRIADA (FRI) O ® FRANKLIN B U S IN E SS REPORT (MON) 5:26 5*30 © © O ® NBC NEW S © © © ® © ® C B S NEW S Q ( D o v e r e a s y 0 ® DICK VAN DYKE © ® A B C N EW S © ® A N D Y GRIFFITH 0 © REPO RTER 41 © ® 0 © 0 ® ( B ® NEW8 © ® BEW ITCHED 6 MO VIE (MON-WED, FRI) (Ór RACE FOR THE PENNANT: HALFWAY TO THE W ORLD SER IE 14 daytime television listings M O RNING M O ® S: si Ú ® ® ® ® ® ® CARTO O N S NEW ZO O REVUE DA YBREA K (MON, W ED, FRI) RFD 6 (TUE) IN VO LVEM ENT (THU) M O NDAY M O RN IN G (MON) TU ESDAY M O RN IN G (TUE) W ED N ESD A Y M O RN IN G (WED) THU RSDAY M O RN IN G (THU) FRIOAY M O RN IN G (FRI) REU T ER S N EW S VIEW (TUE-FR!) 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M S 6*30 O © TODAY IN SA N ANTONIO O ® H O G A N 'S H ERO E8 © ® G O O D M O RN ING SA N ANTONIO © ( D a r t h u r sm ith © (D DEL R EEVE8(M O N ) © ® PO RTER W AGO NER (TUE) © ® NA8H VILLE ON THE ROAD (W ED) © ® DOLLY (THU) © ® MARTY R O BB IN S (FRI) O (D TOW N ANO COUNTRY 0 ® NEW S O GL NEW S © ® PAUL HARVEY * ^ 6:40 0:46 6:56 7:00 8 8 ® © ® TODAY ® MONDAY MO RN ING (MON) g ' l t g i X TU ESDAY M O RNING (TUE) 2 0 S ® W E0N E8 0A Y M O RNING (WED) 6 0 0 ® THUR8DAY M O RN ING (THU) 0 ® o ® FRIDAY M O RN ING (FRI) m Si I 0 ® 0 0 0 0 * * * * * * * AM ERICA © ® S L A M B A NG THEATRE 10 AUSTIN C OM M U NITY CO LLEG E (MON, WED) 7:25 O © © ® NEW S O ® BULLETIN BO ARD O ( D BOOK ENOS (MON, FRI) O ® BULLETIN BO AR D 7 (TUE, THU) O ® IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST (WED) © ® TAKE FIVE O (S) o ® © ® TODAY © ® G O O D M O RNING A M ERIC A 10 AU8TIN COM M U NITY C O LLEG E (MON) 7*30 8*00 0 ® O ® CAPTAIN KAN GARO O O ® S E S A M E STREET (R) 0 ® C O M ED Y C A P E R S 8 © O ® © ® NEW S ® PAUL HARVEY 8:25 8:30 O ® © ® © ® TODAY 0 ® G IG G LESN O R T HOTEL © ® G O O D M O RN IN G A M ER IC A © ® M AU DE G © C A R O L BURNETT AND FRIENDS © ® DONAHUE t * ® © ® ALL IN THE FAM ILY (R) O ® M IS T E R R O G E R S (R) 0 ® FAM ILY AFFAIR © ® M IK E D O U G LAS 9:00 Steamboat f 'f\T 3 1 * ^ < * ¿4 KIWI wad CASSELL WEBB thura AIN'T MISBEHAVIN' fri-tat STEVIE VAUGHAN & DOUBLE TROUBLE FEATURING MIES LOU ANN RESTAURANT-BAR 403 E. 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Fripp would create a swath of sound on his guitar and the signal would be looped via the tape machines to repeat the sound at intervals of several seconds. Having established one motif repeating itself on tape, he would switch timbres and play something else with the first motif as background. Eventually the embellishments of ms lead would become a new repetitive motif over which he would begin to improvise again. The result was hyp­ notic, ranging from eerie to jarring — and though it was repetitive, it was never dull. It was unlike anything you’re likely to have heard before, unless you have the two albums Fripp recorded with Brian Eno — whom Fripp acknowledged in his talk between improvisations. As the first improvisation faded into silence, Fripp said, T will now answer the question which I can hear bursting from the lips of all of you, albeit tacitly — ‘But is it rock and roll9’ And the answer is, of course ‘No it’s F nppertronics’.” In addition to being one of the most innovative and dar­ ing musicians around, with a penchant for surrounding himself with talent (co-conspirators have included Greg Lake, Bill Bruford, Peter Gabriel, David Bowie, Larry Fast and the Roches), Fripp is also one of the most in­ teresting and erudite speakers in rock. His prepared talk and a question-and-answer session after the music provid­ ed some of the most fascinating dialogue I’ve yet heard in conversations with rock perform ers. (It would have been printed here in greater detail, had Fripp not specified that no recorders be in attendance). Though Fripp is seen as an innovator and his music is noted for its uniqueness and intricacy, he denies that he has a penchant for the complex. The technology he