Iran signs plan to release hostages
By United Press International
Algeria’s state radio said Monday Iran has sign
ed the agreem ent to release the 52 American
hostages and the documents were being flown
from Tehran to Algiers for final American ap
proval.
Algeria dispatched
two empty Boeing 727
jetliners to Tehran apparently to pick up the cap
tives. The planes stopped to refuel in Ankara,
Turkey, and left for the Iranian capital at 1:15
a.m. CST, an Ankara airport duty officer said.
The Algerian radio report quoted “ diplomatic
sources,” saying “ an Iranian jet has left Tehran
for Algiers carrying the text of the final agree
ment, signed by Fran’s chief hostage negotiator,
Bezhad Nabavi.”
“ The hostages are now in Tehran and are being
prepared for their journey hom e,” a senior Ira
nian official close to the negotiation told UPI in
London by telephone early Monday morning.
In Washington earlier, the White House said the
term s of the agreem ent to release the
final
hostages had reached Tehran during the night and
required only final approval and initialing by Ira
nian authorities
This raised hopes the hostages could be on their
way home sometime Monday, although American
spokesmen advised caution up to the last minute.
Once in Algiers, the agreem ent was to be signed
by chief U.S. negotiator Warren Christopher to
seal the pact and clear the way to fly the hostages
to freedom on the 443rd day of their captivity.
A White House official said the U.S. initialing
was a technicality and “ we are intending to do
so.”
“ We’re waiting to hear from the Iranians,” he
said as the pace quickened to end the 14Va-month
drama.
Iran said Sunday that it had reached agreem ent
with the United States on term s for freeing the 52
American hostages and a White House official
said the accord aw aits only initialing by the
Iranians.
E arlier a presidential aide said the painstaking
analysis and translation of the final documents by
U.S. officials delayed announcement of a settle
ment of the 14V2-month-old crisis.
But as Sunday drew to a close, a White House
official said, “ We re just awaiting the final ap
proval and initialing of the docum ents.”
The documents embodying the accord must be
prepared in English, French and Farsi and ap
proved and initialed by the Americans, Iranians
and the Algerian interm ediaries.
P resident C a rte r’s speech announcing the
agreem ent to end 442 days of captivity for the
hostages was ready by the afternoon but delivery
had to be pushed back while officials pored over
the fine print of the documents.
“ This is a very, very complex set ot documents
..., v e ry c a re f u lly and
and a g r e e m e n ts
painstakingly drawn over a laborious period of
tim e,” a presidential aide said.
“ If there is one chance in a thousand some in
terpretation of those documents could cause a
hang-up, we don’t want to take it,” he said.
One of the A lgerian doctors who flew to
Tehran Saturday to examine the hostages said in
an interview with CBS News that the Americans
would be released “ tomorrow night (Monday), I
think.”
A broadcast by Algeria’s state-controlled radio
monitored in Washington said that “ no serious
obstacle is in the way” of the final agreem ent,
which will see an exchange of $9 billion in Iranian
frozen assets for the Americans.
But, the broadcast said, “ At the present tim e
the translation of the final document is under
way. It is expected that all will be completed
before
inauguration of P resid en t-elect
the
Reagan” on Tuesday.
C arter placed a series of calls during the
day to relatives of the hostages to tell them of the
progress and briefed Reagan in a short afternoon
telephone conversation.
The D a ily
5<7Z S L "XI
9£*7$*7 x o 8 O d
S U I « 1 9 5 0 * 0 « T T í d O - f W
Vol. 80, No. 76
(USPS 146-440)
S t u d e n t N e w s p a p e r a t The U n i v e r s i t y of Te xas a t A u st i n
Monday, January 19, 1981
Twenty Cents
Accident
takes lives
of students
By ERIC F. BARTELS
Three University freshmen were kill
ed and three others injured at midnight
Saturday when their car went out of con
trol and slammed into a tree near Mt
Bonnell Road
R ussell Lloyd A llred, a nat ur al
sciences m ajor, John W. Slaughter,
business adm inistration and Wiley Hugh
Peebles, liberal arts, were pronounced
dead at the scene of the accident at 12:22
a m Sunday. Peebles was the driver of a
1973 Pontiac Gran Prix.
The
three
injured students w ere
business adm inistration m ajors Mark
Graphman, 19, Mitchell Holcomb, 18,
and William Henry Torres III, 19 They
were
injuries at
Brackenridge Hospital and released
for minor
treated
All six of the students had attended
Klein High School in Houston.
Senior Sgt Curtis Southworth of the
Austin Police Departm ent said the three
students who sustained fatal injuries, all
18 years
1
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Paech
in Brief
By United Press International
Devlin’s condition stable
BELFAST, Northern Ireland —
Political activist Bernadette Devlin
McAliskey and her husband were
reported in stable condition Sunday,
two days after they were shot in an
attack at their home. Sources at the
Royal Victoria Hospital said Mrs.
McAliskey had been in a coma-like
state of “ secondary shock” follow
ing the shooting and subsequent sur
gery to remove five bullets from her
chest and legs.
Saudi* to finarte# A-bomb
LONDON — Saudi Arabia will
soon sign an $900 million pact to help
Pakistan make an atomic bomb, the
Sunday T im es reported Sunday.
Pakistan reportedly thought of tur
ning to Iraq for funds but was warn
ed by Saudi Arabia that Iraqi Presi
dent Saddam Hussein wanted his
country to have a nuclear device so
he could exercise a dominant role in
the Middle East.
Avalanche Idlla 6
TOKYO — A massive pre-dawn
avalanche smashed into a home for
the elderly in northern Japan Sun
day. killing six people and burying 11
more, police said. They said there
were 48 elderly residents in the Nan-
zan Lodge when the avalanche, 100
yards wide and 13 feet deep, rumbl
ed down onto part of the village of
Yunotani, in a rugged hilly area of
Niigata province, approximately 100
miles north of Tokyo.
Marco* authorizaa power
MANILA, Philippines — President
Ferdinand E. Marcos authorized the
army to arrest and detain suspected
subversives and quell disorders even
without martial law, a government
proclamation said Sunday. The
order, signed by Marcos Saturday
and published Sunday, allows for the
continued detention of political
prisoners without an inquiry by civil
courts.
China to try thouaanda
PEKING — China s leaders ap
parently have decided not to execute
Mao Tse-tung's widow but will place
thousands of other people on trial for
crimes allegedly committed during
the Cultural Revolution, diplomatic
sources said Sunday. Preparations
for the new trials already are under
way and among those who will be in
the docket will be Mao’s nephew,
Mao Yuanxin, the sources sakL
London fir# kill* 9
LONDON — A blaze believed
started by a firebomb early Sunday
swept through a house jammed with
scores of West Indians at a all-night
birthday party, killing at least nine
people and injuring 27 others, police
said. “There were people screaming
and shouting ‘fire, fire,’ and they
were trying to break windows to get
out,” a neighbor, Norman Lewis,
said. “There was nothing much one
could do.”
(JAW to vote on pact
DETROIT — The d ra stica lly
reduced labor agreement between
the United Auto Workers union and
Chrysler Corp. undergoes a crucial
first test on the road to worker
ratification Monday. Predictions
from union officials — both at ex
ecutive and local union levels — was
that the concessions would be reluc
tantly approved as the only alter
native to a Chrysler bankruptcy and
possible loss of jobs.
Monday, January 19. 1981 □
THE DAILY TEXAN
World&National
Salvadoran archbishop attacks junta
Page 3 ;
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (UPI) - The leader
of El Salvador’s Catholic church accused the U.S.-
backed junta Sunday of injustice and abuse of power
in the brutal fighting to defeat leftist guerrillas.
At the sam e time, m ilitary officials awaited the
arrival of American helicopters and advisers and an
unspecified amount of “ lethal” m aterial as part of
Washington’s m ilitary aid package, officials said.
Another 58 people were reported killed throughout
the country Sunday, bringing to almost 700 the number
of deaths since
the Farabundo M arti National
Liberation Front launched its “ general offensive”
last week against the U.S.-backed ruling junta.
Authorities said government troops in Tecoluca, 37
miles east of the capital, used gasoline to bum 35 cor
pses found in the town, although details of the deaths
were not available. Another eight bodies were found
in San Salvador.
During his Sunday homily at the Metropolitan
Cathedral, acting Archbishop of San Salvador Arturo
Rivera y Damas said: “ There have been great in
justices and great abuses of power in this country.’’
The Catholic church estim ates about 80 percent of
more than 10,000 people killed in political violence
last year were cut down by government troops and
right-wing extrem ists operating with the tacit ap
proval of the ruling junta.
Rivera y Damas, who has been an outspoken critic
of alleged abuses of human rights by the junta,
added: “ The immense m ajority of the Salvadoran
people are indifferent to the current conflict.”
Air Force officials said Sunday they are awaiting
the arrival of $5 million in U.S. m ilitary aid, in
cluding four Huey helicopters and an unspecified
amount of “ lethal” equipment such as arm s and am
munition.
“ Non-lethal” aid was resumed last Wednesday to
the ruling junta in the Central American nation. It
was suspended shortly after government troops were
implicated in the Dec. 2 slayings of three American
nuns and a U.S. layworker.
T he “ n o n -le th a l” aid
tw o Huey
helicopters and a team of advisers who, according to
a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in San Salvador,
arrived last Friday.
in c lu d e s
Another $5 million in m ilitary aid — which includes
“ lethal” m aterial — was announced by the State
Department Saturday.
“ This is extra, this is a g ran t,” said the U.S. Em
bassy spokesman, who asked not to be identified.
!
%
The additional $5 million in aid will inclue four *
more Huey helicopters, and will arrive
in Ell
Salvador soon, the spokesman said, but declined to
give specifics.
In Managua, Nicaragua, Salvadoran ambassador
Roberto Castellano Figueroa
told reporters he
resigned from his post Friday and would join the lef-
tist. He said the Salvadoran government had an “ in
satiable thirst for blood.”
Begin Cabinet
proposes
July election
®1981 The New York Tim es
JERUSALEM
- P rim e M inister
Menachem Begin announced Sunday
that his Cabinet had decided
to in
troduce legislation setting July 7 as the
date for parliam entary elections, four
months earlier than originally scheduled
but two months later than advocated by
the opposition Labor Party.
The decision,
taken a t a Cabinet
m e e tin g S unday, c o n s titu te d an
aknowledgement by the Begin govern
ment of its inability to complete its full
through November because oí
term
defections and internal strife. But thq
m o v e a ls o s to p p e d s h o r t of a
governmental collapse, for under the
proposed legislation. Begin would not
necessarily resign; he would continue in
office until a new government could be
formed after a new Knesset, or P arlia
ment, is elected.
The July 7 date represented a com
promise between those in the coalition
who wanted elections in May or June
and other factions who wanted to try to
remain until November in the hope that
the extra few months could be used to
expand and strengthen existing Jewish
settlem ents on the occupied West Bank.
There is still room for bargaining once
the bill is formally introduced in the
Knesset Monday, and Israeli political
com m entators speculated that July 7
would be an opening position in a
negotiating process that could end up ad
vancing the vote to the spring, possibly
June. Aryeh Naor, Cabinet secretary,
denied that it was seen as a date to be
bargained away. The Labor P arty called
for elections May 12.
*4
H ardliners,
including Gen. Ariet)
Sharon, the agriculture m inister, and.
David Levy, the housing minister, work-.1
ed all last week to arrange a solution to;>
the crisis that could keep the govern--
ment afloat until November. They and^
other strong supporters of Jewish settle-')
ment want as many m ilitant Jews as
possible on the West Bank as obstacles 7
to any effort by the Labor Party, if it i
should win, to return parts of the area to 1
I
Jordan.
o
Public opinion polls show Labor, head- ;
ed by Shimon P eres, far ahead of *
Begin s Likud bloc. Peres has called for
more flexibility on
the West Bank,
proposing a partition of the region and
the redrawing of the boundaries to leave
in Israeli
security-related
hands while transfering most of the 800,-
000 Arab residents back to Jordanian^
ru le. J o rd a n 's King H ussein has*
repeatedly rejected the idea.
te rrito ry
The immediate cause of the Begin;
government s difficulties has not been^
its policy toward the Arabs, however,
but domestic economic problems, which)
have seen inflation soar to the world’s-
highest rate. Last week, final figures for*
1980 showed that the cost of living had)
risen during the year by 132.9 percent.--
Their spirits were high ...
U PI Telephoto
Hostage wife Dorothea M orefleld is surrounded by news people as she
awaits w ord of developm ents in Iran. Her sp irit was high and she was
co nfid a nt
Richard.
the cu rre n t negotiations would
that
I think it’s m oving along the way we want it to, she said.
free her husband
Europeans optimistic about Reagan team
LONDON (UPI) — Europeans are waiting with quiet
optimism for the advent of the Reagan administration
despite widespread misgivings that his defense policy
may strain East-West relations.
In general, Europeans see Reagan s cabinet team as
professional and have accepted the nomination of Gen.
Alexander Haig as secretary of state without the
W atergate reservations this created in Washington.
Officials in Bonn could hardly have been more pleased
at the defeat of Carter, whom they regarded as inept
and inconsistent
D e r S p i e g e l m agazine quoted W est G erm an
Chancellor Helmut Schmidt as saying C arter had sur
rounded himself with “ m ere youngsters who had no
idea about politics. On the other hand. Reagan is clear
sighted and knows what he wants.
But at a time when they are strapped economically,
Am erica’s European allies are apprehensive Reagan
will oblige them to pick up a bigger proportion of the
Atlantic Alliance's defense burden. Most countries
already are having difficulty keeping up with the 3 per
cent annual real growth target for defense spending to
which they are committed
Haig, who is known and respected in Europe from his
time as suprem e Allied commander, has gone out of his
way to soothe these apprehensions by praising the pre
sent defense efforts of the allies, who provide most of
the ready forces in central Europe and most of the ships
in the North Atlantic.
Haig is the only American cabinet m em ber designate
fam iliar to most Europeans. The rest of the team seems
grey and safe from this side of the Atlantic.
The Spanish newspaper E l Pai s described Reagan's
cabinet as “ a team that will allow him to carry out a
personalized policy, as he did in California."
E gyptian Foreign M inister K am al H assan Ali
welcomed Haig’s nomination because his experience of
strategic affairs would help Egypt stem communism in
the Middle East.
An Israeli official described R eagan's comments on
the Middle E ast as “ positive from our point of view,”
and said Haig had proved himself “ helpful to Israel as
well as being forthcoming and understanding about our
position.”
The g o v ern m en t of B r ita in ’s P rim e M in ister
M argaret Thatcher has m ade no secret of its delight
over the election of a like-minded conservative to the
White House. Mrs. Thatcher will be the first foreign
head of government to m eet Reagan after his inaugura
tion when she visits Washington at the end of February.
Privately, French officials express concern Reagan
will be a difficult and strong-willed man to deal with in
comparison with Carter.
The officials said President Valery Giscard D’Esta-
ing appeared to have dropped his original idea of in
viting Reagan to a private get-together at a resort in the
French Antilles for fear Reagan would not be as recep
tive as C arter to French elegance and luxury.
Diplomats predicted
the French and American
government would disagree strongly over P a ris’ deter
mination to seek closer ties with Moscow, and its rejec
tion of closer links with NATO for fear of upsetting the
Soviet Union.
But unlike the Europeans, the Iranian reaction to
Reagan has been predicatbly negative in tone. Tehran
Radio Sunday warned President-elect Ronald Reagan
against adopting a m ilitaristic policy in the Persian
Gulf.
The commentary, monitored by the BBC in London,
said Reagan is stepping into the White House at a tim e
when U.S. “ prestige as a superpower has diminished
owing to tension in the Persian Gulf."
Calling Reagan “ a form er actor in film westerns
(who) enjoys 75 percent support among Zionist com
panies," the radio said Reagan was planning increased
m ilitary intervention.
Naad to announc# a m ##ting?
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readers. J u st stop by T h e D a lly T e x a n offices In the T S P
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fo rm s.
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LET S GET NASTY!
Not to worry, Jimmy
By RUSSELL BAKER
NEW YORK — A group of learned m en quoted in the pap er the
other day gave it as th eir opinion th a t Jim m y C a rte r will not go
down in the history books a s much of a president. Possibly so. A
G eorge W ashington doesn’t com e along very often, and even if
one did, under our p resen t system for choosing presidents he
would probably be wiped out in the polls for showing badly fitted
false teeth in his television sm ile.
Trying to guess w hat history will say is tricky business. A hun
dred y e a rs from now school children com pelled
to study
A m erican history from John Kennedy to Ronald R eagan a re
m ore likely than not to lum p all five presidents of the e ra under
the label of “ G eneral Confusion” and let them go a t that.
THIS IS WHAT m ost A m ericans do now adays w ith the
presidents betw een Andrew Jackson and A braham Lincoln and
those betw een Andrew Johnson and W illiam M cKinley. Even
people who have read som e history have trouble telling you
w hether F ranklin P ie rc e preceded M illard F ilm ore, w here
Z achary Taylor fitted in, how he differed from John T yler,
which H arrison w as B enjam in and which W illiam H enry, and
w hat C hester A. A rthur did th a t w as different from w hat
R utherford B. H ayes did.
• People a hundred y e a rs hence a re probably going to be equally
baffled about the five presidents we have had since 1961.
AMONG TH ESE FIVE C a rte r has as good a chance as any of
being rem em b ered honorably, if a t all. Im agine for a m om ent
you a re situated in the y e a r 2081 and cram m in g for a te st on 20th
century presidents.
You can handle Theodore R oosevelt easily enough. The last
hero of A m erican o ptim ism . W illiam H ow ard T aft, okay, he was
the fat m an, fa tte s t p resid en t in history.
Woodrow Wilson? A snap. World W ar I. League of N ations.
Intellectual.
W arren H arding, Calvin Coolidge, H e rb e rt Hoover. Lump
them all togeth er under “ R oaring T w en ties.” H arding w as sexy
and produced T eapot D om e; Coolidge did not choose to run;
Hoover got caught
the stock m a rk e t crash. F ranklin
Roosevelt: the big fellow ; you know enough to w rite a 25-word
essay on him . H arry T rum an: gave ’em hell, big cold-w ar
leader. Dwight E isenhow er: w ar hero, presided over eight
y ears of unprecedented A m erican prosperity and power.
in
With John Kennedy, how ever, you run into a confusion
of rapidly changing presid en ts and incom prehensible political
snarls such as, in 2081, only a Ph.D. in history can hope to grasp.
You probably know
th a t Kennedy w as a ssassin ated , and
possibly, if you p re fe r scandal to history, th a t he liked to play
around.
But did Kennedy com e before or a fte r R ich ard Nixon? Well,
Nixon w as the one who had to quit because of W atergate,
w hatever W atergate w as, and then he w as succeeded by the vice
president who had been appointed instead of elected. Was that
C a rte r or Johnson?
It couldn’t have been Johnson because the fellow who succeed
ed Nixon was a nice guy, and Johnson was not a nice guy, but the
one who had to quit because he m ade a m ess of V ietnam .
IT WILL PROBABLY take you a while to re m e m b e r th at it
w as G erald Ford who followed Nixon, and even if you do
rem em b er you a re probably going to forget a lto g e th e r to include
C arter.
Students who a re cunning about grades m ay be able to keep
things properly sorted .out by using the p h ra se “ a very wet
N ovem ber b reeze” as a m em ory device in w hich “ A” stands for
“ A ssassinated” (K ennedy), the “ v ” in “ v e ry ” for V ietnam
(Johnson), the “ w ” in “ w e t” for W atergate (N ixon), the “ N ” in
“ N ovem ber” for nice guy (F ord) and the “ b ” in “ breeze” for
breezy (C a rte r). Why does “ breezy” instantly bring C arter to
m ind? Because he w as the first president who insisted on being
form ally addressed in the breezy style, by his nicknam e Jim m y
THIS, ADMITTEDLY, is not a g reat distinction for a presi
dent, but on the other hand it is not discreditable eith er. It is c e r
tainly not so bad a s being rem em bered by “ V ietnam ” or
“ W aterg ate” and, in the long run, far p re fe ra b le to being
rem em bered by “ a s s a ssin a te d .”
It is not so p leasant, to be sure, as being re m e m b e red by “ nice
guy,” but it is b e tte r than not being rem em b ered a t all, for if
C a rte r can get him self rem em b ered way up th e re in the future
som e student m ay be moved to ask the te a c h e r w hat C a rte r did.
I fancy the te a c h e r will have to reflect a m inute before saying,
“ I don’t believe the m an did anything terrib ly dreadful a t a ll.”
F or the e ra 1961-1981, th a t is not a bad notice from the history
critics.
®1981 New York Times
Editorials
THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, January 19, 1981
I need ‘Help!
By GENE BURP
It T e x a n editor M ark McKinnon
insists on the Monday delusion (Jan
12)
th a t "W e h a v e no s e t o r
preconceived policy ... and in fact
endeavor to avoid adopting a n y ,”
then how and why w ere the John
Lennon photo and story chosen T ues
day (Jan. 13)? T here seem s to be
som e m essage for re a d e rs growing
o u t of
th e M onday m ix tu r e of
editorial m ush on “ free press, free
thought,” “ ideas,” "e n lig h te n m e n t”
and "p ro g re ss” ; but as a m em ber of
the Beat generation, as a p ra c
titioner of a free and responsible
press, as an ex-new sm an and as a
fighter in the vanguard of the civil
rights m ovem ent of the ea rly 1960s
before m ost T e x a n sta ffe rs w ere
born. I need " H e lp 1
from J e ffe r
son, Jesus or John Lennon in un
derstanding how an ill-shaped, nude,
egotistical, exhibitionist B eatle is
the "b e st product” of his m usical
life, w hich he c o n sid e re d m o re
significant than th a t of Christ!
Is he trying to re-en ter the womb
of his s e e m in g ly b o re d “ w ife-
m o th e r” to escape reality? Are we
being told that sex for Lennon is
religious love, but for the re st of us
sex is lust? Public acceptance of his
a rt apparently w as not enough at
high noon in his c a re e r, and now the
m edia serves the cult of his body for
b reakfast Many young journ alists
seem
their glands
because their brains a re apparently
located in their sex organs.
think with
to
ta ste ,
As for editorial
it’s like
to day’s food — there seem s to be no
ta ste We re heading for the year
2000 and the continued T e x a n “ sex
ploitation” of bathroom graffiti, the
B aylor bunnies, sex and KLRN etc.,
rem inds us of the cam pus "sandbox
jo u rn a lism ” of the late 1950s and
1960s. If the T e x a n is a generation
behind the tim es, one w onders if it is
living up to its reputation as a prize-
winning college daily on the very
day state legislators open session to
assess a university of the first class
and flagship of the sta te , Sun Belt
and universe!
If bored T e x a n s ta ffe r s a re
fascinated with porno, then w rite
for S c r e w and H u s t l e r m agazines,
which at least lack the intellectual,
educational and m oral p retense of
R o l l in g S t o n e or the T e x a n .
Hurd is an a s s o c i a t e p r o f e s s o r o f
j o u r n a l i s m .
Opinions expressed in T h e D a ily T e x a n are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not
necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board
of Operating Trustees
Page 4
Viewpoint
And the enemy is...
As we en te r a new sem ester one is led to wonder w hether the b a ttle being
waged for academ ic excellence a t the U niversity is a cam paign to elim in ate or
foster m ediocrity. C ertain adm in istrative policies have us confused
is
m ediocrity our .enemy or ally?
The first priority when form ulating a strateg y to reg ister the U niversity as a
first class institution should be to a ttra c t and m aintain a first class faculty.
While the benefits of living in Austin a re many, m ost faculty would not think
long before moving to another, less a ttra c tiv e environm ent if offered a m ore
reasonable, realistic salary.
U nfortunately, the L egislature is largely responsible for determ ining faculty
salaries and is unlikely to respond appropriately to the financial dem ands of
academ ia during these fiscally conservative tim es.
F urth erm o re, until every a c re of U niversity land is covered with m o rta r, or
until the L egislature redefines appropriation of the P erm an en t U niversity
Fund, the wealth of incom e from U niversity oil lands will continue to pour into
concrete and construction, ra th e r than pockets of poorly paid faculty.
The U niversity offers plenty of shelter, now if only there could be a little
bread and w ater for those who hunger and th irst for knowledge.
While such financial m a tte rs a re in the hands of those in higher authority,
th ere a re steps that can be taken to help pave the road tow ard academ ic ex
cellence.
A m ajo r step in the right direction would be for the U niversity Council to take
action on a report subm itted by the U niversity Council C om m ittee on Basic
E ducation R equirem ents. The com m ittee was established in the fall of 1979 and
the basic education requirem ents for all un
“ charged with exam ining
derg rad u ate degrees at
findings and
recom m endations to the council.” After m onths of deliberation and soliciting
input and feedback from all sectors of the academ ic com m unity, including
students, the com m ittee reached a consensus and has now subm itted its report
to the council.
the U niversity and reporting
its
Among the problem s cited are U niversity program s that require substantial
w riting from students only in freshm an English In other p rogram s students
can avoid sciencé entirely or graduate without any exposure to m ath em atics.
Analysis of lite ra tu re can be skipped in som e program s, social science re
quirem ents a re lim ited in others and a num ber of program s do not req u ire any
foreign language proficiency.
“ Most professional degree plans include very few electives, and th e re is ap
parent pressure to use these in a reas with m axim al job-related benefits,
ac
cording to the report. A student seeking a BA in liberal a rts is offered 40 elec
tive hours while a BBA petroleum land m anagem ent student has the opportuni
ty to exercise freedom of choice for only three elective hours out of 120 hours
needed to graduate.
To rem edy
There a re m any specific proposals and recom m endations included in the
report. On a m ore general level, however, it identifies specialization as the
m alaise p rim arily responsible for producing graduates educationally and
socially ill-equipped to function responsibly and com fortably in today’s society.
the com m ittee has proposed a m inim al set of
c h a ra c te ristic s which should be com m on to all graduates reg ard less of their
field of specialization. The recom m endation calls for the U niversity to "adopt a
new set of req u irem en ts which would be com m on to all undergraduate
d e g re e s” in six basic a re a s: writing, social science, m athem atics, natural
sciences, foreign language and fine a rts and hum anities
trend
the
F u rth erm o re, the report suggests that the U niversity m ust offer a com m it
m ent to the courses which would provide attention to recognizing and re w a r
ding teaching excellence, reducing class size, furnishing graduate or clerical
assistance, or supplying instructional aids and equipm ent
While steps have been taken to recognize teaching excellence, reduction of
class size has been largely ignored With teaching assistants in the D epartm ent
of G overnm ent no longer able to govern their own classes, six classes of 50
students have been com bined to m ake one class of 300 students. The D ep art
m ent of English is cu rren tly experiencing a glut of students seeking freshm an
com position courses. The problem has tem porarily been addressed, but if
students try to add any courses the d epartm ent m ay have to re so rt to un
desirable alte rn a tiv e s such as com bining classes or relying on p rofessors to
volunteer their already overw orked and underpaid schedules to add yet another
course to their burdensom e load. Both students and faculty suffer from such
policies. Nobody w'ins.
U ltim ately, the U niversity m ust realize th at specialization, while preparing
students for the business world, has becom e by and large m erely vocational
training By choosing not to require students to participate in a curriculum
which provides a well-rounded, com m on base of knowledge, the U niversity is
producing a generation of students unable to understand the com plex world
around us and unable to com m unicate with one another
We strongly applaud the c o m m itte e ’s report and encourage its consideration
when presented to the U niversity Council Jan. 26 and hope the council will take
action on it Feb. 16.
Mark McKinnon
Firing Line
The Solomon Report
R egular use of m arijuana m ay cause conceptual
to a p h ilo so p h y
d is in te g r a tio n , a c c o rd in g
professor a t the U niversity of Texas a t Austin.
P ro fesso r R C Solomon found that students who
claim to sm oke m ore than 40 " jo in ts’ a day, the
m inim um daily equivalent inhaled proportional to
body w eight by ra ts in nearby G alveston m edical
c en ter, tend to giggle interm inably in lectures on
P lato, in p articu lar. They ceased to c a re about the
validity of argum ents and expressed “ total in
difference at the idea that an Omnipotent God
could c re a te a m ountain so large that even He
could not move it.”
“ A whole generation is incapable of a b stra c t
thought,” w arned the exasperated Dr. Solomon,
who added, "b u t m any of these students do still
le c t u r e s on
te n d
P a rm e n id e s.”
to e x c la im w o w ! ’
in
in te re s te d
Solom on b ecam e
in m a riju a n a
research a fte r reading “ one too many m edical
re p o rts .” “ W hy,” he is reported to have asked one
noted governm ent au th o rity , “ should m edical
r e s e a r c h e r s g e t a ll
th e g o v e rn m e n t g ra n t
m o ney?”
“ Philosophers and other liberal a rts types are
ju st as capable of captu ring headlines, making
outrageous claim s and instigating congressional
in v estig atio n s,” he exclaim ed.
The o b ject of his study is to call public atten tion
to the untapped reso u rces of the liberal a rts and
hum anities to confuse con tro versial public issues.
Lazio Frink
Austin
Let NASA go to pot
We’re in trouble. Who’s we, you ask? By we I
m ean us people th a t inhabit the planet E arth .
We’re not A m ericans or R ussians anym ore. We’re
E arth m en . This p lanet can sustain only a finite
num ber of people. Supply and dem and. The de
m and is increasing (look a t the b attle over those
valuable P e rsia n Gulf oil fields) and the supply is
decreasing. E a r th 's reso u rces a re running out
(not to m ention an inadequate food supply, in
creasin g pollution and overcrow ding).
This is a crucial generation for mankind. We
have the reso u rces now to get off this planet. P re t
ty soon th e re w on’t be anything left and w e’ll be
stuck h ere w hether we like it or not. We don’t live
on E a rth but ra th e r on a sy stem of nine planets, 34
moons, countless a ste ro id s and a therm on u clear
generator.
W estern civilization
is based and dependent
upon high technology. Why put our money into
coal, oil and fission when th ere is an abundance of
fusion pow er, a ste ro id s full of
solar energy,
nickle,
iron, copper, etc. T h e re ’s a w ealth of
energy out there and i t ’s ours for the taking And
believe one
thing for sure. W ealth gen erates
w ealth.
So how do we do this, you ask? Inflation is ra m
pan t worldwide. Population
in
creasing. Man, through his industries and a tta c k s
on the E a rth ,
is g radually changing the very
n a tu re of our planet.
is continually
We, specifically A m ericans, have a way of m ak
ing this dream com e true. NASA obviously needs
to be revitalized. But with billions of dollars of our
m oney going into “ d efen se,” w h ere’s the money
going to com e from to subsidize a NASA budget?
M arijuana. We’ve all heard the estim ates of the
n u m b e r of m a riju a n a s m o k e rs
the U .S.,
anyw here from 12 to 48 million. Can you conceive
the am ount of money being spent? The m ariju an a
business would be the third la rg e st in the U.S.
G eneral M otors would be first, Exxon second, pot
third, ahead of Ford, Gulf Oil, U.S. Steel and S tan
dard Oil.
in
L e t’s forget about the health and m oral question
(anything the people w ant the people will get) and
look a t the situation as an econom ic one. Why not
legalize the stuff, stan d ard ize the potency and slap
a federal revenue tax on it? We w anted money to
m ake a dream com e tru e, right? Well, there it is.
Billions of dollars each year. We could put NASA
into full gear.
The sta rs would be ours. W e’ve only got this one
chance, folks. A fter those resources a re gone
w e’re finished. We have the m eans. All we need is
the drive.
D a v i d H e w i t t
H u m a n E n g i n e e r i n g
Sickness of opposites
My good and w orthy friend. Laym an So-So, has
beguiled me into this bit of uselessness. I have
heard that there is m uch uptightness, much g rit
ting and bearing of teeth over the photograph of
John Lennon and his wife, w here th ere is som e
nudity. Laym an So-So rem ains concerned about
this affair. I have told him that this business is not
im portant; it is as it should be.
There are those who suffer unwittingly and un
knowingly from w hat m y school calls the “ disease
of opposites.” This sickness of the m ind is su r
passed only by the d isease of oneness, but th a t is
another m a tte r. The d isease of opposites
is
grounded in th at specific sickness of the mind
which defines m o rality as th at com plexity which
sim ultaneously allow s us
into another
hum an being w ith a m achine gun while a t the
sam e tim e condem ning the sight of naked flesh.
One need not go fa r to find the root source of
to cut
such a sickness, but it is not my business as a poor
monk to discrim inate. To ease my good friend’s
mind. I told him the story of the two ancient
monks from my school concerning the touching of
a woman:
Two monks on a pilgrim age cam e to the banks
of a flooded riv er A young girl stood nearby, wan
ting to cross, but unable to because of the raging
w ater Without hesitation the elder monk took the
girl in his arm s and, crossing to the o th er side of
the river, put her down. The two m onks then con
tinued their journey.
Some tim e later, the younger monk turned to the
other and said, "You know according to the
precepts we a re forbidden to touch a wom an. Why
did you pick up that g irl? ”
The elder monk replied, “ Are you still carrying
her around? I put her down an hour a g o .”
Not all will grasp the subtle hum or in this old
story And it is ju st so with those suffering from
the sickness of opposites: they fail to see any
m eaning w here, to others, the richness of sym
bolism sw eeps one away. There should be com pas
sion for those of this sickness, and pity, for such a
sickness cau ses great suffering, m ore so in those
who have
in others who they try to
m anipulate with it. Take care of yourselves.
than
it
Yin Yang
BLOOM COUNTY
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Himmelblau not seeking position
By GARY RASP
Citing a need for time “ to concen
t r a t e on som e p e rs o n a l c o m
m itm en ts and challenges,” City
Council m em ber Betty Himmelblau
has announced she will not seek re-
election to her Place 2 post.
In a written statem ent released
Friday morning. Himmelblau said
she will leave with “ a sense of pride
and accomplishment in my work, es
pecially in the areas of health care,
fiscal control and m anagem ent and
quality programs for our elderly
citizens.”
Him m elblau, who has served
three two-year term s on the council,
has favored proposals calling for
health care and insurance for the in
digent, neighborhood health care
ce n te rs and an
im m un ization
program for the Austin Independent
School District.
She has also been vocal in her sup
port of the South Texas Nuclear
Project in which Austin has a 16 per
cent share. Himmelblau once in
troduced a Mass Gathering O r
dinance that would have required
outdoor concert promoters to notify
City Council 15 days prior to an
event before getting the council’s
approval.
Asked what might happen to the
interests of those in need of health
care, Himmelblau said, “ There will
have to be som e health care ad
vocates” among the remaining can
didates for the council.
Himmelblau declined to endorse
any candidate in the April 4 election
but said she considers business ex
pertise a prerequisite to the job
because “ your budget is your policy
making document, and all policy
decisions are based on your budget.
Candidates for Place 2 include
Roger Duncan, 33, a member oí the
city’s environmental board for three
years, and M arlly O’Brien, 41, presi
dent of M O B. Enterprises Inc.,
which runs three massage parlors in
Austin.
Himmelblau, who helped establish
the Austin Commission on the Status
of Women, said she was disap
pointed she could not recruit another
woman for the council.
“ Outside the mayor, I don’t see
any strong women condidates com
ing forth,” she said.
Himmelblau serves as second vice
president of the Texas Association of
R e g io n a l C o u n c ils and v ic e
chairwoman for the 30-county Cen
tral Texas Health System Agency,
where she is being considered for
president. She said she intends to re
main active and “ express my
opinions and serve in any advisory
capacity that would benefit the
city.”
University fire victim returns to work
By CATHI CARLTON
U n iv e r s it y
fire v ic tim
Joseph Robles, a maintenance
worker in the electrical sec
tion of U T ’s utility depart
ment, returned to work this
month after suffering first
and second degree bums in a
November fire at Taylor Hall.
Robles spent 55 days out of
work recovering from burns
he received while working on
part of a remodeling job. The
accident occurred Nov. 10,
when his screwdriver slipped
while he was tightening a
screw in a panel
In a recen t
in te rv ie w .
Robles recalled he had been
working on the circuit while
the power was on for ap
proximately 20 minutes when
his s c re w d riv e r slipped
between the phases — spaces
— of the electrical panel
“ I don’t recall which phase
it happened on," Robles said
in a N o v e m b e r r e p o r t
prepared to study the accident
and the Nov. 11 electrocution
of another worker, “ but in
trying to tighten a screw I
noticed a flash directly in my
face and then I jumped back
and possibly tripped on my
own feet.’
Robles said the accident
could have been avoided “ had
that thing (the circuit) been
protected by a main dis
connect or a fuse breaker —
for sure no damage would
h a v e been done
the
building
to
“ That’s the reason breakers
exist — for fire protection.’’
Robles said the accident
caused
“ m y e y e b ro w s ,
eyelashes and moustache (to
be) burned cle ar off my
face.”
Based on Robles’ job title
and
job description. Vice
President for Business Affairs
Charles Fra n k lin said he
should not have been doing the
work
J . E H ille r, e le c tric ia n
supervisor, said, however,
that maintenance workers
were allowed to do elec
tricians'
jobs because that
was the way maintenance
workers were able to train for
higher-paying jobs.
s a i d
F r a n k l i n
t he
departm ent’s new safety
program would allow train
ing, outside of simply perfor
ming the tasks, for those who
want to move up in their field.
Hiller said the practice of
Shoe Shop
SHEEPSKIN
COW & CALF
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ENGLISH
WESTERN
1614 Lavaca
Capitol Saddlery
A ustin, Texas
478-9309
working on “ hot” wires was
standard. “ W e’ve done it for
years and never had any
serious accidents, but to have
two in a row ...”
Robles said he had worked
on “ hot” wires many times
before and believes,
“ the
longer you do it, the better
chance you have of danger.
A s s i s t a n t E l e c t r i c a l
Schoenfeld
Engineer E M
said,
“ now, only senior
qualified electricians’’ are
allowed to work on “ hot
wires. Even then, they must
wear all the right equipment,
includ ing rubber gloves,
blankets and goggles, he add
ed.
Asked whether he was going
legal action
to take any
against the University, Robles
said, “ As far as that question
goes, I don't want to answer
it.”
As well as returning to work
for the utilities department,
Robles began a part-time job
as a bartender on weekends.
University officials releas
ed reports late in November
which contained eyewitness
accounts of the accident, as
well as police and hospital
reports, photographs and a
brief conclusion the com
mittee derived from the data.
F ra n k lin said the com
mittee made reco m m en
dations for a stronger safety
program and the University is
in the process of forming a
program which will enhance
stronger and safer methods of
working in all departments.
STUDENTS
The following is an excerpt from The University of Texas at Austin
1980-81 G eneral Inform ation Bulletin:
Sec. 9-201
1
' Directory In fo rm a tio n " i. d efin ed a i a s tu d e n t'. n a m e , local and p erm an ent a d d re **. telephone
liltin g d a te and place of birth, m ajor field of »tudy, particip atio n in officially recognized a c t.v .tie . and
.p o rt. w e ig h t and height if a m em b er of an athletic te a m , d a te , of atten d an ce, d e g re e ., a w a r d , and
hono r, received and th e m o .t recent p reviou . educatio nal in .titu tio n atten d ed
2. Directory In form atio n i. public in form atio n and w ill be m ad e a v a ila b le to the public except a . noted in
Sec. 9 -2 0 1 (3 ).
3. A currently enrolled .tu d e n t m a y re q u e .t th a t all Directory In form atio n not be m a d e public by com
pleting an ap prop riate re q u e .t form in the O ffice of the R eg i.trar no earlier th a n th e fir .t da y of d a * ,
and no later th an the tw e lfth da y of cla»» in a .e m e .te r or fourth d a * , da y in a .u m m e r *e«*ion. Th i.
re q u e .t w ill rem ain in effect for the duration of th e .e m e .te r or the .u m m e r *e**io n . In the event of
such a re q u e .t, th e*e d a ta w ill be treated a . S tudent Record. In form atio n. Sec. 9 -2 0 2 (1 ) (a ); and in
re»pon»e to public inquirió», th e University w ill verify only w h e th e r an in divid ual i. currently enrolled
a t the U n iv e r.ity .
—
OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR —
nCOPAL
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OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8:30
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Monday, January 19, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5
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A n E q u a l O p p o r t u n i t y Em p lo y e r f M H
LATE REGISTRATION
JANUARY 19 through 22, 1981
A ‘ 15 LATE FEE WILL BE ASSESSED
ALL LATE REGISTRANTS
1. Pick up m aterials a t the Academic Center. You must show a
photo I.D.
O b tain advisor's approval for courses. (Advising locations
are listed by m ajor in the Spring Course Schedule.)
Class cards m ay be secured for each course from the office
of the d ep artm en t offering the course.
Submit ALL m aterials to the Academic Center betw een 8
a .m . and 5 p.m .
Be prepared to pay fees a t the tim e m aterials are sub
2
3
4
5
m itted.
DEADLINE FOR LATE REGISTRATION
IS 5 :0 0 PM THURSDAY, JANUARY 2 2 , 1981
WELCOME B A C K
SPECIALS
H e a lth V a lle y C h ili
Jo h n s o n ’s Pasta S a u c e 32 oz.
S2.75
D r. T im as R o o t B e e r 28 oz.
S1.59
O rg a n ic Apples - 5 va rie ties
A .D .L . V it. C w /ro seh ip s
reg.
S I . 69
special
*1.35
*1.98
*1.19
all 59e/ lb.
50 tab
100 tab
S I. 95
S3.45
*1.30
*2.30
We have “ Ginseng D”
B r in g th is ad for free gift
Hour* 8 *.m .-9 p.m. M on.-8*t.
11 a.m .-6 p.m. Sun.
4501 GUADALUPE
1 block off IF shuttl.
46th &
Li4 64-8349
LOSE INCHES AND GET FIT!
CLASSES STARTING NEAR YOU.
Classes are offered nalionwide and are taught by instructors
certified by Jacki Sorensen, originator of Aerobic Dancing
Tex. Fed. of Womens' Clubs
2312 San Gabriel
Mon/Wed
12:15 p.m. & 3:30 p.m.
Jan. 19-Feb. 25
CAU. FOR A FREE SCHEDULE
4 5 4 -6 6 6 9
Gift C e rtific a te s A v a ila b le
y /
Aerobic Dancing
_________________________BY J A C K I S O R E N S E N _________ ______________
p age 6 -J THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. January 19, 1981
CLASSICAL
RECORDS
• TOP QUA LI TY USED IP» — S I . 50
to S3.50
l • COLLECTORS LP* OF HISTORIC
LIVE P E R F O R M A N C E S
A N D
¥** b-uy £©**«<
w vec c to ts tc a i
LJS o^d 7 i»
*om »f »4>oo
'KO^Crt —
1 4 0 4 W e s t 3 0 t h
J m C o r t w r g h * owner
4 7 8 - 9 9 5 4
Lamp» and Furniture
Kitchen Items
Towels/Placemats/Napkins
Gift items
Ladies Sportswear
Christmas Merchandise
th e jC a A e a u .
S P R IN G P R O G R A M 198 1
2 3 3 0 G u a d a lu p e
4 7 2 - 9 2 4 6
W OMENSPACE
C o u n s e li n g & I n f o r m a t i o n Ctr.
Tues W e d
Thurs 7 - 1 0 p . m .
Fri. m t e c o f f e e h o u s e
7 : 3 0 - 9 : 3 0 p . m .
4 7 2 - 3 0 5 3
WOMENSPACE
GROUPS
W o m e n a n d A lcoh ol'
Tues J a n . 2 0 7 3 0 6 wks .
W o m e n Q u e s t i o n i n g their
S e x u a l I d e n t i t y
W e d Jan. 21 7 3 0 6 wk s
W o m e n s L i t e r a t u r e G r o u p
Sun J a n . 18 6 P M .
a t B o o k w o m s n
O n c e a m o n t h .
S W IN G DANCE
CLASSES
w i t h D i a n a C as t il lo 4 7 8 - 5 1 5 8
S I 8 for 6 w e e k s , on ce a w e e k
M o n . 8 - 9 p . m .
Tues 8 3 0 - 9 : 3 0 p m.
Starts J o n . 19 & 2 0
CHA Y O N RYU
w i t h J oh n B l a n k e n s h i p
O n g o i n g classes
T H E C O M M U N IT Y
GARDENS
Sp rin g G a r d e n Plots
2 6 x 2 6 plot for S 2 5 .
In c l u d e s w a t e r ,
tools
i n f o r m a t i o n .
C a l l 4 5 8 - 2 0 0 9
O R G A N IC
G A R D E N IN G CLASS
S a t u r d a y s 1 0 a . m . - N o o n .
Starts M a r c h 1 1 a t the
C o m m u n i t y G a r d e n s ,
4 7 f h a n d G u a d a l u p e
C al l 4 5 8 - 2 0 0 9
G A Y C O M M U N IT Y
SERVICES
C o u n s e ii n g & I n f o r m a t i o n
M o n - S u n . 6 - 1 0 p m
BELLY DANCE CLASS
w i t h H e l e n e C hr is t o p h er
4 5 1 - 8 5 8 6
Sat. 9 - 1 1 a . m .
O n g o i n g class $ 4 per closs
IN D O C H IN A STUDY
GROUP
F a c ili ta to r Cris C u n n i n g h a m
C a l l 4 7 2 - 9 2 4 6 for info.
SPIRITUAL D A N C IN G
W e d 8 p .m
O n g o i n g
Co ll 4 7 2 - 9 2 4 6 for m o r e info
T'AI CHI
w i t h H eloise Go ld . 4 7 2 - 0 7 6 3
DANCE
CO M PO SITIO N
CLASS
w i t h H e l e n M a y f i e l d .
Tues 12-1 p . m .
O n g o i n g class S2 per class
EXERCISE CLASS
W e d . a n d Fri. 1 2 - 1 2 : 4 5 p . m .
S ta rts J a n . 21 $ 2 per doss
4 5 2 - 3 6 1 8
Tues. 5 4 5 - 7 : 1 5 p m.
A M a r t i a l Arts Sy s te m
f or 8 w e e k s
M o n a n d W e d . 6 - 7 3 0 p . m .
Starts J a n . 2 0 $ 3 2
Large h a ll a v a i l a b l e for r e n t a l on w e e k e n d ni ght s a n d
d u r in g t h e d a y f or g r o u p ev ent s.
m
t« P
■ « * £
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$ . c
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s i r ' l l
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OPEN T O N IG H T
UNTIL 8 :3 0
7itt¿ve?4i¿* (?4-0fL
t 3 purcr-eeo
I
p W K i|A ^
University
L eslie W illson, professor of G er
m anic languages. has been selected
to receiv e the G oethe Medal in late
March for his contributions to the
study of the G erm an language and
c ulture.
T h e m e d a l , p r e s e n t e d by
th e
G oeth e In stitu te
in Munich. West
G e r m a n y , has not been a w a rd e d to
an A m e ric a n since 1973. when it w as
a w a rd e d to Wolfgang F. M ichael.
also a U n iv e rsity p ro fe s s o r of G e r
m a n ic languages. Willson said this
a w a r d w ill m e a n
t h a t no o t h e r
A m e r ic a n u n iv e rs ity h as m o r e living
G oethe re c ip ie n ts th a n UT.
in
Willson, who firs t le a r n e d G e r m a n
in the U.S. A rm y, c a m e to UT in the
m id 40s and e a r n e d a b a c h e lo r's
jo u r n a lis m Though he
d e g re e
n e v e r w o r k e d a s a
j o u r n a l i s t .
Willson e a r n e d a d e g r e e in G e r m a n
tw o y e a r s la te r He e a r n e d a doc
t o r a t e
in G e r m a n f ro m Y ale and
re tu r n e d to UT to te a c h
Willson said a la r g e p a r t of the
recognition he is r ec eiv in g is a resu lt
of h is e d i t i n g D i m e n s i o n s . a
m a g a z in e devoted to the publication
of c o n t e m p o r a r y G e r m a n l it e r a tu r e
of all kinds, m uc h of it previously
unpublished
A spring trip to Europe is in the of
fing for Kenneth Tolo, a sso c ia te vice
p resid en t
for a c a d e m ic a ffa ir s,
cou rtesy of a G erm an Marshall
Fund F ellow ship and a grant from
th e U niversity R esearch Institute.
T olo w ill be on
le a v e March
through July research in g private
pension planning
in Sw eden, Ger
m a n y and other European countries.
Although I have visited these
it w ill be an in
co u n tries before,
to conduct
t e r e s t i n g ex p e r ie n c e
r e s e a r c h on location
in Europe. I
w as very pleased to re ce iv e both
g r a n ts. Tolo says.
Tolo will confer w ith p r iv a t e E u ro
p ean business a s so c ia tio n s , govern
m e n t organizations and la b o r groups
co n c ern ed with r e t i r e m e n t income,
es pecially social s e c u r ity p r o g ra m s
and p riv a te pensions.
• • •
The H um an itie s R e s e a r c h Center
has n a m e d HRC a c tin g lib r a ria n Sal
ly Leach and binding h isto ria n John
C h a l me r s to new positions.
Leach, a 16-year e m p lo y e e and 24-
y e a r alu m n u s of the U n iv ersity , has
been appointed d ir e c to r in c h a r g e of
s p e c i a l p r o j e c t s A c t i n g H R C
librarian since 1978, Leach, as part
of her new duties, w ill head the HRC
com m ittee for the UT Centennial
and w ill also be responsible for the
Dobie, Tinker and Knopf R oom s on
the fourth floor of the A cadem ic
Center.
th e r a r e b o o k s
Chalm ers, a form er consultant for
the Library of C ongress and director
of
lib r a r y of
Washington Cathedral, w ill serv e as
overseer of public and support ser
v ices on the fifth floor of the HRC.
Both C halm ers and Leach have
served as authors for several HRC
exhibition catalogues
• • •
Donald Grantham , a U niversity
m usic com position and orch estra
tion instructor for m ore than five
years, has received a $2.500 grant
from the N ational Endow m ent for
the Arts to w rite a one-act opera.
G rantham will w rite both the words
and m usic.
The opera is to be based on the life
of Gesualdo, a 16th century Italian
prince and com poser noted for his
m adrigals.
G r a n th a m has been com posing
s i n c e h e w a s 15 an d h a s a p
p r o x im a te ly 15 w orks in publication.
McClellan initiates moratorium
By SU SA N A LB R EC H T
and S C O TT LIND
Da ly Texan Staff
M ayor Carole M cClellan has placed an ite m on the City Coun
cil ag e n d a for T h u rs d a y to in itia te a 180-dav m o r a t o r iu m on
new subdivisions along th e L a k e A ustin w a te r f r o n t.
T he m o r a t o r i u m will allow the P la n n in g Com m ission to
develop and the c o m m u n ity to rev ie w the p roposed (develop
m e n t s ta n d a r d s p r io r to City Council a c tion. McClellan said.
The new s ta n d a r d s will apply only to subdivisions which have
not a lre a d y e n te r e d a p p lic a tio n s to th e city, she said.
McClellan voted la st w eek to ap p ro v e w a te r a p p r o a c h m a in s
for th e planned West R im subdivision in the e n v iro n m e n ta lly
s ensitiv e L ak e Austin P eninsula.
C L A IM IN G T H E S U B D IV IS IO N
‘h ig h d e n s i t y , ” a
r e p r e s e n ta t iv e of the West L ake Hills City Council had asked
the Austin City Council to r e j e c t d e v e lo p e rs' r e q u e s t for ap
p ro a c h m a in s saying the o n e-a cre a v e r a g e lot size for the sub
division includes ro ad sp a c e and land too ro c k y or hilly for
d eve lopm e nt.
is
D isa g re ein g w ith the contention th a t ap p ro v in g utility line e x
tensions into the m id d le of the penin sula would establish a
p r e c e d e n t, the council a p p ro v e d utility line e x ten sio n s for West
R im . Council m e m b e r John T re vino a b s ta in e d fro m this vote.
Also T h u rsd ay , the council se lec ted th e A ustin-based firm of
P a u l Smolen & A sso c iate s to p e r f o r m an a s c e r t a i n m e n t study
to d e t e r m i n e the needs of c o m m u n ity gro u p s for ac c e s s to the
c a b le television sy ste m .
“ I AM P L E A S E D w ith o u r p r o g re s s so f a r in proceeding
to w a rd an o u tstan d in g c a b le TV s e rv ic e for Austin c itiz e n s,”
McClellan said.
A public hearing on p ro p o sa ls for the ca ble sy stem is schedul
ed for F eb 12
T h e council is studying the design of a bond electio n tentative-
lv se t for J u n e 27 to reso lv e funding shortages faced by city
d e p a r t m e n t s Among the p lans is a bond p ackage which will
the 1980-85 C apital I m p r o v e m e n ts P rogram for three
fund
v e a r s .
Within a few w eeks, d e ta ils of the CIP program w ill be
b ro u g h t back to the council for d e t e r m in a tio n of ex a ct am ounts
to be included in ea ch c a te g o ry , such a s public works, electric
utility, w a te r and w a s t e w a t e r and u rb an
transportation.
M cClellan said
“ I AM ANXIOUS to get this proposal firm ed up. b ecau se we
im p ortan t
a r e a l m o s t out of bond a u t h o r i t y for m an y
c a te g o rie s ,
she said.
T h e council set the te n ta t iv e J u n e 27 d a te b ecau se of a city
m a n a g e r 's rport sta tin g th e city can su stain “ critical portions
of th e Capital I m p r o v e m e n ts P r o g r a m w itho ut additional bond
a u t h o r i ty until June, “ if p r io ritie s a r e rearranged and only
c r i t i c a l p ro je c ts underta k en .
T h e rep ort, dated Dec. 15 and r e le a se d to the p ress last w eek,
d e s c r ib e s funding r e q u ir e m e n ts and proposed p r o je c t priorities
for th e four affected d e p a r t m e n t s . The council w ill act upon
p r o j e c t priority r e c o m m e n d a tio n s a t its J a n 29 m eetin g
McClellan also ask ed th e citizens of Austin to help cr ea te a
" f r ie n d l y a t m o s p h e r e ” for s t a t e legislators in tow n for the 67th
L eg islatu re .
M c G e lla n m a d e no s t a t e m e n t r e g a rd in g th e statu s of her
c a m p a ig n for re-election in the April 4 city election but said she
m ig h t m a k e an a n n o u n c e m e n t a t the end of this m o nth
(DJrasrarfFs
CLEARANCE SALE
Classic Loo ks f o r .Men an d W omen
w o m en s
3()r c Off
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Coats
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Jea n - & P a n t - i n c l u d i n g C a b i n K l e i n c o r d u r o y
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and L \ e r a S p a n d e x . Barrv c o r d u r ox
P o l o J ack et - & P a n t - todd sixes)
Ralph L a u r e n T u r t l e n e c k -
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S t u d e n t s c a n r e c e iv e t h e A m e r ic a n - S t a t e s m a n a t u p to 40 p e r c e n t
off th e r e g u la r s u b s c r ip t io n p r ic e . T h e s o o n e r y o u m a il
in yo u r
o r d e r , th e m o re m o n e y y o u 'll s a v e o n t h e m o st c o m p le t e n e w s ,
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Clip and mail to the following address:
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SPRING STUDENT SPECIAL
P. O. Box 670
Austin, Texas 78767
All winter Clothing and
Accessories previously
reduced ore now Vi off
and more. Come early for
great buys on Gordon Shirts,
Wm. Barclay skirts and pants,
Joan and David Shoes, Polo
sweaters and turtle necks
and much more.
Open Monday-Friday 10-
Sarurday 1 0 -5
7 Jefferson Square
454-5855
-
-
'
Beth Denius, Ltd.
Around Campus
History classes to study Bible
The $2.4 million Gutenberg Bible
purchased by the University in 1978
will be
two new
the subject of
history classes in fall 1981 and spring
1982.
T he c o u r s e s , H is to ry 362K,
M e d ie v a l C iv iliz a tio n — T he
Gutenberg Connection, and History
361L, Renaissance Civilization —
The Gutenberg Influence, will deal
with the historical im pact of the
Gutenberg Bible and will be taught
by visiting instructor Karen Keel
Gould.
The Gutenberg is the symbol of an
event with m ajor consequences for
western civilization, Gould said. She
is a sp ecialist
the study of
medieval m anuscripts.
in
The introduction and development
of printing m arked a transform ation
in human com m unication and dis
semination of knowledge that was a
decisive step in the em ergence of
the modern world, Gould said.
Gould received her doctorate from
the University and as a recipient of a
Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship at
Duke University, she is conducting
research on medieval m anuscripts.
the
T he B ible p u rc h a se d by
University is one of 47 in existence.
It is on display in the lobby of the
H arry Ransom Center from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday,
except on Thursday when it is on
diplay from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. It can
also be viewed on Sundays from 1 to
5 p.m.
Scientists to attend conference
M o r e
t h a n 100 c h e m i s t s ,
biochemists and physicians from the
United S tates and eight foreign
countries are expected to attend a
conference at the University this
week to learn m ore about a sub-
stan ce which m ay
pressure.
low er blood
The International Symposium on
the Biomedical and Clinical Aspects
of Coenzyme Q will be in the Joe
C.Thompson C onference C enter
Monday through Wednesday.
Sessions will cover several topics
including the promising use of Coen
zyme Q to improve the human im
munity system and slow down the
a g in g p r o c e s s , s a id D r. K a rl
Folkers, director of the UT institute
and co-chairman of the symposium.
The other co-chairman is Dr. Yuichi
Y am am ura, president of Osaka
University, Osaka, Japan.
In s titu te
The symposium is sponsored by
U T ’s
for B io m ed ical
R esearch and will provide up-to-date
information on Coenzyme Q, a sub
stance that has a key role in the
chemical energy of the heart and is
being used to improve cardiac func
tions.
Student elected to commission
The day-long symposiums will
begin each day at 9 a.m. and are free
to the public. All sessions will be
highly technical.
A c c o u n t i n g
j u n i o r C r a i g
Blackburn will be honor society
Gamm a Delta Epsilon’s represen
tative on the four-m em ber Election
C o m m i s s i o n
t h e s p r i n g
f o r
sem ester.
Blackburn, who is active in the
College of Business Administration
Student Council, was voted to be the
e l e c t i o n c o m m i s s i o n e r a t a
December banquet.
A new Election Commission is
formed each sem ester to conduct
and m onitor student elections. One
f r om G am m a
re p re se n ta tiv e
is
D elta Epsilon, one
the
School of Law and two are chosen
from Alpha Phi Omega.
is from
The other
three com m issioners
have not been chosen.
Leak causes flooding in Dobie Center
By LISA BEYER
Mo r e
t ha n 20 D obie C e n t e r
residents were waiting Sunday for
their carpets to dry afte r a w ater
leak Friday morning flooded sec
tions of the 27-story dorm itory.
Ron Har di ng, D obie g en e ral
m anager, said
the only reported
dam age from the flooding was to the
carpet, which is the property of the
center
However, two student residents
said they plan to ask Dobie to pay
for personal item s dam aged in the
flood
Randy Pulman. a freshm an in the
College of Business Administration,
said he will seek compensation for a
ruined leather satchel and a study
pillow; Elizabeth Borel, a freshm an
geology student, said Sunday she
will ask $20 for a pair of pants stain
ed in the flood
A m aintenance w orker said the
flooding occurred when a cut-off
valve on a w ater heater on the 15th
floor broke as workers flushed out
t h e
r o u t i n e
t a n k d u r i n g a
m aintenance procedure.
“ It’s just a thing that happens,’’
said the workman.
W ater flow into the dam aged
tank, which supplies hot w ater to
the dorm 's upper 12 floors, wras cut
off alm ost im mediately. However,
the pipes that circulate hot w ater
through the upper floors fed w ater
back down to the dam aged tank,
where it spilled out and flooded the
east wing of the floor.
Nearly an inch of w ater flowed
into several rooms on the 14th and
15th floors. Water leaking through
floors, walls and air conditioner
vents soaked sections of the carpet
and walls of more than a dozen
other rooms down to the seventh
floor. The leaking w ater also dis
lodged 40 ceiling tiles in the first
floor lobby.
The carpet in the w ettest rooms
was taken out to be laundered and
dried. “The m aintenance men said
it would be next week before wTe got
our carpet back, but they didn't give
us a specific d ate,” Bob Duncan, a
general business freshm an and 14th
floor resident, said Saturday.
In the other rooms the carpet was
lifted from the floor and draped
over chairs to dry. Several residents
complained about the grow ing smell
of mildew and the inconvenience of
the wet carpet.
“ The m anagem ent is very incon
siderate for things like this,” said
Pulm an, who returned to his room
Friday afternoon to find his soaked
carpet draped across his furniture
a n d h is p e r s o n a l b e l o n g i n g s
scattered about the room.
“ The excuse they gave us yester
day for not having our room back to
normal was they don't have enough
money to pay the workmen. T hat’s
ridiculous,” he said.
“ We are doing the best we can. I
can assure you none of the residents
will go without service,” Harding
said.
The Texas Union, the community center of The
University of Texas campus, offers four options
for contract meals each semester. The meal plan
program is unique in that all meals are served
Monday through Friday only, with four different
combinations of meals from which to choose, and
at two different locations.
ADVANTAGES TO PARTICIPATING IN THE
PROGRAM
— Time and Convenience
How much time do you spend shopping for food, cooking, and
cleaning up? How much time do you spend walking or driving
to some fast-food restaurant? Almost 15 extra hours per
week can be yours that you can spend on studying or on other
activities. Plus you have the added convenience of eating
right on campus where you spend most of your day. You may
not have access to cooking facilities. You may not know how,
or you may hate to cook. You may be housed in a residence
hall without a meal contract. You may be spending so much
of your time in the library, a laboratory, or in rehearsals that
you end up eating junk or skipping meals. Your eating
schedule may be unique in which you may not have use for
three daily meals. The expanded serving times, the one-, two-,
and three-meal-per-day options, plus the fact that our eating
facilities are right on campus, alleviate all these problems.
— Good Food at a Good Price
The Texas Union Dining Services has a fairly strong reputa
tion on campus for serving good food. We operate 15 food
facilities in the Texas Union Building and around campus that
include cafeterias, fast food facilities, and a formal
restaurant, as well as a complete catering service that
provides banquet facilities for major University functions.
We re concerned about what we serve and how we serve it.
Our cooks and food production staff like what they do, have a
vast amount of restaurant experience, and make just about
everything from scratch, every day. They like to be in
novative and spice meals up with a gourmet touch. We
wouldn’t serve anything that we felt was not very tasty,
healthy, or just plain blah. We buy the highest quality meats
and produce available, from the same places as your favorite
restaurant. We're cheaper than restaurants because we don’t
make a profit. The plan is offered strictly as a service.
Because we can count on you to eat with us each day, we just
produce more food with the same overhead and pass on the
savings to you in the form of a discount — from 20 to 35 per
cent, depending on how many meals a day yoii contract for
Although food prices have been going up steadily, the meal
plan price won’t change during the semester, even though
price increases may occur on certain items that people who
aren't on the plan would have to pay.
LOCATIONS AND hOURS OF THE MEALS
The Varsity Cafeteria
Breakfast, lunch, and dinner are all served at the Varsity
Cafeteria, located just off the comer of 21st Street and
Speedway, adjacent to Moore-Hill Residence Hall. “ The Var
sity” (University Cafeteria) is a full-service food facility
opening each day at 7 a m. for breakfast and closing at 7:15
p m. after the dinner hour. As a part of Texas Union Dining
Services, the Varsity also houses our Bakery Production
Department, producing , top-quaiity, fresh-baked breads,
cookies, pies, doughnuts, and cakes for all of our eating
facilities on campus^The Varsity Cafeteria is unique in that it
is right in the middle of the Men’s Residence Halls complex
and across from Jester Center. It also is just down the street
from the Perry-Castaneda Library. In addition to the daily
variety of popular food items, the Varsity also offers some
grille favorites such as hamburgers and cheeseburgers with a
substitution schedule for our meal plan participants.
Texas Union Building
Breakfast and dinner are offered in the Texas Union Building
(located on the west side of campus next to the Academic Center) at
four adjacent facilities in the Round-Up Food Mall. “ Adds N Drops
is our main cafeteria line offering a variety of fresh hot foods with a
different menu each day. “ Electives
counter featuring barbecue, chicken fried steak and Mexican food
every day. The “ Pizzadeii” and “ Steer Here” offer pizza, deli
sandwiches, fish platters and health burgers. All of these facilities
lead into the 40 Acres Dining Room, a quiet, carpeted dining area.
is our special old favorites
Because you can have breakfast and dinner at either of our
locations, a much greater variety of food is available, especially for
dinner, where there are up to 10 choices of hot entrees each day. A
published menu will be available so that you can see in advance what
the menu items are in each area.
Serving Times
Breakfast is served from 7 to 10:30 a.m .; lunch (Varsity only) from
11 a.m. to 2 p.m., and dinner from 5 to 7:15 p.m.
WHAT THE MEALS INCLUDE
B reakfast. Choice of two eggs, two pancakes, or two slices of
French toast; hash browns; two slices of bacon or sausage; toast or
biscuit; beverage; and small juice.
Lunch: Choice from at least three entrees; choice of two fresh, hot
vegetables; roll; dessert or tossed salad; and beverage.
Dinner; All-you-can-eat tossed salad; choice from at least three en
trees; choice of two item s from a selection of fresh, hot vegetables;
hot roll and butter; choice of one dessert; and beverage.
Beverages include soft drinks, iced tea and lemonade.
WHEN THE PLANS ARE VALID
The Texas Union Meal Plans are valid beginning January 19 and
ending May 14. They are not valid March 16-20.
COST OF THE PLANS
OPTION A — $539.57 plus tax. Includes breakfast, lunch and dinner
five d^ys per week calculated at 79 days x $1.55 fo n breakfast
(regular $2.39), $2.46 for lunch (regular $3.79) and $2.82 for dinner
(regular $4.34). A savings of 35%.
OPTION B — $398.16 plus tax. Includes breakfast and dinner five
days a week. Calculated at 79 x $1.79 for breakfast and 79 x $3.25 for
dinner. A savings of 25%.
OPTION C — $481.11 plus tax. Includes lunch and dinner five days
per week. Calculated at 79 x $2.84 for lunch and 79 x $3.25 for dinner.
A savings of 25%.
OPTION D — $274.13 plus tax. Includes dinner five days a week.
Calculated at 79 x $3.47. A savings of 20%.
PAYMENT
The full payment can be made at the beginning or in accordance
with a set payment schedule spread out over the course of the
sem ester. Payments also can be charged on VISA or MasterCharge
credit cards.
Payment Schedule
(includes 5% sales tax)
Plan
A
Full Payment
0566.00
$418 00
$505 00
$288.00
Payment Plan
(includes $2 per paym ent fee)
By February 17
$189.00
$140 00
$169.00
$ 97 00
By January It
5299 00
$189 00
$204 00
$117,00
By April 10
$154 00
$115.00
$138.00
$ 80.00
HOW TO PURCHASE A MEAL
Any of the meal plans can be purchased in person at the Texas Union
Check-Cashing Office (Box Office) from 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. begin
ning January 12 and ending February 13. Meal plans purchased after
January 19 will be discounted for each day meals have been missed.
For further information, contact the Texas Union Business Office at
(512 ) 471-4852, or write: Meal £]ans, Texas Union Dining Services,
The University of Texas at Austin, 78712^
Monday, January 19, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7
LSAT
A m i t y
Review Seminars
15 stu d e n t a v e ra g e c la s s size
5 S p e c ia lis t In s tru c to rs
C o n v e n ie n t w e e k e n d c la sse s
E X C LU S IV E M A TH R E F R E S H E R
For information call
800 - 243-4767
OVERWEIGHT, DRINKING
OR SMOKING PROBLEMS?
B e h a v io ra l ad d ictio n is an over-reliance upon one
substance or hab it as a source of pleasure, or as a
coping strateg y to re lie v e distress in living. Ray
H aw k in s, P h .D ., P s y ch o lo g ist, 512 E a s t Eleventh
Street, Suite 201, offe rs Habit Self-Control Groups, using
b e h a v io r m o d ific a tio n and s tre ss-m a n a g e m e n t
m ethods to change these p ro b lem patterns. Groups
begin late January. P le a se c a ll 472-5780 for a free con
sultation.
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Hyde draws abortion demonstrators
amendment has been altered
to forbid the use of federal
funds for abortions ‘‘except
when the life of the mother
would be endangered if the
fetus were carried to term”
and in cases of incest or rape
reported within 72 hours.
The Supreme Court upheld
the current Hyde Amendment
by a 5-4 decision in Ju ly 1980.
Hyde does not support the
current amendment which
bears his name, preferring to
include cases of incest and
rape in the ban. Though incest
and rape are tragic, he said,
“ they do not warrant the ex
ecution of an unborn child."
A new pro-life amendment
Hyde is sponsoring will state
that life begins at conception
and an embryo or fetus is en
titled to due process protec
tion from that moment on.
Commenting on Hyde's
proposed pro-life amendment.
Shelly Gehshan, a member of
the pro-choice coalition, said,
“ That would mean a fetus
would be given more rights
than a living woman.”
Hyde said that at present,
the unborn child
is being
treated with less respect than
“ a used piece of Kleenex.”
Hyde, who was introduced
by Joseph Witherspoon. Max-
ey Professor of Law at the
University, said. Being born
is merely a change of address.
is no
different before or after
birth, he added, before han
ding dowrn a “ three-count in
dictment
against the pro-
choice forces.
“ The human
life
Hyde accused pro-choice
‘ e x c e s s i v e
f o r c e s of
sim plicity" and said .they
found it simpler to get rid of
people than to eradicate “ peo
ple problems "
He also charged them with
“ succumbing to excessive
pessimism" in thinking that
being born poor or han
dicapped is “ the worst thing
in life.”
Hyde went on to brand pro-
choice groups with “ failure of
imagination,” because if they
ever imagined ‘‘the en o rm ity
they
of what they’ve done,
would not remain stable.
Hyde proposed a revamping
of the social welfare system
and said it “ needs an overhaul
to encourage people to break
out of the welfare-poverty
cycle.”
He favors giving tax incen
tives to businesses to locate in
depressed areas and employ
the poor.
He also said the inability of
the poor to afford abortions
means ‘‘The unborn of the
poor have a fighting chance to
be saved
M a r t i K r a n z b e r g , a
member of the coalition, said
defeating the pro-life amend
ment would require ‘‘a lot of
grass roots organizing.”
‘‘We are not passive in
this," she said. “ We have
worked long and hard for the
right to abortions.”
Hyde countered the com
plaint that abortion
is the
right-to-life movement’s
single issue He said the com
plaint “ depends on the issue
and whose ox is being gored ”
As pr otesters yelled,
Raise your voice for pro-
choice," “ Hey, hey, ho, ho,
Henry Hyde has got to go,”
and
“2-4-6-8, separate the
ch ur ch and s t a t e . ’ ’ to
applause. Hyde told the
Life is wrhat we
audience
are draggling for
destruc
tion of the innocent is what
the pro-choice people are
struggling for.”
•’age 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, January 19, 1981
PRE-LAW?
PRE-PARE.
NEXT LSAT IS FEB. 21st
Phone 477-3056
for information on how
to improve your score.
■We offer 24 hours
i of instruction, oil
'ought by ottomeys,
vu
w
J: vl*
A t
designed to give you
>eed! Call for class
'he extra points you LSAT
REVIEW
COURSE
hedule.
VEGGIE
HANDWICH
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Broeroii ( autiflou^r. Carrot*. Math rooms.
O n i o n * anti ¿ut i htm Wozzmr+tla and ( hrd-
dot ( hr*'** Mith *pruut* and picket *auce
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Only at
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609 W , 29th
j
precision haircuts
p ractical prices
478-6754
240S San Gabrial
IMMIGRATION
PA U L PARSONS
Attorney at Law
4 7 7 - 3 0 5 6
MPROVE YOUR SCORE
2200 Guadalupe Suite 216
Austin. Texas 78705
(512) 477-7887
Se Habla Español
4 A I L S O X
RENTALS
504 W . 24th
477-1915
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Lookina-lts A J I AD&~
T O O R D E R Y O U R C L A S S I F I E D A D ,
h o t ll i n h ee i
471-5244
WELCOME BACK
SPECIAL
Mrs. Johnson's
Baker)'
40* O FF
1 DOZ.
GLAZED
Doughnuts
Expires Jan 31, 1981
To welcom e our
UT students back,
Mrs. Johnson's is
offering
40* OFF
the re g u la r price
of a D o z e n G la z e d
D o u g h n u t s . Just
b rin g this c o u p o n in
to our A irp o rt Blvd.
location a n d receive
your discount.
Hot Coffee
to go
Austin's Baker
for Over 31 Yeart
North: 4909 Airport Boulevard
459-5801
By A M Y M A S H B E R G
An appearance by U.S. Rep
Henry Hyde. R-Ill., at a right-
to-life convention in Austin
brought approximately 150
pro-choice demonstrators to
picket outside the hotel in
protest of his anti-abortion
stance
Approximately 200 anti
abortion supporters attended
the speech at the Hilton Inn
6000 Middle Fiskville Road
The Friday speech by the
author of the 1976 Hyde
Amendment, which originally
outlawed use of federal funds
for abortions where the life of
the mother is not in danger,
was sponsored by the Texas
Right to Life Committee Inc
As pro-choice picketers in
cluding men. women and
children circled a small plot
of grass at the edge of the
Hilton's parking lot. Hyde told
a capacity crowd in the hotel s
Tiffany Ballroom.
I have no
trouble crossing such a picket
line, because as I understand
it they are against labor.'
Hyde’s remark brought
enthusiastic laughter from the
crowd of supporters.
The demonstrators, brought
together by the Coalition for
R e p ro d u ctive Freed o m
gathered just after dark “ to
support safe and legal birth
control and the freedom to
choose sterilization, abortion
and parenthood,
said coali
tion member Kaethejean
Bleicher.
The protest was termed A
Candlelight Vigil for Choice,
and many demonstrators
brought supplies of candles
which were replaced by
flashlights after a strong wind
arose.
With Ronald Reagan as
president, a pro-life amend
ment stands a better chance
of ratification. Hyde said
earlier Friday at a press con
ference in the Senate Recep
tion Room of the Capitol
Hyde termed the protection
of the unborn
the greatest
civil rights battle since Dred
Scott.”
The original version of his
Rep. Henry Hyde sp e a k s at right-to-life convention.
Mike Hu'ts Daily Texan Staff
TEXAS TEXTBOOKS SEMESTER
TEXTBOOK OVERSTOCK SALE
Not only can y o u s a v e tíme by buying your textbooks and school supplies at the same time, but you can also
SAVE MONEY.
How To SAVE TIME: Texas Textbooks does all of the searching for you. You tell us what book/s you want or, if
you don't know, tell us what class you are in and we have a computer printout that tells us what book/s you
need. W e go get the books for you and you can get your school supplies at the same time. You can even leave
your order and pick it up later.
How To SAVE MONEY: Texas Textbooks guarantees that our prices are never beat or we will refund double
the difference. (This guarantee is good all semester long.) In addition to our already low prices, we offer the
following coupons.
$ 1 °o O FF
Ewen, Captains of Consciousness
Huggins, W
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b y j o h n n y h a r t
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PARAMOUNT BOX OFFICE D¡$C RECORDS 1highlandi
ALL SEATS RESERVED
ON SALE NOW AT
INNER SANCTUM
A
PRODUCTION
P H O N E 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4
Monday through
FOR SALE
UNFURNISHED HOUSES ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS M FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS B FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS
M U S T S U B L E A S E s m a r t, a ir y 1BR
a p a r t m e n t , $240 p lu s e l e c t r i c i t y
D ish w ash e r, disposal C o n ven ien t loca
tion, 415 W 39th O ne block shu ttle. Cal
late eve n in g
454-8527 e a r ly m o rn in g ,
M o v e a n y tim e .
T H R E E B L O C K S fro m cam pu s. 2B R,
IB A , s w im m in g pool, ca b le and la u n d ry .
S310. 307 E a s t 31st. 478-6808
N E A R L A W school. O ne bed ro om $190
plus E E ffic ie n c y $170 plus E . 2800
S w isher, 472-5369. K eep try in g .
L A W S T U D E N T S
G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T S
U P P E R C L A S S M E N
U n iq u e 1BR a n d e f f i c i e n c y s u ite s ,
t a s t e f u l l y d e s ig n e d w it h b u i l t - i n
boo kcases and a m p le s to ra g e T re e
co vered groun ds W ith in w a lk in g d is
tance of cam p u s 476 2633, 459-4814
B a r r y G illin g w a fe r
M a n a g e m e n t C o m p an y
Estrada Apts.
N o w Leasing
1, 2 & 3 b e d r o o m s
Le a s in g fr o m $ 2 1 0 - $ 3 9 5
on U T S h u t t l e
1801 Lakeshore
4 4 2 -6 6 6 8
U n d e r N e w M a n a g e m e n t
HYDE
PARK
APTS.
MOVE IN TODAY
• large Furn. Efficiency
$200-5210
• Large Furn. 1 BR $235
• Shuttle Bus Front Door
• Park & Tennis Courts
Adjoin Complex
Tanglewood
Westside
Apartments
MOVE IN TODAY
1 Bedroom
Furnished $ 2 20
Gas and w a te r
are paid by o w n er
T V Cable, Too!
Shuttle buses
at your front door
44 13 S p e e d w a y
45 8 - 2 0 9 6
1 4 0 3 N o r w a l k
Lane
472-9614
PAUL S. MEISLER
M * PROPERTIES
(f o r m er l y R e a l W o r l d P r o p e r t i e s ;
QUITE SIM PLY
THE BEST FREE LOCATOR
SERVICE IN AUSTIN!
North
4 5 8 - 6 1 1 1
South
4 4 3 2 2 1 2
Northwest
3 4 5 6 3 5 0
1 1 1 & i m r t w n ( .
S e l e c t o r
i____
FREE - apt.
referral service
FEE PAII
BY APT.
OWNER
all
sizes,
prices and
locations
r 474-6357
3507 N INTERREGIONAL!
N o r th w e s t Hills 451-2223]
R ivers ide 441-2277
■ H i
w
I
I
1
I
I
1
i
i
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1
I
Tanglewood North
A p a rtm en ts
MOVE IN TODAY
Better Hurry! T o m o r r o w
Will Be Too Late —
1 Bedroom Furnished $260-$290
2 Bedroom Furnished $370-$390
We Pay Y o u r A ir C onditioning —
T .V . Cable, Too!
S h u ttle Bus a t your Front Doot
1020 E. 45th
452- 006 0
-
J j
® C q
- A
45th & Duval
4 5 1 -4 1 1 9
4 5 1 -4 0 3 7
Page 14 □ TH E DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, January 19, 1981
C IA $
(. d<
E ac
Eae
I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G
,ec .it.vP Day Rates
n im u m
1 . .nc
3 tunes
S ■ nes
nange copy
e all C apt*ai
SJ 66
, s4 41
E .rs t
ette r s
■ a p 11 a i
, t A F I
N T F A C UI
fa c u lty and s»att of
i m a v puf* hase
H Q cl * C H ^ ‘-3 i Í
ra te m
the
a '•s * ed
th e ap
y'ed above Ads
person a
T $ p
sP S u iid g 3 200,
5 4 30 p m M o nday
aen* 1 c ation
nee p a » " e*1* a f e re q u ired
'o change copy F ir s t ‘ wo
iy be a ll a p it a l .e f*er s 25
'-i c a p ita l
rial w rp
. • i •
da •
U 1
d e a d l i n e S C H E D U L E
M o n d e y T e s a n
T u»-sdci y T e x a n
W e d n « » s d a y T e « a n
I h u r s d o y T e . a n
F n d o y T f i o n
F r id a y
M o n d a y
2 0 0 p m
1 1 0 0 o m
T u e s d a y
1 1 O O o r t l
W e d n e s d a y
1 1 0 0 a m
T h u r s d a y
1 1
oo
Eo
tn t h e e v e n » o f er o r s m a d e i n o n a d v e r -
n o t i c e m u s t b e g i v e n
i m m e d i a t e
f.s e m e n t
o s
t h e
p u b l i s h e r s a t
O N F
' r o r r e c t
r e s p o n s ib l e
in s e r t » o n A l t e ta m
n o d e n o t l a t e r
co
f o r a d
t h a n 3 0
n l $ s h o u l d b e
d o y s c H e r p u b h c o t * o
S U R P L U S J E E P value $319t sold tor
$44 C a ll 3 1 2 ’ 42 1142 ext 9013 fo r info on
how to pu rch ase b a rg a in s lik e th is !
7« T O Y O T A C O U P E 5-speed AC, PB ,
a m F M stereo cassette 18 000 m ile s
M itr a 443 4632 or 447 7646
J E E P S , C A RS , tru cks a v a ila b le through
g o v e rn m e n t agencies. M a n y sell for u n
der $200 C a ll 602-941-8014 ext. 296 fo r
your d ire c to ry on how to purch ase
1974 M A Z D A R X-4 w agon N ice body and
n terio r, r e lia b le A ir A M F M cassette.
$1500 or best o ffe r 478-6975,
19 7 5 S a te llite Sebring
G R E A T C A R
F u lly equ ipp ed 77,000 o ne-ow ner m iles
E x c e lle n t co n d itio n 471-3971, 458-6796.
1978 M G B Y E L L O W c o n v e rtib le AC,
A M F M cassette good m ile a g e $4900
Ev en m g s and w eekend s, 346-0464
64 C H R Y S L E R R uns good, c le a n ,
re g u la r gas $225 472-8359 a fte r 4 p .m .
M o to rc y d e -F o r S ale
’ 980 S U Z U K I P E -1 7 5 T d irt bike E x
cellent co n dition $1095. via-1 479-03¡6
1980 H O N D A C T-70 3-speed, up to 40
rrph $450 fir m . E v e n in g s 443-5212.
Bicycle-For S a le
P E U G E O T Í0 - S P E E D to u rin g bike, 23".
Seldom used, e x c e lle n t con dition. $175
Bob Jones 454 9439, a fte r 8 p.m .
Stereo-For S ale
C IR C L E S T E R E O , p ro m p t, reaso n ab le
audio vid eo s e rv ic e . Used e q u ip m e n t
bought and sold P a rts and accessories.
1211 Red R iv e r 476 0947
M usical-F or Sale
M A N Y N E W song books a r r iv e d w hhe
vou w ere a w a y A lp h a M u s ic C e n te r 611
A 29th 477-5009
G U IT A R S
Y v A H A u
IB A N E Z uf
A R IA P R O II
i along w ith th<
1 C H E A P !
p to 33% off
i to 33% off
up to 40% off
1 a rg e s t selection of
itin and a sizeable
and accessories a re
'hes
seo
G U I T A R R E S U R R E C T I O N
3004 G u a d a lu p e
478-0095
Tues -Sat
P h o to g rap h y -F o r Sale
M IN O L T A SRT1Ó1 35m m c a m e ra w ith
case and accessories; e x
f 'i 4
ilie n * co n d itio n . $215 472-2851 evening s.
lens
S O N Y P O R T A B L E v id e o s y s t e m .
R ecorder c a m e r a w ith b u ilt-in m o n ito r,
T V
t w o
•e re vpr m o n ito r E x c e lle n t condition.
(~©st over $2 000 O n ly $975 835-0326
c h a r g e r ,
l e n s e s ,
H om es-For Sale
H Y D E P A R K L a rg
h a -d /.o o d . fire p la c e
C a ro lyn 459-0964 $i
3-2-2, 100% b ric k ,
w alk UT Lee 506
5.000.
O R A N G E T R E E
tw o p a r k in g
2 B a
M a rs n an d Box Co., J
1000 327 M65.
id o m in iu m s
2B R ,
spaces. $130,000
ane F r a n k lin 472-
V E R Y N IC E 2 B r T2Ba 7 C A /C H . F o u r
blocks no rth of la w school $69,500, by
ow ner 476-8351
M iscellaneo us-Fo r Sale
IN D I A N
is 25% off!
S A L E !
N elson s G ifts , 4502 S C ongress. 444
3814, 10-6, closed M o n d ay s.
je w e lr y
N E W W O M E N 'S le a th e r boots size 8 ' y
and m a tc h in g b e lt $45 40's dress, m a k e
o ffe r 479-0422.
M A K E M O N E Y . Sell y o u r sports e q u ip
I N S T A N T
m e n t a n d c l o t h i n g a t
R E P L A Y R e sale e q u ip m e n t a t t e r r if ic
p ric e s 5256 B u rn e t R oad at N o rth Loop
P la z a T u e s d a y -S a tu rd a y 10-6. 451-8081.
V I N T A G E C L O T H E S and a n tiq u es at
item s on sale.
v in ta g e p rices. M a n y
L a r g e s e le c t io n of o ld v a le n t in e s .
W e d n e s d a y -S a tu r d a y 12 30-6 G y p s y
W ag o n and G la d Rags 631 W 34th, 453-
9029
T W O F I N E desks - one solid oak glass
top e x e c u tiv e desk, 30" x 58
S185; a n
x 44", $145.
tiq u e m a h o g a n y desk, 23
S m a ll A m e r ic a n oak d in in g ta b le , $125;
set of
fo u r c h a ir s , $25 M u c h m is
cella n eo u s 476-7608
F O R S A L E G u it a r ,
s h a ver,
w eek d a y s , an y tim e w eek-ends.
e l e c t r ic
reco rd s C a ll 472-1145 a f te r 6
iro n
D O W N H IL L S K IS and boots e x c e lle n t
co n d itio n , S200 A M F M c a r stereo plus
un d erd ash 8 -tra c k , $50 B ill, 459-4062.
T W O D A Y
ta b le $45
M a r v J7 1-2917
(s tu d io ) beds w ith c o rn e r
th re e c h a irs $5 eac h . C a ll
N E E D A
B A T T E R Y ?
Good used d e p e n d a b le b a tte rie s c a r -
top post-side te r
tru c k 6-volt 12-volt,
m in a l $12 60 plus e x c h an g e, g u a ra n te e d ,
452-2410
O pen 7 days
fro m 1-9 p m .
W E B U Y A N D S E L L
G O L D , S IL V E R ,
D IA M O N D S A N D COINS
W e p a y c a s h , c o n s ig n m e n t o f
je w e lr y w a n te d .
f in e
S A N D C L I F F S J E W E L R Y
Second L e v e l D o b ie M a ll
GOOD US E D
F U R N I T U R E
D o u b le beds - $25 up, 3 d r a w e r desks -
$35, c h a irs - $5 up, h e a v y d ra p e s and
bed sp read s Good used c a rp e ts $20 up,
b a th ro o m sinks - $10 each. 474-5133 9
a .m . 6 P m , 478-7029, 1-398-5091
We buy je w e lry ,
estate je w e lry , d ia m o n ds
and old gold.
H ig h e st cash p rices paid.
C A P I T O L D I A M O N D
SHOP
4018 N. L a m a r
to c a m p u s R e
C O - E D D O R M n e x t
r e c r e a tio n
m o d eled , new
a r e a , s u n d e c k . W id e s c r e e n T V ,
r e f r i g e r a t o r s . 24 hou r s e c u r it y . No
m e a ls . Taos, 2612 G u a d a lu p e , 474-6905.
fu rn is h in g s ,
t h e
S T U D E N T S ■
A l a m o . " An a l t e r n a t iv e h o te l. C o n
ve n ie n t to U T R e s ta u ra n t and q u a in t
b a r. 476-4381
' R E M E M B E R
F E M A L E W A N T E D fo r fu rn is h e d room .
S h are bath. A 8 P 472-9325 a fte r 6 and
w eekend , 476-7211 ext 210 days only.
P R IV A T E R O O M S W om en, m en Close
to c a m p u s F u rn is h e d , c a rp e te d S l2 0 to
Si 46 A B P K itc h e n , C A /C H C a ll D a ve,
477-1205
P R IV A T E R O O M a t Taos, 2612 G u a d a -
l ,'pe G ro und flo o r, room 110. A ssum e
m y c o n tra c t, g et $100 re b a te . C a ll E r ic ,
478-9155 A don, 447-4970
R O O M W IT H b a th . A ttr a c tiv e , c o m fo r
ta b le h om e in South A u stin just south of
Ben W h ite $125 A B P 443-3218.
B E D R O O M . S H A R E bath and k itc h en .