uses is simple, he said, and he prefers to work with as few in- ,nC a1 5 a getS aS P° SSible ~ “ if ,t s sim P'e and it works. s good. When asked if he was influenced by electronic com- hvSfh S ,ke, Stf khausen' F n PP said “ I ’m influenced only by the technology. I m really something of a simpleton. Give me a simple device and let me m anipulate it.” He also denied haute-cultural influences — ‘‘My cultural background is that of a philistine. My parents were con­ cerned only with survival.” " How do you distinguish art and cra ft? ” one person asked. Fripp responded, “I ’ve never been asked that question before and I ’m grateful. Art provides a form of in a direct way — it reflects m irror or feedback something in society that cannot be found in a textbook Craft involves learning to work within an art ’ r;PP elaborated on why an artist with a new album / should choose to promote it in such an unorthodox way — giving an informal concert and get-together in a record store rather than rounding up a band and playing the Ar- madil o He spoke of leaving the music business altogether several years ago, for a number of reasons Frustration, being unable to make contact with the peo­ ple I was playing for. There was also the m atter of the Kin* Crimson once play «l before 5,000 enthusiastic fans in Italy, he said, and the fans’ enthusiasm reached such a peak that the police had to pressure the group into playing a second encore - they hoped to avoid a riot. When the band attem pted to play, they found that some of the fans had torn up some necessary power cables; a fan then rushed up onstage and was clobbered by an anxious security person. ‘‘His blood evfntr T F n p p sa id ; “ U w as 11160 t o t I decided that crowd control was not an area in which I wanted to work any longer.” *le dld ^ do" .t a6cePl that we have any responsibility in a . tening situation, he said of audiences. “ In rock and roll we expect no more than ‘Jaw s’ or ‘The Poseidon He hoped to help break down the usual Sinks Again. the audience/perform er barriers and shnnM°hmy ) J ave the idea ^ a rt is something that should be confined to galleries and made available only to adults of consenting age during daylight hours.” limitations in Fripp s upcoming projects include a rem ake of Godard s Alphaville ’ starring Deborah Harry of Blon- die and directed by Jodorowsky. The next Talking Heads album will feature Fripp and the production of Brian Eno; a new Fripp and Eno album will be out in September. Additionally, Fripp recorded what is reported to be a very good album with Darryl Hall, which is currently in limbo — RCA refuses to release it. Fripp is incensed over the veto, and suggests that persons in­ terested m hearing the album actively lobby for it — by writing to Robert Sommers, the RCA executive in New York who is reportedly responsible for nixing the album s release I can t do it (release the album ) myself; ” Fripp said. Things can be done, but it requires the effort of all of us. It really does.” Deborah Harry THE KEG 725 W est 23rd 477-5505 **A College Tradition” 3 Hours Free Parking in Tri-Towors G a r a g e FIGHT FOR UFE (Chapter 11) CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE (Chapter 12) ... are this week's thrilling episodes of "THE W OMAN IN G R A Y " as Scampi's presents a 1919 vintage silent movie serial in 15 chapters with live organ accompaniment on our authentic theatre pipe organ. Performances nightly beginning at 8:45 for the next 3 weeks. Enjoy our delicious food, cold beer, and soft drinks while you enjoy the show. MONDAY Get Acquainted N ight $1.75 Pitchers & $1.00 Highballs (No Cover) THURSDAY Rock and Roll Night. $1.75 Pitchers & $1.00 Highballs (No Cover) Tuesday "T w o for Tuesday" All M ixed Drinks and Pitchers of Beer two for the price of one all night (No Cover) FRI. and SAT. No Cover til 9 :0 0 After 9:00, Ladies $1 .0 0 The Keg ^ 23rd Rio G rande 23rd G u ad alu p e 2 4 th W ith in w a lk in g d ista n c e of UT. [OBGA i f PALACE K o .n ig In . a t N . L a m a r In C o m m . r t t P ork 451-1115 $ WEDNESDAY College Night The traditional 15 e beer ¡2SSSSSSQ $ ClIFFHANGER SPECÍa T ANY PIZZA Vi PRICE M on.