$40 m o n th , plus re m a in on p re m is e s 10
p . m 8 a m M o n d a y - T h u r s d a y as
re s o u rc e person fo r 11-year-old boy. No
b a b y s ittin g No sm oking S h uttle. 477-
90 31
R O O M F O R re n t Sl20 m onth plus %
b ills 443-9573. 447-6681.
M A L E T O sh a re 3 1 fu rn is h ed $175 plus
P h il 478 9699
t w o b a t h
lu x u ry two
G A Y M A L fc for fu rn is h ed ,
t o w n h o u s e .
b e d r o o m ,
tennis co u rts. Serious
F ir e p la c e pool
g r a d u a te s tu d e n t or
u p p e r d iv is io n
p r o f e s s io n a l p r e f e r r e d M U S T B E
U N U S U A L L Y N E A T S ix -m in u te d riv e
'0 c a m p u s SI 75 plus
. e le c t r ic it y
W r ite O c c u p a n t, Box 7073, A u stin, T X
787 %
H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D N ic e 4-2
house, w ind ow s and tre es. $106 plus %
bins No tobacco, please 459 7177.
R O O M F O R re n t. $130 m o n th ly . 1907
W o odland . 441-9912.
in nice house off Red
S M A L L R O O M
R iv e r M o s t co n venient, a b ills /c h o re s ,
S140 451 4611
■ P s s a e M s ™ ™
Service as efficient and
reliable as the
car itself.
Engine tuning, problem
diagnosis, full parts inventory.
Personal service. Fine used BMWs
PHOENIX
A U T O PRODUCTIONS
4 4 2 - 1 3 6 1
m FOR SALE
1606 Fortview Road
O n e b lo c k n o rth of
B e n W h ite at C law so n
r e d e c o r a t e d 2-1
IH-35, 15th L arg e ,
C O N V E N IE N T - U T ,
R a n g e ,
c l e a n
1405 W a lle r . L ease $350.
r e frig e r a to r
4 7 2 -2 0 9 7 , 4 7 8 -5 7 3 9 A n o t h e r n e a r
B e rg s tro m , $275.
fenced,
2 BR
1005 R o m e ría . R edone
u tility porch, a p p lian ces , a c , c a rp o rt,
pets $335, F e b r u a r y 1. 451-7968, 345-7102.
T R A V IS H E IG H T S - u n fu rn is h e d house
fo r ren t F iv e room s w ith ap p lian ces
2203 E a s t Side D r iv e . $335. 443-3401.
F O R R E N T a v a ila b le sp rin g sem es ter:
la rg e 2B R m o b ile h om e ( 1 2 'x 6 5 '). All
in c lu d in g w a s h e r. S even
a p p lia n c e s
m iles to U T (n e a r T ra c o r, M o to ro la ).
(k e e p
R ent $160 m onth, bills 928-1541
t ry in g ).
H O U S E F O R re n t n e a r iaw school. Un
fu rn is h ed $275. C a ll a fte r 5, 476-7825, 476-
1177
H Y D E P A R K : n e a r shu ttle, fire p la c e , 3-
la rg e kitchen, ap p lia n c e s , w a te r paid
2
N o d o gs. $375 lease and deposit. J a c k
W ilson, 478-9521 W .E . Associates
I M M A C U L A T E 2 B R
R O S E D A L E ,
house Sundeck C o m p le te ly upd ated
a n d r e m o d e le d $525 le a s e 478-1078, 476-
________________
4770
N E A R L A W schooi. 2 /1 , C A /C H , fenced
y a r d g a ra g e , w a s h e r - d r y e r , $410 plus.
478-1177, 475-3281 ( D o u g la s L _____
T W O B E D R O O M , tw o bath co tta g e nea r
H a n c o c k C e n te r. T w o houses fro m CR
s h u t tle H a r d w o o d
flo o rs . O rd in a r ily
w o u ld re n t fo r $375 but w i ll ren t as is
fo r $300. L e a s e
( p a r t i a l ly p a in t e d )
t h r o u g h 1981. N o
la r g e d o g s . S u b
c o m p a c t c a r o w n e r s o n ly 451-6671.
W E S T C A M P U S , o ld e r 3-2. $400 m onth,
a v a ila b le J a n u a r y 25. 2815 R io G ra n d e ,
478-5895 a fte r 5.
_________
3-2 U N F U R N I S H E D H O U S E . C A /C H ,
w a s h in g m a c h in e , d is h w a s h e r a n d s o la r
d r y e r $510 p lu s d e p o s it. Y e a r le a se , no
pets. C o m e by 5013 A v e n u e G o r c a ll 451-
66/5
R O U N D R O C K - 3 b ed ro o m , 2 bath, 2 c a r
fir e p la c e E le m e n ta r y
g a ra g e ,
school n e a rb y . $425. 255-0654 a fte r 6:30
p m
fence,
F R E S H P A l Ñ T ’ and c a rp e t. 2-1 plus
stove and r e f r ig e r a t o r . C a rp o rt, fenced
ya rd , sto rag e b u ild in g . $325 plus deposit.
3802 M a n o rw o o d . E v e n in g s , 255-0746,
___________
892 14%
A V A IL A B L E F E B R U A R Y I H y d e P a rk
2B R , 1BA, liv in g , d in in g . E x c e lle n t con
ditio n $380 plus dep osit. C a ll a fte r 6 p .m .
476 1300
MISCE
E N T E R T A I N E R S
f o r A C C 's " A r o u n d N o o n "
p ro g ra m , M o n d a y -T h u rs d a y .
Need a v a r ie ty of p e rfo rm e r s :
m u s ic ia n s , d a n c e rs , snake
c h a rm e rs . Call Ed Lundy, 476-
6381. M odest stipend,
liv e ly
audience, good p u b lic ity .
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
O L D M A I N A p a rtm e n ts , 25th and P e a rl.
1BR, e ffic ie n c ie s F o u r blocks U T , shut
tle, cab le , pool. 476-5109.
fu rn is h e d or un fu rn ish ed ,
1B R, 1BA,
$ 2 3 5 . 4 5 0 4 A v e n u e A , C e l e s t e
A p a rtm e n ts . 453-3520 o r 458-5301.
2800 R IO G R A N D E . 1 B R $195 fu rn is h ed .
472-2343
W A L K T O cam pu s, sh u ttle c ity bus
L a rg e e ffic ie n c y $225 plus E 2B R , 2B A
e ffic ie n c y $325 plus E . 472-2147.
C E N T R A L F U R N I S H E D e ffic ie n c y w ith
gas h ea t and cooking paid. L a u n d ry and
pool C o n ven ien t to U T sh u ttle and c ity
bus $205 plus E . 45! 4584 o r 476-2633.
B a r r y G illin g w a fe r M a n a g e m e n t Co.
R O A C H F R E E 2 b ed ro o m a p a rtm e n t on
I F . C A - C H , c a b le , A B P % p r i c e
J a n u a ry . 206 W 38. 452-3314.
Q U I E T N E IG H B O R H O O D , 1BR a p a r t
m en t. N e w c a rp e t, cab le , 10 m in u te w a lk
to cam p u s. D o ris A p a rtm e n ts , 304 E
33rd $215 8. E 471-3176, 472-8140, 478-
6148
F U R N IS H E D F I V E ro o m g a ra g e a p a r t
m en t. N e a r D u v a l. 3507 L ib e r ty . $275
A B P 476-3634
f u r n is h e d a p a r t m e n t .
L A R G E 1B R
CA CH , c a rp e te d , c le a n . D is h w a s h e r
and disposal. S w im m in g pool and sauna.
O n sh u ttle , R iv e rs id e a r e a . $279 plus
u tilitie s 451-5685.
f r o m U T
R e c e n t ly
O N E B L O C K
rem o d e le d e ffic ie n c y w ith m ic ro w a v e ,
fo r
b a r . $195 A B P
fe m a le , sh a re b a th now, $220 A B P a fte r
new bath, k itc h en , M a r c h . 300 E . 30th.
C a ll 478-3507, 476-4824.
1B R , $200 A B P
____________
S U B L E A S E 2B R e ffic ie n c y tw o blocks
$325 plus e le c t r ic it y .
f r o m c a m p u s
W a te r ,.g a s paid 474 5271.
1 BR , C E IL IN G fa n s . Close to U T $235.
C a ll 474-2212.
C O M F O R T A B L E E F F I C I E N C I E S One
b lo c k U T . $185 a n d u p E im w o o d
A p a rtm e n ts , 504 E lm w o o d . 27th and
D u v a l a r e a . 477-5658.
I M M E D I A T E L Y . T w o
A V A I L A B L E
l a r g e b e d r o o m s , o n e b a t h . F u l l y
e q u ip p e d k i t c h e n . M a n y e x t r a s !
Sublease u n til M a y 31 $35 2/m o n th plus
e le c tr ic ity . N a n c y o r A lliso n , 447-3644.
la w school.
A C R O S S S T R E E T f r o m
L a rg e fu rn is h e d e ffic ie n c y , S200' m onth
plus e le c tr ic ity A v a ila b le now , 473-2441.
N E W O R L E A N S SQUARE
L U X U R Y A D U L T APTS.
• E ie g a n t new fu r n itu r e
• 2 bed ro om , 2 b ath , $395
• All b ills paid
• W et b ar
• Tw o pools
• C a b le T V.
• U T sh u ttle
1200 B ro a d m o o re
___________ 454-2537
_
B L A C K S T O N E
A P A R T M E N T S
2 B R - 2 B A
A L L B I L L S
P A I D
$410
M g r . 476-5631
The E llio t t System
Now Leasing fo r Spring
B R O W N L E E
SP RI NG R E N T $180
2 BLOCKS T O C A M P U S
2502 Nueces
477-2687
Near NE edge of campus, on
s h u t t l e , 1 & 2 b e d r o o m s .
l a u n
R e s e r v e d p a r k i n g ,
d ro m a t A B P except E. $235
and up.
T H E S P A N I S H T R A I L
4520 Bennett
451-3470
O NE U N E X P E C T E D
V A C A N C Y
108 P L A C E
F U R N . E F F . A PT .
• D is h w a s h e r D isposal
• S w im m in g Pool
• P a tio B a rb e c u e
• I n d iv id u a l S t o r a g e
• Bookshelves
•
• C a b le T V
• L a u n d ry F a c il it e s
• R e s id e n t M a n a g e r
l
. blocks to s h u ttle bus
$205 plus E.
r
108 W. 45th
452-1419
453-2771
$330 A B P
S m all 2 BR • 1 BA. C A/C H ,
new carpet, w a lk or shuttle to
UT.
2211 Leon
474-7732
302 W. 38th
One and
paid. Come study w ith us.
tw o bedrooms, gas
453-4002
$219 plus E.
A B P
L a r g e 1 B R
C A / C H , ne w c a r p e t , d i s h
w a s h e r, d isp o sa l. W a lk or
s h u t t l e
to U T . 2212 San
G a b rie l. 474-7732.
e x c i t i n g A P A R T M E N T a v a ila b le !
404 E a s t 30th S tre e t. O ne bed ro om , f u r
nished. W a lk in g distan ce fro m cam pu s.
S260 m o nthly C a ll 472-8-738
$50 REBATE
TRAVIS HOUSE
APARTMENTS
1600 R O Y A L CREST
4 4 2 -9 7 2 0
S ta rtin g at $230. 1st shuttle
stop . H u g e
f l o o r p la n s .
Free cable T V. T w o laun
d ry rooms. Ple nty of p a r k
ing. P r iv a te balconies and
; ja t l0 S ' C o m e S ee Us
$ 5 0 Rent R ebate paid w ith in 7
days of move-in.
EL
DORADO
APT.
1 BR FURN.
$235
• S h u ttle Front Door
• S m a ll, F riend ly C o m p le x
47 2- 489 3
VILLA
SOLANO
APT.
1 BR FURN. $250
2 BR FURN. $310
• Shuttle, Front Door
• W ater, Gas, TV Coble Paid
• Intramural Field Across St.
• M O V E IN TODAY
4 5 4 - 2 4 9 5
~ i
EL CID
APTS,
M O V E IN TODAY
1 BR Furn. $240
• Shuttle Front Door
• Water, Gas &
TV Cable Paid
• Small Friendly
Complex
3704 Speedway
459-1740
L a
Canada
Apts.
MOVE IN TODAY
— All bills paid
• 1 BR Furn. $310
• Walk to campus
• Nice Pool, Pofio
• Tennis courts
across street
1300 W. 24
477-3066
You’ve just made it home.
Now you're w ay a h e a d of
the g a m e a t Pla za 25. A
c o e d dorm, w here w e offer
a non-regim ented lifestyle.
C o n tra ct parking available
to m ake your life infinitely
m ore simple. Laundry rooms
on every floor. And, w e're
lo c a te d on the U.T. shuttle.
There are T.V, and music
rooms, a courtyard, and a
pool for relaxing moments;
special rooms available for
sequestered studying;
fur
nished suites th a t you'll call
home.
P laza 25 is central to all U.T.
happenings, at the corner
o f Longview
25th
Streets.
and
Choose P laza
It's
som ething special - not just
another pretty place.
25.
LkU\Z¿i\
N o w leasing for spring.
25 05 Longview
472 0 1 0 0
Professionally m anaged by Barry Gilling water Management Company.
UNFURN. APARTMENTS ■ UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES
ROOMMATES
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
SERVICES
TYPING
Monday, January 19, 1981 □ T H E D A ILY T EX A N □ Page 15
2 B R , C A R P E T E D , C A /C H , dish w a sh er,
c a r p o r t. 4707B, 4709B C a s w e ll. T w o
blocks U T shuttle. T rash se rv ic e paid
N o pets. 5265. 282-4644, 282-1109
N O R T H E A S T L A R G E ~ ~ y T v ¡ 7 T w o
stories,
fu lly carpeted, all
a p pliances. 5390. 327-4095, 444-5818.
fire p la c e ,
A R E Y O U tired of tin y k itc h e n s? T his
one is 19 feet long and has 13 ca b inets.
One bedroom , hardw ood floor duplex
n ear H a n co ck Center. F iv e houses fro m
C R shuttle. 5260. No larg e dogs. 451-6671
STU C K ?
N E E D TO M O V E ?
R O O M M A T E
N E T W O R K
473-2800
5290 2 B R - 1 B A a v a ila b le F e b r u a r y 1.
N e ar u n iv e rs ity . No pets. C a ll 9-11 a.m .
only, R o g er M a r tin - Consolidated R e a l
ty, 474-6898
N E E D S T U D E N T
to r e n t s e c o n d
bedroom w ith bath in nice house w ith
pool n ear ca m p u s and on shuttle 5200
plus bills and deposit. M ik e , 474-5905.
ROOM AND BOARD
1 BR - $225
S m a ll q u ie t a p a r t m e n t c o m m u n ity .
L a rg e studio a p a rtm e n ts a v a ila b le now.
P r iv a te balconies, l'/j baths. W a te r, gas,
cable paid. 701 W . N o rth Loop. 453-2230,
451-6533.
C e n tra l P r o p e r tie s Inc.
P A V I L L I O N
and 1 bedroom
L a rg e e ffic ie n c ie s
ap a rtm en ts w ith
la rg e w indow s and
walk-in closets. F u rn is h e d or u n fur
nished. W ith in w a lk in g d istance of U T
shuttle and c ity bus C o nvenient to shop
ping and m a jo r h ig h w ay s. Sta rtin g at
S210/month plus E . C a ll 926-3534 or 476-
2633.
B a r r y Gillingw ater
M anagem ent Co.
N E A R C A M P U S 1 B R , w ith so larium .
W /D connections. G a s, w a te r paid 5275,
first, last m on ths' ren t 454-9898 a fte r 6.
S P A C IO U S , M O D E R N condo m in ium . 2-
story, 2-1 Vj, pool, patio, balcony, shag,
dishw asher, etc So uthw est. O w ner w ill
rent for only S295 for qu ick ren tal. 477-
4088 471-5151 ext. 168
W A N T T O sublet spacio us 2-2 a p a rtm e n t
off R iv e rs id e . 5220/month lease ends at
end of sem ester. 442-8350, 443-6919
S U B L E A S E U N F U R N I S H E D 1-1 a p a r t
m ent on the side of A ustin. Sh uttle one
block a w a y . 5210, 1 1 e le c tr ic ity 441-3353.
O N E B E D R O O M a p a rtm e n t a v a ila b le
spring sem ester. F r e e
Ja n u a r y paid.
Call Sheila, 444-3039, 471-3616.
A V A I L A B L E N O W
L a r g e 2 B R , ~2BA
a p a rtm en t w ith wood bu rning fire p la c e
P e rfe c t for ro o m m ate s. F o r m ore infor
m ation ca ll 451-6697 or com e by Spanish
V illa N orth, 909 R e in li
FURNISHED DUPLEXES
L A R G E , P A N E L E D clea n 2-1 H a r d
wood floors, g arag e, A C s Q uiet respon
sible couple L e a se 5330 1907B w 38th
472-2097 478-5739
NFURNISHED DUPLEXES
Eanes School
New d e co ra to r 3 bedroom , 2 bath, with
ev e ry e m e n ity includ ing wood-burning
fire p lac e and ce ilin g fan W a lk in g d is
ta nee to all schools C y c lin g d ista n ce to
U T and dow ntow n 5550 plus deposit
V irg in ia H in es R e a lto rs 327-2745
5185 18R n e w ly rem o d eled a v a ila b le
.m m ed iate ly N e a r M o r r is W illia m s G olf
Course on P e c a n Sp rin g s R oad Good
ya rd for g ard en C a ll 9-11 a m only
Roger M a r tin - C o nso lidated R e a lty, 474-
6898
2BR , CA CH , ca rp o rt
storage. Q uiet
neighborhood Two blocks S R shuttle
G rad u ate studen*s only No ch ild re n no
pets 5250 plus u ti!:t,es and deposit. 443-
__________ __________________________
3927
B A R T O N H I L L S near Z iik e r P a r k Quiet
4-2 plus stu d y,
fir e p la c e , built-ins,
app anees d ra p e s view , c a r port and
p r i v a c y
d e p o s i t ,
referen ces 5525 442-1998
L e a s e
f e n c e
U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C V Sp lit leve ,
Z i l k e r P a r k a r e a
S p a c io u s 2 B R
• a p la c e W D CA C H 5350 443-8668,
454 6264
H AVE A
CO-OP S P R IN G
The A rk Co-operative has last m in ute
va c a n c ie s for w om en. Sin g le room s, 19
m eals, a ir conditioning, sw im m in g pool -
these a r e just som e of the a d va n ta g e s of
our s e lf- g o ve rn in g e d u c a tio n a l c o m
m unity. See the others. Com e by 2000
P e a r l or ca ll 476-5678
N E W G U IL D Co-op has fe m a le and m a le
v a ca n cie s 510 W 23rd. 472-0352
N E X U S CO -O P Sing le room s, one w ith
fire p la c e 5155/month 476-0818, 612 W e s t
22nd
F E M A L E A N D m ale va c a n c ie s in an
ed ucation al co-operative en viro n m e n t
L a u re l H ouse Co-operative, 1905 N u eces
478-0470.
C H A M B R E S A
louer chez L a M aiso n
F r a n c a is e , 710 W e st 21st Street, tel 478-
6586
W O M E N 'S CO O P on cam pus. 5145 A B P
R o o m / b o a rd . G ood food! D u tie s six
hours/w eek. C a ll Sharon, 474-8177.,
H E A L T H A N D nutrition oriented co-op
seeks resp onsib le in d ivid u a ls W e o ffer
q u ie t r e s id e n tia l n e ig hb o rho od n e a r
cam pus, v e g e ta r an sm oke-free e n v ir o n
ment, sundeck, open field and g ard en
R o y a l Co-op, 1805 P e a r l. 478-0880.
V A C A N C Y A T V CO-OP. Larg e~ roo m ,
p r i v a t e e n t r a n c e , m a n y w in d o w s
C o u p le s , d o u b le or s in g le
F e m a le
pre ferre d , m a le considered 474-7767
S E N E C A F A L L S F e m i n i s t Co-op
openings for fe m in ists Su p p o rtive e n
v iro n m e n t p r iv a c y and co m panv 2309
Nueces, 477-0225
D O B I E M E N 'S side suite a v a ila b le for
sublease N in e teen m ea ls w eek
10th
floor C a ll 459-4822._____________
R O O M A N D board rig h t on ca m p u s
A B P C all 477-4191 for in cre d ib le p rice s
and im m e d ia te o ccu p an cy.
H O M E - C O O K E D M E A L S fiv e da ys a
week L u n c h and dinner, 5100; lunch on
ly 545 C all 477-4191
_
R O O M A N D board a v a ila b le in dorm
close 'o ca m p u s B e st food on ca m p u s
477 5052
ROOMMATES
NO N S M O K IN G F E M A L E p re ferre d to
share 2-1! i duplex on shuttle F ir e p la c e ,
• enced ya rd South 444-2833
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
15 DRIVERS
NEEDED NOW
• MAKE GOOD MONEY
• PART OR FULL TIME
• FLEXIBLE HOURS & DAYS
• MUST USE OWN CAR
• 4115 Guadalupe 458-9101
• 2011 E. Riverside 477-6681
APPLY IN PERSON:
• 1325 Rutland 335-2600
UNFURN. APARTMENTS
The Cascades
i t ’s th e w a y we l i v e . ..
• Efficiency, 1, 2, 3 & 4 bedroom*
• From $200
• 2 pools & club house
• 1 st stop on shuttle
1221 Algarita
444-4485
Barry Gillingwater Management Co.
THE ARBOR #
• Efficiency, 1 & 2 bedroom*
• From $220
• 1 st stop on shuttle
• Roommates welcome
1500 Royal Crest
444-7516
Barry Gillingwater Management Co.
QLtnagGcl bu$e
• Efficien cy 1, 2 & 4 bedroom s
• From $225
• O n UT shuttle
9 G a s, w a t e r an d cab le TV p aid
• 2 Pools, clubroom & g ym
2304 Pleasant Valley
Barry Gillingwater Management Co.
442-1298
_____
ROOMS
2012 (
A u s t i n , U u i 7870S
474-eeos
NOW LEASING FOR SPRING
• Co-ed dorm across the street from campus at 27th St.
• Tasteful, efficient furnishings
• Recreation area with exercise
equipment, music room, wide screen T V.,
refrigerators in every room, 24 hour security
TYPING
RESUMES
> LAND THE JOB YOU WANT
•
W h e n th e p o sitio n y ou see k d e m a n d s
th e b e s t p r e s e n ta tio n , see th e m a s te r
MASTER TYPIST
DOBIE MALL No. 36
2021 Guadalupe St.
472¿0293
I //•• 2 H o u r F o r k in g )
• 1-DAY SERVICE • All Original* • Continuou* Update •
T Y P E S E T T E R O P E R A T O R I
U T A U S T IN
v a c a n c y
Im m e d ia te
for T yp e setter
O p e ra to r I. R e q u ire m e n ts include high
school co m p letio n plus a score of 60 w pm
on the ty p in g test 1 y e a r 's ex perien ce as
P r e f e r experien ce as
ty p is t re q u ired
f r o m
t y p e s e t t e r . W i l l s e t
m a n u s c r i p t s p r o v id e d u s in g T T S
k e y b o a rd s , v id e o d is p la y
te r m in a ls
a n d / o r p h o to ty p e s e tt in g m a c h in e s .
W o rk d a y s a re S u n d a y through T h u rsd a y
nights, 6:30 p.m . to 2 15 a.m . S a la r y ,
$5 48 per hour. E x c e lle n t frin g e benefits.
To a p p ly co n ta ct:
t y p e
O ffic e of P erso n n e l S e rvic e s
and E m p lo y e e R elatio n s
2613 W ic h ita
A ustin, T X 78712
An E q u a l O p portunity/
A ff ir m a t iv e A ctio n E m p lo y e r
System Analyst
( D a t a P ro c e ssin g M a n a g e r )
M A in co m p u te r scien ce or B A in c o m
p u te r s c ie n c e w ith e x p e rie n ce . E x
p e rie n ce w ith D E C P D P 11 F a m ily ; good
u n d e r s t a n d in g of b a s ic
la n g u a g e
K n o w l e d g e of m e d i c a l o r h e a lt h
fa c ilitie s M I S p re fe rre d . E x p e rie n c e in
su p e rvisin g a d a ta processing ce n ter
operation A b ility to perfo rm job cost
a n a ly s is ; a b ility
to design com puter
s y s te m s r e q u e s t fro m no n-technical
users. 8 a .m . - 5 p.m M on .- Fri. Som e
w eek ends and som e nights. F o r m ore In
fo rm atio n co n ta ct:
A u s tin - T ra v is County
M e n ta l H e a lth R e ta rd a tio n Center
1430 C o llier
A ustin, T X 78704
or c a ll 447-4141 ex 20
E . O . E .
for vig o ro u s public spirited
P a rt- tim e te m p o r a r y em p lo ym en t w ith
c h a rita b le non-profit rese arc h o rg a n iz a
tion,
in
d ivid u a l. D u ties In clu d e contacting co m
m u n ity m ir d e d people in southw estern
towns by phone. S a la r y is $3.50/hour.
M o n d a y - F r id a y e m p lo y m e n t needed.
T w o shifts a v a ila b le : 9 a m .-3 p.m., 3
p .m .-9 p.m . F o r appo intm ents ca ll 451-
6459.
_______________ E . O . E . __________________
M ental Health Worker
The R a n c h T r e a tm e n t Center of the
B ro w n Schools is c u r r e n tly in tervie w in g
•or full-tim e positions from 3 p m .-11
p m and 11 p .m .-7 a .m . You w ill be part
of a tre a tm e n t team sup ervised by a
p ro fe s s io n a l. W ill w o rk w ith d e v e l
opm ental d isa b led and brain
injured
residents M u s t be 18 and high school
g rad u a te A p p lica tio n s m a y be filled out
at 1110 E . 32nd St., or ca ll 478-6662
E O E
P A R T - T IM E
A U D IO - V IS U A L
O P E R A T O R S N E E D E D
So m e e x p erien ced desired, w ill tra in
p ro m ising a p p lica n ts. $3.43/hour, C a ll
U .T u tilitie s - co m m u n ica tio n s, 471-3641,
for in te rvie w .
P R O G R A M M E R
fir m
specializing
Consulting
in
q u a n tita tiv e a n a ly s is techniques needs
tim e p r o g r a m m e r . Y o u re s u m e
fu ll
s h o t d
in d c a t e p r o g r a m m in g e x
pe rie n ce (la n g u a g e s and h a rd w a re ) as
w ell as m ath, en gineering and business
skills. To a p p ly, send resu m e to:
P O Box 4067
A ustin, T X 78765
E L E C T R O N I C S
T E C H N I C I A N
fo r p a r t - t im e
I m m e d i a t e o p e n in g
b io m e d ic a l e le c t r o n ic s
t e c h n ic ia n .
U p p er d i v :sion e le c tric a l en gineering
m a io r w ith bench e x p erien ce pre ferre d
M in im u m 20 hours per w eek; re lia b le
tra n sp o rta tio n req u ired . 385-6232.
PART-TIM E
Sta rt im m ed iately, flexible
hours, excellent pay. Apply
after 1 p.m. at 1209 Rio Grande
Suite 212.
P R O G R A M M E R
E x p a n d in g E D P d e p artm e n t req u ires
p ro g ra m m e r w ith m in im u m one y e a r
p r o g r a m m in g e x p e r i e n c e fo r n e w
b u s i n e s s s y s t e m s a p p l i c a t i o n s .
D a t a p o in t , D a ta b u s ,
la n g u a g e e x
p e rie n ce d e sira b le . Dow ntown A ustin
lo c a t io n .
E x c e l le n t
F r e e p a r k in g
benefits p a c k a g e P r o fit sharing. P le a s e
f o r w a r d
r e
q u ire m e n ts to:
r e s u m e a n d s a l a r y
P O. Box 1827
A ustin, T X 78767
E . O . E .
P A R T - T I M E T E C H N I C A L editors need
ed M u st h a ve strong background
in
c h e m istry E d itin g to be done at home.
Good pay and e x cellen t experien ce Send
q u a lific a tio n s *o T ra n sla to rs, P .O . Box
7552. A ustin, T X 7 8 7 1 2 ._____
JAPANESE- T R A N S L A T O R S , p a rt or
full tim e u rg e n tly needed. W o rk at your
own speed at hom e or in our office Send
q u a lifica tio n s to T ra n sla to rs, P.O . Box
7552, A ustin, T X 78712 ____
N I G H T A A T C H P E R S O N . S e e k in g
depend ab le person t o w o t k g r a v e y a r d
shift on w eek en d s A p p ly in person only
_________
at 1000 W e s t A ve .
W H I T E W A T E R ! R A F T I N G jobs $1200-
53600 su m m e r. T ra in in g pro vided! U .S.,
E u ro p e , w o r ld w id e ! Send $ 6 95
fo r
a p p lication , in fo rm a tio n re fe rra ls (an d
fre e
iob g uid e to L a k e Tahoe, C A ).
W h ite w a te r, Box 60129, S a cra m en to , C A
95860
_____________
_________
C R l T ÍS E s T C L U B M e d ite rr a n e a n , s a il
ing ex peditio ns! N eeded sports in s tru c
o f f ic e p e r s o n n e l, c o u n s e lo r s
to rs
C a r i b b e a n , w o r l d w i d e !
E u r o p e
S u m m e r
Send 55.95 plus 51
c a r e e r
handling fo r a p p lica tio n , openings, guide
to C ru ise w o rld 189, Box 60129, S a c r a
mento, C A 95860.
___ ______
A L A N A S IS a cce p tin g a p p lication s tor
ex p erien ced k itch en staff and waitper-
sons C a ll 474-9166 between 3-5 p.m. for
ap po intm ent.
________
T H E L O N G H O R N R an ch , a group hom e
for m ild ly re ta rd e d ,
is now accepting
a p p lic a tio n s fo r
full- and p a rt- tim e
p ro g ra m aides. C a ll 272-5994. E . O . E .
C I T Y D E L I V E R Y tru c k d r iv e r and
w a re h o u s e p e rso n . S e m e e x p e rie n c e
w ould be helpful C a ll Jo h n n y at R o a ch
P a in t Co. 454-8723.________ _____________
A C C O U N T IN G M A J O R w anted for part-
tim e light bookkeeping. M u st be super
depend ab le. C a ll 459-3321. _________
_
C O U N T R Y G U I T A R I S T and or piano
p la y e r needed for tw o nights per w eek in
a saloon C a ll 472-1082 Ask for Scott for
m ore in fo rm a tio n .
_
M O N I T O R E Q U I P M E N T fo u r tim e s
lo c a l
w e e k ly . C le a n p o lic e re c o rd ,
time. 452-5763
referen ces,
w eek d a ys
_______
fre e study
C A S H I E R S . R Í T A I L experien ce w ith
cre d it n e c e s s a ry W e h a ve d ay and e v e n
ing shifts
Im m e d ia te openings, ce n tra l
location. V o lt T e m p o r a r y Se rvices, 1507
G u a d a lu p e 472-6916. E O .E
MODELS N E E D E D fo r L ife D ra w in g
c la s s a t S o u th w e s te r n U n iv e r s it y
in
G e o rg eto w n M o n d a y 3-5, W ed n esd ay
evening 6 -8 . C a ll 476-7914^___
S U M M E R
J O B S - C a m p So rop tim ist
Co unselors to sp e cial populations (han-
d ica p p ed ). D a lla s a re a D irec to r on
c a m p u s
J a n u a r y 26 a n d 27. A p
po intm ents through C a re e r Center, 471-
A ' s o s l i d e p r e s e n t a t i o n ,
1217
Ja n u a r y 26, 7 30 p.m.
re fe re sh m e n ts
Je s te r C e n te r A215A
M O T H E R 'S H E L P E R - afternoons 12-4.
M u st h a v e own tra nspo rtation C all for
in te rvie w , 345-2054 N orthw est Austin
B A B Y S I T T E R N E E D E D - loving and
responsible,
for one, som etim es two,
sm a ll c h ild re n Sl 50-52 00 hour, fle x ib le
hours, s e v e ra l tim es week 476-7608
E X C H A N G E E F F I C I E N C Y a p a rtm e n t
♦or part- tim e b ab ysittin g , housekeeping
E n e rg e tic , d epend ab le w om an w anted.
South A u stin 441-3995 a fte r 5 p m
T R A N S L A T O R S A N D in terp reters tor
A ra b ic,
Ja p a n e s e and over 30 other
languages needed A p p ly P & H T r a n s la
tion, Box 5215, A u stin 78763.
S A L A D P R E P A R A T I O N person w anted
from 5-8 p.m . M o n d a y - F rid a y and some
w eekends M u s t be neat, clean, depen
dable and e ffic ie n t A p p ly in person, 17th
and San Ja c in t o 476-9187. ____________
L O O K I N G F O R p e r s o n fo r s a la d
p re p a ratio n So m e h e a vy lifting 8 a m -3
p m M u s t be neat, clean, dependable
and e ffic ie n t A p p ly in person, 17th and
San Ja c in t o 476-9187.
_______
F A T H E R W I T H 8 y e a r old son livin g in
high ris e a p a rtm e n t needs person for
ch ild c a r e and light housekeeping 327-
3666
B I K E R E P A I R person needed Monday-
S a tu r d a y 1 p m .-6 p m. M ust be ex
p erienced and bondable L o c k s m i t h ex
p erience help ful A p p ly 5413 N L a m a r .
M I K E & C h a r lie 's needs
w a itp erso n 451-5550
lunch tim e
L I B E R A L , M A T U R E , n o n - sm o kin g
fe m a le needed fo r fu rn ish ed 3-2 house
clo se to IR S , shuttle. A fte r 5:30, 443-3450.
5145, '/2 bills.
F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed A S A P
5118, 575 & e le c tr ic ity . 471-3134 or 447-
3498
R O O M M A T E N E E D E D . F e m a le , non
sm oking 1 B R condo, 5150/month 8, '-/i
u tilitie s Six blocks north of U T . 474-2142.
F E M A L E S H A R E 3-2-2 "f urnishedTiouse.
H ig h w a y 183N/L00P 360 5175, A B P , 5100
deposit M a r ily n , 255-3684 4 p .m .-5 p.m.
w eek d ays.
I N E X P E N S I V E R O O M in huge house
W a lk to ca m p u s. Co-op livin g style. 479-
0534 evenings.
F E M A L E R O O M M A T E ^ n e e d e d to share
la rg e 2 B R / 2 B A Non-sm oker N e a r U T
shuttle. 5105 plus '/< e le c tr ic ity 442-2961.
f e m a l e S T U D E N T , m ust be resp onsi
ble, m a tu re ,
to s h a r e N o rth A u stin
house 5150 a m onth,
i bills. 459-7345.
N O N - S M O K IN G F E M A L E
to s h a re
th re e bedroom hom e. 5149 plus '/j bills.
926-8692 evenings.
W O M A N T O sh a re la rg e 2 B R duplex
South, by shuttle. P r e f e r o v er 23 Cats
o nly 5132.50 plus h a lf bills. 441-5115
M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to sh a re 2-2
a p a rtm e n t
in Q u ail C ree k a re a . Call
a fte r 5 p.m B im , 835-5078
N E E D N E A T , lib e ra l fe m a le ro o m m ate
to sh a re nice 2-2 a p a rtm e n t near B a rto n
Sp rin g s F ir e p la c e , va u lte d ceiling s, no
pels s 185 plus half b ills. C a ll Suzanne,
327 5266
________
L I B E R A L , E A S Y - G O IN G m ale needed
to sh a re 2 B R house. 3909B R ed R iv e r ,
454-1975
________
F E M A L E R O O M M A T E S n e e d e d to
sh a re house in South A ustin, F u rn ish ed ,
f r e p la c e , w a s h in g m a c h in e , d r y e r .
590 month. 443-7130, 444-6460
N E E D N O N - S M O K IN G fe m a le ro om
m a te to s h a re 2-1 fu rn ish ed duplex. Sh u t
tle 5120 plus 2 bills C a ll 442-2518 a fte r 5
p.m
N E E D F E M A L E
tw o
be d roo m tw o b a th a p a r tm e n t on S
R iv e rs id e . 5190 plus
' 2 utilities C all
a n ytim e, 447-6715.
r o o m m a t e ,
W O M E N . SH A R E la rg e 2 B R I B A on S R
route
'2 E . D eposit 5100.
! 2 ren t - 5176,
T eresa , P A X 3505, 444-4644
N E E D O N E to sh a re house E R shuttle
5137 B: I, 478-3668 Non-sm okers only.
F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w anted
F u r
nished m ob ile hom e has spare bedroom
590. half bills 385-4483, M ic h a e L ________
M A T U R E R O O M M A T E to Share 3 B R
house one block off E n fie ld , Fen ced
3 bills M ust
y a rd sundeck, sauna 5143
ke dog
J a ^ e s , G eorg e, 478-2304.
F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed
im
m e d ia te ly to sh a re p a r tia lly fu rnished
townhouse Non-sm oker. U pp er cla ss or
g ra d u a te student p re fe rre d . M u st be
m atu re, resp o n sib le and w illin g to help
with household duties 5165 month,
\ ' i
b ills W a lk , shu ttle U T N o rth of cam pus.
C a ll Ju d ith , 474-5330
S H A R E L A R G E T b R a p a rtm e n t P a r
t i a l l y
f u r n i s h e d O n T o w n L a k e
5140 m onth plus e le c tric . On shu ttle 445-
0511
_______
_
N E E D T W O f e m a le r o o m m a te s , 3
bedroom 2 bath house on shuttle. 453-3865
a fte r 5:00
f e m a l e R O O M M A T E needed
im
m e d ia te ly. F u rn is h e d 2-1, C R shuttle.
$140 8. E N e a r H a n co ck Cen ter. B e ck y ,
459-0304 K e e p try in g
A / A N T E D P E R S O N sh a re 2 B R a p a r t
m ent Sh are d room, bath 5115; p riv a te
room , bath $160. C a ll 453-2334.
M A L E R O O M M A T E w anted to share
th re e bedroom duplex in South Austin.
5125 plus 1 3 p e ls C a ll 447-7841.
R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to sh a re fu r
nished, spacious com fon’ able 2 i a p a r t
m ent $135,
In fro nt of
2 e le c tr ic ity
shu ttle 445-0184
P O R C H , T R E E S , n e a r ca m p u s $95 plus
1/3 b ills . R o o m
in house for fe m a le
g ra d u a te student non-smoker 474-6476
R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to share nice
2 B R 1BA a p a r 'm e n t a t 32nd and Red
R v e r W a lk to ca m p u s o r C R shuttle at
d o o rsteo
s tu d io u s upper-level student or g rad u a te
student C a ll R a v i, 477-4705 or 471-4153
2 E . P r e f e r
R e n t
$140,
R O O M M A T E W A N T E D tor beau tiful 3-
2 2 tonw house v e r y clo se to ca m p u s $190
plus ' 3 bills plus deposit. 472-9182.
R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to sh a re 2BR
house 5157.50. f u t i l i t i e s C all 477-6438
F o u r blocks east of cam pus.
H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D to
liv e w ith
th re e m ale g rad students L a r g e ho^se
w est of cam pus, four bed, fire p la c e $125
plus bills 478-8026.
H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D four bedroom
h o u s e
ro o m
5100 month, m ce p la ce C all 926-9643
a n ytim e.
5 2 m ile s U T
o w n
F E M A L E R O O M M A T E for 2 B R 1 B A
duplex a p a rtm e n t A B P Ten blocks
fro m ca m p u s on I F shuttle. S 150 451-
9802
________________
H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D to Sh are with
tw o others. $210 m onth A B P plus phone
447-7002 at night.
R O O M M A T E F O R w on d erful la rg e 2 BR
house near B a rto n Sp rin g s C eiling fans
porch swm g, etc. E a s y gc ng student
p re fers p ro g re s s iv e ly m inded 29-30 y e a r
old A p ro x im a te ly $160 m onth A B P . 442-
7912
______________
R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to Sh are 2 B R
a p a r 'm e n t north of cam pus. Pool, C R
shuttle. $160 A B P 454-8441.
L A R G E R O O M in South A ustin house
p a rtly fu rn ish ed , for lib e ra l non-smoker
s 135 including utilities. 447-1698
W O M A N G R A D s tu d e n t o n ly O w n
room bath. Q uiet M o d ern kitchen S160
A B P A fte r 5:00 452-6645
R O O M M A T E W A N T E D
to s h a r e
spacious duplex in W e s tla k e H ills with
tw o m en P r e f e r stable, gay student.
5200 in clu s ive 327-5728, 471-1761
S E R I O U S S T U D E N T w anted to share a
v e r y n i c e 2 B R 2 B A a p a r t m e n t
5166 month. No deposit n e cessa ry . All
bills paid
3 chores V e r y close to C R
shuttle bus s*op. C a ll R o liie or O m a r at
451-3808 C h r i s t i a n w a n te d but not
necessa ry.
R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to sh a re two
bedroom one bath fu rn ish ed a p a rtm e n t
on S p e e d w a y and 31st 5132.50 plus elec
tr ic ity G as, w afer, ca b le paid. 478-1064,
Scot K eep try in g
F O U R T H R E L I A B L E r o o m m a t e
P r e f e r older student. N ic e house, $162 50
plus
w eek days.
4 4301 A v en u e D a fte r 6 p.m
N E E D E D . M a l e
R O O M M A T E
p r e f e r a b l y
T w o b e d r o o m s , 1 1 2
bathroom s. Close to shu ttle C a ll 442-
4712
__________
_
O N E O R tw o fe m a les needed to share
two bedroom studio a p a rtm e n t in R iv e r
side C all 442-4147.
fe m a le
N E E D Q U IE T , non-smoking
O w n room
in house, u n furn ish ed $90
plus bills C lose to ca m p u s. 472-5862,
Jo a n .
________
M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d . T w o
bedroom a p a rtm e n t, $ 1 1 0 plus ' 3 bills
N e a r ca m p u s on E R route. P e r r y , 476-
472!.
S H A R E N I C E 3 B R house, Southw est
A u stin M a le fe m a le , but no sp a ce
cad ets or m o ra l c ru sa d e rs Jo e M c C a ll,
474 5811 or 892-3806 a fte r 5: 3 0 . ___ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
R E S P O N S I B L E R O O M M A T E needed
S h a re
2 b ills in 2 B R a p a rtm e n t U T
shuttle C a ll 443-3233 or 1-625-3266.
HELP WANTED
A L L Y O U F O L K S w h o need e x tr a
m oney can sell flo w ers w ith The O rig in a l
F lo w e r P e o p le P a id d a lly . 288-1102.
O lsten T e m p o r a r y
S e r v ic e s
t o r a
H a s a p e r m a n e n t o p e n in g
tele p h o n e s a le s p e r s o n . 2 0 ho u rs per
w eek , M o n d a y - F r id a y . P r e v io u s e x
p e rience in telephone sales is pre ferre d .
C a ll for an appo intm ent, 458-4266.
E . O E .
W E N E E D
g rad u a te students to fa ke notes in un
d e rg ra d u a te cla sses this sem ester You
m ust be a b le to take co m p lete a c c u ra te
notes and tu rn them in to us typed, the
d a y a f t e r th e
if y o u 'r e a
g ra d u a te student ( T A 's w e lc o m e ) please
c a ll us at 472-7986 or co m e by P a r a d ig m
Books, 407 W . 24th,
le c t u r e ,
W A N T E D - S E C U R I T Y g u a rd fo r s o ro ri
ty house. Part-tim e, study on job. C a ll
W ill D a y a t 476-9282 before 6 p.m . or 474-
7990 6 p .m .-6 a.m . F rid a y - M o n d a y .
W A N T E D : G A S O L IN E p u m p e r - ex
p erie n ce d , open fro m 7:30 a .m .-6 p.m.
(tw o sh ifts). A p p ly in person at Don
W ee d on Conoco, 34th and G u a d alu p e.
G O O D T E L E P H O N E v o ic e ? T e m p o r a r y
w o rk ca llin g a rea resid e n ts for non
p r o f i t h e a l t h o r g a n i z a t i o n . 20
h o u rs/ w e e k , $3.35/hour. E x p e r ie n c e
p r e f e r r e d C a ll 453-81 17; e v e n in g s ,
w eek ends 444-0584.
N E O - L I F E CO. of A m e ric a , established
1958, needs distrib u to rs for make-up,
n a tu ra l v ita m in s and d e h yd ra te d foods
H ig h e st co m m issio ns paid, own hours,
sell re ta il and p u rchase w h o le sa le for
own use. Jo e , 477-6074.
W A N T E D . E X P E R I E N C E D person to
c a r e for 15-month old boy $3.15/hour
plus bus transp o rtation . C e n tra l A ustin
n e a r No. 24 bus. 12 hours per w eek or
m ore. A fternoons p re ferre d R e p ly D a i
ly T exan, Box D-2.
C A N 'T W O R K 9 to 5? Sell A vo n and w o rk
w hen you w ant. C a ll 472-7220, 477-8261.
S A L E S P E R S O N W A N T E D to sell F D A
( n o n
a p p r o v e d p h a r m a c e u t i c a l s
p r e s c r ip tio n )
C a ll L a r r y , 447-4293.
E O .E .______________________________________
T R A V E L A G E N C Y needs a fte rn o o n
d e liv e r y person M -F 1-5 p.m . C a r and
g o o d d r i v i n g r e c o r d
r e q u i r e d .
S3 35/hour, 18'/mile. 458-2161.
P A R T - T I M E A F T E R N O O N h o u r s
p re fe rre d , M -F, for run ning errand s,
light
typing. M u st be w ell-groom ed,
re lia b le , and h ave depend ab le c a r C a ll
L in d a , 477-6155.
B U D G E T R E N T - A - C A R has part-tim e
opening, w eekends only. 478-6430, 3330
M a n o r Road
M A K E 1981 the y e a r to e a rn ex cellen t
m o n ey at w ork that is fun. T e a c h d a n
cing full or part tim e. No e x p erien ce
n e c e s s a ry ; yo ur tra in in g is fre e A rth u r
M u r r a y School of D an ce now selectin g
m en and w om en to tra in as in stru cto rs
and sp e cialis ts A p p ly 8776B R e s e a rc h
B lv d . G r a n d C en tra l Statio n, betw een 2-
6 p m M -F
W A N T E D B A B Y S I T T E R for afternoo ns
and e v e n in g s M o n d a y- T h u rsd a y. M u st
h a v e tra n sp o rta tio n and re fe re n ce s. 454-
6511, 345-3593.
__________
W A N T D O O R to door d is trib u to rs for
a d v e rtis in g agency. Good p a y for good
production Choose yo ur own hours. 454-
5244
•; A SERVICES
PHOTOS
.
for
PASSPORTS
APPLICATIONS
RESUMES
3 m inute service
M O N .-SA T. 1 0 -6
4 7 7 -5 5 5 5
THE THIRD EYE
2 5 3 0 GUADALUPE
ORAL SURGERY
PATIENTS
S tu d e n ts in n e e d o f h a v in g th ir d
m o la rs (W is d o m te e th ) re m o v
e d a n d w h o w o u ld be w illin g to
p a rtic ip a te in an a n a lg e s ic d ru g
s tu d y a t re d u c e d fees, p le a s e
c a ll
Donald R. Mehlisch, M.D., D.D.S.
451-0254
S u rg e ry can be a rra n g e d to be
d o n e a t the U n iv e rs ity o f Texas
S t u d e n t H e a lth S e r v ic e
i f
d e s ire d
J E N N I N G S ' M O V I N G and H a u lin g .
D e p en d ab le personal s e rv ice , la rg e or
s m a ll lobs 7 d a y s w e e k . 442-6181
F R E F P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S . Confiden-
tia l counseling on a lte rn a tiv e s , in fo rm a
t on and r e fe rra ls on w o m e n 's health
co n cern s W e refer to local reso u rces
W o m e n 's R e fe r r a l Center, 603 W . 13th
No 210, 476-6878, M o n d a y - F rid a y 9-5. M S
shu ttle.
T E X A S R E N T E R S : Do y o u h a v e
la n d lo r d o r
le a s e p r o b le m s ? N e ed
a n s w e r s ’ S e n c $3 95 to L a n d l o r d
P ro b le m s, Box 794, San M a r c o s , T ex a s
78666
P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y
C O U N SE LIN G , R E F E R R A L S
& F R E E
P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G
T e x a s P ro b le m P r e g n a n c y
507 P o w e ll St
M -F, 7:30-5:30
474-9930
Statistical Analysis
Consultation
Social Sciences Data
• Se le ctio n of sta tis tic a l techniques
• P r e p a r a tio n of data for a n a ly s is
• C o m p u ter usage
• No c h a rg e for in itia l consultation
477-4940
I N m y h o m e -
B A B Y S I T T I N G
(p la n n e d a c t iv it ie s ) .
d a y s / e v e n in g s
R e fe r e n c e s a v a ila b le
fenced
L a r g e
y a rd . Close to U T . L o vin g and relaxed
a tm o sp h ere 454-5526.
S T U D E N T F A M I L Y S e rv ic e s - P a re n ts
N ig h t Out. N e w ho urs: F r id a y s 6-11 p.m.
L o c a tio n : O ff E R route at W est L yn n at
St. L u k e 's C h u rch . P r ic e : 50* per hour.
S ta ff ra tio 3:1. A ll age ch ild re n are
w elco m e . F o r m o re in fo rm a tio n ca ll 472-
8433, 458-4545 o r 476 8164 F r i d a y
evenings.
P r i v a t e 56/half
T E N N I S L E S S O N S
hour, 510/hour; g ro u p 5 5 /ho ur. C a ll
Ja c k , 477-4671 or 345-4303.
WANTED
SO LID GOLD
1 G o ld p rice s ch an g e d a ily
2 W e w eigh your ring s, gold and silv e r
3 W e pay you top d o lla r the d a y you sell -
at th a t d a y s prices.
Co m e See Us F ir s t!
2003A W h e e le ss L a n e
Next door to H a n d y A n d y
928-0082
W E WANT
YO UR B IK E S !
W e buy, re p a ir, sell and tra d e b icycles.
Bob's Bike and Key
5413 N. Lam ar
452-9777
C L A S S R IN G S , gold je w e lry, old pocket
w a tc h e s , c u r r e n c y , sta m p s w a n te d .
H igh p rice s paid P io n e e r Coin C o m
pany, 5555 N o rth L a m a r , B ld g . C-113 In
C o m m e rc e P a r k , 451-3607.
W E B U Y c la ss rings, w edding bands,
gold je w e lry , scra p gold H ighest cash
price s paid. A 8.A P a w n Shop, 420 E . 6 th
St. 478-1558 10 a .m . -6 p m.
_______
T W E N T Y - O N E Y E A R o ld S w e d is h
p ro sp e c tive U T student w ould like a c
co m m o d ation w h ile pro viding do m estic
help and b a b y sitting Good E n g lis h . F o r
in fo rm a tio n ca ll 478-7069.
W A N T E D : Q U A L I T Y tapes of last night
at the " D i l l o " ra d io b ro adcast W ill pay
Ji m , 452-4427, 452-6909.
or tra d e
PERSONAL
IS Y O U R frie n d 's , lo v e r's or r e la tiv e 's
d rin k in g p ro b lem affectin g you as w ell
as him or h e r ? C o m e to U n iv e r s ity
A lc o h o l A n o n y m o u s m e e t in g s on
T u esd a y s at noon and lea rn how to deal
w ith the p ro b lem and gain inner strength
and sere n ity. M e e tin g s a* C a th o lic S tu
dent C enter, 21st and U n iv e r s ity .
P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y " ? F r e e p re g
n an cy testing and re fe rra ls. 47f ; 9930_
C A N 'T S T O P E A T I N G ? O v e r e a t e r s
A nonym ous. Noon W e d n e sd a y s C a th o lic
Student Cen ter, 21st and U n iv e r s ity ,
S e m in a r Roo m . W e c a re .
27th ST8EET
l?\pAiÁtX A w
M B A
0
•
TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING
The Complete Professional
F U L L T IM E
T Y P IN G S E R V IC E
4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0
4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7
2 7 0 7 HEMPHILL PK
P l e n t y of P a r k i n g
: e
Campus News in Brief
! THE DEADLINE FOR SUBMITTING ITEMS TO CAMPUS
NEWS
IS 5 P.M . THE FR ID AY BEFORE
PUBLICATION. ITEMS MAY RUN ONLY ONCE DURING
THE WEEK.
IN BRIEF
ANNOUNCEMENTS
M e a s u r e m e n t a n d e v a l u a t i o n c e n t e r The college
Board Achievement Test in Mathematics Level I will be offered
at 6:15 p.m. Monday. Students must present proof of having
taken this test before registering for their first UT math course.
The fee is $11. The College of Communication Grammar,
Spelling and Punctation Test will also be at 6:15 p.m. Monday.
A passing score on the test is required for registration in J 312
or ADV 325. The fee is $7. Test fees can be paid from 4:30 to
6:15 p.m. Monday at Batts Auditorium ticket office. Test
description and eligibility information are available at the ticket
office and at the Measurement and Evaluation Center, 2616
Wichita St., 471-3032.
RASSL LEARNING SERVICES Erollment for free, non-credit
four-week classes in study techniques, college reading skills,
faster text reading, GRE and LSAT preparation, chemistry
skills, math skills and writing skills is from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
through Thursday in Jester Center A332A, 471-3614.
UT DANCE TEAM Auditions for spring '81 team. Open to all UT
students. No experience necessary. Auditions are at 8 p.m. on
Jan. 21, 22, 23, 28, 29 and 30 in Anna Hiss Gym 136.
STUDENT VOLUNTEER SERVICES Men needed to assist a
moderately mentally retarded boy with motor coordination; the
urban affairs office needs a clerical volunteer; there is an
opening for a volunteer dental health education assistant. For
information, contact Student Volunteer Services, Union
Building 4.214, 471-3065.
UT STUDENT CHAPTER OF AM ERICAN G U ILD OF
ORGANISTS Recital by UT organ students, 7:30 p.m. Mon
day, New Music Building and Recital Hall 2.630, 25th and Red
River streets. Admission is free. For information, contact Dr.
Frank Speller, 471-7764.
DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
Michael Rivas, chairman of DSCC Hispanic Commission, will
speak on “ U.S. Policies Toward Latin America in the '80s: A
Democratic Socialist Perspective," 7:30 p.m. Monday, Texas
Union Building 3.128.
TEXAS UNION
Informal classes registration, Texas Union
Ballroom, 6 to 9 p.m. Monday; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday; 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday; 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday; 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday. Country swing dance demonstration,
noon to 1:15 p.m. Monday in the Texas Tavern.
TEXAS UNION RECREATION CENTER Spring
league
registration, through Jan. 26.
MEETINGS
UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEES UNION General membership
meeting, 7 p.m. Monday, Sid Richardson Hall 3.107.
LECTURES
LATIN AMERICAN STUDENTS ASSOCIATION Discus
sion on the American Friends Service Committee tour of Cen
tral America, with a focus on El Salvador, noon Tuesday,
Eastwoods Room in the Texas Union Building.
STRAIT &
M U S I C &T
C O M P A N Y
908 N. Lamar • 476-6927
2 5 % -4 0 % OFF LIST PRICE
ON ALL NEW ACOUSTIC AND
E L E C T R I C G U I T A R S AND
BASSES IN STOCK
“ We Sell the Best, Not the Rest 9 9
Strait’s accessory department has the largest and most
complete selection of guitar and drum accessories in
Central Texas.
Present this coupon with purchase and receive:
4 0 % OFF GUITAR STRINGS
3 0 % OFF DRUM STICKS
AND DRUM HEADS
STRAIT MUSIC COMPANY
908 N. LAMAR
476-6927
KARATE CLASSES
M e n • W om en • Children
W o m e n Self-Defense • Rape Prevention • A w a re n e ss
Enroll in O ur 3 -M o n th Program an d Receive
1 Extra M o n th Free
(Interesting
Facts
B rought To You Every W eek
By T h e U n iv e r s it y C o -O p
• Class ta u g h t b y Joe A lv a ra d o
5 th d e g re e B lack Belt
• R ated N o. 1
in s tru c to r in Texas fo r 1 9 7 9 & 1 9 8 0
by th e A m a te u r O rg a n iz a tio n o f K a ra te
• R ate d by A .O .K . as th e N o. 1 K a ra te
C o m p e titio n School in Texas
• O ld e s t school in C e n tra l Texas —
15 ye a rs in th e c o m m u n ity
• C o m p le te V id e o S ystem
SORYU K A R A T E IN S T IT U T E
2011B E. Riverside
Rivertowne M all
441-3216
EG G ROLL S T A N D *
2 7 1 7 G u a d a lu p e
478 -0 3 5 4
(WEN II a.m. to 9 o.m.
D
C1*
TRY OUR QUICK LUNCH SPECIAL
at $2 62 (Served Mon.-Fri. 1 1 :3 0 -1 :3 0 )
Its a variety of delicious food packed in a covered foam container
w hich w ill keep the food w a rm for an hour.
Its fast. You don't have to w ait. You alm o st get your food at the
tim e you order.
M O N D A Y Jan. 19
EGG ROLL
Mushroom Fried Rice
Sweet & Sour Pork
$262
TUESDAY Jan 2 0
EGG ROLL
Chicken Fried Rice
Beef with Broccoli
s262
So, S e n d a f r i e n d b y to p i c k up th e f o o d f o r t h e whole L u n c h
P a r t y !
WEDNESDAY
Jan. 21
SURPRISE!!!
You can't believe
what you'll get for
$262
The biggest denom ination b ill p rin te d by the U.S.
today is the $100. The fo rm e rly -p rin te d $500, $1,000,
$5,000, $10,000 and $100,000 b ills a re n 't p rin te d
anym ore.
How m a n y
rooms are
in
the W hite House?
A n sw e r: 107.
The f ir s t m ovie ever to w in the A cadem y A w a rd
was " W in g s ," s ta rrin g C lara Bow, Buddy Rogers,
R ichard A rle n and G ary Cooper, m ade in 1929.
How m uch
to elephants w e ig h t? The biggest
w eight about 14,000 pounds each.
O ddly, the state of D elaw are was nam ed a fte r the
colonial g o ve rn o r of V irg in ia — Lord De La W a rr —
who never tra ve le d to the state nam ed a fte r h im in
his life.
And, h ere's another in te re s tin g fa c t... The fir s t
open m eeting of the U n iv e rs ity Co-Op Board of
D ire c to rs this sem ester w ill be at 5:30 p.m . T h u rs
in the Texas Union E astw ood
day, J a n u a ry 22,
Room, 2.102. A ll m em bers — UT students, fa c u lty
and s ta ff — are in vited. P L E A S E C O M E !
VI SA
MasterCharge
F ree 1 H r. P a r k in g
w $ 3 . 0 0 P u rc h a s e
ofp stars)
o
8‘30
( X«o* 4U
fM ta* w ry
4my fw
for imtmi
ATTENTION
ALL U.T. STUDENTS:
We a t W a lla c e 's B o o ks to re k n o w th a t b u y in g y o u r
books a t the s ta r t of a new s e m e s te r is n e v e r easy, b u t o u r
h u s tle m e a n s less hassle fo r you. T r y us fo r fa s t, one-stop s e r
v ic e and q u ic k c h e c k o u t.
HUGE — AND WE MEAN HUGE — SELECTION OF NEW
AND USED TEXTBOOKS FOR YOUR CLASSES. T h is
m e a n s th a t you w o n 't h a ve a n y p ro b le m s fin d in g
th e books you need. M a k e it easy on y o u rs e lf by
te x tb o o k s q u ic k ly and c o n
b u y in g a ll y o u r
th e
v e n i e n t l y a t W a lla c e 's . A n d c h e c k o u t
q u a n t it y of used te x tb o o k s we c a r r y . The io w e r
p ric e s f o r used books can r e a lly he lp re d u c e e x
penses.
PLUS PAPER, NOTEBOOKS, PENS AND PENCILS,
HIGHLIGHTERS, CALENDARS, REFERENCE AND TRADE
BOOKS, CARDS, ENCYCLOPEDIAS. W a lla c e 's is y o u r
one-stop sh o p for all y o u r school needs.
YOU STUDENTS TAKING ARCHITECTURE, ART, HOME
ECONOMICS, JOURNALISM OR ENGINEERING — B rin g
in those long lists of s p e cia l s u p p lie s to us. No
need to look a ll o v e r to w n . Y ou c a n get w h a te v e r
you need a t W a lla c e 's , in o u r A r t D e p a rtm e n t.
THIS MAY BE THE SPRING SEMESTER, BUT SPRING
WEATHER IS STILL A LONG WAY AWAY.
So, not only do we c a rry T-shirts and shorts, we also have a
large selection of jackets, sweat shirts and pants, knitted caps
and mittens, all in orange and white, of course. Not to mention
every other kind of novelty you can think of with the U.T. In
signia on it.
V I S A
OPEN 9-6
M on.-Sat.
umuAcex
your book store, and more store.
2244 GUADALUPE
SPECIAL STORE HOURS:
AAon., Tues., and Wed. (Jan. 19, 20, 21) 8:30
A M to 9:30 PM
Thurs. (J a n .22) 8:30 A M to 8:00 P M
F r i. (Jan. 23) 8:30 A M to 6:00 P M
within 45 days of the classroom session Sailing will be done
at Town Lake SailAway at 2005 South Lakeshore Blvd . NR
shuttle bus can be taken from cam pus Note You must
register in person for this class
Sec 1
Sec 2
Instructor: Freída Jackson TownLake Sail Away F ees $24-
UT; $28-0
7 30 - 9 30
7 30 - 9 30
March 30
April 13
Mon
Mon
BASIC SCUBA DIVING: This cou rse w ill fa m ilia rize
stu dents with
scuba equipm ent, diving p h ysics and
physiology, safety, dive tables as well as m arine life, first
aid, and rescue breathing, Upon successful com pletion of e x
am, pool work, and open w ater training, students will be cer
tified as a PADI or NAUI basic scuba diver Diving equip
ment, air, text and log book, and dive tables are included in
the cost of the course. Students must provide light weight ten
nis shoes or wet suit booties for pool and open water sessions
Students must attend all classes, pool, and open water
sessions and are required to dem onstrate basic swim m ing
sk ills at the first pool sessio n NOTE: YOU MUST
REGISTER FOR THIS CLASS IN PERSON
6:00 - 9:00
March 24 - April 28
Tues
Instructor: Jim Fuller J. Rich Sports F ees: $96-UT, $102-0.
licensed
SKYDIVING This first jump course consists of intensive
practical training in aircraft exits, parachute canopy control,
landings, and em ergency procedures. Participants will jump
from an altitude of 2800 feet under the supervision of a United
States Parachute Association
instructor P ar
ticipants will be equipped with a main and reserve parachute
packed bv an FAA rigger Plan to spend all day to train and
do your jump NOTE YOU MUST REGISTER FOR THIS
COURSE IN PERSON. Class will be held at Bird’s N est Air
(10 m iles from Austin) so transportation will be
port
necessary A map to the airport will be given at registration
See l
Sec, 2
Sec 3
See 4
Sec 5
Sec. 6
Instructor Kevin Gibson Austin Parachute Center. F ees
$65-U T . $69-0
9:00 -dark
9:00 -dark
9 :0 0 -dark
9 00 -dark
9:00 -dark
9:00 -dark
Feb 7
Feb. 14
Feb. 21
Feb. 28
Mar 28
Sat
Sat.
Sat.
Sat.
Sat.
Sat.
April 4
WINDSURFING: An exciting sport whose popularity is grow
ing. windsurfing dem ands coordination and agility as you
learn to work with the wind, w ater, your sail, and board The
course consists of one classroom session in which you are in
troduced to basic technique; then each person will have two
hours of individual instruction and four hours of practice tim e
on the water. Sign-up for individual lessons will be during the
classroom session on Monday night. These lessons and the
practice tim e will be scheduled Monday-Friday from 1:00 -
dark and must com pleted within 45 days of the classroom
session Windsurfing will be done at TownLake SailAway at
2005 South Lakeshore Blvd.; NR shuttle can be taken from
cam pus NOTE: You m ust be a good sw im m er and feel com
fortable in the water to enroll in this class and YOU MUST
REGISTER IN PERSON.
Sec. 1
Sec. 2
Instructor: Freida Jackson TownLake SailAwav. F ees: $24-
UT; $28-0.
Monday April 27
Monday May 4
7:30 - 9:30
7:30 - 9:30
BASIC BREADMAKING: Butter bran bread, cottage cheese-
omon bread, pecan rolls, cinnamon rolls, and basic white
bread will be m ade in class to introduce you to principles and
processes involved in making bread. Other bread recipes,
many of which include natural food grains, will be discussed
and distributed. You will take your bread hom e at the end of
each class; in addition, you will have the opportunity to sam
ple other breads, including whole wheat and rye You could
bring your own salad or cheese to go along with the fresh hot
bread you will be sam pling and m ake a m eal of the class.
Plan to bring your own ingredients (about $8 00) and utensils
(m aterials list given at registration) and a book to read while
the bread is baking
Mon.
Instructor: Hilda Higley F ees: $22-UT, $26-0
Feb. 16-March 9
7:00-10:30
GOURMET FRENCH COOKING: Come to my kitchen ready
to sam ple dishes from the wide variety and richness of
French cooking Foods will include classic recipes from the
north of France as well as from N ice and Provence. We will
also prepare together a group of elegant French desserts and
American favorites such as Quiche Lorraine and Chocolate
Mousse. R ecipes will be distributed at each class
6 30-9:30
Tues.
Instructor: Linda Koebert F ees $23-UT; $27-0. (Plus $12 to
cover cost of food payable to
instructor at first class
m eeting).
Feb 17-March 10
HOME-STYLE ITALIAN COOKING: This
four session
course will add pizzazz to your life as you are introduced to
the colorful, nutritious, and inexpensive dishes of Italian
cooking. Each session we will prepare and eat a three course
m eal which will feature dishes such as polenta with m eat
sauce; fettucini carbonara; and m anicotti. Come prepared to
participate and to sam ple authemc Italian cooking
Tues
Thurs.
Sec. 1
Sec. 2
Instructor: Tracy Córtese. F ees $23-UT; $27-0 (P lu s $12 to
cover cost of food payable to
instructor at first class
m eetin g.)
Jan. 27-Feb. 17 6:00-9:00
Jan. 29-Feb. 19 6:00-9:00
JEWISH COOKING: Austin’s gourm et Jew ish caterer,
in
Joanne Hartman, will offer six weeks of instruction
'W M W km id IIHIiBWMMMilM
preparation of a variety of gastronom ic delights. The course
is free and will m eet on Monday nights starting February 2 at
7 30 at the Hillel Center, 2105 San Antonio. For m ore inform a
tion. call 476-0125 DO NOT REGISTER FOR THIS CLASS
AT THE INFORMAL CLASSES REGISTRATION
EAST M EDITERRANEAN COOKING: This course will be a
cooking trip from Turkey to G reece to the Balkan countries
into the intriguing Middle E ast with dishes such as Moussaka,
yogourt soup. Greek salad, and the fam ous Borekas You will
prepare under supervision and eat a different three course
m eal at each class. Bring an apron or a kitchen towel with
you to class
Mon
6 00-9:00
Instructor Esther Plitm ann F ees $34-UT; $38-0 plus $15 to
cover cost of food for entire course payable to instructor at
first class m eeting
Feb. 2-Mar 9
In
this six session course, a
MEXICAN BRUNCHES:
different main dish, such as chilaquiles and huevos m otulenos
(m exican eggs benedict), will be featured each week In addi
tion. we will learn to m ake tortillas and a variety of fruit dis
hes to accom pany the m eal. Class tim e will be prim arily
dem onstration with student participation when possible; we
will eat the brunch we have prepared at the end of each class
session
Thurs.
7:00-9:30
Instructor Virginia Wood. F ees: $25-UT; $29-0 (P lus $10 to
cover cost of food payable to
instructor at first class
m eeting.)
March 26-April 30
MEXICAN DINNERS. Acquaint yourself with the rich and
varied cuisines of the interior of M exico in this six session
course A poultry dish from a different region of M exico and
appropriate side dishes will be dem onstrated at each session
We will prepare and eat dishes such as Pipían Verde (chicken
with green sauce and sesam e seeds) and Pollo de M estizo, a
chicken dish which exem p lifies the French and Spanish in
fluence in M exican cooking R ecipes will be distributed, and
we will eat the m eal that we have prepared at the end of each
class
7:00-9:30
Thurs.
Instructor: Virginia Wood F ees: $25-UT; $29-0 (plus $12 to
cover cost of food payable to
instructor at first class
m eeting.)
Feb. 5-March 12
BARTENDING This course will cover the basics of liquor,
m ixing drinks, glassw are, recipes. You will also learn about
liquers and after-dinner drinks. You will mix several drinks
each class period. Each section m eets five tim es.
Sec 1
Sec 2
Sec. 3
Sec. 4
Sec 5
Sec. 6
Sec. 7
Sec 8
Instructor: Jack Rushing. F ees $26-UT; $30-0
Feb. 2 - -March 2
Feb 2 - March 2
Feb 2 - March 2
Feb 2 - March 2
March 23 - April 20
March 23 - April 20
March 23 - April 20
March 23 - April 20
Mon
Mon.
Mon.
Mon.
Mon.
Mon.
Mon
Mon
4 :0 0 -5 :1 5
5:30 - 6:45
7 :0 0 -8 :1 5
8:30 - 9 45
4 :0 0 -5 :1 5
5 :3 0 -6 :4 5
7 :0 0 -8 :1 5
8 :3 0 -9 :4 5
CALIFORNIA CABERNETS & CHARDONNAYS: In the last
few years, these w ines have dram atically improved in quali
ty. This course will be an in depth look at the very best of the
California cabernets and chardonnays. We will com pare
stylistic and geographic differences of the w ines that we sam
ple.
Wed
Instructor: Dave Gibson. F ees: $29-UT; $33-0.
March 25 - April 15
6:00 - 7:30
CALIFORNIA WINES: This course is an introduction to the
m ajor California varietals. Basic wine information will be
stressed, and we will sam ple m ajor California varieties such
as cabernet sauvignon, chardonnary, chenin blanc, and johan-
nisberg riesling.
Thurs
Instructor. N eile Wolfe. F ees: $30-UT; $34-0.
Feb. 5 - March 12
8 .00 - 9 30
CHAM PAG NES AND SPAR KLING S W INES: All that
sparkles is not cham pagne, but it still can be very good. We
will do com parative tastings of french cham pagnes and other
sparkling wines. The em phasis of the course will be on discus
sion, tasting, and enjoym ent of the wines.
Thurs.
Instructor: N eile Wolfe F ees: $32-UT; $36-0
March 26 - April 16
8 -9 :3 0
INTRODUCTION TO WINE: Basic wine information will be
stressed in this survey cla ss You will sam ple wine from
F rance, California, G erm any, and Spain with the em phasis
on how to use, understand, and taste wine
Thurs.
Feb. 5 - March 12
Feb. 4 - March 11
March 25 - April 29
Thurs. March 26 - April 30
See l
sec. 2 Wed.
Sec. 3 Wed
Sec. 4
Instructor: Sec. 1 & 4 - N eile Wolfe. Sec. 2 & 3 - Dave Gibson
F ees: $30-UT; $34-0
6 00 - 7:30
8:00 -9 .3 0
8:00 - 9 30
6:00 - 7:30
WINES OF EUROPE E xam ples of wines from Germany
France. Spain, and Italy will be sam pled and com pared We
will also discuss geography and nom enclature B a s il wine in
formation will be stressed with the em phasis on how to taste,
use, and understand wine
Wed.
Instructor: Dave Gibson F ees $30-UT; $34-0.
Feb 4 - March 11
6 00 7:30
ACUPUNCTURE WITHOUT NEED LES: ACUPRESSURE
This intensive weekend workshop blends theory of Chinese
m edicine — the five elem en ts, diagnostics, acupuncture
m eridians — with practical application in acupressure. You
will learn about pressure points on the body; techniques in
self-m assage; body armouring; and special form ulas for
problem areas such as back pains and headaches. You will
feel GREAT on Sunday afternoon! Wear light cotton clothes
and bring a blanket or mat
Sec. 1
F n .S a t. Sun
Feb 13
Feb. 14
Feb 15
Feb 27
Feb. 28
Mar 1
7-10 pm
11 am-6 pm
12-5 pm
7-10 pm
11 am-6 pm
12:00-5:00 pm
Sec 2
Fri Sat. Sun
Instructor: Kathleen Daniel. F ees $28-UT; $32-0.
EXERCISE: A far cry from monotonous calistenics' This
cla ss will provide a continuous and vigorous work-out to
m usic which will take off inches. We will work on toning and
trim m ing problem s such as thighs, pones, and abdomen.
These ex ercises flow together so that you can rem em ber
them and practice them at home. Wear leotards and stirrup
tights or a sw eatsuit
Sec 1 M W
T Th
Sec. 2
Sec. 3
T/Th
Res Hall M W
(P riority in this section will be given to residence hall
students You m ust show proof of residency — Jester I D.,
m eal card, or disc — at registration.)
Instructor: Sec. 1. 2 — Glen Dawson; Sec. 3 and R es Hall —
Kathy Fisher F ees: $25-UT; $29-0
Feb. 2-Apnl 15
Feb. 3-April 16
Feb. 3-April 16
Feb 2-April 15
12:00-1:00
12:00-1 00
2.45-3:45
2:30-3:30
is
SELF-DESIG NED PHYSICAL FITNESS. This cla ss
designed for beginning and advanced athletes who wish to
build endurance, increase circulation and tone the entire
m usculature. The instructor works from the prem ise that
every person is different and needs particular ex ercises on an
individual basis It is a vigorous, yet non-com petitive class
that will result in m ore strength, m ore flexibility, improved
posture as well as less back and neck pain. Open to men and
women.
M W
Instructor: Debra Eaton. F ees: $25-UT; $29-0
Feb. 2-April 15
6:15-7:15
OKINAWAN KARATE: Uechi Ryu is one of the four m ajor
styles of Okinawa, birthplace of Karate. As it com bines the
hard punches of Okinawan te with the soft blocks of the
southern Chinese style Pangainoon, Uechi Ryu is an effective
self-defense system The em phasis of the course is on perfec
tion of form Mind/body coordination, poise, lim berness, and
strength are the goals. Participants should wear
loose
clothing.
M W
Instructor: Gregg Weber. F ees: $34-UT; $38-0.
Feb. 2-April 15
7:00-9 00
KI-AIKIDO The aim of Aikido practice is self-aw areness
and self-developm ent. F irst, ex ercises will be taught to
develop a sound understanding of mind-body coordination,
followed by Aikido arts (self-d efense techniques), breathing,
and flexibility ex ercises. All practice will be non-fighting and
non-com petitive and requires relaxed coordination rather
than physical strength. No previous skills are necessary.
Open to m en, wom en, and children. P articipants should wear
loose clothing suitable for exercising
T/Th
Instructor: Kurt Von Quintus. F ees $31-UT; $35-0
Feb. 3-April 16
5:30-7:00
KUNG FU: This course will cover the two main categories of
('hiñese m artial arts: the Praying Mantis system and Shai
Chiao The Praying M antis system is an advanced Shaolm
tem ple system in which the person blocks a punch, grabs with
the blocking hand and pulls the opponent off balance, then
closes in by sim ultaneously striking with the opposite hand.
Soft and hard principles, kicking techniques, and fighting
principles are also studied Shai Chiao, the ancient Chinese
body throwing art which is the ancestor of Judo, w as founded
thousands of years ago and em phasizes close distance com
bat Sparring, belt cracking exercises, and solo form s will be
com pletely covered Belt and Kung Fu pants are required and
m av be purchased from instructor
M W
Instructor John Wang. F ees $41-UT; $45-0
P'eb. 2-May 6
7 :30-9 45
T'AI CHI: T ’ai chi is a series of slow, flowing m ovem ents
which tones m uscles, im proves balance and concentration,
and prom otes relaxation and the release of tension T'ai chi
w as invented over 500 years ago, and it is still practiced by
m illions of Chinese today. In this course you will learn a set
form of t ’ai chi which you can use anywhere and anytim e
The feeling, as well as the physical form of t ’ai chi. will be
em phasized
M/W
April 6-April 29
Instructor Anya-Rylander Jones. F ees $14 UT $18 0
5:00-6 00
HATHA Y(XIA (BEG I AND II) Yoga was developed as a
scien ce with specifn m ethods for bettering the total well
being of an individual Hatha Yoga consists of "postures
that work on the m ajor physiological system s
circulatory,
respiratory, nervous, glandular When properly com bined
with sp ecific breathing and relaxation techniques, these
"postures’’ affect the m ajor nerve and glandular plexuses
and a natural control over the body in established The
Beginner’s II class offers more in depth study Students Beg
I purchase a Yoga workbook <$7) from the instructor at the
first cla ss m eeting NOTE: Students enrolling in Beg II must
have com pleted Beg I
Yoga I:
Tues.
Sec 1
Sec 2 Wed.
Sec. 3
Yoga II
Feb. 3-M arch31
Feb 4 April 1
Feb. 5-April2
4:30-6:00
4 30-6 00
5:30-7:00
Thurs.
Thurs.
Scot Hill.
Instructors Beg I Sec 1
Sec 3 - Mike Breland Beg II — Mike Breland F ees $24
UT. $28-0
Tom Linchan Set 2
Feb. 5-April 2
7 15-8 45
Advertising S u p p le m e n t to The Daily Texan • January 19, 19H1
9
1
1253
BASIC DARKROOM (B & W ): D iscover the sa tisfac tio n of
m aking your own photographs in the d ark ro o m This in troduc
tory co u rse will teach basic a sp e cts of the photographic
pro c ess and use of the dark ro o m as a basic tool You will
learn e verything from developing film to m ounting and spot
ting finished p rin ts P eople who have an a d ju sta b le c a m e ra
which they know how to o p e ra te a re best suited for the
course, but anyone w ith a c a m e ra can learn how to develop
and print his or h e r own film
F ri
In stru c to r: W alter Lenoir F e e s: $48-UT; $52-0
cludes $20 lab fee)
1:00-6 00
(P ric e in
Feb. 6-M arch 6
trad itio n a l Ja p a n e se painting
JA P A N E S E INK PA IN TIN G (SU M I-E ), BEG & IN T .: In
this course on
techniques,
stu d en ts will learn how to use India ink on ric e p a p er with
bam boo b ru sh es to paint flow ers, n a tu ra l scenery, birds and
v egetables. The c la ss will consist of lec tu re , d e m o nstration,
and p ra c tic e under supervision. No previous experien ce
n e ce ssa ry , only a love of painting The in te rm e d ia te level is a
continuation of the beginner in which we will do a n im a ls and
in
m o re a d v a n c e d n a tu r a l s c e n e ry . P r e r e q u is ite fo r
te rm e d ia te
the beginner
you m u st have a lre a d y taken
Ja p a n e se Ink P ainting. A list of m a te ria ls will be a v ailab le a t
re g istra tio n (A pproxim ate cost: $20)
Beg.
Int
In stru c to r: M itsuko H iraizum i F ees: $20-UT. $24-0.
Feb. 3-M arch 10
Feb. 3-M arch 10
5:30-7 :30
7:30-9:30
T ues
Tues.
IN T E R M E D IA T E PH OTOGRA PHY : D uring this six week
course, we will su rvey the histo ry of photography a s well as
view the w ork of c o n te m p o ra ry p h otographers such a s R obert
F rank, Diane A rbus, R ichard Avedon, and E rn e s t Haas. In
addition, we will discuss your own photographs in class. C lass
session will co n sist of one hour slide show lec tu re and one
hour c ritiq u e of stu d e n ts’ work T here will be four field trip s
on the w eekends to shoot pictures. Students should own and
know how to o p e ra te a 35mm or 120 c a m e ra . P lan to spend
about $8-$15 on film
Wed
7:30-9:30
In stru c to r W alter Lenoir. F e e s: $35-UT; $39-0. (P ric e s in
c ludes $16 lab fee).
F eb 4-M arch 11
L E A D E D STA IN ED GLASS: In this co u rse you will learn to
design and a sse m b le a leaded glass panel of two to th ree
sq u a re feet. O riginal designs a re encouraged Topics to be
covered include: techniques of design, color theory, g lass c u t
ting, soldering and glazing, and a b rief introduction to glass
etching. NOTE M a terials a re NOT included in the course
fee. Call 471-3654 for m o re inform ation on m a te ria ls.
T hurs
In stru c to r: M ichael Y eager. F ees: $26-UT; $30-0.
F eb. 19-April 2
7:00-10:00
W ATERCOLOR: We will begin w ith basic d e m o n stra tio n s of
the m ajo r techniques of w aterco lo r. Students will have the
c h an c e to e x p e rim e n t a s well a s work w ith the trad itio n al
still life and landscape fo rm a ts Though th e re will be som e
d e m o n stra tio n and explanation of basic th eo ries and p rin
ciples of a rt, stu d e n ts will spend the m a jo rity of the c la ss
tim e painting under supervision The e m p h asis of this cou rse
is on self-expression through the m edium of w atercolor.
10:00 a m -l:0 0 pm
S at
In stru c to r Jo y c e L ieberm an, F ees: $35-UT; $39-0. (P lan to
spend about $10-$15 on m a te ria ls i
i a P n
f Ij A ' T H l i v l
F eb 7-April 25
AM ERICAN CAR R E P A IR A course designed to explain
how a c a r w orks, how to m aintain a c a r so it keeps w orking,
and how to re p a ir it when it doesn’t. C lassroom sessions
cover safety periodic m ain ten an ce, tools, re p a ir m anuals,
the engine, e le c tric a l and ignition system s, carb u retio n , and
how to buy a c a r. L abs cover: periodic m aintenance, b re ak
down p rocedures, oil changes, brake inspection, steering
safety checks, and tune-ups
In labs, you m ay observe or
bring your own c ar to work on If you work on your own car,
plan to spend ap p ro x im ately $20 for p a rts and $25 tor tools,
depending on w hat you a lre ad y have Two Sunday labs a re
scheduled during the class.
Sec. 1 M/W
L abs.
Sec. 2 M/W
Sec 3 M/W
L abs:
L abs:
Feb. 2 - F eb 11
F eb 8,15
Feb. 23 - M arch 4
M arch 1.8
M arch 30 - April 8
April 5,12
6:00 - 8:00
6 00 - 8 00
6:00 - 8:00
In stru c to r. Steve M cG uire F ees: $24-UT. $28-0
BIK E R E P A IR FO R B E G IN N ER S: Does your bike baffle
you9 Does it squeak, clank, click, groan, ra ttle , or s tic k 9 You
don’t know when to lu b ric ate , w here, or w ith w hat Y ou’re
a fra id to tak e it a p a rt because it w on’t go back together
again T his re p a ir c o u rse is for the beginning m echanic who
is a fra id of nuts, bolts, and w renches Y ou’ll learn basic bike
re p air by understanding how the bike w orks, and w hat it
needs. Topics include; lubrication, g e ar dem istification, fix
ing flats, ad ju stin g b ra k es and d e raille u rs, b earing overhaul,
flats, wheel
trouble shooting, and developing a
m echanical a ttitu d e
M /W
In stru c to r Sue W hite F ees: $16 - UT; $20 - O
Feb. 2 - F e b . 18
7 30 - 9:00
trueing.
D E F E N S IV E D RIV IN G : D efensive driving m ea n s “ driving
so as to prev en t a cc id e n ts in spite of the a ctions of o th ers or
the p resen ce of a d v erse driving conditions T his course will
teach the student to a n tic ip a te w hat the “ o th er guy" m ight do
and how to avoid his accident-causing m istak es. C om pletion
of
insurance
p re m iu m s (check with your agent prior to re g is tra tio n —it
v a rie s from com pany to com pany).
the course m ay save up
lOG on au to
to
See l
Sec. 2
Sec. 3
In stru c to r: Tom Chisholm . F ees: $13-UT; $15-0.
F e b .3 & 4
Feb. 24 & 25
M arch 31 & April 1
Tues. & Wed
T ues & Wed.
T ues & Wed
6.00 - 10:00
6:00 - 10.00
6:0 0 -1 0 :0 0
is
PERSONAL FINANCIAL PLANNING: Y our m oney
alw ays w orking The big question is—for w hom 9 This survey
c la ss a im s a t expanding your knowledge of financial m a tte rs
in our h y per-inflationary econom y and will provide you som e
basic techniques for long-term planning, w hether you a re
m a rrie d o r single, presen tly em ployed or not. Topics include:
basic notions of financial planning (a sse t m an a g em e n t), life
insurance i how to m ea su re the need, if th ere is one), taxation
to fin a n c ia l w e ll-b e in g ),
and
risk rew ard
(from
g u a ra n te e s to speculation), tax-advantaged investing, the a t
to rn e y ’s role in financial and e sta te planning E ach p a rtic i
pant will be able to develop his or her own personal financial
plan (e ith e r a ctu al or hypothetical) using a v ailab le co m p u ter
softw are.
Wed.
In stru cto r: Ron Policy. F ees: $9-UT; $13-0.
investm ent sp e c tru m
th r e a ts
the
Feb. 4 - F e b 25
7:00 - 9:00
in fla tio n
( m a jo r
fa c to rs
in
from
the O ffice of
PRACTICAL LAW: A ttorneys
the
S tu d en ts’ A ttorney and the legal com m unity, local judges,
and o th er public officials will discuss various a re a s of the
law Topics will include fam ily law ; business, re al e sta te ,
tax, and p robate law
c rim in al law; and c onsum er and
lan d lo rd /te n an t law T his course is presented by the O ffice of
the Students' A ttorney.
M/W
In stru c to r: Ron Shortes F ees $6-UT; $10-0.
Feb 2 - F e b . 11
6 00 - 8 00
TH E ART OF SUCCESSFUL NEGO TIA TING : O r how to
n egotiate w ith your boss, a landlord, o r a collegue T his c la ss
is an introduction to th e skill of successful negotiating in
business, groups, organizations, and personal relationships.
Course m a te ria l will be synthesized from business, law , and
social psychology Topics to be covered included non-verbal
com m unication; basic stra te g ie s and ta c tic s; and how to get
w hat you w ant through negotiation. C lass tim e will be a co m
bination of
lec tu re , dem o n stratio n , and role-play which
should help stu d e n ts to d isco v er and im prove th eir own style
of negotiation
Wed.
In stru cto r: M ark B ennett F ees: $15-UT; $19-0.
F eb 18 - April 1
7 :0 0 -9 :0 0
1 1
RANCHO D E L C IE LO : C om e to a cloud fo re st for a week
this su m m e r' R ancho del Cielo, located on the e a s te rn front
of the S ie rra De G u a te m a la in so u th w estern T am aulip as,
M exico, is an ecological p a ra d ise for n a tu ra lis ts of all p e r
suasions M ore than th irty non-U.S. bird species nest in the
cloud fo rest, and orchids and bro m eliad s grow in abundance.
You can p a rtic ip a te in an inform al schedule of hikes and
w alks a s well as explore the cloud fo rest on your own. Once
you re ac h R ancho del Cielo, you will have no e xpenses; you
will be lodged in ru stic cab in s and all m eals a r e provided. The
fee of the trip does not co v er your tra n sp o rta tio n to and from
G om ez F a ria s which is a t the base of the m ountain up to
R ancho del Cielo. F o r m o re in form ation about the trip , call
Mr. F re d W ebster a t 451-1669 You m ay re g is te r for this trip
a t the re g u la r Inform al C lasses re g is tra tio n and also during
the s e m e s te r a t the Inform al C lasses office in the Union
P ro g ra m O ffice When you re g is te r, you m u st put down a $50
NON-REFUNDABLE deposit to hold your place. The deposit
will be applied to the $250/$255 fee; you m u st r e m it the
balance of the trip fee by Ju n e 12 o r forfeit your $50 deposit.
T here w ill be a slide show and a q u e stio n /a n sw e r session
about R ancho del Cielo for any in te re ste d p erso n s on T h u rs
day, J a n 22 a t 7:00 p m in Tx. Union 4.224
F e e s: $250-UT, $255-0. T rip d a te s: Aug 2-8, 1981.
C A L LIG RA PH Y : ROMAN BOOKHAND: In this c la ss you
w ill be introduced to Bookhand, the fo rm al and spacious
fifteen th c en tu ry a lp h a b et, w hich is the b asis of our type face
today You will co m p lete a place c ard , envelope, m onogram ,
and an invitation in c la ss. P lan to spend about $5 on m a te ria ls
(to be discussed a t first c la ss m eeting )
T hurs.