-Thurs. until 4 p.m. O n e O n ly W ith C ou p on N o Takeouts, Please Offer Expires July 19, 1979 wwtíieaawr, vivors 13 By Jeff Whittington P atti’s story: In all the reams that have : been written about Patti Smith over the years, there has been a curious omission of what appears to be a very pertinent fact. Patti Smith is perpetrating rock music. The people who are paid to write about her are, therefore, alm ost uniformly rock critics. And P a tti is, or was, a rock critic; she gained far and away her greatest public visibility as a person who wrote about rock and roll long before she ever played a note of it. Hence, rock writers who discuss Pat­ ti are dealing with one of their own. It would be naive to think that this has no bearing on their views, and it is perhaps telling that rock critics usually tend to skirt or ignore the issue when handing t h e ir s u p p o s e d ly o b j e c t i v e dow n judgements on their ex-colleague. I first encountered Patti Smith in the August 1972 issue of C r e e m — a rock magazine which, I hasten to point out, was much different then than it is today. To­ day, C r e e m is cluttered, com m ercial and crass. Before its decline, however, it was one of the most interesting magazines of a n y type — witty, outrageous, literate, cool and possessed of an admirable com ­ mand of and feel for rock and roll sen­ sibilities. It was during this tim e that C r e e m began to take note of the poetry of a certain 24-year-old woman, publishing some of her poems and reviewing others — it was a review of “ Seventh Heaven” that first caught my eye. “hai'te y o u s e e n d y l a n ’s dog it g o t w in g s it c a n f l y w h e n you s p e a k o f it to h i m is the o nly t i m e d y la n c a n ’t look y o u in th e e y e . ” The January 1973 issue was devoted en­ tirely to the Rowing Stones and featuring the sam e young woman this time writing a reminiscence of when she was a teenager and first saw the Stones — and had a crush on their beautiful and doomed blond guitarist. More articles followed, record reviews too: Todd Rundgren, Lou Reed... People began to take note of the most distinctive writer in a magazine which was (then) filled with distinctive writers. There were letters: Kathleen Dunkle, a frequent cor­ respondent, wrote, “ Patti Smith is the best (only?) thing you’ve got. Don’t lose her.” And then in July of 1975, there was a photo feature on the graves of rock stars, accompanied by a meditation Patti wrote at the tomb of Jim Morrison. an unconscious level, anyway) as a fluke of the marketplace. Reviews were un­ ifo r m ly w a r m . The n e x t, “ R ad io Ethiopia,” was less ambitious and more musically overbearing (though in many ways more listenable) and was fairly pan­ ned. With “ E aster” and “ Wave,” however, the situation had changed. With a little help from Jim m y Iovine and Bruce Springsteen, Smith garnered a top ten single and top 20 album with “ E aster,” and “Wave” went top 20 within a month of release. These are telltale signs of bigness, and it became quite unmistakable that one who had just a few seasons ago been One Of Us had now become a Star. is perhaps m ost strikingly drawn in the case of “Wave,” Patti's new album. It, like “ E aster,” is more com m ercial than “ H orses” or “ Radio Ethiopia,” so accessibility is not an issue. The songs are more straight­ forward, their appeals more direct. It is more difficult to m iss what the songs are trying to do and whether or not they This whole m ess ‘ Why don't you Americans honor your poets?' ‘Because we don't look hack! “ W h y d o n ’t y o u A m e r i c a n s ho n o r succeeded. y o u r p o e t s ? ’ B e c a u s e w e d o n ’t look b a c k . ’ ” The text was followed by a brief note in P atti’s own handwriting: “this is my last article.” Four months later, “ Horses” appeared. And Patti Smith has been a rock star ever since, returning to rock journalism only once, again for Jim Morrison: a review of “ An American Prayer,” once again in C r e e m . Her first two albums were n o t big — “ Horses” actually sold surprisingly well for a debut, but it was easy to dism iss (on .So where is the tr u th in all of this? Probably in the minds of what Robert Christgau calls the “critical audience” — those who have the vision and background to actively th in k about the music they listen to, but without a personal stake in the lot/status of Rock Critic. (So don’t ex­ pect to read a genuinely truthful review in the papers). The attitude toward the album is likely to prevail in analyzing Smith’s latest con­ cert tour (bet you were wondering when I’d get to that, weren’t you?). Is the fact that the concert is substantially longer this time than last, divided into two sets, an attempt to give the audience more of what they cam e to see, or an exercise in ego? Is the addition of Patti’s clarinet an attempt to broaden the group’s instrumen­ tal palette, or is it just excessive? Does allowing three other members of the band a chance to sing add variety, or is it an ex ­ ercise in self-indulgence? lo o s e r I can only be subjective and say what I thought about it, and present it as opinion, not objective fact, i found the present show to be more entertaining by virtue of th e added fo r m a t and the fripperies, though I doubt that a casual listener would be amused The tendancy toward a less-controlled atm osphere seem s to be a move back in the direction of the group's earlier perform ances (w h ich , it, w ere q u ite anarchic) and this pleases m e just fine. But then it would, wouldn t it? legend has I liked Ivan Krai’s rendition of “Cold Turkey” and Richard DNV Sohls “ All Along the Watchtower” (w elcom e back. Richard), though I still prefer the version of “The Kids Are Alright” that Lenny Kaye sang at the band’s last Austin Opry House performance a year ago. As usual, the group’s choice of cover material was inspired: an obligatory “ My Generation” and a rousing version of “Twist and Shout.” As far as I’m concerned, the high point among the cover versions was the center­ piece of “Wave,” to wit. the Byrds’ “ So You Want To Be A Rock And Roll Star.” The song begins on the album with a whine of feedback; in concert, it em erges from the veritable tempest of feedback that is P atti’s guitar solo. As might be expected. “ Because the Night” drew the heaviest response. But the show-stopper which the band finished the second set with was “5-4-3-2 Wave,” an unrecorded rouser that should be the centerpiece of her inevitable live album Patti Smith was at Austin Opera House last Thursday and I dug the hell out of it. The other people there seemed to enjoy it too. Patti Smith, Critic, is now Patti Smith, Star. tinued with several more songs from the “Sleepwalker” and “ M isfits” albums. In between. Ray kept up a teasing patter, delighting the crowd. Only a song later, Davies is at it again, teasing the crowd with the opening strains of “ Lola,” only to break suddenly into his famous “ Banana Boat” routine. When the crowd response is not quite right, he decides w e’re not ready for it yet and swings into the title track from their new album, “Low Budget.” By Randy Ormsby Throughout their R ay’s story: long career (nearing 16 years now) the Kinks have inspired many a critic to gush enthusiastically and lose all sense ol the propor­ tion of things. To wit, a few quotes collected over the years: • “T h e r e a r e tw o k in d s o f p e o p l e in th e w o r ld : K in k s f a n s a n d p e o p le w h o d o n ’t lik e r o c k ’n r o l l . ” — B r u c e H a r r is • “ ‘A r t