In stru c to r F ra n Chibib F e e s $20-UT; $24-0
A pril 2-April 30
5:00-6 30
Irish a lp h a b et
CA LLIG RA PH Y : CELTIC : A full and fo rm al v e rtica l text,
th is 8th c en tu ry
is v ery d iffere n t from
ch an c ery c u rsiv e or gothic, and it can be easily lea rn ed a s a
first o r second text
In this co u rse, we will learn the basic
alp h ab et and c o m p le te a m onogram , envelope, and vario u s
c a rd s P lan to spend about $5 on m a te ria ls — to be discussed
a t first c la ss m eeting.
T hurs
In stru c to r: F ra n Chibib F e e s: $20-UT; $24-0
F eb. 5-M arch 5
5:15-6:45
CALLIGRAPHY CHA NCERY CU RSIV E: C hancery C ursive
is an eleg an t, yet less fo rm al, form of c allig rap h y w hich you
can easily apply to your own h andw riting A sty le of slanted
handw riting. C hancery C ursive w as invented in th e fifteenth
cen tu ry for the papal sc rip ts, and it soon sp read all over
E u ro p e You need not be an a r tis t to p ra c tic e c allig rap h y and
be able to m ake g re etin g c a rd s, invitations, and o rn a m e n ta l
bo rd e rs which a r e personalized and visually pleasing P lan to
spend about $5 on m a te ria ls (to be discussed a t first c la ss
m e e tin g )
Sec 1
Sec 2
Sec 3
In stru c to r F ra n Chibib. F e e s $20-UT; $24-0
Feb. 5-M arch5
April 2-April 30
Feb. 5-M arch5
3:45-5:15
3:15-4:45
6 45-8 15
T hurs
T hurs
T hurs
CA LLIGRAPHY OLD ENGLISH SC R IPT The Old E nglish
text is a v e rtic a l, fo rm al s c rip t which w as the type se t for the
G utenburg Bible O ften re fe rre d to a s the “ C h ristm a s c ard
te x t." Old E nglish G othic is beautiful and onate. P lan to
spend about $5 on m a te ria ls which will be d iscu ssed a t th e
first c la ss m eeting
T hurs
In stru c to r F ra n Chibib F e e s $20-UT; $24 0.
April 2-April 30
6:30-8:00
( AM ERA BASICS B ecom e a cq u a in te d w ith your c a m e ra
through a se ries of talks, slide show s, and p ra c tic a l e x
perie n ce s The co u rse will co v er c a m e ra handling; m aking
sh a rp and w ell-exposed p ic tu re s in a v a rie ty of situ atio n s,
p ic tu re com position and photo-history T h ere will be a couple
of c la ss field trip s on S atu rd ay m o rn in g s to shoot p ictu res un
d e r supervision
T /T h
Sec. 1
Sec 2
T /T h
In stru c to r W alter I,en«>ir F e e s $4l-lJT, $45-0. (includes
$22 50 m a te ria ls fee)
F eb 3-Feb 19
M arch 24-April 9
7:30-9:30
7 :30-9 30
HOOKED ON CROCHET I : This course will cover all the
basic stitches of crochet, including the afghan stitch. You will
also learn to read patterns. The em phasis of the course is on
learning by doing projects will include a wall hanging, a
pillow, and a special project of your own choosing.
Thurs.
Instructor: Suzann Thompson Fees: S17-UT; $21-0.
Feb 5-March 12
5:30-7:30
FIBER & FABRIC SCULPTURE: The main object of this ten
session course is for you to design and produce a fiber sculp
ture. We will explore the sculptural protential of fiber and
fiber techniques through discussion of fabric in contemporary
art; in the work of the native American and other geographic
groups; and through slide presentations It would be helpful
to have som e background in any of the following: knitting,
sewing; m acram e, or any other needle work. Students will
choose their own m aterial which can be at virtually no cost
or, if desired, m ore expensive. Bring a pencil, sketch book,
and paper to the first class m eeting.
Tues.
Feb. 3-Apr. 14
Instructor: Kanola Aulick. Fees: $31-UT; $35-0.
5:30-7:30
BASIC QUILTING: Start your o w t i heirloom ' This beginner
quilting course will introduce you to piecing, applique, string,
quilts, and other techniques. The format of the class will be
learning be doing — by the end of the course, you should have
com pleted six quilt squares and have sufficient skill to com
plete your won quilt. Plan to spend about $25 on m aterials.
Don't purchase any m aterials before first class m eeting.
Wed.
Instructor: Ann Harrington F ees: $25-UT; $29-0.
' Feb. 4-March 25
6:30-9:00
BASIC SEWING TECHNIQUES: Tired of paying more
money for clothes than your budget can afford0 In this basic
course, you w ill learn and practice a variety of sewing
techniques that will enable you to m ake your own clothes and
expand your w-ardrobe. Class sessions w ill consist of discus
sion, lots of dem onstration, and attention to any special
problems that students are having on their projects Plan to
spend $5-$20 on m aterials, depending on the cost of your
choice of fabric Do not purchase any m aterials before the
first class m eeting. You must own or have a ccess to a sewing
machine.
T/Th
Instructor: Carolyn Norulak. F ees: $24-UT; $28-0
Feb. 3-March 5
7:00-9:00
WEAVING WITHOUT A LOOM: Rugs, pillows, vests, and
wall hangings can all be produced without a loom. In this ten
session course, you will learn basic w eaves and variations
(plain, basket, tw ill); rug techniques; wrapping and coiling;
and warp manipulation You will have the opportunity to ex
perim ent with the different w eaves by com pleting four sm all
“sam plers." Then you will choose your own projects.
M aterials will be discussed at first class m eeting — they can
be very inexpensive or m ost costly depending on what you
choose Bring a sketchbook, paper, and pencil to the first
class
Thurs.
Instructor: Kanola Aulick Fees: $31-UT; $35-0.
Feb 5-Apr. 16
5:30-7:30 p.m.
/ j y ¿ j €
BLUEGRASS BANJO, BEG. & INT.: In the six session
beginner course, you will learn the basic Earl Scruggs three-
finger picking style through tablature and demonstration.
The interm ediate course will cover the m elodic playing style,
additional chords and inversions, and upper neck technique.
Both the beginning and interm ediate classes include special
sessions on reading m usic and on instrument repair.
Beg
Int
Instructor Don Prater F ees: $21-UT $25-0
Feb. 3 - March 10
Feb 3 - March 10
Tues.
Tues.
7:00 - 8:15
8:1 5 -9 :3 0
YOU BET YOUR BEETH O VEN1: What m akes a difficult,
antisocial, deaf man one of the greatest figures in Western
music? Find out by learning how to listen to his m usic Using
exam ples from sym phonies and piano sonatas by Beethoven,
this course will provide the student with basic skills for
listening to classical m usic Through informal lectures, class
discussion, and recorded or live perform ances, we w ill e x
plore a symphony and a sonata from each of the three periods
of Beethoven s creative life. Each work will be placed in the
context of Beethoven's own developm ent as a person and as
an artist No prior knowledge of music is required
Monday
Instructor: Bill Moore. Fees: $16-UT; $20-0.
Feb. 2 - March 30
7 00 - 8 30
GUITAR. BEGINNING We will cover the basics of chords,
rhythm, and som e single-note playing in this course The
em phasis is on applicability and actually playing tunes,
theory will be kept to a minimum You will be exposed to a
variety of guitar styles such as blues, folk, and country. No
gu itar background necessary , it is highly recom m ended that
you have a guitar and bring it to class
Sec 1 Wed
Sec 2 Wed
Sec 3
Tues
Instructor: Don Chamberlain F ees: $21-UT. $25-0.
Feb. 4 - April 1
Feb. 4 - April 1
Feb. 3 - M arch31
4 00 -5:30
5 30 - 7 00
5:00 -6:30
GUITAR, INTERMEDIATE This class is a more quickly
paced and advanced continuation of the beginning level guitar
course (see above). Students should already know basic open
position chords and be able to handle a guitar com fortably
Sec 1
Sec. 2
Instructor: Don Chamberlain Fees: $16-UT, $20-0
Feb. 5 -A p ril 2
Feb 5 - April 2
5 1 5 - 6 1 5
6 :1 5-7:15
Thurs.
Thurs.
CLASSICAL GUITAR Learn
to play "G reensleeves,"
"M alagueña, and other songs This course is designed as an
introduction to classical guitar open to people with or without
previous experience playing the guitar. Theory will be kept to
a minimum; students will learn basic techniques, chords, and
the fundam entals of reading m usic and m usical notation Br
ing an acoustic guitar to class.
Sec. 1
Sec. 2
Instructor: Jim Lawrie. F ees $18-UT; $22-0
Feb. 4 - April 15
Feb. 5 - April 16
Wed.
Thurs.
5:0 0 -6 :0 0
5 30 - 6:30
INTRODUCTION TO JAZZ G UITAR: This is a course design
ed for the interm ediate or better player with a serious in
terest in the playing and understanding of jazz guitar. Studies
will center on theory, technique, and transcriptions of solos of
the forem ost players in order to gam and improve im-
provisational skills.
Tues
Instructor. Don Chamberlain F ee s. $29-UT; $33-0
Feb. 3 - March 31
6:30 - 8 00
HISTORY OF JAZZ M USIC-ALL THAT'S JAZZ; A course
for fledgling and m ore seasoned jazz buffs wishing to gain an
overview of the evolution of the only major m usic form from
America. A pleasant balance of lecture and listening (with an
occasional in-depth su td y) of each style and the players who
m ade it will give the student a greater appreciation of jazz as
a whole and enhance the ability to listen intelligently to all
the varied form s this m usic takes.
Thurs.
Instructor: Don Chamberlain. F ees $16-UT; $20-0.
Feb. 5 -A pril 2
7:30 - 9:00
WOMEN COMPOSERS IN WESTERN MUSIC: By and large,
women com posers are m issing
in m usic history books
Scholars of w estern history are now discovering hundreds of
women who tried, som etim es against great odds, to write
m usic. The intent of this course is two-fold: to approach
selected w om en’s works on purely m usical term s, and to
show how historical forces affected their lives The class will
range from fem ale troubadours of the 12th century to the
many wom en com posing today and is m eant to be a lively in
troduction to a long neglected field. Listening, biographical
lectures, m usical analysis, and open discussion will all be a
part of the course. No m usic background necessary—only a
sense of adventure in listening to different m usical styles.
NOTE: com posers of jazz, rock, and popular m usic will not
be included in this course.
Thurs.
Instructor: Ann Yama. F ees: $16-UT, $20-0
Feb. 5 - April 2
7:30 - 9:00
AUSTIN'S FAVORITES (C & W): Spend a Sunday afternoon
learning the C & W basics: The Texas two-step; the waltz;
and the polka. You can leave this m ini-course Sunday after
noon and head for the dance hall!
Sunday
Instructor: Jean Tarlton. F ees: $4-UT; $5-0
3:00-5:30
Feb. 8
BALLET ( B E G .), LEVEL I : Ballet, Level I will offer a basic
but thorough introduction to ballet, barre work, dance exer
cises, adagio, petit and grand allegro, and pirouettes while
letting you enjoy the fun of the m usic and being with other
people. At the com pletion of the course, you will be able to
perform a variety of basic ballet variations.
Sec. 1
Sec. 2
Sec. 3
Sec. 4
Instructors: Sec. 1 & 2 J A Lazarus; Sec. 3 Lynn Grossman:
Sec. 4 Glen Dawson F ees: $38-UT; $42-0.
Feb.-Apr. 16
Feb. 2-Apr. 15
Feb. 2-Apr. 15
Feb. 3-Apr 16
12.00-1:15
6 00-7:15
4:30-5:45
4:00-5:15
T/Th
M/W
M/W
T/Th
BALLET (B E G .) LEVEL II: If you've already had at least
one sem ester of ballet and are anxious to review the basics
and learn new ballet techniques, this is the class for you.
Level II will introduce new steps and m ore com plex se
quences at the barre and in the center
Sec. 1
Sec. 2
Instructor J A Lazarus. F ees: $38-UT; $42-0.
Feb. 3-Apr. 16
Feb. 2-Apr. 15
5:15-6:30
7:30-8:45
T/Th
M/W
BALLET, INTERM EDIATE: If you have com pleted at least
two sem esters of beginning level ballet, perhaps you are
ready for the challenge of interm ediate ballet We w ill con
centrate on adagio work and on fast steps (such as assem ble.
Ballone, tem ps de euisse) as we begin to practice the m ore
com plex grand allegro, m ultiple turns, and beats P rere
quisite: 2 or m ore sem esters of ballet.
T'Th
Instructor: J.A. Lazarus. F ees $38-UT; $42-0
Feb. 3-Apr. 16
6:30-7:45
BELLYDANCE, BEG. & INT Bellydance is a series of sen
suous. undulating m ovem ents which are very graceful, sup
ple, and fluid The ex ercises can rem ove inches from the
waist, hips, and thighs and they are also relaxing. You will
learn the traditional style from Algeria which distinguishes
itself from the more com mon
cabaret" style by the dual
concentration of flowing hand m ovem ents and graceful body
techniques
Beg
Sec 1
Sec 2
Sec 3
Sec 4
Sec. 5
Int.
Sec 1
Sec 2
Instructor: Beg sec. 1, 2. 4, 5 — Laurie Forteith; Beg sec. 3
& Int sec. 1, 2 — Pam Clem ent F ees: $23-UT; $27-0
COUNTRY SWING The recent m ovie, "Urban Cowboy,"
highlights the popular dance style. Country Swing. A couple's
dance which is made up of sim plified foot patterns and in
Feb 3-Mar 5
5:30-6:30
Feb 3-Mar. 5
6:30-7:30
Feb 2-Mar 4
6:30-7:30
Mar. 24-Apr 23 5:30-6:30
Mar. 24-Apr 23 6:30-7:30
Feb 2-Mar 4
5:30-6:30
Mar 23-Apr 22 5:30-6:30
T Th
T Th
M W
T Th
T/Th
M W
M W
triguing m oves and turns. Country Swing is easier to learn
than you m ay think and m ore fun than you can im agine In
this course you'll be learning current steps which can be
danced to rock and disco m usic, as well as to Country and
Country Rock
Sec 1
Sec. 2
Instructor Antone Horton F ees $15-UT; $19-0
Feb. 3-Feb 12
7 :00-9 00
Feb 17-Feb 26 7 :00-9 00
T Th
T Th
COUNTRY WESTERN DANCE: Make yourself at hom e at
local dance halls! We'll learn the cotton-eyed Joe, jitterbug,
waltz, polka, schottische, and T exas two-step
kicker style
— in this six session course.
Sec. 1
Sec. 2
Instructor Jean Tarlton F ees: $15-UT. $19-0
7:30-9:00
Feb. 2-Mar. 9
Mar. 23-Apr 27 7:30-9:00
Mon.
Mon
DANCE MACHINE: You will dance to live m usic in this
energetic course which will cover dance styles from the
1920 s, up through the 30’s and 40’s, and into the 1960's. This is
basically a jazz c la ss which features dance styles of m usical
theatre from various decades. No previous jazz dance e x
perience is required. Be prepared to m ove alot'
T/Th
Instructor: Glen Dawson.
F ees $35-UT; $39-0. (P lus approxim ately $5 to cover cost of
piano accom paniest for entire course, payable to instructor
at first cla ss m eeting.)
Feb 3-April 16
2:00-3:15
DANCING FIT: This is an aerobic exercise program through
fun and vigorous dancing One hour c la sse s begin with a
warm up routine followed by active dancing and finish with a
sm ooth cool down routine Heart rates are monitored
between dances. A variety of m usic and m ovem ent will help
you get in shape and have fun doing it No dance background
necessary Each student must sign waiver and release which
states they have doctor’s approval to participate in a fitness
program
Sec 1
Sec. 2
Instructor: from Dancing Fit. F ees $16-UT; $20-0
Mar 30-Apr. 29 5:15-6:15
Mar. 30-Apr.29 5:15-6:15
M/W
M/W
ISRAELI DANCING: This class is free and open to any level
of dancer and will take place at the Hillel Center on Wednes
day nights from 7:30-10:00. Call Maryon Rosenthal at 476-0125
or 327-5646 for m ore information. DO NOT register for this
class at the Informal C lasses registration.
JAZZ, LEVEL I: This is basically a fun, high-evergv course
for people who like to m ove alot. It enables you to stretch and
tone your m uscles while learning dance styles that are pop
ular on Broadway and in early film m usicals. Wear leotards
and stirrup tights.
Sec. 1
Sec. 2
Sec. 3
Instructor Sec. 1 & 2 — J.A. Lazarus; Sec. 3 — Kathy Fisher
Fees: $38-U T ; $42-0.
Feb. 3-Apr. 16 1:30-2:45
Feb. 2-Apr. 15 4:00-5:15
Feb. 3-Apr. 16 5:45-7:00
T/Th
M/W
T/Th
JAZZ II Continuation of instruction from the Level I c la ss or
for those who have had som e previous jazz dance experience
M/W
1:30-3:00
Instructor: Glen Dawson. F ees: $38-UT; $42-0.
Feb. 2-Apr. 15
JITTERBUG: Spend a Sunday afternoon having learning the
basic steps of Jitterbug and its m ultiple turns and variations
Jitterbug is a really versatile dance which can be done to C &
W or disco m usic.
Sunday
Instructor: Jean Tarlton F ees: $4-UT; $5-0.
3:00-5:30
Feb. 22
MODERN DANCE, BEG.: This basic modern dance class is
designed to im prove body alignm ent through the developm ent
of your given strength and through flexibility exercises. We
will learn a variety of m ovem ents and m ovem ent com
binations focusing on rhythm ic and spacial aw areness and on
controlled and free form motion.
T/Th
Instructor: E m ily Burken. F ees: $38-UT; $42-0.
Feb. 3-Apr. 16
5:15-6:30
MODERN DANCE, INTERM EDIATE: C lasses will begin
with stretches and strengthening exercises to prepare for
com binations in the center and m ovem ent across the floor.
Each cla ss will build upon the student’s progression in m obili
ty. flexibility, and coordination. A variety of modern dance
techniques will be introduced. P rerequisite. Som e knowledge
of dance basics.
T/Th
4:00-5:30
Instructor: Kathy Fisher. F ees: $38-UT; $42-0. (P lus ap
proxim ately $8 to cover cost of piano accom panist for entire
course, payable to instructor at first class m eeting.)
Feb. 3-Apr. 16
WALTZ ACROSS TEXAS AND THE WORLD I: W altzes,
polkas, schottisches, sw ing, pivots and other social dances
will be taught through learnmg-by doing, so that students will
feel at e a se on the dance floor. We will start with Texas
dances such as Western and Texas Polkas and m ove to
related Am erican couple dances. The finest European couple
dances have been selected and include the Viennese waltz,
Irish jig. and smooth-turning Scandinavian schottische. Both
singles and couples w elcom e. Previous dance experience is
not necessary. If you have danced before, you will find
review s and an expanded range of dances popular in Texas,
USA, and the world
Thurs.
Instructor Michel Breger F ees $18-UT; $22-0.
Jan. 29-Apr 2
7:00-9:00
WALTZ ACROSS TEXAS AND THE WORLD. INTER
MEDIATE More popular couple dances from the U.S.A. and
the rest of the world will be presented. These dances are
selected from annual surveys of the m ost popular couple
dances done by thousands of dance clubs. While m ost of these
dances are not particularly difficult, previous experience
with couple dancing may be helpful, or even essential
Thurs
Jan. 29-Apr 2
Instructor Michel Breger F ees $9-UT, $13-0
9:00-10:00
EXPLO RIN G PERSONAL ASTROLOGY I This course
offers the basic skills and understanding necessary for natal
readings The symbology of astrology—signs, planets,
houses, aspects -will be covered Each student will complete
their own chart and be introduced to a humanistic system of
interpretation A small computer will be brought in to
calculate each person's chart Plan to spend about $6 on books
• to be discussed at first class meeting) and $2 on a com
puterized chart
Mon
Instruí tor Nancy Smith Fees $20-1 T . $24-0.
Feb 2-Apn! 13
7:00 - 9:00
B IC Y C L E TOURING IN E U R O P E Never been to Europe
and want to see the countryside and villages that most
tourists m iss’’ Or. are you revisiting your favorite countries
but don't want to see all those train stations again7 This
course will show you how anyone, from the sedentary type to
a super-jock, can bicycle through Europe and experience
European culture as most visitors never will. Topics will in
clude pre-trip planning and training, route-finding, equipment
selection, basic bicycle repairs, and living on the road We
will end with an overnight bike tour. No previous bicycling
experience is required, or even expected.
M W
Mar 30 - Apr 8
7:00 - 8:30
plus a weekend overnight
Instructor Anne Kovich F e e s: S14-UT, $18-0.
to
HIR1 WATCHING Learn how to identify and where to look
for native birds in diverse habitats in the Austin region
Topics covered in class and field include: the art of birding.
clues
identification, cla ssifica tio n of birds, flight,
plumage, song, social behavior, migration, adaptation to en
vironment, and natural zones of Central Texas. Transporta
tion is volunteer-and-share. Field trips leave from parking lot
at 26th and Speedway (N .E. corner).
Two sections are offered separately; one may register for
either or both Fees are the same. S e c t i o n O ne is especially
helpful for newcomers to the sport of birding. At this season a
variety of wintering bird species can be observed with
relative ease S e ctio n Tiro will appeal especially to those
completing Section One and to repeaters, although the
beginner may start here. The spring season brings a m igra
tion of colorful species from tropical wintering grounds,
while resident birds are in full song as nesting begins
Thurs.
Sec 1
Field Trips: Sat.
Sat.
Thurs
Sec. 2
Field Trips: Sat
Sat.
7:30 - 11:30a.m .
6 :3 0 a m - 2:30p m
7 :0 0 -9 :0 0
Feb. 5 - March 5 7:00 - 9:00
Feb. 7,14,21,28
March 7
March 26-
April 16
March 28,
April 4,11,18
May 2
6:30a.m . - 2 :3 0 p m
7:30 - 11:30a.m
Instructor: Fred Webster. F ees: S22-UT; $26-0.
1XX1 O B ED IEN C E : This class is designed to teach Rover the
basics not exactly the 3 R ’s—but
the canine equivalent such
stay, and come. Dog owners will be taught
as heel, sit, down,
how to teach their 4-legged friends in supervised sessions
twice a week for 4 weeks. The dogs must be at least 6 months
of age, be current on their shots (Rabies, DHL. Parvo).
Proper equipment (fitted choke collar and 6 ft. leather leash)
is required—more information will be available at registra
tion.
M /Th
Feb. 2 - F e b . 26
M/Th Mar. 23 - April 16
Sec. 1
Sec. 2
Instructors: sec. 1 - Melinda G iles; sec. 2 - Jennifer Phillips.
Fees: $16-UT; $20-0.
7.00 - 8:00
7:30 - 8:30
H ER BS FO R U SE AND DELIGH T: Every class will be an
olfactory delight as you explore fifty of the world's most in
teresting plants—peppermint to jimson weed. You will learn
fascinating superstitions as well as useful information about
herbs. Classes will cover these topics: historical, culinary,
and medicinal uses of herbs; and native herbs and herb grow
ing in central Texas. The fourth class will be a demonstration
of making potpourri and herbal soap. A field trip is planned
for early March.
Wed.
Instructor: Pat Carlson F ees: $15-UT; $19-0.
Feb 4 - March i l
7 :0 0 -8 :3 0
INVESTM ENTS FO R TH E NEW INVESTOR Spend a Sun
day afternoon learning about the various kinds of investment
instruments that exist for the new investor. This course will
have value for both the person who has only small amounts of
money to invest and for those who may have more ample
funds Topics to be covered include money m arket funds;
stocks; short term corporate bonds; and mutual funds.
Sunday
Instructor: Neile Wolfe.
F e e s. $4-UT; $6-0
2:00 -5 :0 0
Feb 22
MASSAGE FO R RELAXATION An integration of various
relaxation techniques and fundamental massage strokes will
enable students to give a sensitive massage. The class is ex
periential Wear loose com fortable clothing over a bathing
suit and bring a sheet or towel and a bottle of massage oil. A
foam pad is optional, however, the tables are more com for
table with some sort of padding Bring whatever is con
venient
M W
Feb. 2 - F e b . 18
Instructor Barbara Hewitt Chapin. Fees: $27-UT: $31-0.
6:30 - 9:30
individuals who "persist
TH E ART OF WRITING P O E T R Y : American poets are
to success' against a
loners;
m aterialist culture and m ass conformity This course is
designed to encourage the task of writing through teaching
the sp irit, su b je ct m atte r and
techniques of modern
American m asters of poetry.
Tues
Instructor Paul F’oreman F ees: $19-UT, $23-0.
Feb. 3 - April 14
7:30 - 9:00
SOAPMAKING WORKSHOP This class will be a demonstra
tion of soapmaking using tallow, olive oil, jojoba oil, and
vitamins A. D, and E mixed with lye and herb tea—and of
course, with sweet smelling oils. The result is a fine hand
made soap suitable for gift giving or home use While we stir
the soap, we will also make a potpourri—the natural air
freshener Recipes will be given to all class members.
Herbs for Use and Delight’’ includes this class, but you may
also register for this workshop only. You do not need to bring
any m aterials to class.
Wed.
Instructor: Pat Carlson Fees: $4-UT; $5-0
6 3 0 -9 :0 0
Feb. 25
W ILD LIFE REHABILITATION: Would you like to bottle
feed a raccoon or raise a young owl9 Wildlife Rehabilitation
will teach you the basic skills in helping the injured and
orphaned wild animals in the Austin area. Through slides, the
direct handling of wildlife, and discussions of our rehabilita
tion manual, you will learn about the supplies, caging, per
mits, and technique needed to assist our native species back
to release in their natural habitat Rehabilitation Manual
($7.50) to be purchased from instructor
5:30 - 7 00
Feb. 4 - March 11
Wed.
Instructors Margaret Griffin & Jan e Lyons. Fees $10-1 T ,
$ 12-0 .
ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE, B E G .: This course is
designed for people with no previous knowledge of English.
Each class session will focus on a group of base sentences
which relate to a real-life situation such as answering the
telephone or introducing a friend The emphasis of the class
is practical: basic vocabulary, gram m ar, and pronunciation.
Course text Lado English Series, by Robert Lado available
at the University Co-op for $4.00 and accompanying workbook
for $2 50
See l
Sec. 2
Instructor Mike Powers. Fees $16-UT; $20-0.
Feb. 3-March 12
Mar 24-April 30
10 30-11 45
10:30-11 45
T Th
T/Th
FRENCH AT F IR ST SIGHT I & II: Shed your fear of French
and make the language yours. Believe it or not, you already
have a stock of French expressions in your vocabulary to
which you can add. You will learn to tune your ear to the
language, pronounce it, and feel at home with it. You will be
given "aid es-m em oire” in the form of amusing anecdoes, apt
phrases, and folk sayings, in addition to basic essentials for
getting along in a French-speaking environment French II is
designed as a continuation of level I, or for people who may
not have taken level I but who have had some exposure to
French
French I
Feb. 3-March 12
French II T Th M arch31-M ay7
Instructor: Adele Fath. Fees $19-UT; $23-0.
5:15-6:30
5:15-6:30
T Th
CONVERSATIONAL GERMAN I : If you would like to travel
in German-speaking countries or understand your Germ an
speaking relatives and friends, this course is a good way to
begin You will learn to understand and then use vocabulary
appropriate for travel and for everyday conversation You
will communicate with the instructor and class mem bers in
German in an enjoyable, relaxed atmosphere. The instructor
will conduct the class mostly in German, making meaning
clear through pictures, objects, actions, and occasional ex
in E n g lis h . NO P R E V IO U S G E R M A N
p la n a tio n s
L A N G U A G E E X P E R I E N C E
IS R E Q U I R E D OR
A SSU M ED ''
Sec. 1 M W
Sec. 2 M W
Instructor: Maria Beck. F ees: $19-UT; $23-0
Feb 16-March 11
March 23-April 29
5:30-7:00
7:00-8:15
CONVERSATIONAL GERMAN II: This is a continuation of
Level I designed for people who have had some exposure to
German. Class will be conducted primarily in German to
enable you to get lots of practice hearing and speaking G er
man.
M W
Instructor Maria Beck Fees:$19-U T; $23-0.
March 23-April 29
5:30-6:45
ITALIAN AT PLA Y: The goal of this course is to get a c
quainted with the Italian language in close association with
aspects and details of life in Italy. We will cover both useful
and intriguing vocabulary as well as pronunciation. G ram
mar instruction will be minimal, though some handouts will
help fill in for those who are interested The instructor, who
has lived in years, will bring in a series of props, form the ab
surd to the sublime, as a focus for vocabulary, themes of life
in Italy, and dram atic improvisation Some audio-visual
m aterials will also be prepared
T Th
Instructor: Movra Byrne. F e e s: $19-UT; $23-0.
Feb 3-March 12
5:30-6:45
SIGN LANGUAGE ( B EG . > This Beginner's I course will in
troduce students to American Sign Language and Dactologv
t manual alphabet) Different aspects of deafness will be dis
cussed and some of the popular idioms used by deaf people
will be covered. Students will learn to put sentences together
and to "re a d ” another person who is communicating with the
use of manual signs and alphabet. The m ajor emphasis of the
class will be upon "A m eslan,”
the native language of
American deaf people. A certificate from the Texas Educa
tion Agencv is awarded upon completion of the course.
Feb. 3-March 5
T Th
Instructor Barbara Garza Fees: $19-UT; $23-0.
6 06-7 30
SIGN LANGUAGE. BEG L E V E L II This Beginner s II
course is designed as a continuation to the Beginner 1 in
which students were introduced to American Sign Language
and Dactologv (manual alphabet). Students will practice put
ting sentences together and “ reading" another person who is
communicating with manual signs and alphabet The m ajor
emphasis of the class will be upon "A m eslan,” the native
language of American deaf people. A certificate from the
Texas Education Agency will be awarded upon completion of
the course
Feb 3-March 5
Sec. 1
Sec 2
Mar 24-April 23
Instructor Lynette Pickens-Fant Fees $19-UT, $23-0
6 00-7:30
6 00-7 30
T Th
T Th
\L
CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH
I : “ S i,” you can speak
Spanish' In this practical introductory course, you will get a
thorough background
in simple gram m atical structures,
vocabulary, and phonetics. In addition, we will practice
greetings and responses of everyday conversation: days,
dates, and seasons; and other topics in everyday conversa
tion There will be special emphasis on correct pronuncia
tion
Sec. 1 M W
Sec. 2 M W
Instructors: Sec 1 Azucena Arias; Sec. 2 — Juan Martinez-
Ortin F ees: $19-UT; $23-0.
Feb. 2-March 4
Feb. 2-March 11
5:15-6:45
6:00-7:15
CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH,
IN TERM ED IA TE This
class is designed for people who have acquired a moderate
speaking ability in Spanish — neither a total beginner nor an
advanced speaker. We will practice Spanish in conversations
on a variety of cultural and travel topics. Some cultural
aspects of Spanish-speaking countries will be
included
through listening to music and other audio-visual presen
tations.
M W
Instructor: Azucena Arias. Fees $19-UT: $23-0
Feb. 2-March 4
6:45-8:15
CONVERSATIONAL SPANISH, ADVANCED This course is
designed for students who want lots of conversatioanl prac
tice in an informal atmosphere. We will briefly review basic
gram m ar Then we will concentrate on increasing skill with
more complex tenses, vocabulary, and idiomatic expressions.
It is expected that students who enroll in this course will have
had three or more sem esters of college Spanish or equivalent
skills.
M W
Instructor
Juan Martinez-Ortin Fees $19-UT:$23-0.
Feb.2-M arch 11
7:15-8:30
í* ü
I*
J ay
BACKGAMMON FO R WINNERS: Impress your friends with
your "lu ck ” by learning to play backgammon the rig h t way.
We will progress quickly from basic strategy to advanced
play in this course, with special emphasis on the doubling
cube. Class' time will be primarily devoted to lecture and
demonstration of strategy and information which you can
put into plav outside of class. There will be numerous han
douts, and backgammon boards will be provided.
Wed.
Instructor: Randy Prater. Fees: S10-UT: $14-0
Feb 4 - March 11
6 :3 0 -7 :3 0
BOWLING FOR FUN: Learn to bowl or learn to bowl more
proficiently in this informal class. Topics to be covered in
clude the basics of technique: arm-swing; stance, 3. 4, and 5
step approach, and equipment care In addition to film s and
handouts, you will have lots of on the lane instruction and
practice The course fee includes a new bowling ball custom
made for you in the Union Rec Center Pro Shop, and shoes
will be provided
Sec. 1
Mon.
Sec. 2
Wed.
Sec. 3
Mon.
Feb 2 - March 9
( Especially for women)
Feb. 4 - March 11
(Co-ed)
Feb. 2 - March 9
(Co-ed)
1 2 :0 0 -1 :0 0
2 00 - 3:00
4 .3 0 -5 :4 5
Instructor: from th eT x. Union Recreation Center. Fees: $36
U T; $40-0
BRID G E ( BEG . & IN T .): The beginning class will cover the
basics of bridge including how to count points, score, bid, and
play hands Emphasis will be on playing prearranged hands
as opposed to long lectures. The intermediate class covers
the basic m aterial with greater depth and adds a discussion of
hand valuation, playing suggestions, defensive bidding, and
the Stayman and BÍackwood Conventions. You may sign up
for both beginner and intermediate
Beg.
Int
Instructor
Tues
Tues.
Feb 3 - March 10
7:00 - 9 00p.m.
March 24 - Apr 28 7:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Jim Musumeci Fees $18-UT; $22-0
JUGGLING, i BEG ) Learn the magic and fun of juggling'
The class will deal mainly with ball juggling With class and
home practice, you will be able to juggle 3 balls in no time
and the remaining sessions will be spend learning ball juggl
ing tricks and partner-group juggling Bring three tennis balls
to each class.
M W
Instructor Bill Brown Fees $12-UT; $16-0.
Feb 2 - Feb 25
6 00 - 7 00
JU GG LIN G , (ADVANCED) Advanced juggling will deal
mainly with ball and club juggling The students will be work
ing with variations of advanced three-ball juggling (three in
one hand, etc i. along with side-by-side passing, group juggl
ing. and club juggling Four ball variations (cascading,
showering, full and half-reverse' will be taught P re re
quisite The student must be able to comfortably juggle three
balls
T Th
Instructor Phill Brown Fees $12-UT; $16-0
Feb 3 - Feb 26
6:00 - 7:00
BASIC POOL The course will be an introduction to the
techniques necessary for optimal improvement in pocket
billiards It w ill include instruction in proper bridge, stance,
stroke, aim, application of English.” speed control, etc The
class will include rules and strategies required in various
billiards games.
M W
7 00 - 8 30
Feb 2 - March II
Instructor Robert W Hempel Fees $27-UT $31-0 Plus $6
table fee.
SAILING Basic sailing instruction will include one on-the-
land class session in rigging and general technique, then each
person will have 2 individual sailing lessons as well as four
hours practice tim e on his or her own Sign-up of individual
lessons will be held during the classroom session on Monday
night Individual lessons and practice time will be scheduled
M o n d a y - F r id a v from 1 00 p m - dark and must be completed
t
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I
cINEMA TEXAS
Jester Auditorium Spring 1981
MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
THE BATTS HALL TUESDAY SER IES
X THE GRADUATE
3
HAJILAR C O U lfT T U S. A.
1 2 7 SHADOW O F A DOUBT
3 17 ZO RRS LEMMA*
d kitrmd Kuchcact
RIDDLES or THE SPHDOt*
;
i MuTw r^ancfcir
B A C I AITD FORTH*
3 Mirto* Sncw
: 10 SEVER SAMURAI
a Atoro K
2 |7 MESHES or THE AfTEJUIOOR
d Mara
DUSTWA TALEWG PICTURES’ (,3 KARA fUU
d Yvonn* Romm
3J 2 4 Canon McC udm ixzutjtm Fwwuw
HEART 15 A LOHELT HURTER
R E T lE C - n O ia D» A CO LDER
CTE
4 7 THE MAR FRO M LARAMIE
'•QD Orüy
AROLA TIOM PRO GRA M
HE OrJr
4 ¡4 A U THAT HEATER ALLOW S
4 2! LEFT HARDED G UR
4 28 REDE THE HIGH C O O RTRT
L n a n Atar 'Joutum
o n e m i n u t e t o znio
MEN Of WAX
TXPOOXLTT-A. FILM STNES
THE MALTESE FALCON (1941)
d. John Huston. w 'H um phrey B ogart Mary Astor
Peter Lorre Sy d n ey G reen street
1/26
MURDER MY SWEET (1944)
d. Edw ard Dmytryk w Dick Powell C laire Trevor
2/2
DOUBLE INDEMNITY (1944)
d. Billy Wilder w- Fred M acM urray B a rbara Stanw yck
Eld w ard G Robinson
2/9
BRASHER DOUBLOON (1947)
d John B rahm . w G e o rg e Montgomery. Nancy Guild
THE BIG SLEEP 1946)
d. H ow ard Hawks, w Humphrey B ogart L auren B acall
THE KILLERS (1946)
d R ob ert Siodm ak w Burt L ancaster Ava G a rd n er
WHERE THE SIDEWALK ENDS (1950)
d O tto Prem inger w D ana Andrews. G en e Tierney
PUSHOVER (1954)
a R ich ard Q uine. w 'Fred M acMurray Kim Novak
D orothy M alone
THE BIG HEAT (1953)
d. Fntz Lang. w /G len n Ford. G lo n a G ra h am e
Lee M arvin
3/30
KISS ME DEADLY (1955)
d. R ob ert A dlnch wf Ralph Meeker. C ion s L eachm an
4/6
TOUCH OF EVIL (1958)
d. O rso n W elles w C harlton Heston. Janet Leigh
M arlene D ietnch. O rson Welles
BREATHLESS (1959)
d Jean -L u c G od ard . w /Jean-Paul Belm ondo, Jean Seb erg
7.-00 O n ly
SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER (1962)
d Fran cois Trulfaut. w C h arles Aznavour. M aria Dubois
fcOOOnly
MARLOWE (1969)
d Pau l B ogart, w Jam es G a m er Rita Moreno
C arroll O 'C onnor. Bruce Lee
POINT BLANK (1967)
d John B oorm an w 'L e e Marvin A ngie Dickinson
K ee n an W ynne. C arroll O Connor
5/4
THE PARALLAX VIEW (1974)
d A lan J. Pakula. w /W arren Beatty. Pau la Prentiss
2/16
2/23
3/2
3/9
3/23
4/13
4/20
4/27
I
TUESDAY
1/20 BULLITT (1968)
d Peter Y ates w S tev e M cQ ueen Robert Vaughan
Ja c q u e lin e Bisset R obert Duvall
p l u s R E N D E Z V O U S (1977)
d C la u d e Lelouch
1/27 WAY DOWN EAST (1920)
d D W Griffith. w /L llia n Gish. Richard B artheim ess
with a m usic score
2/3 SPIES (1928)
d Fntz L ang w /Rudolph Kíem -Rogge G erd a M aurus
2/10 UN CHIEN ANDALOU (1929)
d Luis B unuei a n d Salv a d or Dah
BATTLESHIP POTEMKIN (1925)
d S e r g e i E isenstein
2/17
FOOTUGHT PARADE (1933)
d U oyd B aco n d a n c e num bers by Busby Berkeley
w /Jam es C a g n ey Joan Blondeli. Ruby Keeier Dick Poweil
2/24 RULES O F THE GAMES (1939)
d le a n Renoir w /M arcel D a l» Nora Gregor
3/3 STAGECOACH (1939)
d lohn Ford w/John W ayne. C laire Trevor Andy D evine
3/10 CITIZEN KANE (1941)
3/24 SONG O F CEYLON (1932)
d Basil Wright
FIRES WERE STARTED (1943)
d H um phrey Jennings
3/31 GERMANY YEAR ZERO (1947)
d Robert Rossellini
4/7 WOMAN IN THE WINDOW (1944)
d Fntz L ang w 'Edw ard G Robinson Joan Bennett
Dan D ury ea Robert Blake
4/14 SHANE (1953)
d G e o rg e Stevens w A lan Lada Jean Artnur
Van Hefhn. Jack P a ia n c e
4/21
PSYCHO (I960)
d Alfred HitchrocX w. Anthony Perkins Janet Leigh
Vera M iles Martin B alsam
4/28 LA CHINOISE (1967)
d Jean Luc G od ard w Jean Pierre Leaud
5/5 TARGETS (1968)
d Peter B ogd an ovich w ' Bor is Karloff
1/21
IT S A WONDERFUL LIFE (1946)
d. Frank C a p ra w lam es Stew art Donna Reed
Lionel Barrym ore G lo n a G ra h a m e 7 ft t :I S
1/28 BEST YEARS OF OUR LIVES , 1946)
d William W yler w Fred nc M arch. Myrna Loy
Teresa Wr.ght D an a A ndrew s 1:30 ft 9:30
2/4 GELDA (1946)
d. C h a rles Vidor, w Rita Hayworth G lenn Ford
2/11 CROSSFIRE (1947)
d Edw ard Dmytryk. w Robert Young Robert Mitchum
Robert Ryan G lo ria G ra h a m e
2/18 BODY AND SOUL (1948)
d R obert Rossen. w lohn G arfield Lilli Palm er
2/25 RED RIVER (1948)
d. Howard Hawks w John W ayne M ontgom ery Clift.
Joan n e Dru. W alter B rennan 7 ft 9 : IS
3/4 ADAM'S RIB (1949)
d G e o rg e Cukor w S p en cer Tracy K athann e Hepburn
3/11 ON THE TOWN (1949)
d S tan ley D onen & G e n e Kelly, w G en e Kelly.
Frank S in atra Vera-Ellen Ann Miller Betty G arret!
3/25
I WAS A MALE WAR BRIDE 1949)
d H ow ara Hawks w C a ry G ran t. Ann S h en d a n
4/1 ALL THE KING'S MEN 1949)
d. Robert Rossen b a sed on Robert Penn W arren s novei
w Broderick C raw ford Joann e Dru
4/8 THE FOUNTAINHEAD ! 1949)
d. King Vidor b a se d on Ayn R a n d s novei. w G ary
C oooer Patricia Neal
4/15 SUNSET BOULEVARD (1950)
d. Billy Wilder w /G lo n a Sw an son, William Holden
Buster Keaton E n c h von Stroheim
4/22 STRANGERS ON A TRAIN (1951)
d Alfred H itchcock w 'Farley G ran g er Robert Walker
Ruth Rom an Patricia Hitchcock
4/29 THE THING (1951)
d. C hristian Nyby prod uced by Howard Hawks
w Jam es A m ess M arg a ret S h e n d a n
5/6 HIGH NOON (1952)
d. Fred Z innem ann. w /G ary C ooper
G ra c e Kelly
1/22 THE THIN MAN (1934)
d W S. Van Dyke, b a sed on a story by D ashiel! Hammett
w W illiam Powell. M yrna Loy an d Asta 7:00 O nly
SONG OF THE THIN MAN (1947)
d Edw ard BuzzelS w /W Powell M. Loy 1:4ft O nly
1/29 CITY LIGHTS (1931)
d C h a rle s C h ap lin , with a m usic score
2/5 PROGRAM O F SILENT COMEDY
SHORTS 7:00 O n ly
HEART O F TEXAS RYAN (1917)
d. E. A Martin w Tom M u. B essie Eyton
Plus "T h e M iracle R id e r" (I93S)
C h ap ter 1 with Tom M u fcOO O ftiy
2/12 GO WEST (1925)
d Buster Keaton, w 'Buster Keaton Howard Truesd aie
2/19 THE STRONG MAN (1926)
d Frank C ap ra. w /H arry L angdon
2/26 DR. BULL (1933)
d. John Ford w/W ill R ogers M arion Nucon
3/5 MY LITTLE CHICKADEE 1940)
d. Edw ard C lin e w 'M a e West W C Fields
3/26 DESIGN FOR LIVING (1933)
d. Ernst Lubitsch. w /G a ry C ooper Miriam Hopkins
4/2 BRINGING UP BABY (1938)
d Howard Hawks w /C ary G ran t. K athann e Hepburn
4/9 THE PHILADELPHIA STORY (1940)
d G e o rg e Cukor w /C ary G ran t K a th an n e Hepburn
Jam es Stew art
4/16 THE PALM BEACH STORY (1942)
d Preston Sturges. w /C iaud ette C olbert Joel M cC rea
Mary Astor Rudy Vailee
4/23 WILL SUCCESS SPOIL ROCK
HUNTER? (1957)
d Frank Tashlin w /Jay n e M ansfield Tony Handail.
G ro u ch o M ar* Joan Blondeli
4/30 SOME LIKE IT HOT (1959)
d Billy Wilder w M arilyn M onroe Jack Lemmon
Tony C urtis 7 ft felft
5/7 THE LADIES'MAN (1961)
d terry Lew is w terry Lewis G e o rg e Rati
d O rson W elles w O rson Welles Joseph Cotton Agnes
M oore h e a d 7 ft t : I S
3/12 H O R S E F EA T H ER S (1932)
d Norm an Z M cLeod w T h e Marx Brothers
All shows at 7:00 and 9:00 except where noted.
All seats $1.50, Season pass for all Jester Auditorium films, just $18!
JUNGLE BEAT
On safari with KORET OF
CALIFORNIA®: it's an e xp e d i
tion you w on't w ant to miss.
W e're exploring the sporting
looks of a safari ja cke t a n d
w alking shorts. They're big
g a m e this season because of
their co m fo rta ble g o od looks,
and
they m ake a dauntless
fashion statement. Try them out
on the city streets; we know
you'll m ake a ca p tiva tin g
adventurer. All
in D a cron8’
polyester a n d cotton, 8 to 16.
Safari ja c k e t in khaki or white;
belt not included, 48.00
W alking shorts in
khaki 29.00
Short-sleeved p la id shirt, 28.00
WILLOWICK SPORTSWEAR, FIRST FLOOR. FOLEY'S IN HIGHLAND MALL. SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
oe^sj
4
"h ro u g h Feb 22.
FACULTY ART EXHIBITION: A d sp ay o* a d work
by ?ne stud io a d faculty, in the A d B u ild in g , 23rd Street
a ^d San uacm to B oulevard. T n ro ^ g h Feb. 22.
CONTEMPORARY SCULPTURE: Betty G oic
a
^ e x a s -b o m ad ist n o * .vorking in Ca to rn a creates
w c r's of stee:. n the A d Build ng. ‘T hrough Feb 22
GOLDEN AGE OF PAINTING: A pre sen ta : on of 16th
and 17th cen tury D jtc n paintings at the s e c o n d -e v e
t^ e H a rry Ransonn C e n te r, 2 1st a " d
-
ga e ry
3 ja d a jp e streets
ARS DOM ESTICA: C la s s c a G 'e e k a ^ d R o ^ a -' art
irz r j n versify of ndiana c o lle c to n s on d sp ay a t t he
se co n d -ie ve gai ery n the Hamy R ansom C e rte r
’ ’ n r o u g n A p r
DEMING AND PETERSEN: A d sp ay o* s c . ptures
l a . c _ Dem °g and p a intin gs by B ra d le y p .
p .
:ne p atr ick 3 a ery. 7 2 " E Sixth S'
Feterse^ A'
'4
T h rough Fe p
NEW WORKS III: D avid E s anc C ra ig A n d e rso n dis
play a r w orks at -a g u n a G io ra at First F ede ra 10th
and Brazos streets " ^ r o . g r Feb 19
IRON WORKS: T he W eigl
be
0 " e x- bit at La g u n a G loria A d M ^ s e ^m , 3 8 0 9 W 35tn
S’ T hrou gh Feb, 8.
ly Iron W orxs a
‘ 5.
ONE ACT PLAYS:
"S nake P re a ch e r at Swam;
D o r s," "T he Death and Life of E lm er F u d d " and
'T n p ie o g u e wrth G hosts will oe p re se n te d by the
N um enon F oun da tion at 8 p.m . T h u rs d a y through
S aturday at the G aslight Theater, F o u d h and Lavaca
streets. Can 4 7 6 -4 5 3 6
THE RITES OF A THEATRICAL HEART: Texas
D ow ntow n Literature Series presents Jo n W ested ield 's
on e -a ct po etic play and the poetry of C h e ryl Hawkins,
acco m p a n ie d by guitarist D 'Jalm a G a m ie r III. Both
events will be at 9 p.m . Jan. 27 at S p e llm a n 's Cafe,
1401 W Fifth St. D onations of $1 will be a cce p te d at
the door.
A GERSHWIN RHAPSODY: A revue fea tu ring the
m usic o ' c o m p o s e r G eorge G ershw in. S how s at 8
p.m T hursd ay th ro u g h Saturday and at 6 p.m . S un da y
at C enter Stage Theatre, 320 E. S ixth St. T hrough
February 1.
A FATE W O RSE TH AN D E A T H : A c la s s ic
m e lodra m a w ritten by D unstan W eed. S ho w s at 7:30
p m T hursday, F riday and S atu rday th ro u g h Feb. 7 at
the A ustin C a b a re t Theatre, 2700 W. A n d e rs o n Lane.
Call 4 5 4 -2 5 9 1 .
71/m
in
trib u te
THE MALTESE FALCON: H u m p h re y B o g a d and
M ary A stor star
the classic S am S p a d e thriller
directed by Joh n Huston. At 7 and 9 p.m . M on da y in
Jester A u d ito riu m ,
BULLITT: Steve M cQ ueen had on e of his m ost
m e m o rab le roles as a San F rancisco p o lice m a n u n
cove ring co rru p tio n . At 7 and 9 p.m . T u e sd a y in Jester
A ud itoriu m .
IT’ S A WONDERFUL LIFE: Frank C a p ra s heartw ar
to s m a ll-to w n A m e ric a n a o ffe rs a
m in g
m e m o ra b le p e rfo rm a n ce by Jam es S tew ad. At 7 and
9:1 5 p.m . W e d n e sd a y in Jester A u d ito riu m .
THE THIN MAN: W illiam Powell a n d M yrna Loy star
in this p o p u la r series based on a story by Dashiell
H am m ett. A t 7 p.m . T hursday in Je ste r A ud itoriu m .
SONG OF THE THIN MAN: A n o th e r installm ent of
“ The T hin M a n " series. At 8:45 p.m . T h u rsd a y in
Jester A u d ito riu m .
THE THIRD GENERATION: D ire ctor Ram er W erner
F a ssb in d e r's
in
m o d e rn so cie ty. A t 3 and 7 p.m . M o n d a y through
W e d n e sd a y in th e U nion Theater.
ENTER THE DRAGON: A kung fu film with the in
c o m p a ra b le B ru c e Lee. At 5 and 9 p.m . M onday
th ro u g h W e d n e s d a y in the Union Theater.
ALIE N : D ire c to r R idtey Scott's
frig h te n in g ho rror
film a b o u t
fa scin a tin g
terrorism
I WON THE WAR: J o h n Le nn on stars
classic set in outer s p a ce At 11 p.m . M o n d a y through
W edn esd ay and 11:35 p.m . T h u rs d a y in the Union
Theater.
HOW
r
R ichard Lester’s su rre a listic satirical w ar film . At 3 and
7:1 5 p.m . T h u rsd a y in th e U n ion T heater
M IDNIGHT COWBOY: D ustin H o ffm an and J c r
V o ig h ’ de live r m arve lou s p e rfo rm a n c e s vin John
S c " esm ger's stu d y of tw o losers stru g g lin g to survive
in Hew Y ork City. At 5 an d 9 :3 0 p.m . T h u rsd a y n the
Urnon Theater
KRAMER VS. KR AM ER: An A c a d e m y A w a rd-
w tnn ng dra m a a b o u t a p a re n ts ’ fig h t over custo dy of
meir child. At 3 and 9 p.m . F rid a y and S atu rday n the
U nion Theater.
THE JUNGLE BOOK: A W alt D sney anim ated f -
oased on the R u d ya rd K ip lin g cla ssic. At 5 and 7 p.m
r - day and S un da y n th e U nion T heater
JIM I HENDRIX: R ock d o c u m e n ta ry on th e 4e a^d
m usic of the ate g u ita rist. At 11 p.m r nd ay and Satur
day n the U nion Theater.
HERCULES: Steve Reeves as the le g e n d a ry Greek
strongm an. At 1 p.m . S a tu rd a y and S u n d a y in the
U nion Theater
A SMALL CIRCLE OF FRIENDS: Brad Davis and
K a re r A llen star n this film a b o u t the lives of tmee
m ends dur ng tne co n fro n ta tio n and ch a o s of the '60s
A t 7:3 0 p.m . F rid a y
in Batts
A ud itor jm .
ONE TRICK PONY: p au S m on as an agm g pop
.vno m ust m ake som e decisions
s n g e r-co m p o se r
about h¡s career and his life At 9:3 5 p.m . Friday
through S unday n Batts A u d ito riu m .
WHAT’S UP TIGER LILY?: A Jap an ese g a n g ste ' fi m
turned n to a co m e d y by W ood y A llen. At 1 1 :3 0 p m
Friday and S aturday in Batts A u d ito riu m .
MY BODYGUARD: T o n y B 1 s P r e t o r ia de b u t s a
sensitive study of a g ro u p df yo u th s co p in g with
pro ble m s of peer p re ssure on C h ic a g o ’s S outh Side
At 7:30 p.m . Friday and S atu rday in the A c a d e m ic
Center A ud itoriu m .
DR. STRANGELOVE: Peter S ellers stars in a brilliant
anti-w ar satire d ire cte d by Stanley K u b n ck. At 9:30
and 11:15 p.m . F riday and S a tu rd a y in the A cadem ic
Center A ud itoriu m .
SINGIN’ IN THE RAIN: G ene Kelly, D o n a 'd O ’C o n
nor and D ebbie R e yno lds in on e of H o lly w o o d 's finest
m usicals. At 5 and 8 :3 0 p.m . S u n d a y
in Batts
A ud itoriu m .
th ro u g h S u n d a y
A iu iic
BACH MASS IN B-MINOR: H e lm uth R illing c o n d u c
ting the G a e chin ger K antorei of S tuttgart and the Los
Angeles C h am b er O rch e stra at 8 p.m . F rida y at Hogg
A ud itoriu m . A d m issio n is $8 and $7 for CEC holders.
PACIFIC LUTHERAN CHOIR: S election s by Vivaldi
and Lidho lm will be p e rfo rm e d with a 5 0 -v o ic e choir
and a 2 0 -p ie ce ch a m b e r o rch estra at 8 p.m . T hursday
at St. M artins Lutheran C h urch .
SLtaL
UNION EVENTS: Events at the Texas U n ion Tavern
in clu d e a swing d a n c e d e m o n stra tio n at no o n M onday
and T uesday; soul night d is c o at 9 p.m . Tuesday;
be llyd a n cin g at 7:30 p.m . W edn e sd a y;
'60s da nce
m usic at 9 p.m . W edn esd ay, and d a n c e w ith H unt Ar*
m istead at 9:3 0 p.m . S atu rday.
SWING DANCE CLASS: A jitte rb u g -s w in g da nce
class will be offered at 8 p.m . b e g in n in g M o n d a y at the
U niversity Y, 2330 G u a d a lu p e St. Fee is $18.
TEXAS UNION CLASSES: R egistration fo r Texas
U nion classes will be held M o n d a y th ro u g h Friday.
Paym ent m ust be m ad e at tim e of registration. For
m ore inform ation, call 4 7 1 -3 6 5 4 .
DANCE TEAM: The UT B allroo m D a n ce Team is
ho ld in g au ditio ns at 8 p.m . W edn esd ay, T h u rs d a y and
Friday in Room 136 of the A nn a Hiss G ym . A ud ition s
are op en to all students.
is o fferin g a cla ss
COPING WITH DIVORCE: The A ustin W o m e n s
to he lp solve pra ctical
C enter
p ro b le m s and e n h a n ce self-e ste em . M eetings are at
7 3 0 p .m . b e g in n in g W e d n e s d a y at
th e A u s tin
W om en s Center. F ee is $40 per person. For in fo rm a
tion or reservations, call 4 7 2 -3 7 7 5 .
H A M LE T A U D IT IO N S : A u d itio n s
fo r W illia m
S h a ke sp e a re ’s "H a m le t" will be held at 6 p.m . M o n d a y
and T uesday at Theatre in the Rye, 120 W. Fifth St.
Tom Skerritt stars as captain of the starship Nostromo in
Ridtey Scott's ‘Allen.’ Showing Monday through Wednes
day in the Union Theater.
‘Tkli Week
•dttor
kelly cash
attoclate editor
alice shukalo
graphics consultante
karen hurley
aiex plaza
contributors
louis black
george coieman
brad doherty
sam hurt
theresa m ysiew iczs
steve p u m p h re y
eric tib be ts
jeff W hittington
c in d y w id n e r
brian w iison
J7tmage*
For What
Its Worth
I continually m eet people who see m to believe that
som ew here (usually the E a s t or West Coast) i t ’s all
happening, and they’re m issing it.
It m ust be som e kind of southw estern m alaise, con
sidering the kind of money we sink into utopian perfo r
m ance centers to a tt r a c t n a m e companies, groups
whose a rtistic m erit has alre ad y been sanctioned by
T h e N e w Y o r k T i m e s or T h e L o s A n g e l e s T i m e s .
It's not that I have a personal vendetta against the
Perform ing Arts Center or the Special Events Center.
I t ’s simply that both of these places c a te r to a notion of
ART. ra th e r than cultivating w’hat grows here natu ral
ly-
This is a strange place we live in. and strange things
spring from it. A scruffy oasis in the middle of Texas,
Austin houses one of the larg e st universities in the na
tion. Its clim ate has nu rtured growths which surely
would have died anyw here else.
Austin saw the creation of the A m erican Deaf Dance
Company three y ears ago, the first deaf dance com
pany in America. The company is still doing well to
day. “ The Book of D ays’’ is one of the longest- running
com m unity-supported photography books in the coun
try, and of course the ever-changing music scene
whose hybridizations cre a te anything from Tex-Mex
polka bands to the Uranium Savages.
There is an old w ives’ tale that goes, “ bew are of
what you wish to become for someday you will surely
attain it.” I think that this might apply to cities as well
as individuals. In its quest for city status, Austin con
tinually am pu tates institutions which a r e vital to its
ch a rac te r, such as the Armadillo, Antone’s and the
soon-to-go Kresges building downtown. The prem ise
that im ported culture is somehow b etter than in
digenous culture is a dangerous one, especially when it
m eans supplanting existing institutions.
w m j i o
704 W . 29th " l u n i
4 7 4 -9 8 8 8
BEVERAGES
Bud Longnecks 12 oz. R e tu rn a b le s 6 " cos« o n ly t Dap.
Schlitz Longnecks 12 oz. R e tu rn a b le s 1
6 pk i o*p.
Check your R egular Texan
for N a sty Hour Specials
at
Uncle Nasty’s
606 M aiden Lane
Specials good Mon. thru Thurs.
T K s __________
J
L
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>
NORTH
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Road
y e i a m l l l j . A .U U SAT SUN I HOLIDAYS 1st MATINEE SHOW ONLY j
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New Cine-fi Sound System
385-7217
Privacy of Your Auto
1 00- 3: 15-5 30
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XXX
Original Uncut
Theatre
Note
sound operates
through your car radio If your car
has no radio, bring a portable
“ S E X U A L D Y N A M ÍT E !"
S r U a g a z n e
“JEAN DALTON’S THE HOT
TEST NEW DISCOVERY ON
THE PORNO SCENE TODAY!"
- N e s c r K - . g h 1 M a - s W o - 3
Introducing
JEAN DALTON as
hot apple cider
with háagen dazs
Les Amis Cafe
24th & San A n to n io
Starring X-roreds
Hottest New Supewor
JESE SI JAMES.
THE FORBIDDEN FRUIT
EVERY MONDAY NIGHT St PER PERSON
OPENS 6 30 STARTS 7 00
T H E VARSITY
GUADALUPE
474-4351
PRESIDIO THEATRES
m*
‘A BRAZILIAN SMASH.
..VASTLY ENTERTAMNG!”
y.:-...::-;!..:... I
RESTRICTED
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Bruce Springsteen is
rtfying A fusion of
Elvis Presley and John Garfield
1:45-3:45-6:45-7:45-fl:45
nn D O L B Y S T E R E O
RICHRRD
PRÜ0R
I M l
I M t l M l l t l
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1:00-2:40-4:20-
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VILLAGE 4
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11 Spavklnuj
Musical kevue
Thurs.-Sun.
Ja n 9-Feb. 1
Reservations Advised
6th & Trinity
477-1012
austin
ballet
theatre
PRPILLOn LAST NIGHT
M il M llllC Kill
f M A N [ 1975
'S u n 4 151 9 15
P A P I L L O N 1 9 7 3 1 (S u n 1 30) 6 3 0 J
EN D S
T H U R SD A Y
dow nstairs
/
This year’s ‘My
Brilliant Career’.
Sensitive,
intelligent
and
.8:00.8:00.10:00 o o r c e o u s ly
sal/sun2:00.4 0 0 l® _ _ ®
. . .
7 ’j
— f ilm e d . -CBS -
TEXAS
TAVERN
M o n d a y
Tuasday
2:15-400-
5:45-7:30-9:15 LAKEHILL8
2428 BEN WHITE • 444-0552
1:40-3:40-
5:40-7:40-9:40
CONVERSATION & MUSIC
“ BYE BYE BRAZ1 SCORES
rha »p»rrt of th* comwiy ts hard to ?•%•*»
RICHRRD PriyOR
i n i in
n iM l it i
•C
RESTRICTED
5:55-7:45-9:30
SOUL NIGHT
W a d na sd a y
'60S DANCE MUSIC
T hursday
CONVERSATION & MUSIC
Friday
RESTRICTED
5:30-7:35-9:40 RIVERSID E
1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5489
j
REDUCED P R IC ES UNTIL 6:00 MON. THRU FRI.
Thefts from dorm rooms
a n d
o f f i c e s
a r e
p r e v a l e n t c r i m e s on
cam pus. N e v e r le a v e an
office or room unlocked
when unattended, even
if
f o r o n l y a
f e w
m inutes. Lo ck up!
E n g r a v e your d r iv e r 's
license num ber on all
v a lu a b le s
in o rd e r to
facilitate return to you if
sto len and r e c o v e re d .
Engravers can be signed
out from U .T . P o lic e .
"Operation Identification"
— it really works! Call 471 -
4441.
TIME WARP
Sa turd a y
DISCO
S u n d a y
SUPER BOWL
CELEBRATION ,_____
3 p.m.
y
art is t ic d ir e c t o r S T A N L E Y H A I L
school co dir ec tors L I S A S M I T H
J O H A N N A B A R T O S H
717 W E S T 23 RD A U S T I N , T E X A S -7 8 705
SPRING CLASSES BEG IN JA N 5TH
Registration in Progress
• a l l c l a s s leve ls - C h i l d th ro u g h A d u l t
• pre b a ll e t , b a l l e t , p ointe, ja z z , t a p
• o u t s t a n d i n g p ro f e s s io n a l t e a c h i n g s t a f f
a n d p ia n is t s
F O R I N F O R M A T I O N . C A L I 478 995 7 8 a m - 1 2 noon
Austin Premiere
“ Rainer Werner Fassbinder is the
most dazzling, talented, prooocatioe, original,
puzzling, prolific and exhilarating film- maker
of his generation. Anywhere. . . ”
— W v r e n t Gantry N e w York T i m e *
■TT- •) ■
^ -
r 4 4 4 3 2 2 2
S »LÍASa n ’ v * u f * *»C
fa w b iiu U J iX
m z m m m
C'yyjXf) •;*.' Hji-zJi'-' *'•.
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Wl
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—
M
G e n e J ia tio n
W ith E d d ie C o n s la n lin e , H a n n a S c h y g u lla , B u lle O g ie r , V o lk e r S p e n g le r
A H e w Y o rk e r F il m s R e le a s e $ I 9 6 0
German with tubtitle%
Today at 3 & 7:15 p.m.
Union Theatre
2.00 U.T.
2.50 non-U.T.
r V
Today at 5 & 9:25 p.m.
Union Theatre
1.50 U.T.
2.00 non-U.T.
A M E R IC A N A
ill .1 H( H i
UJMMA <.
E n a
f [ JF ÍmUIA
m o n
FOX TRIPLEX
6757 AIRPORT BLVD.
454-2711
p resen ts
TONIGHT
ONLY!
THEMALTESE FALCON
JESTER AUDITORIUM
7 & 9 p.m .
s1.50
r r - if-
TIM CS S H O W X (O H tn O A Y O NLY
m m m u m m m sm m
4 4 2 2 3 3 3
f
4 2 3 A B f \ W h ;t £ BL vO
|
I
- WALT CMSwer
efotes ns
{ 5 A S /$ U 5 h 4 M
~ z : : ~ —
i
Q
( S J 4 / S 1 J 5 F 7 J I
A Q U A R IU S 4
P W Q f l
( * ! • / $ 1.75V4 : »
Adc-we-t*» « t * r comoOv * -M I
( 5 J |/ $ 1 . 7 5 ) 4 «
(* 4 5 /$ 1 .7 5 > -7 JI
«h^ T t i e
■ C ra ek cf
15J0 II.7SF7.-45___
M
C E N T
W I L D E R " P R Y O R
Together
A g a i n i n . . .
rA f: . STIR I’KAZY
^ f s c i u t N S
1) (5 : 15/ 1 1 .7 SV7 J #
Jt l t l S J J O
j 130 S Congress • Open 11 a.m. • 442-t>719
HELD OVER BY POPULAR DEMAND
FOUR MORE BIG DAYS!!!
m
^ • :»*c' .
...'.'■■"4.
W i i m r .
trS S LS '
£ » > > * >
V V
f
• ‘¿e
\ /
\ /
s -
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I
•
. *
*' Sur
' Cí
- ...
*■
'-
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t S S h X p i
ir e s e m s
■ 'M a t s f ir s t
r i f S
lUMiX r. ##OI M f*
I S í 't ó j
* *
1 V;
‘>5i& sin M i M l M U R G A
O y*
C l )1 v »H
» AN A V Mm U f
Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z
Director:
John Huson
Humphrey Bogart,
Mary Astor,
Peter Lorre,
Sydney Greenstreet,
Ward Bond,
Walter Huston
I l M I K I H
S C R E EN S
Season P ass
for all
C inem aT exas
m ovies (m ore
than 60 m o v ie s!)
in J e s te r Aud.
availab le for
only $18.00
Sold a t the
box office or
CT office
F or m ore inform ation call 471-1906
WINNER “BEST FILM"
TORONTO FESTIVAL OF FESTIVALS
“ONE OF THE YEAR’S BEST FILMS.
DAZZLING. EXCEPTIONAL ACTING
BY ART GARFUNKEL. BE SURE TO
SEE THIS REMARKABLE FILM!"
-After Dark
I he most
thououghly adult
movie ever m ade
in the English
language."
Maclean •> Magazine
"The sheer pleasure of
w atching Miss Russell in
action. ..¡t enough...she
com es through
triu m p h an tly ."
-Archer Winsten YY. Post
• *» « »»L( >ikf .it./ .ti«H. J*i. Mm. \ M u >| . \> |« >| (, i |i \ i
BAD TIMING/A SENSUAL OBSESSION
5:15- 7:30-9:45
C ,
z s
FEATURES: $1.50 til 6:00, $2.00 after
M ID N IG H TER S: $1.50
«Ml
X
BAD TIMING - " T h e most demanding whodunit
sin ce'C hinatow n'."
— TORONTO SUN
MANN 3
WESTCATE
4608 WESTGATE BLVD.
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Chwvy C t m o
Gofctfa Hewn
Charleo Orodin
N al Simon'*
9 ee*büke
O ld'Bm e s
H L
*CTU«CS MLfAM
h -
1:30-3.-40-5:20-4:00-10:10
s t M Pm
slurring
BBW-
12J 0-3K)0-5:10-7JO-f JO
JO H N C HOLM ES
115 Johnny Wudil
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His story will have ijou
singing, laughing, crying, cheering
and stomping
T H E B U D D Y
I H O LLY STO R Y
MIDNIGHTER
T
h a i l o w e e n
83» X - x
He
Com e
Home!
, w A
MIDNIGHTER
v
E3
'Hammers in Hand'
by cindy widner
The ironsmith, says a pla
que in the Laguna Gloria Art
Museum, has at various times
been awarded everything
from elite to scum status. To
some African tribes, he was
near-divine, on the same level
with a shaman or a witch doc
tor. In Malabar. India, he was
the most repulsive of un
t ou ch a bl e s . c a p a b l e of
polluting a Brahman from 24
feet.
Hammers in Hand: Weigl Family Iron Works." the
current exhibition at Laguna Gloria, addresses not the social
status of the ironworker but his subtle social influence. It
reveals the surprisingly significant extent to which the
ironworks of German immigrant Fortunat Weigl and his
sons added a pervasive and individual aesthetic to Austin's
architecture. Indeed, the various Weighs- hammer prints
cover the city.
The exhibition, with photographs and actual works, cap
tures the pervasive nature of the Weigls' civic contributions.
There are iron gates from Fonda San Miguel Restaurant, or
namental display cases from the Capitol, a gate top from the
Elisabet Nev Museum, a window grille from Zilker Park, a
decorative piece from Austin High School and a weather
vane depicting Peregrinus from the I T law school.
Weigl. who learned his craft in Germany, was already a
master when he immigrated to Austin in 1913. Swiss wood-
carver Pete: Masbendel provided Weigl with tools and
collaborated in his early efforts. Masbendel’s carving on a
mesquite rafter from the Alamo is also on display at the
museum
In 1922 the ironworker established F Weigl Ironworks,
and from a shop at First and Fed River streets, Weigl and
his sons. Herb and Lee. worked for more than 50 years, doing
commissions for several of the city's key buildings Their
work has been honored twice: in 1973, by the Austin chapter
oí the American Institute of Architects and in 1975. by the
Austin Heritage Society. Fortunat died in 1973, and Herb was
killed in an automobile accident shortly after his 1977 retire
ment. but Lee lives and continues to work on his ranch in
at Laguna Gloria
works which are signed by
Fortunat or one of his sons
one gets a feel for the in
dividuality of each man s
work Lee for instance, ap
parent 1 y had a p r o l i f i c
the show con
adolescence
tains a weather vane he did
when he was 13 and tin- Austin
Higf School work that he did
when he was 17 Hr rb’s works,
bordering on art nouveau, are
the most eccentric and ex
citing His floor lamps and
railings are covered with
dragons snakes and roses. Many of Fortunat s pieces are
apparently unlabeied. but a firescreen he did in Germany is
conservative almost classical Though the differences in the
Weigls'
individual styles are hardly polar, the subtle
variations among the three shows a surprising, not often
recognized, diversity possible m ironwork
The exhibe also includes photograph-' of the extensive in
terior and exterior work that the Weigls did on the Animal
Industry' Building at Texas A&M University — apparently
Fortunat s most ambitious project. And, of course the
Weigls did numerous pieces for themselves or other in
dividual.-'
sm all scu lp tu res of dragons, crucifixes and
allig itors; business signs: tables, repousse portraits, which
look like minimalistic iron or bronze reliefs and weather
V3I16S,
These individual pieces are perhaps more idiosyncratical-
ly intriguing and arty than the commissioned railings and
park benches The images of the hardworking craftsman
sweating over his day’s labor as sparK> fly — enhanced by
the tool display and the slide show -- are also an interesting
a>pect of the show to those sympathetic to the dignitv-of-the-
gritty-working-class-hero theme
But the primary power of the exhibit lies more in the
effect of having all or most of the Weigl s works collected in
a few rooms instead of scattered throughout the city The ex
hibit shows that an iron gate or window grille is not only a
utilitarian creation but an artist craftsman’s contribution to
a city’s physical character, much like a mural or a statue,
but much less appreciated
Ornamental grille at the Texas C apito l
Bastrop
The show displays examples of railings, grilles, balconies
and benches done by Fortunat for the Austin History ( enter
formerly the city's public library; a fireplace tool set
belonging to Lady Bird Johnson: two floor lamps from the
Driskill Hotel and extensive photographs of stair rails, win
dow grilles and firescreens from the Roy Butler Home and
Reed Hall. There is also a room displaying the Weigls’ tools
and a nifty do-it-yourself slide show of Herb and Lee at work.
Unfortunately, many of the works in the exhibition are not
attributed to a specific Weigl. However, if one examines the
Watch for the
STARS in IMAGES
Find out everything you
always wanted to know
about the CO SM O S
in next week’s
special ASTRO NO M Y issue
p v x X *
o * * * 0*
\ A2 ’
o
A .3 ^
c p e C * s
\o<
\Ne * * ? < * » » •
pOne
: the most renowned teachers of chorus
and choral conducting in Germany. Rilling
r..as taught organ and conducting at the best
conservatories in Germany and has toured
throughout the world He will conduct the
Bach Mass in B-Minor at 8 p.m. Friday Jan.
in Hogg Auditorium.
Even before he received his diploma from
the State Academ y for Music in 1954. Rilling
founded the Gaechmger Kantorei a chamber
ensemble specializing in u cappella music of
the 16th :7th and 20th centuries. During the
mid-Sixties the choir developed a repertoire
of the lesser-Known works of Johannes
Brahms. Robert Schumann and Anton
Bruckner, among other 19th century com
posers In 1966. the group began to concen
trate on the cantatas and the oratorios of
Bach The Kantorei has appeared at the
English Bach Festival in London and Oxford
and m the Bach Week at Ansbach. Since 1954.
the group has grown from 25 to over 100
singers, whose repertoire now includes the
cantatas, masses and oratorios of the baroque
composers with particular emphasis on the
works of Bach For performances of these i
works, the Kantorei travels with 40 to 50 of its j
performers.
Rilling travels regularly to the United
States for workshops and festivals. He has
been musical director of the University of
Oregon's Summer Music Festival for the past j
10 years, and he has appeared at Aspen. Tem
ple University, Indiana University. West
minster Choir College, the University of Iowa
and St Olaf College in Minnesota He was in
vited to perform in Israel in 1976. the first j
German conductor to be extended this invita
tion. and his concerts there proved so popular
that he was invited to return last spring
The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra. I
which was founded by musical director
Neville Marriner, is celebrating its 25th an
niversary this year. Its 35 musicians currently
work under the direction of Gerald Schwarz 1
Schwarz was praised by one New York critic
in his debut at Avery Fisher Hall with the
Mostly Mozart Festival as “the most impor
tant young conductor to debut in the past eight
years.' The Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra
most recently represented American
orchestras at the 1980 Winter Olympics at I
Lake Placid and then went on to give perfor-j
manees at Carnegie Hall and the John F
Kennedy Center in Washington.
Tickets will be sold at the Texas Union Box
Office starting Monday. Tickets for CEC
holders are $8 and $7 with CEC ID; tickets for
the general public are $10 and $9
Color/B&W Darkroom Rental
Complete Range of Classes
Austin Photo Center otters a total
range of services and facilities.
New, state-of-the-art equipment.
Abundant darkroom space. And
fresh, individual chemistry for each
Customer. (We have studio rentals)
FREE: 1 free hour of B&W dark
room rental time with this ad. One
coupon per customer. Offer valid
until 2/ 28/ 81.
AISIIN
(CENTER)
3409 Guadalupe. 453-0047. Ample parking in the rear.
Studio Rentals Coming Soon
Open 9am to midnight, 7 days a week.
JO tm COULEE &THE JO ttn COULEE BAI1D
S P E C IA L G U E S T
INTRODUCING
JAME FRICKE ¿THE HEART CTT!) BAM)
FrMey. February 20 • P.M. «9.00. ER.OO. «7.00
TICKETS O N SALE NOW AT SIC
ln|oy an A ll-Y o u -C a rvla f l a r S-O b e fo re th e ahow In the Burnt O ra n g e Dining Room.
A Aults $6.00 Chi I Aren 12 6 unAer $4.00 Reeervetlona requ ired N o Com eros
C H A t O I A-TICKCT A u s t in 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 S a n M a r c o s 3 * 2 -2 7 9 1 T e m p le 7 7 4 -9 1 7 6 K ille e n 5 2 6 - 2 M 1
M a ll O r d e r : F . O . B o i 2 * 2 9 , A u s t in ,T X 7 B 7 6 9
SO( tonsenlerKe charge per ticket on ell phone enA melt orAers beginning Jan. 17
TH£ SPfCLdL IVW TS CIN1SR
AANTA DITA
E S T A U R A N T 1 1
T h e S a n t a R i t a R e s t a u r a n t is
on th e 3 rd le v e l o f th e T e x a s
U n i o n , N E e n tr a n c e .
OPEN ING FO R D IN N ER ON JA N U A R Y 19
EN T R EES
Enchiladas Juarez
Enchiladas Nuevo Laredo
Enchiladas Matam oros
Chicken Fried Steak
Bratw urst and Cabbage
Driskill Chicken
Outlaw Burger
$3.50
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$3.75
The Deluxe
Tenderloin Estacado
Red fish Galvez
Redfish Alm ondine
Fried Oysters
B B Q Shrim p
$3.75
$5.95
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We’re Back In
The Saddle Again.
iexas Ur»
SPRING
PARKING
CONTRACTS
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INC.
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27th & Guadalupe >*85 per sem
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by jetf Whittington
: nainq
'.he wit A,
/ U'ClÍ
On t h a t c ol d a n d w i n t r y d a y
W h e n I s a w that h e a r s e c o m e rolling
C o m e to c a r r y t he Dillo a w a y .
- M a n a M u l d a u r
A rm adillo W orld H eadquarters opened
Aug 7 1970 and closed Dec. 31. 1980 In the
interim , everybody w ho's anybody played
there I won t try to list them because it
would be e a sie r to list the people who
d i d n ’t play th e re . A lready I h ear som e
w ise-ass saying, B etcha Steely Dan never
knowing that Steely Dan
played th e re ,
never plays a n y w h e r e But even
they
played the Dillo in 1972 And everybody
alread y know s about Springsteen
But let s re s tr ic t ourselves to the p re
sent crop of ev erybodies The last week at
the A rm adillo began with M aria M uldaur
and continued w ith Joe Ely, Je rry Je ff
W alker and D elb ert McClinton before the
final blowout The sentim ental highlight
was J e rr y Je ff W alker, flanked by Ely and
M uldaur and about half of the m usicians in
T ravis County, singing a raveup version oi
(During
the firs t Dillo co n c ert I ever review ed for
this publication. Valdy & the Hometown
Band ended w ith th a t song )
TH E LAST DANCE
Will the C ircle Be Unbroken
loom ed from
The doors opened a t 8 30 p.m. New
Y ear s E ve The in terior of the hall was
bright from all the TV lights — statio n ary
three p latform s
c a m e ra s
stra te g ic a lly placed in the audience while
ca m e ra m e n w ith portable videotape units
wound
the crowd.
T h e re h ad b een p len ty of v id e o tap e
m achines around all week, but this night it
was obvious th a t they m eant business.
th e ir way
thorough
The show w as sold out, despite the fact
th at it took $25 and a two-hour w ait in the
cold to get tick ets. N onetheless, the place
d id n 't seem ja m m e d , people seem ed to be
m ore in te reste d in m illing around and ex
p eriencing ev ery th in g the A rm adillo had
to offer one m o re tim e than latching onto
one good place to w atch the show
I suppose ev ery Dillo fan had a m om ent
when it hit
Not the m om ent when they
heard th at the Dillo was doomed, but the
m om ent when it finally sunk in One such
m om ent c a m e rig h t a fte r the opening ac t
— the m im e, juggling and m agic of Turk
Pipkin When T urk w as done, M ichael
P rie s t took th e stage, as he had done m any
tim e s before
P rie s t is an a r tis t who also happens to be
the D illo’s announcer. F or years, he has
a p p eared o nstag e betw een ac ts
to a n
nounce the upcom ing concerts. T here was
alw ays a m ild rush of anticipation when
P rie s t sa u n tered up to the m icrophone to
reel off a list of w onderful p erfo rm ers who
would g ra c e the A rm adillo stage in up
com ing w eeks. Now. for the first tim e, his
list of com ing a ttra c tio n s w as em pty.
N onetheless, he left us with an upbeat
m e s s a g e .
th e h e a d
" T h is m a y be
q u a r te rs ,” he said, "b u t y o u a re the a r
m adillos. I t ’s not the building th at m akes
it's the sp irit — and
all
th e re 's too m uch energy w rapped up in all
of this to ju s t fade aw ay.'
this possible,
And w ith a final rem in d er of "W e will do
this a g a in ,” he tu rn ed the stag e over to
A sleep a t the W heel — w ith special gu ests
K enneth T h readgill and
the ubiquitous
M aria M uldaur (who d eserv es la u rels for
spending m o re tim e onstage during the
F in al D ays than anyone else).
It m u st have been difficult for the people
listening to this on public radio — the la st
d a n c e a t
'D illo w a s b r o a d c a s t
nationw ide — to com prehend w hat happen-
th e
ed next.
T h e m u r a l a p p e a r s to m o v e by i t s e l j
f r o m t h e w i n g s to t h e c e n t e r o f t h e
s t a g e . T h e m u r a l p a r t s , a n d b e h i n d it
is a b e a r d e d f i g u r e w e a r i n g a n A r
m a d i l l o h e l m e t a n d w e i r d c e r e m o n i a l
g ar b . H e s e t s u p a w i n d i n s t r u m e n t
t h a t s e e m s to h a v e b e e n s y n t h e s i z e d
f r o m s e v e r a l g e n e r a t i o n s o f p l u m b i n g
t r u m p e t
a n d d e l i v e r s 10
b l a s t s - o n e f o r e a c h y e a r o f the A r -
t o r t u o u s
lllustration by Sam Hurt
I Goodbye t o |
the Armadillo
m a d i l l o ’s e x i s t e n c e . E a c h bl ast
is
f o l l o w e d by a n e n o r m o u s r o ar f r o m
t he a u d i e n c e . T h e b e a r d e d f i g u r e d i s
a p p e a r s b e h i n d
t h e m u r a l , w h i c h
s c u t t l e s o f f s t a g e u n d e r its o w n p o w e r .
This was the final a p p e aran c e on the A r
m adillo stage of the original Dillo M aster
of C erem onies and sp iritu a l lead er: the
M ichaelangelo of A rm a d illo a r t, J im
F ranklin, JFK L N .
And then it w as tim e for C om m ander
Cody and his Lost P lan e t A irm en to rock
everybody's socks off — a fte r ushering in
the New Y ear, of course. Seem ed like old
tim es — in la te '73 the A irm en took the
stage right here to do m any of these sam e
songs for their ‘‘Live F ro m Deep in the
H eart of T ex as” album .
■•Whole
lotta
t h i n g s I a i n ' t n e v e r
d o n e
I a i n ’t never h a d too m u c h f u n ! ”
— C o m m a n d e r Co dy
A fter the C om m ander s set, m em b ers of
the Lost P lan e t A irm en and Asleep a t the
Wheel — plus vario u s o th er guests — got
together to form the Ozone O rch estra and
vowed to play everything they knew before
the night w as over. They did. They ex
hausted all the orig in als and turned to
including, of course, "W ill
traditionals,
the C ircle Be U nbroken.”
It was about 4:30 a.m . Jan . 1 when the
la st notes of
faded
aw ay and the sta g e of A rm adillo World
H eadqu arters fell silen t for the la st tim e.
Even then, hundreds of people m illed
‘G oodnight Ire n e ’
about, not really w anting to leave, orbiting
the hall one m ore tim e before the lights
w ent out.
T here w as one m ore public event a t the
A rm adillo, nine days la te r. The auction
P eople ask if it w as sad. A ctually it
w asn 't, not for the bidders anyw ay (though
som e of the A rm adillo em ployees had the
look of people who w ere losing a piece of
th e ir own lives) It w as invigorating to see
th e place packed w ith people again — e x
c i t e d people, bidding feverishly on the
p a ltrie st item s. (A uction item No. 298:
“ tra sh can and contents
' i The A rm adillo
seem ed alive again, and as long as it w as
alive, it w as still h ard to believe th a t it
could ev er die — this place had been the
scene of so m u c h life in the la st 10 years.
F or the m ost p art, the bidders w eren ’t
m e rc e n a ry b argain h u n ters, but people
who w anted to hang on to p a rt of the Dillo
in the fu tu re as they had in the past. T hat
little foot-long "S ta ff O nly” sign w ith the
hand-painted tro p ical isle scene th at used
to hang over
the kitchen a re a w asn 't
“ re a lly ” w orth the $325 th a t som eone paid
for it; it w as only w orth it because it had
been p a rt of som ething th a t people cared
a b o u t ....
T H E POLEM ICAL PART
So WHY, yo u 're asking, is the Dillo so
im p o rtan t? T here a re lots of places to
h e a r m usic in this city alone Why m ake
such a big deal over a scroungy old place
th a t used to be an arm o ry building and is
alw ays too hot in su m m er and too cold in
13
w inter?
Well, this is ju st m y opinion, but I'd say
it's b ec au se A rm ad illo W orld H ea d
q u a rte rs
is (ca n ’t bring m yself to say
" w a s ” ju st yet) the best place I'v e ever
seen for experiencing live rock ‘n ’ roll —
not to m ention country, jazz and dam n
n ear anything else th a t com es down the
pike.
The A rm adillo is the best because it
p rese rv e s virtues of tw o types of venue,
which a re usually thought to be m utually
exclusive:
the big co n cert hall and the
sm all funky club th a t’s drenched in the
sp irit of rock n ’ roll (using the term loose
ly not to exclude Waylon Jennings and
Count Basie and all the re st).
lik e
Think about
it. T here a r e big shiny
p la c e s
th e S E C an d M u n ic ip a l
A uditorium th a t will hold m ore people for
a concert — but these places don’t have
rock n' roll a t th e ir core. Can a place ever
really get sa tu ra te d w ith rock ‘n ’ roll sp irit
when i t ’s going to have to be cleaned up
and ready for a boat show or basketball
gam e the next day?
it. It also felt no need
The A rm adillo, on the o th er hand, had no
excuses to m ake, felt no need to scrub off
all this nasty graffiti so th a t the resp e c
table people in th ree-piece suits w ouldn’t
to h ire a
see
squadron of arm ed and uniform ed security
guards
line. At
M unicipal,-you’re liable to see as m any as
25 guards a t a concert. Why don’t they
h a v e a r m e d
th e ’D illo ,
tr o o p e r s a t
h m m m 9 B ecause the Dillo doesn’t n e e d
them . Rock n' ro lle rs a re not a l i e n s at
the Dillo the way they a re a t the m ore
bourgeois places. I t ’s th e ir home.
to keep everybody
in
“ So, the ’Dillo has rock ‘n' roll in its
h ea rt. So w hat? So do a lot of clu b s.’’ True,
Austin has m ore than its sh a re of little
funky m usic p la ce s. B ut
th e ir v ery
littlen ess prevents them from doing w hat
the A rm adillo did. Rock co n certs need to
h a v e
th a t old N u r e m b e r g - r a lly a t
m osphere that com es from having hun
dreds of like-m inded fans all in the sam e
place for the sa m e purpose. Plus,
the
’Dillo w as big enough to a ttr a c t bigger-
nam e a c ts such as L ynyrd Skynyrd, who
i n s i s t e d on playing a t the 'D illo even at
the height of th eir fam e.
P erh ap s m ore im portantly,
the Dillo
could a ttr a c t ac ts of a m ore "m e d iu m ”
s ta tu re , and this is w here the absence of
the Dillo will really be felt. Local bands
will alw ays have a place to play; the big-
nam e touring a c ts can g et booked at places
like M unicipal But the Dillo w as a light
n in g
fo r b a n d s w ith only c u lt
followings, m any of whom will not be play
ing in Austin anym ore. The clubs a re too
sm all, the auditorium s too big.
ro d
The A rm adillo brought together m any
d ifferent facets of
the Austin m usical,
en tertain m en t and co u n tercu ltu ral scene
in a w ay that reinforced one another. In a
fragm ented club scene,
th e re a re jazz
clubs, honky tonks, punk clubs and so
forth, and they seldom , if ever, interact
with each other or give any energy to each
other At the A rm adillo, all these things
and m o re w ere brought to g eth er under one
roof
W hat’s m ore, the Dillo w as a tim e w arp
wdiere the last 11 y ea rs of Austin m usic ex
isted sim ultaneously — the psychedelic
60s, th e luded-out 70s and the apocalyp
tic ’80s w ere all one a t the A rm adillo.