h u r ’...is by all o d d s the b e s t B r iti s h Ip o f 1969 ... th e B e a t l e s h a v e a lot o f c a t c h i n g up to d o . ” — G re il M a r c u s • “...c a ll R a y D a v i e s a g e n iu s ... ‘L o l a ’ (is) o n e o f th e g r e a t e s t s i n g l e s o f t h e t w e n t i e t h c e n t u r y ...D a v i e s ran k s rig h t u p t h e r e w it h T o w n s e n d a n d M c C a r tn e y ...a s a c o m p o s e r o f r o c k a n d roll, r ig h t up th e r e w ith d a g g e r a n d D y l a n a s a s i n g e r o f s a m e . ” — J o h n M e n d e ls o n There are many more, but you get the idea. No one is neutral about the Kinks. They may not be the world’s most popular band in terms of numbers of fans, but they are without a doubt the best-loved band by a sm all and fanatic group of persons, bound together under the yoke of the hopelessly devoted. Shortly after 8:30. Herman Brood and His Wild Romance, a group from Holland on their first U.S. tour, took the stage and slashed their way through several rockers from their just-released album, named after the group. Highlights of the set included “ Rock and Roll Junkie,” “ Dope Sucks” and a shining, all-too-brief ver­ sion of Dylan’s “ Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door.” But when the Kinks took the stage shortly after sun­ down, the crowd really cam e alive, standing for the entire hour-and-20-rninute set. The Kinks got right to work bursting out with “ Sleepwalker” from the album of the same name, with the crowd singing right along, matching Ray word for word from the very beginning. They con­ They continue with several songs from the LP, in­ cluding “ (Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman,” and what Ray claim s to be the tour’s debut of “ In a Space,” which features D ave’s absurd high harmonies. Now he’s decided that we re finally ready and picks up an acoustic guitar and begins “ Lola” once again, only to stop just as abrubtly as before to exhort us to sing. “ I want everyone to sing,” he says. “ If you can’t sing, clap your hands. If you can’t clap your hands — there’s no hope. Clap your feet.” Finally, he plunges ahead, only stopping near the end to give the crowd a chance to hear itself chanting the chorus over and over. Though they’ve been doing this bit for years now, it remains an effective and moving statem ent concerning what rock is all about The only other moment that com ­ pares favorably is the point in Springsteen’s act when he leaps into the crowd and the audience becom es the act, passing him high above their heads while he continues to sing The only thing that could follow “ Lola” is a batch of golden oldies that sound as fresh as ever. They offered letter-perfect but abbreviated versions of “ A Well- Respected Man,” “ Death of a Clown.” “ Sunny After­ noon" and an incredibly raw re-vamping of “ You Really Got Me" powerful enough to obliterate Van Halen and those like him. After several more recent classics, Ray sets us up for the final number saying, “ Rock bands com e and rock bands go. but R o c k A n d Roll goes on forever” — while the band is already launching into “ All Day and All of the Night.” Even as we watch him go, we know we can get him back if we make enough noise, and it doesn’t take long They return for two more songs; “ Pressure" off the new album, and a definitive version of “Twist and Shout” that puts a fitting topper on an invigorating night of rock and roll by one of the few survivors of the original British In­ vasion The Kinks are living testament to the truth of Ray’s lyrics: “ S in g e r s c o m e a n d go A n d s t a r s f a d e a w a y T h e y v a n i s h in the h a z e A n d t h e y 'r e n e v e r s e e n a g a in B u t th e y c a n ’t s to p th e m u s i c p l a y i n g o n . ” With music this special, why would anyone want to try? Patti Smith Photograph by Jan Sonnenmair Photograph by Ronald Cortos Ray Davies