G ranted, the place w a sn ’t perfect. Some
factions in the Austin m usic scene said the
Dillo m anagem ent w as often unsuppor-
tive But still, when th a t cosm ic balance
sheet is tallied, the fa c t rem a in s that the
co re of the live m usic scene in Austin for
the
last decade w as A rm adillo W'orld
H ea d q u arters — and its d em ise is a loss of
m a jo r proportions.
Still, it’s b etter to burn out than to fade
aw av, as w hatsisnam e used to say. and
perhaps i t ’s b e tte r for th e A rm adillo to end
in a hellacious sa tu rn a lia n blowout — like
the New Y ea r's Eve p arty — than to slow
ly d rift into oblivion. I'd really hate to
Continued on page 18
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COUNSELING CENTER
PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS
First Series Spring, 1981
West Mall Office Building 303, 4 7 1 -3 5 1 5
The Counseling Center is o ffe rin g several p ro g ra m s fo r persons in
terested in th e ir personal grow th and developm ent. The groups listed
below are open oniy to registered UT students. E n ro llm e n t for these
program s is free and can be made d ire c tly th ro ugh the Counseling
Center, West M a ll O ffice B uilding 303, 471-3515, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through F rid a y.
_____________
be
assisted
SELF-ASSERTION SKILLS:
ndividuals will
in
developing assertive behavior and the
necessary skills to enjoy open interac
tion with others. The group will focus
on re p r e s e n tin g one's own r i g h t s
without
rights of
others.
VL ednesdays, F e b ru a ry
sC "ion>). 3-5 p.m .
infringing on
- M arch 11
the
18
( I
M A N A G I N G S T R E S S A N D
TENSION: This group is designed to
help
individuals gain a greater un
derstanding of the nature and causes of
stress and to develop skills to reduce
and manage stress in their daily living.
Sec. 1: M o n d a y *, February 16 - M arch 9 (4
sessions), 3 -5 p .m .
Sec. 2: Tuesdays, February 17 - March 10 (4
sessions), 3 -5 p.m .
th e m s e lv e s ,
MEN S AWARENESS GROUP:
This program is
intended for males
who are interested in gaining greater
u n d e r s ta n d in g of
the
effects of being born male, and' ways of
relating c om fortably and openly with
others. M ajor focus will be on raising
the male consciousness and providing
an on-going support group for discus
sion.
Tuesdays, S tartin g J a n u a ry 2 7 , continuing all
semester, 5 -7 p.m .
M A N A G IN G RELATIONSHIPS:
Focus will be on decisions regarding
s t a r t i n g , c o n t i n u i n g and e n d in g
relationships. P a rticip a n ts will be en
c o u r a g e d
t h e i r o w n
t o a s s e s s
relationships and to c la r ify 'a r e a s of
conflict.
M ondays, February 16 - M arch 9 (4 sessions),
3 -5 p.m .
I N
A C H I E V I N G S U C C E S S
COLLEGE: M IN O R ITY STUDENT
SUPPORT GROUP: M in o rity students
face many challenges while in college.
This group w ill focus on ways of m a x
imizing college success. Topics w ill in
clude
tim e m anagem ent and study
s k ills , c a r e e r e x p lo r a t io n , stress
m anagem ent,
in c re a s in g self con
fidence and esteem and developing in
terpersonal skills.
W e d n e s d a y s , F e b ru a ry 2 5
- A p ril 8
(6
sessions), 3 -5 p .m .
t h o u g h t s ,
BUILDING YOUR SELF-ESTEEM:
The focus of this group w ill be on iden-j
t i f y i n g
f e e l i n g s a n d '
behaviors that a ffe c t self-esteem and,|
through a va rie ty of exercises, explor-;
ing w a y s of
i n c r e a s i n g p o s i t i v e !
feelings.
T uesdays, F e b ru a ry 17
- M arch 2 4
(5 .
sessions), 3 -5 p .m .
INCREASING SELF-CONFIDENCE: Students often experience challenges tai
their self-confidence due to new roles and expectations encountered in school.!
This group w ill focus on these challenges and explore strategies to build self-’
confidence.
i Sec. 1:
(for G ra d u a te W o m en o nly), M o n d a y s , February 3 - M arch 31 (8 sessions), 1-3 p .m .
vSec. 2: Thursdays, February 12 - M arc h 12 (5 sessions), 1-3 p
. m
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15
Opryland
holding auditions for shows
by eric tibbets
If you can sing, dance or play a musical instrument, you
can try out for a season with ‘ Oprvland USA.”
Top members of the Opryland entertainment department
will stop in Austin Jan. 27 as part of a 25-city “ tour for
throughout the eastern two-thirds of the nation
talent'
Their visit will be the first Opryland has ever made to
Austin The team will be in Dallas and Denton Jan. 26.
Oprvland’s upcoming season will mark the theme park s
10th birthday, and the audition team is seeking 350 singers,
dancers, musicians, stage managers and technicians for the
spring-through-autumn celebration
The wide variety of American musical forms featured at
Opryland in its 14 fully staged musical productions include
country, pop, rock, gospel, bluegrass, Broadway music,
vaudeville and many others The audition team wants to see
singers, trained dancers, dance captains, experienced in
strumentalists. conductor pianists and specialty acts and
bands.
‘ Performers we select are among the best young talents
in the country,” said Bob Whittaker, the park’s entertain
ment director and a member of the audition team, “ We’ll
give them more experience in one Opryland season than
some of them ever dreamed of. In fact, Broadway producers
have told us that the experience of one Opryland season
equals that of two years in the cast of a Broadway show.
That’s how much our performers are on stage.”
A season with Opryland is rigorous. The larger shows will
be performed 650 times each and some of the smaller shows
will be performed more times yet. The 1981 season is open
weekends from March 28 to May 17, It is open daily from
May 23 to Sept. 7 and closes the season with weekend-only
operation from Sept. 12 to Nov. 1.
At the auditions, singers will be asked to perform two or
more numbers, one ballad and the other an up-tempo selec
tion. A piano accompanist is part of the audition team, and
singers should bring music in the proper key. A record
player and a cassette recorder will be available. Dancers
should perform a routine of no more than one minute.
Instrumentalists will be asked to sightread, and woodwinds
must be proficient doublers. Conductor/pianists must be
prepared to submit references and a resume. Stage
managers and technicians should bring typed resumes.
Austin-area auditions will be from noon to 4 p.m. Jan. 27 in
the Quadrangle Room of the Texas Union Building. For
more details, call (615) 889-6600. ext. 4343.
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photo by Brad Doherty
f
Music
Last fall, the Reality of Illusion Exhibition drew a record crowd at the Huntington
Art Gallery. This spring the works of Russian avant-garde artist Ilya Chasnik
(1902-1929) will be exhibited at the Art Building.
The Talking Heads held its position as the most vital band of the ’80s to date with
the release of "Remain in Light.” The Heads’ polyrhythm s, straight from the
Bush of Ghosts — yet another quantum Jump In the lyrical sensibilities of David
Byrne.
George Lucas followed his enorm ously successful "S tar Wars" with another box
office hit, “ The Empire Strikes Back,” while the movie event of 1981 will be
Reagan’s stay in the White House.
I
■Be n ■sarg^ tt-
Movies
That was then
iftit '
V 1 "
2
^ /
' - '• 4
Wm
The American Deaf Dance Company proved itself the freshest and most ex
citing dance company in Austin in 1980. Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre
will make its first visit to Austin in early March.
Dance
r
„■<£>
■A '
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(
Institutions
photo by t arry Murphy
Television
Theater
The last day of 1980 was also the last day for the Armadillo World Head
quarters, where loyal supporters gathered for a nostalgic New Year’s Eve bash.
The new Performing Arts Center, a $41 million complex with a Concert Hall,
Recital Hall and Opera Lab Theatre, will be dedicated April 25, 1981.
Vanessa Redgrave gener ated a storm of controversy in "Play
ing for Time.” The members of the Screenwriter’s Guild may
strike for higher salaries, putting 1981 television programs
months behind schedule.
“The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas" played to sold-out
houses in November at the Paramount. "Gertrude Stein, Ger
trude Stein, Gertrude Stein” comes to Austin In February, with
Pat Carroll in the lead role.
Speakers
photo by Brad Doherty
Gloria Steinem, eminent feminist, visited the University In
In February, William Burroughs, author of “Naked
1980.
Lunch” and "Cities of the Red Night,” will speak at UT.
f i »
photo by Brad Doherty
Just because everything’s changed doesn’t mean
anything’s different.
tvm--
K * v
Continued from page 13
have come back years later and found the same building at
525-1/2 Barton Springs Road turned into a disco.
T H E PO LIT IC A L PA R T
“ Austin’s three major places for live music in the last 10
years were the ’Dillo and the original Soap Creek Saloon and
Antone’s,’’ said one veteran scene-watcher the other day.
“ All three of them came up against the developers, and the
City of Austin didn’t do a damn thing to save even one of
them.” How true. On the gravesite of the Armadillo will
reside Austin’s fourth Ramada Inn. A parking garage stands
where Antone’s pnce existed and Soap Creek was flattened
for a couple of roads and a few tract houses.
isting zoning To save the ’Dillo, at least temporarily, the
city didn't have to do a damn thing — just let the zoning stand
as it already was.
At the hearings, dozens of Austinites testified, and no one
was in favor of the zoning change — except for the out-of-
town developers who wanted to build the damn hotel.
Guess whose interests the City Council voted for — the in
terests of the people of Austin or the interests of out-of-town
developers with money0
Right.
To be fair, council members Richard Goodman and John
Trevino voted against the zoning change However, council
members Ron Mullen, Betty Himmelblau, Jim m y Snell, Lee
It ’s almost like a satanic
conspiracy. Let’s just gloss
over the fact that this city
needs new hotels and parking
garages about like it needs to
be a suburb of Houston. Let’s
pretend these things are vital
projects which the city needs
desperately. The question still
remains: why put them smack
dab on top of institutions that
really matter to so many peo
ple in this city?
Goodbge to
the Armadillo
Cooke and Mayor Carole
M c C le lla n voted for it.
Developers — 1; people of
Austin — 0.
This is an “ arts and enter
tainm ent m agazine not
usually given to overt political
commentary, but this is rele
vant to the very survival of the
arts in this community. What
if our
can we e x p ec t ,
showplaces
musical artistic
Government agencies from the federal government down
talk about “ Art for the People” and provide grants to put
statues in parks and Van Gogh prints in elevators and so
forth Huge grants are given for artists to come up with con
ceptual works that nobody except other conceptual artists
will ever notice. But when it comes to preserving a place
where thousands actually experience art and semi-art
month after month on a massive scale, a place which is a sen
timental favorite of the community to boot — our represen
tatives won’t raise a finger.
Consider that for a hotel to be built on the site of the Ar
madillo, the city had to go out of its way to change the ex
can expect to be stabbed in
the back by our City Council despite such overwhelming pop
ular support0
And for those of you who couldn't care less about art — do
you really want a council which has shown such unrespon
siveness to the will of its constituents0
Think about it when you enter the polling booth this April.
Cooke and Snell are not running for re-election, but Mullen,
Himmelblau and McClellan are. There s nothing anybody can
do now to save the Armadillo, but there is still a chance for
the thousands of people who have patronized the Armadillo
during the years to give these members of the City Council a
message in a language they will understand
JILL LBCOHS
(except selected technical
and scholarly titles)
January 19 *
\ IS A & MasterCharge Welcome
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Lorenzo Lamas stars as Midland Heights High School’s
sports hero, and Linda Hamilton portrays his girlfriend,
the most popular girl in school, in “ Secrets of Midland
Heights,” the CBS drama that airs Saturdays.
(Stations reserve the right to make last-minute changes )
NBC Sports will cover the final round of the Bob Hope
Desert Classic from La Quinta Country Club in Palm
Desert, Calif., on Sunday, Jan. 18, on NBC. Bob Hope
will host, and sportscaster Don Criqui will report on the
action
(Stations reserve the right to make last-minute changes I
New Wave:
1980’s style
Judys
Photo by Brian W;ison
by louis black
It's late at night and the band is slagging through its last number
but the crowd is hot and ready now and they just want to dance
some more It may be rock n‘ roll or it might be jazz but it is
music and that mystical connection between band and audience
has been made
It’s two hours into the next day and sweat-drenched you hustle
out of the muggy club into the chill of the night and the music has
filled your body and touched your soul. You can feel the magic in
your feet and you just want to keep dancing like some crazed Fred
Astaire.
Ed Ward, an Austin Am erican-Statesm an music critic, once
asked me why I went to see so many movies and then he said that
every night on different stages all over there were movies
happening but these movies ' were finite and when they were
over and the dawn was near they would never happen again.
He was talking about muic, pain, joy, love and romance and
about making it through the day-bv-day — which are all the sub
jects music talks about He was talking about what happens when
a band takes off and plays to save their life even though they don t
know why and even though afterwards they'll shrug and say it was
okay but the drummer was slow on one song
The Austin music scene is incredibly rich and varied and new-
wave is by no means the only thing happening locally The big
-ear are stories about ChristoDher Cross
and about the Fabulous Thunderbirds But this article is on new
wave music.
It was a weird year for local new wave because it started off
with a bang - new bands, a lot of media interest and bigger than
ever audiences. During the course of the year bands broke up. new
ones were formed, clubs closed and clubs opened and clubs closed,
and the audience came and the audience went.
A few vears ago a couple of Mexican Americans opened a bar
named Raul's. One day members of one of the only punk rock
bands in Austin stopped in, asked for a gig and the manager said
sure and gradually things happened. Soon a number of punk new-
wave bands were playing there and slowly they attracted a follow
ing One night a band called the Huns debuted and the police busted
them Suddenly everyone seemed to know about Raul's and new
bands were springing up daily.
Time passed and last February the original owners got tired of
the day-to-day problems and hassles and sold the club In April, the
club reopened under new management with a better sound system.
At first things were pretty much the same but then the policy
shifted slightly to a heavy emphasis on punk bands during the
weeks though weekends still saw a mix of punk and new wave
bands.
Spring saw Duke’s Royal Coach Inn get into the action Former
ly the Vulcan Gas Company. Austin's famed psychedlic rock club,
Photo by K a t h r y n MHian
F-Systems
this club began booking new wave and punR music. The club never
caught on the way Raul s did, where the club itself was the event,
but a lot of good music was played there as it tried to struggle
along.
By the fall, Duke’s was booking a cross-section of music but Club
Foot had come along to fill the gap. booking a lot of local and
national new w-ave groups. So the beat goes on
Ultimately the music scene isn’t clubs, it s bands. And the bands
come and go. Terminal Mind, one of the best bands around, dis
banded this year and Delta, one of the most exciting new bands,
was formed. It isn’t exactly a circle but it’s not quite a straight
line either Lead guitarist Ratldy Franklin left Standing Waves, to
many the premier Austin new wave band, and joined F-Systems
and now it is uncertain as to what is going to happen to the Waves
The scene is bands, new ones like 5-Spot, and the Hormoans,
ones with personnel changes like the Next and STB. old ones that
keep getting better like the Big Boys and F-Systems, and even
visiting ones like the Judys — one of the most pleasant surprises of
the year. The scene is bands, bands like the Inserts, the Delin
quents, the elusive Foams, the ephemeral Casa-Novas, the Skunks,
the Radio Planets. D-Day and more. Bands like Joe King’
Carrasco and the Crowns who have broken big internationally. And
that list barely scratches the surface of the numerous new wave
bands in this town. There is no way to adequately describe them in
rords but there are places to see them at Club Foot, Raul's, The
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20
'Coal M iner’s Daughter’
by louis black
The critical opinion seems to be in. Authorities ranging
from Andrew Sarris in Th e Village Voice to those two prize
idiots on Sneak Preview have all agreed that this has been a
terrible year for film. This information is always said or
written quite solemnly. It is stated as an unequivocable truth
without room for argument. 1980 was a horrible year for the
American cinema.
Exactly why it was or in what way it was is never really
elaborated. It should be noted that these same critics are the
ones who are usually the most vocal about decrying
Hollywood’s tendency to move toward big extravaganzas and
away from so-called “sm all” pictures. Yet. I can t get rid of
the gnawing assumption that the reason this past year is now
assumed to have been such a bad one for film is that there
were no outstanding popular blockbusters along the lines of
“The Godfather,” “ Star Wars,” “Close Encounters” and
“Jaw s,” or critical successes like “ Kramer vs. Kramer.”
"Apocalypse Now” or the painfully overrated “The Deer
Hunter.”
Because, in fact. 1980 was not only an incredibly exciting
year for the American cinema but a year full of promise for
the future. Instead of being a year of blockbusters, it was a
year full of small films. Some were extraordinary, some
were good, some were not so good, but a surprisingly large
number were, at the very least, interesting. In decrying the
quality of Hollywood films in a year that saw the releases of
"The Elephant Man,” "Ordinary People,” "The Stunt Man,”
"It's My Turn," "Airplane,” "Howard and Melvin,” "Dress
ed to Kill, "The Shining,” "The Long Riders,” “The Great
Santini.
"Gloria,” "Raging Bull,” “The Big Red One,”
"Private Benjamin, "The Blues Brothers,” “Coal Miner’s
Daughter,” “ Popeve,” “American Gigolo” and “Used
Cars,” among others, all the critics illustrated was their own
myopic vision and their increasingly pathetic lack of im
agination.
For if 1980 was a good (if not a great year) for film, it was a
horrible year for film critics. The Village Voi ce' s Andrew
Sarris became increasingly senile, Th e N e w Y o r k e r ' s
Pauline Kael continued to gently float down the river of
dense incomprehensibility, the Today’s show Gene Shalit
continues to ignore the film and go for the quip while Gene
Siskel and Roger Ebert continue to give vaudeville a bad
name on Sneak Previews.
There were many new talents who did their first major
work during 1980. David and Jerry Zucker and Jim Abrahams
were responsible for the hysterically funny and enormously
successful “ Airplane.” Writer turned director Lewis John
Carlino managed to get brilliant performances from the en
tire cast of "The Great Santini.” Long time actor Robert
Redford achieved an across-the-board success with his tun
ning directorial debut, "Ordinary People.”
films as well as one
Claudia Weil had previously directed documentary and ex
perimental
independent feature
"Girlfriends.” In 1980, she directed “ It's My Turn,” an
engaging, captivating film that sensibly confronted a wide
range of issues including fem inism as well as male
vulnerability. Another director with one independent film un
der his belt, David Lynch, also turned out one of the better
films of the year, “The Elephant Man.” Novelist John Sayles
has turned out excellent screenplays for such films as “ The
Lady in Red” and "Battle Beyond the Stars.” He used $60,000
of the money he earned from those sales to direct his own
film, “ The Return of TheSecaucus Seven.” The film, about a
reunion of survivors from the ’60s, has become a smashing
critical success.
A number of directors who had been laboring in Hollywood
for several years finally hit their stride last year, critically if
not creatively. Richard Rush, who began directing motorcy
cle films more than a decade ago, finally gained a critical hit
with "The Stunt Man.” Jonathan Demme, a personal
favorite of this writer, had earned critical praise several
years ago for “Citizen's Band.” Still, it was nothing com
pared
to the outpouring of ovations for “ Melvin and
Howard.” Along with a bevy of other prizes, it made
numerous 10 bests lists as well as winning the National Film
M ouiel
mo
Critics Award as the best picture of the year. Even though
"Melvin and Howard”
is certain to get a few Oscar
nominations, as with “Citizen’s Band,” the film has been a
disaster at the box office. Demme's talent is so quirky and in
novative that no one seem s quite sure how to market the
film.
John Landis had directed a few films before finally hitting
it big with “ Animal House.” “The Blues Brothers” was the
follow-up and, even in prerelease, it generated a lot of
negative press by radically overshooting its budget. Although
the film had been bombed by the critics, it managed a fair
showing at the box office. Despite the fact that it is overlong
(maybe “lengthy ), it’s still quite funny as well as one of the
best musicals in recent years. Besides all that. Aretha
Franklin’s version of “ Think” is worth the price of admission
if not the whole $30 million cost of the film.
Howard Zieff had developed a cult following with
a critical hit with “ Hearts of the West” and
"Slither,
achieved commercial success with “House Calls,” but it
wasn t really until “Private Benjamin” that he managed to
bring them all together. A funny, fast moving film, the most
notable quality of “ Private Benjamin” is its truly outstan
ding ensemble acting; from Goldie Hawn to Harry Dean
Stanton to P.J. Soles, the whole cast turns in an exceptional
job.
Although his credentials as a writer were clearly establish
ed in “Rolling Thunder” and “Taxi Driver,” Paul Schrader’s
career as writer/director was uneven. The success of
"American Gigolo” managed to clearly establish him both
critically and in the industry.
Director Irving Kershner has been doing fine work in
Hollywood for years, but it is only with his direction of the
enormously successful “ Star Wars” sequel, "The Empire
that his name became known outside a very
Strikes Back,
‘‘Dressed to Kill”
small circle
A number of good directors continued to turn out fine work
including Brian De Palma, (the exquisite "Dressed to Kill” i,
Clint Eastwood 1 who, as in "Bronco Billy, always gives his
best performances in his own films) and Stanley Kubrick
i whose "The Shining," despite a critical bloodletting still
managed a respectable show at the box office). Robert Alt
man. after almost a decade of praise for mostly second-rate
films, managed to turn out not onlv his first big commercial
success since “M*A*S*H” but one of the best films of his
career in "Popeve Not surprisingly, it was ravaged by a
lot of critics who didn t understand it A surprisingly
warm and funny film, it was beautifully acted, especially bv
Shelley Duvall The film took advantage of all of Altman's
strengths in its creation of a magic and special land peopled
by unique and unusual characters.
A number of directors returned to work after years aw’av
from the silver screen. After a decade and a half away from
Hollywood. Samuel Fuller returned in triumph with "The Big
Red One.
a war film about people and about surviving ’
Though their work hasn't been finished yet. Bob Rafelson
' F*ve Easy P ieces” ) and Arthur Penn ("Little Big Man” )
are both working on films.
What is so impressive about the above list is not the quality
of any individual film but the fact that it indicates that so
many directors, new and old, are hard at work turning out in
teresting and creative films. The above list is limited to
directors, ignoring the numerous writers, cinematographers
actors, actresses and others who are equally hard at work
turning out an astonishing number of good films. The excite
ment in this listing is more in what is going to be coming out
than in what wre have already seen
Along these lines, a large number of superior films have
already opened in Austin this year, but among the official
980 re eases. Shogun Assassin." the problematic but total-
Shtp!
The ComPetition.” "Altered
States and The Reunion of the Secaucus Seven” have vet
h * agl"g Bul1’
fnrP h' t0Wn ( ertainly’ 11 is not the best of all possible times
have us'be^ieve
‘S * ‘0t beK6r tha" S° me people would
*• e
&
by chM ter brooks
There is a film that sifts, finer than
flour, over the eyes of everyone, even
the most vigilant. It is created by
cultural expectation and kept up by the
seduction erf inertia.
This third lid thickens day after day,
year after year, until perception
becomes a solely utilitarian function
and the possibility of seeing vanishes.
It often takes an abrupt rupture with
the past, such as the collision of two
mediums, to rivet people’s attention to
the awesome, novel qualities inherent
in the mundane — familiar objects, like
feet and television.
This week Sharon Vasquez, Eric
Graham and the Austin Repertory
Dancers Company unveil their recent
experiments with dance and video in a
s e r i e s
e n t i t l e d
of wo r ks
“ Observed/Observing.” Vasquez,
assistant professor of dance at the
University, has been a dancer, teacher
and choreographer in Austin for four
years. In addition to creating pieces for
the American Deaf Dance Co. and the
Austin Repertory Dancers Company,
she has conducted a workshop in con
temporary dance for the Ballet
Nacional de Peru. She studied modern
dance at the Martha Graham School,
Merce Cunningham School and most
recently with Bella Lewitsky.
Eric Graham is a graduate of Penn
State University with a degree in com
munication. As a founder member of
Vido-Out, Graham collaborated
in
various performances involving live
dance, video and laser art. In Austin,
Graham has acted as video-grapher on
several dance/video projects, including
Edward Kramer’s “Thought Piece”
and “Cycles” and “Picturing the
Dance,” directed by Ellen Schiffman.
Graham is also an animator and has
P
h
o
t
o
s
b
y
S
t
e
v
e
P
u
m
p
h
r
e
y
created computer animation sequences
for “KENV Earthbeat” and commer
cials for KLBJ. He is a field director
for KTW.
“The most important thing to me as a
choreographer,” said Vasquez is to give
the audience choices, so that the
audience can decide what they want to
view.” Vasquez enjoys working with a
camera instead of a conventional
pro scen iu m s ta g e b e c au se
the
audiences’ viewing focus is not dictated
by lighting or direction.
and
In the process of using video as a
teaching tool, Vasquez discovered “a
creative force capable of augmenting
c h o r e o g r a p h y
g i v i n g
choreographers more possibilities.” In
“Observed/Observing,” by implemen
ting four 21-inch monitors, a movement
may be seen from two or more direc
tions, or the location of the dance may
suddenly change from the studio to an
outdoor space. By using video screens
and mirrors, the audience will con
stantly be offered to view the dancers
at different angles and dimensions. The
camera is usually a fairly unobtrusive
b e a s t , e x c e p t s a y s V a s q u e z ,
“sometimes you feel like it's zeroing in
on your nostril or something.” At first
some of the dancers viewed the
“camera as an intrusion,” says Vas
quez, but then others began to “ham it
up. But now it isn’t a problem anymore.
We want to show what video can do.”
is
Vas que z
c o m m e n t s
t hat
“Observed/Observing”
like “ a
smorgasbord, there’s so much going on
that your attention can fall whereever
something interests you.” But like the
host who wants the food and not the
cook present at the dinner party, Vas
quez will keep the actual cameras out
of sight, even during the portions of live
taping. '
é ^
íjtie
A O o u c L o f
u ro p e
G F R M A N
Records, tapes, magazines,
books, all occasion cards.
Europ ean imports in cry stal,
porcelain and pewter.
FOREST PLAZA
12591 Research B lvd .
183 - Ju s t N orth of T .l.
258-0500
T u e s d a y
>0 c o v e r
1 .
I . \ D I F S P o o l T o u r n a m e n
L a d i e s f i r s t D r i n k F r e e 7 -1 1
W e d n e sd a y
BEER B E ST
9 2 a l l th e b e e r y o n c a n d r i n k &.
p o p c o r n to o 7*11
Thurs
BELLY DANCER
S u n d a y
R A T NIG HT
> o c o v e r w ith Hat
P o o l T o u r n a m e n t P r i z e s
“ C o m e D a n c e y o u r H e a r t o u t "
H ap p y Hr. 7-9P1H
D o u b le s h o t s fo r th e p r i c e o f I
15 23 T in n in F o rd
Off R i v e r s i d e
O pen 7 -2 T u es-S u n
The cast of ‘A Gershwin Rhapsody’
Photo by Brian Wilso^
Center Stage features elegant revue
by theresa m ysiew icz
“ T r u e m u s i c ... m u s t r e p e a t t h e t h o u g h t a n d
a s p i r a t i o n s o f t h e p e o p l e a n d t h e t i m e .... M y
t i m e is t o d a y . " — G e o r g e G e r s h w i n
George Gershwin is one of A m erica’s best-loved
and most prolific com posers of popular music, whose
heyday coincided with the 1920s and ’30s world of the
Black R enaissance, jazz and Prohibition. Center
Stage's opening revue of the season, presented as a
live radio show in the elegant black-tie-and-satin
style of the '30s. features the m usic of this self-styled
composer.
Above all, “ A Gershwin Rhapsody” is a m usical
revue. From the m om ent the stagelight illum inates
the baby grand for the show 's overture of “ Rhapsody
in Blue” to the final notes of “ Sw anee.” a song that
A1 Jolson adopted and m ade into a million seller, it’s
the music that takes center stage.
Although G ershw in's compositions have withstood
the test of tim e, m usical d irector Noel Alford, who
has had a num ber of local successes as a theatrical
m usic director, points out that the whole purpose of a
revue is “ to present the songs in a new way, with
fresh in terp retatio n .”
Alford also gathered together songs with sim ilar
chord progressions, so that
they could be sung
s im u lta n e o u s ly . T h is sound w as p a r tic u la r ly
successful in the blending of the classically trained
voices of B arbara A m aral and John Aielli. In the set
of love songs. A m aral's expressive rendition of
is followed by A ielli's
“ Someone to Watch Over Me
solo of “ Somebody Love M e,” with both eventually
m eeting in a beautiful duet.
Each of the three m em bers of Center Stage's
regular revue company, Madeline Palm isano, Laura
B u c k lin and P e t e r M a d iso n , a ls o e n e r g iz e
G ershw in's composition with a distinctive flair
One of the most successful segm ents of T hursday’s
perform ance was the group of G ershw in's lesser-
known satirical works. Here. Palm isano did a g re a t
take-off of Carmen M iranda in G ershw in’s Cuban-
inspired “ Ju st A nother R h u m b a.”
The Madison-Aielli perform ance of “ The B abbitt
and the Brom ide,” (rem iniscent of smooth, soft-shoe
vaudeville days), revealed the Gershwin com m ent
that meaningless chit-chat could be carried into the
higher realm s of heaven
Although the midweek show got off to a slow sta rt,
things soon picked up with Bucklin’s strong p erfor
m ance of the bittersw eet love song. “ They C an’t
Take That Away From Me. From there, the energy
and emotion accum ulated and reached its highest
pitch in the final set of songs taken from one of
G ershw in’s most cherished works, the black opera,
“ Porgy and B ess.”
In this last set. the cast perform s a sonorous
medley from the world-famous folk opera. The im
age that rem ains is that of Am aral as her voice rises
to a controlled cry of emotion in the “ S um m ertim e”
reprise.
t L
>
\ lijL‘
JRNURRY WHITE
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476-9171
r FOOTGEAR
2 2 0 0 GUADALUPE
AUSTIN. TEXAS 7870 5
512 472 9433
by goorg# cotoman
“Aran Islands: A Personal Journey” ; by Dennis
Sm ith ; photographs by Bill P o w ers; D oubleday; 143
pages; $14.95
Thirty m iles off the Atlantic co ast of Ireland lie
three silvery-gray rocks called the Aran Islands. The
'about eight miles long by two
largest of the three is
wide, comprising 7,635 a c r e s ,” the sm allest about
“ three miles long by two wide, comprising 2,252
a c r e s .” These are not p retty islands. They probably
would not im press the av erag e tourist or travel
agent. They a re. for the m ost p art, without e le ctrici
ty, hot w ater or adequate roads But “ like a blessed
barrier reef protecting holy Ireland, they stand up
from the sea, defiant in their isolation, proud even in
their uniqueness.
Dennis Smith, the com passionate firefighter best
known for his books. “ Report Fro m Engine Co. 82,
“ Firehouse” and the m ore recent “ G litter and Ash.
and himself a first generation Insh-A m erican, was
drawn to this uniqueness just as the renowned Irish
(pronounced
John Millington Synge
playwright
“ sing” ) was 80 y ears before, and just as Robert
Flaherty was in the 1930s when he m ade the classic
docum entary. “ Man of Aran
The Aran islands that Synge and F lah erty lived on
and observed, as Smith tells us in his n arrative, are
basically the sam e today as they were 50 or even 80
year : ago. The islands' inhabitants are Catholic, sup
port themselves by trapping lobster and fishing,
growing their own vegetables and taking advan
tage of the free-flowing stream of tourists that come
out to the islands. They speak Irish for the m ost part,
English when they have to. They are a proud people,
the
attend m ass regularly, work hard and on
weekends play hard Though there is no real outlet
for recreation on the islands, alm ost everyone —
men and women — head for the local lounges on the
weekends where dancing and singing go on until the
wee hours of the morning.
Though Smith informs us that “ m usic is not a
strong tradition here as it is in other ... a re a s ... a few
islanders could always be prodded to offer a song or
two. When they sang, they stared directly in front of
their natural
them or
shyness, and often a friend sitting by their side would
hold their hand to support them through the song.
That was true of the men as well as women. The
gesture was referred to as pumping the song up.
looked down because of
The real emphasis here is neither on the m usic nor
people, but on the unique, even haunting physical
ch aracteristics of the islands them selves. From
the m ystical F o rt Dun
Smith's descriptions of
Aengus to the ' “ strange juxtapositions’’ he finds on
Inishmore. the biggest of the three islands, we com e
to know these lonely islands as Synge and Flah erty
them selves must have. They are at once moving and
beautiful but at the sam e tim e threatening and dead
ly.
With his easy, graceful prose. Smith shows us how
these islands are all of these things and so much
m ore, how they have captured the imagination of
men for hundreds of y eárs and why. Sm ith’s text,
combined with Bill P ow ers' moving photographs,
does not make “ Aran Islands” a rem arkable book,
but it does cre a te a work that is as enigm atic as its
subject and for islands like these, that is enough.
4 Aran’ reveals poetry of landscapes
23
Recycle this newspaper.
T h ere are twelve g re e n
recycle boxes on campus.
The
Tnird V o a s l
Every Monday
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Every Tuesday
THE LOTIONS
Wednesday
SONS OF SLIM
WHITMAN
Thursday
MINOR MIRACLE
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L a rry C o ry o ll
Friday & Saturday
"G ATE MOUTH BROW N"
5555 l\l. LAM AR
454-0511
Facing Koenig between Lamar & Guadalupe
Ruins on the Inlshmors island built bsfors ths tlms of Christ.
j
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WITH 2 FOR
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m m m iH H M R
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AND
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AND
IjlfiCONDITION RED|||| Ü T H E SH A D ES!
50‘ DRAFT
f REGGAE Í
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I
I UM OJA I
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SSCHNAPPS, AND-
j
5 KAMAKAZZIS
BIG BO VS
ANO
THE N E X T
WITH
$1.25 M ARGARITAS
I
I JOE KING
| CARRASCO |
I THE JUDY'S
THE FABULOUSi
THUNPERBIRDS
The Great
Bronze Ag
of China
the beautifully designed and intricately decorated bronze
vessels and jade pieces.
Excavations that produced these objects have pushe
back the date of the beginning of the Bronze Age in Chim
and have raised the question of whether the Bronze Age <
China actually originated in China or was a product of th
bronze technology of the ancient Near East. Evidenc
shows that the Chinese developed their own methods an
artistry in bronze, as the styles of the two regions are ver
different.
Early bronze in the ancient Near East was cast by th<
lost wax method, in which hot wax was poured over a con
and sculpted after it cooled. This produced a wax replici
of the final bronze piece. The wax was covered with cla\
and baked, causing the clay to harden and the wax to melt
Bronze was then poured in to* the hollow clay mold whicf
was broken when the bronze solidified, leaving a finishec
bronze piece.
* * *
The Chinese used another method for the vast majoritv
of their bronze work. They used piece molds, which were
made by building a clay model, and then covered the
model with sections of clay. The whole thing was baked
and the clay sheUs that had covered the model were
removed. Decorations and inscriptions were then carved
into the inside of the shell, with the images reversed so
that when the bronze was poured into the shell
the
patterns that had been carved into the shell would be in
relief « . the bronze. Then the surface of the
shaved according to the thickness desired for the final
piece, the carved shell placed back over the m odel and
bronze poured into the space between the two clay p ieces.
^ Forrest McGill, assistant director o f the
Huntington Art Gallery, will deliver the last of a series of
three lectures on the Bronze Age of China at 3 p.m. Sun
day, Jan. 25, in the ÜT Art Building Auditorium. The lec
ture is titled “Classical China; The
n£nr and.Tang Dynasties.” Also, the
UT Division of Continuing Education is
sponsoring a bus trip to the Kimbell
Art Museum on Feb. 6. To register,
the Division of Continuing
contact
Education, Main Building 1&Q0, 471-
3123. And at 7:30 on Wednesday, Jan.
21, Dr. Virginia Kane, art historian at
the University of Michigan, will give a
special slide lecture called “The Great
Br o n z e Age of C h in a : New
Archaeological Issues,” in the Opera
Lab Theater, which is in the Perfor
ming Arts Center
Although the exhibition is free and
open to the public, reserved tickets are
being issued for times on the hour and
half-hour To order tickets by mail,
«end a stamped, self-addressed
envelope with name, address, telephone
number, number of tickets (limit of
four per order) and first, second and
third choices of date and time. The ad
dress is T h e Great Bronze Age of
China.” PO Box 9460. Fort Worth, Tex
as, 76107 No telephone orders wUj be
accepted, and there will be no ex
changes
by slice shukalo
“The Great Bronze Age of China” is an exhibition from
the People's Republic of China showing at the Kimbell Art
Museum in Fort Worth through Feb. 18. The exhibition,
which includes bronze, jade and terra cotta objects, spans
the entire Bronze Age of China, approximately 1800-201
B C. As Philippe de Montebello of the Metropolitan
Museum of Art has described it, “ The 105 exhibits in the
present exhibition sent by the People’s Republic of China,
carefully selected for their aesthetic and historical impor
tance, summarize the most brilliant achievements in re
cent Chinese Bronze Age archaeology.” The exhibition in
cludes huge ceremonial wine and food vessels, knife
blades made of carved jade, also used in ceremonies, and
the life size figures found in 1974 in the burial complex of
the First Emperor of Ch’m (221-210 B.C.). The objects are
amazing in their complexity, and the museum provides a
cassette that you can carry with you which explains the
history and design of each piece as you go through the ex
hibition.
The Kimbell is one of five museums in the nation
privileged to show this exhibition. The others are the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Field
Museum of Natural History in Chicago, the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art and the Museum of Fine Arts in
Boston.
The history of the excavation began when an 18th cen
tury scholar found ‘'dragon bones” or “oracle bones,’’
with inscriptions carved on them. The bones were used to
predict the wisdom of a given policy or military decision
an emperor was trying to make, by inserting a hot rod into
the bone and “ reading” the cracks that formed. It was
later determined that the bones were from cows and pigs.
The tones were traced to Anyang, the last capítol of the
Shang dynasty. It was there that excavators found royal
tombs, bronzes and stone sculptures. It
was also at Anyang that the custom of
human sacrifice was practiced when an
emperor died; dozens of people were
killed and put with the emperor in the
burial ground.
But with the Chou dynasty, which
came after the Shang. human sacrifice
was not so prevalent. Instead, human
figures made of ceramic, wood and
straw were buried with the emperor.
And for the burial of the emperor of the
Ch’in dynasty, 7,000 terra cotta figures
were made as stand-ins for human
beings. The figures are life size and are
arranged underground in battle forma
tion. Chariots and life-size figures of
horses were also buried, and the ex
cavators have yet to uncover all the
figures. The size and artistic style of
these figures are astounding; the high
degree of naturalism, such as the in
tricately braided hair on the back of a
figure's head and the expressiveness of
the faces, is remarkable. The exhibition
includes eight of these sculptures, six
warriors and two horses, in addition to
DAYTIME MOVIES
ses and orderlies at Kensington
¡1968} Tony M usante. Martin Sheen. A
© ?
subway car is terrorized by two inebriated hood'.^r-is until a soldier on
* * * Trie incident
0 53 * *
11968) Yul Brynner Robert Mitchum An
aviator te^TTis up with Pancho Villa to further the cause of toe Mexican
P.£V0 lUti0 n
Hides
6
Dot A- r The Kangaroo' 1197»• Animated a young girl becomes
lost in the Australian bush and is befriended by a Kangaroo who gives
her a lift in its pouch G
1 00
3:00
5:00
EVENING
6:00
O '2 Q H 0 t Q 2 © S © 3 © l NEW S
O © 8 3-2-1 CONTACT (R) Q
»D 1 W ELCOME BACK, KOTTER Epstein and Mr, W <
fall in love and decide to live together
© 10 FAMILY FEUD
CD 53 APRENDIENDO A AMAR
6.30
O 12 O 6 t lady who faithfully stood
o 2 © 5 © 0 P.M. MAGAZINE
Q © 8 M AC N ESL/LEH R ER REPORT
© ? HAPPY D AYS A G AIN R chie
imsge when he gets his own radio show a
ffl 3 HAPPY D a y s AGAIN Richie, Ralj
CD 13 C RISTINA BAZAN
Q l| O 6 0 4 LITTLE H O U SE C
PRAIRIE
7 00
AN UNCOM MON W OMAN
© U Q 2
6 MOVIE
FLO
Cliff Gorman
ih the streets
idnapped b;
or his missing daughter mist;
ntnal R
ta-
0 f Pop p e a '
Jean-Pierre Ponnelle’s
::-century R o n e which
imperor Nero to piace
P E R F O R M A N C E S The Co
d Eric Tappy are featured in
nteverdi s masterpiece set n fi
Poppea s efforts to persuade
and banish his wife Octavia.
O © 8 G R E A '
Rachel YaKar ar
production of M(
'ells the story of
her on the throni
a m otorcycle
f f i 5 © 10 f f i ^ T H A T ’S
stuntman racing through a tunnel ot fire: a severely h a n d icap p ed young
m an with am azin g m u sical ability an expert m agician.
© 9 G U N S M O K E A yo u n g lady has her h a n d s full trying to get her
lazy family to keep themselves from getting kicked off their land
10 NEW S DAY LEG ISLAT IVE REPORT
IN C R E D IB L E Featured:
0 1 1 0 2 LA D IE S' M A N
CD 3 ) C H ES PI RITO
10 WOMEN, W ITCH ES A N D H ERB
7:30
8:00
O 3 ) O d ) M O VIE * * . When Hell W as In Session
(1979) Hal
Holbrook. Eva Mane Saint The ordeal of Navy commander Jeremiah A
Denton Jr during his years as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam is
detailed (R)
0 533 O CD M * A * S * H A love-starved Hawkeye arms himself with a
bottle of vintage wine and goes after the nurses.
© ® © @ 2 ) D D Y N A S T Y Blake and Krystle s global honeymoon
is disrupted when foreign rebels take over his company’s oil tankers,
f f l ® MOVIE
The Wicker M an'' (1973) Edward Woodward,
Britt Ekland A mainland policeman is sent to a remote Scottish island
to investigate the disappearance of a young girl who may have been the
victim of modern-day pagans.
ffl GD M O VIE ** + ',
Ivanhoe' (1953) Robert Taylor, Elizabeth Tay
lor. A chivalrous knight is in love with one woman, but betrothed to
another.
10 A CC SPO TLIG HT
8:30
i f 5D O D H OU SE C A L L S The nur
go out on sir ke ‘or higher wages
© 9 C O LO R IN A
10 ESPIRITU DE AZTLAN
9:00
egc are undermined by
1 doing a column for the
O 0) O D LOU GRANT Lou's authority an<
an old pal. a high-paid writer who is temporar I
Trib
6 THE CAN D ID CAN D ID C A M E R A Host Allen Funt introduces uncen
sored film clips of various people's unpredictable reactions when they
are ' caught r the act of being themselves” in zany situations.
© D © IP © X3ALL-STAR
IN A U G U R AL GALA President-elect
Ronald Reagan. Vice PreS'dent-elect George Bush and members of the
Cabinet are honored in an entertainment gaia featuring performances
by an array of celebrities Johnny Carson hosts.
CD 9 ) NOCHE A NOCHE Host Veronica Castro
to BOTTOM LINE
9:30
6 LEG ENDS: ELEAN O R R O O SE V E L T ~ AN U N C O M M O N W O M A N
The famed first lady who faithfully stood by her polio-stricken husband
during his difficult presidency is profiled
CD 533 24 H O RA S
10 W INSTON BO DE S C APITAL EYE Host Winston Bode.
O ’2 0 D O i O 1 ffl X NEW S
6 MO VIE Close Encounters Of The Thirc
(1980) Rich
er compam
Kind Tv Special Ed lion"
reytuss Francois Truffaut. After sighting a UFO. a pow-
ilovee becomes obsessed with finding the aliens' iand-
Q © 8 DICK CAVETT Guest Clare Booth
© ? MARY TYLER MOORE Phyliis disc
having an affair with Sue Ann Nivens
Luce. (Par* 1 of 2)
vers that ner husband
CD 9 REPO RT ER 41
O 9 Q 6 ffl 4 THE BEST OF CARSO N Gu«
Cheryl Ladd,
0 9 THE RO C KFO RD FILES
Q 2 C AR O L BURNETT A N D F R IE N D S Guest Tim Conway
Q © £ CAPTIONED A BC N E W S
© 9 BO B NEW HART Bob ¡oms the firm of a much traveled, swinging
psychiatr st
CD ,13 MO VIE "L a Picara Sonadora Mirtha Legrand Alfredo Alcon.
11:00
O D MO VIE * * * You C an’t Get Away With Murder ' (1939) Hum-
phrey Bogart. Gale Dage A convicted K'iier is condemned to Sing Sing
0 © 8 G REAT P E R F O R M A N C E S Big Blonde
Sally Kellerman
stars in an adaptation of a Dorothy Parker short story about a show
room model m the 1920s who gives up her party life and returns unhap
pily to her former way of living.
© 5 © 10 © 3 NEW S
© ® HEY ABBOTT Host Milton Berle narrates a tribute to Abbott and
Costello
0 9 0 £ S3 5) T O M O R R O W Guest Paul Anka
0 Tí KO JAK Ar unsuccessful attempt at stealing a painter's truck
has Kojak baffled when the thief's lawyer doesn t seem to want him out
of jail
© £ ffl ® A B C NEW S
© © ST A R SK Y A ND HUTCH
0 U) PTL CLUB
6 MO VIE Boardwalk
(1979) Lee Strasberg. Ruth Gordon A crum
bling Brooklyn neighborhood populated mostly by senior citizens
becomes the target of a ruthless street gang
O 2 3 NEW S
© 53) A B C NEW S
CD 9 C H ESPIRITO
10:00
10:20
10:30
11:30
12:30
1:00
1:05
1:30
O ® f fl ® NEW S
© © ST R E E T S OF SA N F R A N C ISC O
1:03
© ® TO D A Y ’S W O MAN
© ® N EW S
0 (TT) N EW S
JANUARY 19, 1981
MONDAY
Almanzo Wilder (Dean Butler, center) makes the m is
take of offering to babysit for his nephews Rupert (Ros-
sie Harris, right) and Myron (Ham Larson), on “Little
House on the Prairie,' Monday. Jan. 19, on NBC.
(Stations reserve the
fiakt last-minute changes
HEY, HORNS
“ BALLOON
SOMEBODY”
B A L L O O N B O U T IQ U E
ACTU ALLY D ELIVER S B A L L O O N S
M A I l - A - B A U O O N
tre e d e liv e r y to
• D IR T Y S • D O R M S • TOP OF MT. BO NNELL •
• A N Y W H ERE « A N Y T IM E •
• FOR THAT S O M E O N E SPECIAL •
• PARTY D EC O R A T IO N S .
FOR ID EAS CALL M A RG A RET W O M A C K , 4 5 1-004 7
NOW IT S NOT ONLY FUN TO SE N D AN EDIBLE
M E S SA G E , BUT IT'S CONVENIENT, TOO I
B A C K TO SCHOOL
BOOK P A C K SALE
MUNCHIES77
L o o k f o r the
COOKIE C A R T
on the Drag by the Co-Op
W e l l have chocolate chip, d ouble chocolate chip, oatmeal
chocolate c h ip, p ea nut butter chocolate chip and one sur
prise f l a v o r e v e r y day! A lso, y o u can p i c k up the large j u m
bo cookies ordered f r o m the cookie shop at Highland Mall at
the Cookie Cart. Orders must be placed a m in im u m o f 24
hours in advance. Call 458-3251.
R eg
16.98
Reg.
20.98
ing Feet
D obis Mall
472 8610
26
J A N U A R Y 2 0 , 1981
D A Y T IM E S P E C IA L S
_
9 :0 0
® ® ® rt6) ® ® © ® P R S I D E N -
IAL IN A U G U R A T IO N C E R E M O N IE S Live c o v e r a g e o f th e p re s id e n tia l
in a u g u ra tio n c e re m o n ie s fro m W a s h in g to n , D C
4:00
6 D A V Y C R O C K E T T , IN D IA N F IG H T E R A to u g h b a c k w o o d s m a n (Fess
P a rk e r ) fro m T e n n e s s e e a n d his c o m p a n io n (B u d d y E b s e n ) e s ta b lis h a
tra il for c iv iliza tio n to fo llo w in th e s a v a g e In d ia n te r rito r y o f th e 1 80 0s
5 :0 0
6 D A V Y C R O C K E T T G O E S T O C O N G R E S S T h e le g e n d a ry , c o u ra -
H f 0 ^ ^ 0 n , 'e r 8 m a n (FeSS P a r k e r > w h o 'o u g h t fo r th e rig h ts o f In d ia n s in
th e 1800s h e a d s fo r W a s h in g to n to re p re s e n t all th e p e o p le o f his te r r i
tory
D A Y T IM E M O V IE S
1:00
( 1 9 7 2 ) R ic h a rd C r e n n a . C a th e rin e
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7 :0 0
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tives, at le a s t o n e of w h o m is a m u r d e r e r R'
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to b la c k m a il d o z e n s of T ru ro citize n s
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O (Q T H E R O C K F O R D F IL E S
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( 1 9 7 9 ) J a m e s B rolm M a r g o t K io u -
6 M O V IE
er A young m a rrie d c o u p le s e a rc h e s fo r th e re a s o n b e h in d a series of
b iza rre and frig h te n in g e v e n ts o c c u rm g in th e ir new ly p u rc h a s e d Lon g
Islan d h o m e R
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b u ilding to in te rv ie w all of its te n a n t d o c to rs
© @ M * A * S * H
CD @ M O V IE
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La N u e v a C e n ic ie n ta M a ris o l R o b e rt C o n ra d
i S p a n
11:00
O >2 O 6 m 4 T H E B E S T O F C A R S O N G u e s ts Jo h nny M a th is
K elly M o n te ith M a rilu Tolo n -
Union Life
308 W est 15th
Suite 400
477-4761
From election night until
inauguration day. ca m e ra
crew s have recorded the process that brings a new go v
ernment to power The results will air on Countdown to
the White House: The Reagan Transition," Wednesday,
Jan. 21, on PBS.
(Stations reserve the right to make last-minute changes i
28
JA N U A R Y 22, 1981
D A Y TIM E S P E C IA L
4:00
6 DAVY C R O C K E T T AT THE A L A M O The brave frontier hero (Fess
tirker) joins other legendary heroes, including Jim Bowie, in one of the
most decisive battles of the lawless 1800s
D A Y T IM E M O V IE S
* * 1 " A Flea In Her E a r” (1968) Rex Harrison. Rachel Roberts
© 9
A woman susp ects her husband of philandering, but discovers that her
fears are unfounded
Q H
* * G uns Of The Magnificent Seven (19691 G eorge Kennedy.
Jam es Whitmore Seven professional gunm en join forces to free a revo
lutionary leader from a Mexican jail
Hot And The K angaroo
6
(19/8) Anim ated A young girl becom es
lost in the Australian bush and is befriended by a Kangaroo who gives
her a lift in its pouch G '
1 OO
3:00
5:00
t h u r s d a y
t el evi s i o n
EV E N IN G
6:00
O © © I T 0 ( 6 0 2 © ® © ( j * D ® n e w s
O © 1)3-2-1 CONTACT ( R ) n
© ® W E L C O M E BA CK, KO u ER The guys give Arnold a bachelor
party that almost destroys his weddinq plans (Part 2)
© d® FAM ILY FEUD
CD O A P R E N D IE N D O A A M A R
6:30
_
O 12 0 6 © 4 TIC TAC D O U G H
O (U) J O K E R 'S W ILD
6 IN SID E THE NFL Len Dawson and Nick Buomconti present
highlights of the week s football action as the teams vie for places in the
annual Super Bowl
O @ © ( D © 10 P.M. M A G A Z IN E
O © ( D M A C N E IL / L E H R E R R EP O R T
© 9 H APPY D A Y S A G A IN Before Richie can realize what s happen
ing. an old girlfriend decides that they are going steady
ffl 3 H APPY D A Y S A G A IN Fonzie falls for a woman whose life centers
around the city’s country club set
CD © C R IS T IN A B A Z A N
7:00
O 12 O 6 © 4 B U C K R O G E R S Buck and his cohorts escort an
aloof diplomat on a d angerous journey to a crucial peace conference
0 I I O (3 THE W A L T O N S
O © I T EX A S W E EK LY
© 5 © (TO CD ® M O R K A N D M IN D Y M ork m akes M indy s first day
as a TV announcer unforgettable
© 9 G U N S M O K E A young lady has her hands full frying to get her
lazy family to keep them selves from getting kicked off their land
10 A M E R IC A N G O V E R N M E N T
7:30
6 M O V IE M e atballs’ (1979) Bill Murray C hris Makepeace. A zany
summer camp counselor leads his misfit charge s into a no-holds-barred
sports competition against a group from another cam p with a much
better reputation PG
O © 1 O V E R E A S Y A Place To Live Guest Dr Nan Hutchison (R)
Í B 5 © to © ® B O S O M B U D D IE S Henry and Kip and then alter-
ego s help Am y get revenge on a politician who dum ped her
CD 13 C A S A DE H U E S P E D E S
10 B U S IN E S S
8:00
Q 11 Q 2 M A G N U M , P.l. Two holocaust survivors become targets
of unrepentant Nazis.
O © 8 G O V E R N O R 'S R E P O R T
© 5 © © 0 3 ® B A R N E Y M IL L E R Harris is assigned to write, pro
duce and direct a porno film for police use □
f1969) Elvis Presley. Mary
( D ® M O V IE * * ’ .> Change Of Habit
Tyler Moore A young novitiate and a doctor become deeply attached
while working together in a ghetto clinic
10 C A B L E TELEV ISIO N . THE N EW FRO N T IER
8:30
© (5 © to © ® I T ' S A LIVING Vicki learns the new man in her life
is also the new man in Dot’s life
CD © C O L O R IN A
9:00
O © O ® © ® HILL ST R E E T B L U E S Captain Furillo continues
his efforts to make peace between warring gangs, and a financially
strapped cop is tricked into accepting a payoff
O í ! O ® K N O T S LA N D IN G Abby goes directly to J.R Ewing to
ask him to lend Gary $50,000 to pay off a bad business deal
6 ON LOCATION: THE FIFTH A N N U A L Y O U N G C O M E D IA N S SH O W
Carl Reiner plays host to some of America’s brightest new comics in a
pK>gram of laughs from the renowned Comedy Store in Los Angeles
O © ^ A U S T IN C ITY LIM IT S George Jones With Hank Thompson
© 5 © IP © ® 2 0 / 20
CD S N O C H E A N O C H E Host Veronica Castro
9:30
10:00
10:20
10:30
CD © 24 H O R A S
10 THE S K U N K S
:
0
O 6 Q 2 © • ■ © ■ : © 3 © 4 NEWS
0
O © 1 DICK C A V ETT
Guests Henry B randon Nicole Bernheim Gitta Bauer (Part 2 of 2/
CD S M A R Y TYLER M O O R E Lou tells Mary and the new sroom gang
that he and his wife are seeing a marriage counselor
European Journalists Look At Am erica
CD © R E P O R T E R 41
Suzann e
O 12 O 6 © d THE BEST OF C A R S O N G u e sts
Som ers Michael D ou glas Debby Boone iRi
0 © THE R O C K F O R D FILES R ockford’s rock-star client s problem s
intensify when his m issing producer s body is found (Part 2)
6 IN SIDE THE NFL Len Daw son and Nick Buoniconti present
highhghts of the week s football action as the teams v « for places in the
annual Super Bowl
O ® C A R O L BU R N ET T A N D F R IEN D S G ue sts Jonn Byner Franc me
Beers
O © 8 C A P T IO N E D A B C N EW S
© 5 © 3 A B C N E W S
© $ B O B N EW H A R T B ob becomes ms pat •- •
nch-quick reai-estate .enture
© ® M * A * S * H
CD 13 M O V IE
La Muerte Es Puntual Alfredo . ea Maricruz OLvier
partner n a get
11:00
O S M O V IE * *
The Unsuspected (1947j Joan Caulfield Claude
Ram s A radio announcer, the quiet guardian of a wealthy young girl
plots to murder her
Q CD 8 SU R V IV A L
Leopard 0* T he W net D a »id Ni ver mirra tes this
true story of an orphaned leopard which bridged the world of protected
captivity and her natural habitat in the wilds of A sia m
© 1 © 3 C H A R L IE S A N G E L S A wedding in which Kelly is taking
part turns out to be a cam ouflage for a murder schem e i R
CD f M O V IE * *
The Horsemen H 9 7 U O m ar Sharif. Jack
Paiance The injured so n of a cham pion equestrian sportsm an in
Afghanistan attempts to regain his glory
© 10 S T A R S K Y A N D H UTCH
O 12 o 6 © 4 T O M O R R O W
Q 11 KO JAK A desperate man tries to clear his nam e by helpmq
Kojak trap a loan shark (Part 1)
6 M O V IE North Dallas Fo r’y (1979) Nick Nolte. M a c Davis A steady
routine of groupies pill-popping and all night partying begins to take its
toll on a fun-lovmg but aging football player R
© 10 A B C N E W S
0 U P T L C L U B
© 10 C H A R L IE 'S A N G E L S A wedding m which Kell. is taking part
turns out to be a cam ouflage for a murder schem e i Ri
CD 13 C A S A DE H U E S P E D E S
11:30
12:00
12:30
1 00
1:03
1:05
1:30
1 45
O @ SAW DUST THERAPY
O 6 O 2 ff i 4 NEWS
© CD TODAY'S WOMAN
© ® NEWS
0 dD NEWS
© I D COMMUNITY CALENDAR
© 4 TAKE A MOMENT
f iv e c u r v a c e o u s w a i t r e s s e s s e r v e up a ban qu et of c o m e
dy in "It's a Livin g," the ABC s i t c o m that a ir s T h u r s
days. F r o m top to b o tto m are Ann J illian . Su san S u lli
va n , W e n d y
and B a r r i e
S e h a a l, G a il E d w a r d s
Y o u n g f e ll o w .
Statio n s re se rve the right to m a k e la st-m in u te c hanges
FREE BEER
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DAYTIME SPECIAL
4:30
6 STORIES FROM A FLYING TRUNK Animation and dance perfor
mances by the Royal Ballet of London are combined to present three
tales by the legendary Hans Christian Andersen
(D T + *
(1973) Barry Nelson Nyree
Dawn Porter A butler and maid starve and torture their wealthy wid
owed employer in order to extort her millions.
Death in Small Doses
CD 5 5 COLORINA
* *
(1 9 7 11 Cimt Walker Stefame Powers m the
Q IT)
early 1900s. a mercenary soldier rallies to the cause of Mexican revolu
tionaries only to discover his missing wife among them
Hardcase
DAYTIME MOVIES
1:00
3:00
EVENING
I € D 4 NEWS
6:00
Q Í 1 Q II o 6 0 2 0 s Q )
INSIDE THE NFL Len Dawson and Nick Buomconti present
6
highlights of the week s football action as the teams vie for places in the
annual Super Bowl
o © 8 3-2-1 CONTACT ( R ) n
CD * WELCOME BACK, KOTTER Washington gets a ,ob that Epstein
thought he had in the bag
© I f FAMILY FEUD
SD T3 APRENDIENDO A AMAR
6:30
O S O ® TIC TAC DOUGH
0 U PINK PANTHER
O (3D £0 ® © 3$ p M m a g a z in e
O © © M A C N E IL / LEHRER REPORT
j
HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie has a problem when everyone
expects him to get them free tickets for a rock concert
2 3 X HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Ralph deserts his dream of becoming a
comic when he discovers that he can make bigger money as a teen-age
bookie
Q3 T SUPER BOWL XV: THE FINAL SUNDAY
CD S CRISTINA BAZAN
7:00
O S O $ f f i ® HARPER VALLEY PTA The PTA board mistakenly
believes Stella is pregnant and embarks on a campaign to find her a
husband
O H O ® THE INCREDIBLE HULK A private detective investigating
a blackmail attempt picks David as the prime suspect
6 MOVIE The Baltimore Bullet ' (1980) James Coburn. Omar Sharif
A champion pool hustler teaches a young newcomer the tricks of his
trade while a wealthy man tries to cash in on the veteran s cocky, self-
assured manner PG'
O © (©W ASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW
© ® © 3 3 © (©BENSON Benson's first attempt at romance in his
new apartment is interrupted by the arrival of a very upset co-worker
© ® GUNSMOKE A schoolteacher makes a strong statement for
compulsory education for children in Dodge City.
10 AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL
7:30
© 5 3 O ® CD ® SANFORD Cal's feelings of guilt over his cowardly
behavior when confronted by robbers leads Fred to concoct a situation
in which his friend can be a hero
Q © © W A L L STREET WEEK Dancing Up Wall Street” Guest
investment counselor Arthur Murray
© 3D © 5 3 0D (© I’M A BIG GIRL NOW Ben refuses to talk to Walter
after Walter smashes Ben's hand in a tennis game.
CD 35 MALU MUJER
8:00
© 3 5 © ® CD ® NERO WOLFE An old school chum of Archie's is
frid a y television
murdered on Nero's doorstep
0 J 5 o (© © ® t h e DUKES OF HAZZARD Bo and Luke compete
against each other in the first annual Hazzard Derby,
o © © H A R D CHOICES Behavior Control” An examination of the
various types of mind control features attempts to distinguish between
benign and harmful forms
(1976) Omar Sharif. Karen
© © MOVIE * * Crime And Passion
Black. A wealthy industrialist tries to have his wife and boss killed after
learning she married him for his money.
© 3 3 2 ) © M O V IE Oklahoma City Dolls” (Premiere) Susan Blakely,
Ronee Blakley A woman's football team made up of female factory
workers decides to vanquish male chauvinism once and for all. g
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:20
O S O Ü f f l ® NBC MAGAZINE WITH DAVID BRINKLEY
© (S3) O (?) © ® DALLAS Lucy and Mitch get married amidst a
series of events which have a great impact on the Ewing family. (Part 2)
(1971) John Wayne. Richard Boone A tough
6 MOVIE Big Jake
man of the West defies both the Army and Texas Rangers in his efforts
to locate his kidnapped grandson PG'
O © © T H E SHATTERER OF WORLDS From the establishment of
the Los Alamos Laboratory to the explosion at Hiroshima, humanists
review the development of the atomic bomb with historical film footage
from the United States and abroad.
CD 33 NOCHE A NOCHE Host Veronica Castro
CD 5 3 24 HORAS
O S O ( E D O ® f l ® © ® © 3 3 8 ¡ ) © f f l ® n e w s
O © © D IC K CAVETT Guest New York Times writer William Satire
© ® MARY TYLER MOORE Lou gives Mary the responsibility of hir-
ma a new sportscaster if she will fire the old one
CD 5 3 REPORTER 41
10:30
© 3 3 O ® CD ® t h e BEST OF CARSON Guests Raquel Welch,
Tony Bennett, James Galway (R)
0 53) THE ROCKFORD FILES While on a fishing trip. Rockford gets
sidetracked into local politics and murder
O C © CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS Skits "TV Commercials.'
Friends.” "Lucky Lady,” "The Old Folks.”
O © © C A P T IO N E D ABC NEWS
© ® MOVIE * * ' * The Unsuspected” (1947) Joan Caulfield, Claude
Rains A radio announcer, the quiet guardian of a wealthy young girl,
plots to murder her.
© ® BOB NEWHART Bob has his hands full with Carol s amorous
husband, poker parties and allegedly fixed bingo games.
© ® M *A *S *H
2 ) © F R ID A Y S Musical guests REO Speedwagon.
CD 5 3 MOVIE Jacinta Pichimahuida Se Enamora” Maria De Los
Angeles Medrano, Jorge Martinez.
11:00
6 MOVIE "Night Of The Juggler ’ (1980) James Brolin, Cliff Gorman. A
former police officer launches a desperate search through the streets of
New York City for his missing daughter, mistakenly kidnapped by a
psychopathic criminal. R'
O ® MOVIE ★ ★ "The Battle Of Neretva” (1971) Yul Brynner. Hardy
Kruger Yugoslavians struggle for freedom against local Chetniks as
well as Italian and German troops
O © © T H E LAWMAKERS Correspondents Linda Wertheimer and
Cokie Roberts join Paul Duke for an up-to-the-minute summary of Con
gressional activities.
© ® MOVIE ★ ★ , 2 "Gable And Lombard” (1976) James Brolin, Jill
Clayburgh. Thirties film stars Clark Gable and Carole Lombard discover
that neither the movie moguls nor the American public are ready to
accept their illicit off-screen romance.
© 5® STARSKY AND HUTCH
© 5 ® MOVIE
? "Someone At The Top Of The Stairs” (1973) Don
11:30
civC- \0
i
A#-*
i * ' * " *
Welcome
Back, Students!
Make us your
Valentine
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omelettes, sandwiches, salads, soups, gingerbread
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4 5 3 - 5 0 6 -
^
TÜ1
O M E L E T T R Y
29
JANUARY 23, 1981
na Mills, Judy Carne. Two young women rent a room at a forbidding
Victorian mansion and discover that their fellow tenants are not what
they appear to be
0 5 1 KOJAK A desperate man tries to clear his name by helping
Kojak trap a loan shark. (Part 2)
O ® CD ® MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
O © © O L D FRIENDS... NEW FRIENDS Fred Rogers visits with Nan
cy Acosta, a 21-year-old teacher in the barrios of La Puente, outside of
Los Angeles. (R )Q
© 5® FRIDAYS Musical guests: REO Speedwagon.
f f l © S T A R TREK
© (0) PTL CLUB
CD 3 3 MALU MUJER
12:45
6 MOVIE Buckstone County Prison” (1978) Earl Owensby. A bounty
hunter with expertise in locating escaped convicts is framed for a crime
he didn't commit and is sentenced to a prison term R’
11:40
12:00
12:30
1:00
1:03
1:05
1:10
1:30
O ® O ® CD ® NEWS
© ® TODAY’S WOMAN
© ® NEWS
© 5® SOLID GOLD
0 © NEWS
CD ® COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Lucy Ewing (Charlene Tilton) and Mitch Cooper (Leigh
McCloskey) are married, in the conclusion of a two-part
episode of “D allas” the airs Friday, Jan. 23, on CBS.
(Stations reserve the right to m ake last-m inute changes )
VALENTINE’S D A Y
DINNER BUFFET
&
DANCE
*20*' P E R COUPLE
Buffet & C om plim entary Cocktail
6:00-8:00 pm-VILLA CA PR I R EST A U R A N T
DANCING
8:00 pm -2:00 am -E N T E R T A IN M E N T C E N T E R
Featuring “THE BIG BAND SOUND OF AUSTIN”
m —WITHOUT DINNER B U F F E T - ^
’8" P E R CO UPLE
W
CO M PL IM E N T A R Y CORSAGE P R E S E N T E D
DU RIN G D IN N E R TO ALL LADIES
AWARDS P R E S E N T E D
AWARDS P R E S E N T E D
VA LENTIN E’S DAY AT ITS BEST
TICKETS ON SALE DAILY AT T H E C A S H IE R ’S STAND-
VILLA CA PRI RESTAURANT
Of1
IH3S AT MANOR RD
M O R N IN G
© ® VARIEDADES MUSICALES
J A N U AR Y 24, 1981
O 15 A BETTER WAY
O ÜÍ CARTOONS
O f> AGRICULTURE U S A
O 15 BATTLE OF THE PLA N ETS
O ¿ N E W S W A TC H PR ES E N T S
O 5 NEW ZO O REVUE
CD 'O' N E W S M A K E R S
CD 4 HOT FUDGE
5 30
6 00
6:30
7:00
O o O 6 CD 4 G O D Z IL L A / H O N G K O N G P H O O E Y
© " O 5 CD 5 M IG H T Y M O U S E / HECKLE & JEC K LE
f f i '0 CD T lS U P E R FR IE N D S
© 13 TV O N O TV
O '1 CJ 5 © 5
CD n TV O NO TV
7:30
TOM AND JERRY
O 12 O 6 f f l 4 THE FLINTSTONES
O 11 o 5 CD 5 BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER
U (D 8 MISTER ROGERS (R)
© 'O CD 3'FONZ AND THE HAPPY DAYS GANG
CD > * TV O NO TV
10 BUSINESS
L I CD 8 El ECTRIC COMPANY (R)
11) * NFWS IN REVIEW
© Hi CD ) RICHIE R IC H /S C O O B Y DOO
CD J 3 TV 0 NO TV
10 BUSINESS
O © ó S E S A M E STR EET ( R ) n
CD ? EXTENSION 80
CD 13 TV 0 NO TV
10 AM I RICAN GOVERNMENT
O 12 O 6 CD J DAFFY DUCK
0 11 O 2 © 5' POPEYE
CD * FIFTY PLUS
© 10 CD J'THUNDARR THE BARBARIAN
CD 13 BURBUJAS
to AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
8:00
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10 30
O 12 o 0 CD -I BATMAN AND THE SUPER SEVEN
L I © #'13-2-1 C O N T A C T (R )q
© « L AKE COUNTRY FISHING Host Gone C o'felt
© 10 CD 3 HEATHCLIFF AND DINGBAT
10 ESPIRITU DE AZTLAN
O 1 O 2 © 5 DRAK PACK
O © 8 MASTERPIECE THEATRE Da \j< UXB
oom m ate Ken -elu-n
to oe'i.se a boobv -happed bom b n a sc-Vo: va-o Part 3' ,Ri
f f l V s \ h a t ABOUT PEOPLE h 0 s: .e >
© >0 CD 3 PLASTICMAN BABY PLAS
CD 13 L A VIDA EN CRISTO
10 ACC SPOTLIGHT
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c_ow nim a lure plants fcv te -a _-ns
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© '0 CD 3 A m e r ic a n b a n d s t a n d
PARENTS >\ ACT OK
SOUL TRAIN
S N MAGAZ NE
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12 00
C l '2 BILL DANCE OUTDOORS
0 0 ' JIM HALLER
; -o
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1 W e R oberts |Oin Paul Duke to an up-to-the-m inute sum mary o fC o n -
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© 1 1 1 MOVIE a ? Who Done It?
f he com ic duo solve a m ystery at a radio station
O (2 ) DIALOGUE 81
O © 8 MATINEE AT THE BIJOU William Boyd stars in the 1935
adventure-thriller The Lost C ity . the short subjects include a newsreel
and a cartoon, and the serial is Chapter 1 of "J u n io r G -M en" starring
Huntz Hall and the East Side Kids (R)
© GD NEWTON / WEAVER HOUR
2:00
2:30
O 13 O 0
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f f l 4 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Rice at Southern M eth
0 MOVIE Close Encounters Of The Third Kind The Special Edition'
11980) Richard Dreyfuss. Francois Truffaut A fter sighting a UFO, a pow
er com pany employee becomes obsessed with finding the aliens land
ing site PG'
0 3 BILL DANCE OUTDOORS
© 5 © JO f f l (^'PR O FESSIO NAL BOWLERS TOUR $95 000 ARC
Alam eda Open (live from Mel s Southshore Bowl in Alameda. Cal I
© 13 FUTBOL INTERNACIONAL Road To The W orld C up" Italy vs
Yugoslavia
3:00
O 5 PHOENIX OPEN GOLF Third round coverage of this PGA tour
event (live from Phoenix C ountry Club in Arizona!
© 4 MOVIE A A Pippi Goes On Board
(1 9 7 11 mger Nilsson Par
bu nd b e rg Pippi escapes from a ship and tries to dodge thieves who are
after her jewels
3:30
© 11 WILD, WILD WEST West and G ordon must escape a W estern
tow n whose entire population is hunting them
O © 8 IS THERE AN AMERICAN STONEHENGE? The theory that
Am erican Indians built a shrine in W yoming designed to calculate sea
sonal changes for religious and agricultural reasons sim ilar to the stru c
ture at Stonehenge. England is exam ined tR)
« ^
4 00
O 2 SPORTS SPECTACULAR Super Bowl edition of the Battle of the
N F l cheerleaders with the O akland R aiderettes vs
the W ashington
R edskm ettes W orld Cup Skiing (from Wengen. Switzerland) NFL Com-
m issioner Pete Rozelle s Super Bowl Press Conference
O © Ji'N O V A Message In The Rocks' Using sophisticated dating
techniques and m ethods of exploration, m odern geologists have uncov
ered some new answers about the origin of our planet and how life
evolved upon it (RjTT
© (Jp © m ÉD i & I D E WORLD OF SPORTS W orld Cup Gymnas-
: cs Cham pionships jfrom Toronto. Canada): W orld Cup Ski Jumpma
(from nnsbruck. Austria)
O I f HAVE GUN. WILL TRAVEL
© I f STAN HITCHCOCK
O ( £ SUPER BOWL XV: THE FINAL SUNDAY
© X WILD KINGDOM
CD I J LUCHA LIBRE
4:30
5:00
O S 0 I f NEWS
O Ji THE MUPPETS Guest Gene Kelly
0^ LEGENDS: ELEANOR ROOSEVELT - AN UNCOMMON WOMAN
^e fam sd first lady who faithfully stood by her po lio -stricke n husband
d u r ng ms d ifficu lt presidency is profited
O .2 SOUP MAN A boy thm ks it s easy to 10b the elderly until he
♦ nds out they can give him som ething he can t steal
Q © 8 SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel look at
>o••-e film s that portray women as helpless v ic tm s being attacked by a
sadistic k ler featuring scenes from Friday The 13th.' "H allow een
When A S tranger Calls and 1 S pit On Y our Grave R)
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-t and women >n then attem pts to become professional models are
— d
© ^ T h is OLD H O U SE Bob . a discusses some of the key d e o -
-s ce s Look At The Mode) nq industry
5:30
s
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O í 5 O d ) f f l ® WALKING TALL Sheriff Pusser s father is Kid
napped by a trio of robbers and held in exchange for the im prisoned
fourth member of their gang
O (13) O GD FREEBIE AND THE BEAN While investigating a m urder,
the Bean runs into an old flame who claim s he is the father of her 11-
year-old son
(1980) Doug McClure Ann
0 MOVIE Humanoids From The Deep
Turkei A DNA experim ent goes haywire breathing life into m oss-cov
ered creatures which terrorize unsuspecting beachgoers R
The m ysterious
O © CDWORLD Who Killed Georgt M a rkov 7
events surrounding the bizarre m urder of Bulgarian dissident and
defector Georgi M arkov are investigated (R)
© 5 © 10 QQ ( H O V E BOAT Vicki grows jealous over the Cap
tain's attentions to an another woman, and an expectant father creates
havoc with Doc s love life Q
© 5 NASHVILLE ON TH eTROAD Guest Hank Thompson
© Q Y AHORA QUE?
8:30
BACKSTAGE AT THE GRAND OLE OPRY Guests 7 G Shep
© I
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© ® EDUARDO MANZANO
9:00
^
© i ! f f l A HILL STREET BLUES Shortly a ft- ' a ioca¡ gun store s
robbed, a blackout hits the area leading the precinct cops to think they
are under attack
Í Í ) I © Í SECRETS OF MIDLAND HEIGHTS M icki s parents
attem pt to keep her from learning that her black ballet instructor is he<-
real m other
O 6 REX HUMBARD SPECIAL
O © 8 EMANUEL AX AND YO-YO MA IN RECITAL P.anist Emanue-
Ax and cellist Yo-Yo Ma return to the Michigan S tate University campus
for a special invitational television recital
CD l5 © 1 0 © 3 FANTASY
ISLAND 4 w riter c 1 rom antic novels
lives the life of cue of her characters and a w ould-be kung fu cham pion
enters a com petition with very high stakes
© ? LAREDO The Land Slickers
9:30
0 ON LOCATION: THE FIFTH ANNUAL YOUNG COMEDIANS SHOW
Carl Reiner plays host to some of Am erica s brightest new com.es in a
program ot laughs from the renowned Comedy S tore in Los Ange'es
© T3 BOXEO DESDE MEXICO
O l
í ® " © 6 O 3 © 5 © 10 © 3 © 4 NEWS
© ® W RESTLINGITY UMITS Geor9e Jones w ,' h Hank Thompson
10:00
10:30
10 45
11 30
O 13 o 6
© 11 MOVIE *
4 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE Host Robert Hays
rne Cnme ot Dr H j l e t
, 93g) Rajph Bei|ap, (
W illiam Gargan 4 -oientist's assistant insists upon being used m an
experim ent which proves to be deadly
ZiegfeCd Girl
O 3 MOVIE * * *
.a r a
urner What happens to three girls fro m the m om ent Flo Zieoteio dis
ja m e s Stew art
1941
covers them is traced
© 5 ABC NEWS
© 1 0 M O V I E * * * Apache
Indians battle tin- u K y:,u,iirv as settlers open up the West
eD 3 MOVIE * * *
Eastwood
attem pt to retrieve a $200.000 treasure
rhe Good The Bad And The Up .
'
t ee Van Cleef Three violent determ ined men separately
(1954) Burt Lancastc- Jean Peters
' 9 6 ' Cl
( 1.81 Richard Dreyfuss. Francois Truffaut After sighting a UFC 4 pow -
\ ......7 ’ " “' " Of The Th,rd K nd
Spe: a. Ed t.o r
ÜqCS7 e P PG ' " np l° v ,v becomes Obsessed with finding :* e a ens a - c ■
© 5 M S BLACK A M t RICA AW A RD S H O W
P A IR 0 L ( ‘p,a,n n.etr.cfi m asterm inds a ^ ?! to discredit
O ) I ) r u H i i i m D c c t «bduction of a eve.ed A rab m arabout
CD 13 EM B A JA D O R ES DE LA M U SIC A C O L O M B IA N A
® ' . 5 ' M 0 ¡/IE * *
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t1 9 5 J)K irk Douglas Dewev Martm
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0 , 1 1 MOVIE * * * M y .le iy OI
12 00
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0 © NEWSWATCH PRESENTS
O f f i LIGHT OF THE WORLD
© I® DIRECTIONS
89 ® GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
5:40
5:55
8:00
6:30
730
Q © WRAPAROUND
O ® PTL CLUB
O f f i NEW ZOO REVUE
© f f i THE SKATEBIRDS
CD f f i KEN COPELAND'S BELIEVERS VOICE OF VICTORY
© 5® ROBERT SCHULLER FROM THE CRYSTAL CATHEDRAL
f f l © THIS IS THE LIFE
© ® IT IS WRITTEN
£D 13) ESFERA AZUL
7:30
O 59 IT'S YOUR BUSINESS
O X DAY OF DISCOVERY
© f f i JASON OF STAR COMMAND
© ©JAMES ROBISON
© ® REX HUMBARD
© 53) EL VISITANTE
7:55
0 53) HENRY B. GONZALES REPORT
8:00
O 5J DAY OF DISCOVERY
Q 55 O © © f f i SUNDAY MORNING
O ® JAMES ROBISON
O © (DMISTER ROGERS (R)
CD ® TOWN MEETING
© 5® REX HUMBARD
© ©ROBERT SCHULLER FROM THE CRYSTAL CATHEDRAL
© 53) 300 MILLONES
8:30
O ® REX HUMBARD
O © (©ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
© ® DAY OF DISCOVERY
© ® BAPTIST CHURCH
930
O 52! MOVIE A A A "The Panic In Needle Park " (1971) Al Pacino, Kit
ty Winn A heroin addict becomes involved with a naive young woman,
and when she becomes addicted they turn to crime to support the habit.
O © (©SESAME STREET (R) Q
© ® DIVINE PLAN
© 59 ORAL ROBERTS
© (©PEOPLE VUE
© 59 PTL CLUB (SPANISH)
EYEWITNESS NEWSMATES
9:30
_ JERRY FALWELL
Sfe © ORAL ROBERTS
D ® rr s y o u r b u s in e s s
© f fi BAPTIST CHURCH
© © CASTLE HILLS
0 © K JD 8 ARE PEOPLE TOO Guests: Andy Gibb, Dick Clark, Murray
Langston, Dr Julius Fast on body language, NASA driver Pierre Deles
Pionois. (R)
© ® THE WORLD TOMORROW
o 53) GOOD MORNING TEXAS
© ® CARLOS VELASQUEZ
O © (©MATINEE AT THE BIJOU William Boyd stars in the 1935
adventure-thriller "The Lost City” ; the short subjects include a newsreel
and a cartoon; and the serial is Chapter 1 of “ Junior G -M en” starring
Huntz Hall and the East Side Kids. (R)
© ® © f f i JIMMY SWAGGART
© f f i rr IS WRITTEN
© 53) HOY MISMO
f f i ROBERT SCHULLER FROM CRYSTAL CATHEDRAL
S 53) FACE THE NATION
8 ® HERALD OF TRUTH
59 CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP
0 ©AMMALS a n im a ls a n im a ls
0 ® CAPITAL EYE
Q 52! WASHINGTON WIRE
i CONVERSATION
i © ® NBA BASKETBALL Phoenix Suns at Philadelphia 76ers
18 © B A PTIST CHURCH
FIRST METHOOIST CHURCH
15 9 FIRST BAPTJ8T CHURCH
I ® A LOOK AT AUSTIN
i ® MEET THE PRESS
_
UPON A CLASSIC “ The Mill On The Floss” Tom’s
friend suggests a way to help pay TuMiver's debts; Tom stops speaking
to Maggie when he discovers she has been seeing Philip. (Part 4) (R)
0 ® LONE 8TAR SPORTSMAN
© 5 9 FUTBOL
AFTERNOON
1230
O 59 Q f f i © © SPORTSWORLD “The 1980 NFL Season: The
Year in Review”
O © (©WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW (R)
© f f i SPORTS AFIELD
© ® POINT OF VIEW Host: John Whitson
© 59 NEWSMAKERS
©(©INTERVUE
12:30
O © (©WALL STREET WEEK "Dancing Up Wall Street" Guest:
investment counselor Arthur Murray. (R)
© (3D THE SUPERSTARS (Season Premiere) Coverage of the Men s
Preliminaries (from Key Biscayne. Florida).
© ® FUN OF FISHING Host Freddie Grant.
© 59 0 (©ISSUES AND ANSWERS
130
O 59 O f f i © ® COLLEGE BASKETBALL Ohio State at Virginia
1030
10:30
10:54
11.-00
11:30
11:45
0 55 Q © PHOENIX OPEN GOLF Final round coverage of this PGA
tou r event (live from Phoenix C ountry Club in Arizona).
6 PRESTO CHANGO, ITS MAGIC! Master illusionists gather for a
display of mystifying talents and miraculous feats which virtually defy
explanation.
O © (©GREAT PERFORMANCES "T he C oronation Of P oppea"
Rachel Yakar and Eric Tappy are featured in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle’s
production of M onteverdi s masterpiece set in first-centu ry Rome which
tells the story of Poppea s efforts to persuade Em peror Nero to place
her on the throne and banish his wife Octavia. (R)
© ® WALLACE WILDLIFE
0 59 INSIGHT
0 (©CREATIVE CRAFTS "F all Colors Of Robert A b b e tt"
1:30
© ® INTERNATIONAL BOXING U.S National Team vs. Yugoslavia in
amateur boxing (from Las Vegas, Nevada).
© ® JIMMY HOUSTON OUTDOORS
© 59 MOVIE A A A Girls Of Pleasure Island" (1953) Leo Genn, A bby
Dalton The peaceful Pacific island life of an English scholar and his
daughters is disrupted by 1500 Marines
0 (©t h e PARTRIDGE FAMILY
230
6 INSIDE THE NFL Len Dawson and Nick Buom conti present
highlights of the week s football action as the teams vie for places in the
annual Super Bowl.
© ® MOVIE T h e Return Of Charlie C han " (1975) Ross M artin, Rich
ard Haydn Famed detective Charlie Chan is lured out of retirem ent to
solve a series of m urders aboard a yacht
© ©MOVIE A A Vi After The Fox”
(1966) Peter Sellers Victor
Mature An Italian m aster crim inal uses the film ing of a movie as a cover
for a g o ld bullion theft
© 5 Í ROUND CERO
© 59 HOY MISMO
2:15
3:00
0 5 9 0 ® 0 ® SUPER BOWL XV PRE-GAME SHOW Bryant
Gumbel hosts a pre-gam e look at the com batants in this year's Super
Bowl
0 53) O ® AFTERNOON PLAYHOUSE "L o s t
plane crash strands five high school students in the m iddle of a desert
6 MOVIE "2001: A Space Odyssey” (1968) Keir Dullea, Gary Lock
w ood Directed by Stanley K ubrick. During a mission to Jupiter, two
astronauts and their exceptionally intelligent com puter are drawn into a
bizarre and surrealistic journey through the cosmos. G
© ® WILD, WILD WEST
© 59 MEXICO, MAGIA Y ENCUENTRO Host: Raul Velasco
In Death V alley" A
3:15
© 59 MOVIE AAV4 "T he S p id e r" (1958) Ed Kemmer, June Kenny A
huge spider comes to life to terrorize a com m unity.
430
4:30
530
5:30
Q 53) I LOVE LUCY
O ® DIALOGUE ’81
O © (©ODYSSEY "Franz Boas (1858-1942)" The life of Franz Boas,
the German physicist singularly responsible for shaping the course of
American anthropology, is documented. (R) q
© f f i FACE THE NATION
© ® GRIZZLY ADAMS While Grizzly is recovering from an accident,
Ben is captured by an animal trainer who attempts to discipline him
through starvation.
0 (©LAWRENCE WELK "Music In The Heavens"
B 53) THE OOO COUPLE
8 © FACE THE NATION
© © ISSUES AND ANSWERS
© 59 SIEMPRE EN DOMINGO Host: Raul Velasco.
4:55
O 59 O ® 0 ® SUPER BOWL XV Philadelphia Eagles vs. Oak
land Raiders (live from the Superdome in New Orleans).
CBS NEWS
053) NEWS
0
Q © (©FIRING UNE "Are
Guests: Cord Meyer, Frank Snepp.
© © 0 (©ABC NEWS
© ® THE SEEKERS Abraham Kent refuses to accept the responsibil
ity of the Kent dynasty and leaves Boston to seek his fortune in the
Northwest Territory. (Part 1 of 2)
© 5 9 EYES OF TEXAS
Ideology And The CIA Compatible?"
O 53) © ® CBS NEWS
£ MOVIE “A Boy Named Charlie Brown" (1969) Animated. The ever-
hapiess Charlie Brown tries to prove to the other members of the "Pea
nuts" gang that he is capable of doing at least one thing right G'
© © N E W S
© 59 ABCNEW8
0 ©NASHVILLE MUSIC Guest: Bill Anderson.
EVENING
530
O i B G D O f f i 5 0 MINUTES
O © © T H E NEW VOICE "Teen-Age Suicide” When a classmate
attempts to commit suicide. "The New Voice” staffers try to figure out
what motivates a young person to try such an act
© 59 0 (© S C 0 0 8 Y GOES HOLLYWOOD Animated A dog decides
it's time to hit the big time and travels to Hollywood to convince network
executives he's ready for prime time television. (R)
o © (©FROM JUMPSTREET "The Blues: Country Meets City" Willie
Dixon. Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee perform and talk with Oscar
Brown Jr. about the growth of the distinctive musical style called the
blues. (R)Q
.
6:30
730
© 53) © © ARCHIE BUNKER’S PLACE
& MOVIE "Night Of The Juggler" (1980) James Brotin, Cliff Gorman. A
former police officer launches a desperate search through the streets of
New York City for his missing daughter, mistakenly kidnapped by a
psychopathic criminal. 'R'
O © (©SHOCK OF THE NEW "The Landscape Of Pleasure" Robert
Hughes concentrates on visions of paradise as illustrated in the works
of Gauguin, Monet. Cezanne. Matisse and Picasso.
© f f i © 59 f f l © TH O S E AMAZING ANIMALS
0 ® THE SEEKERS After the degradation of Abraham, the Kent
family looks upon Jarod as an outcast, forcing him to flee Boston as his
father had done a decade before him. (Part 2 of 2)
© 55 O © ONE DAY AT A TIME
7:30
530
O 5D O ® ALICE When Mel's safe is stolen, he hires a pair of guard
dogs to protect the diner (R)
JANUARY 25, 1981
O © ©MASTERPIECE THEATRE "D anger UXB” Brian and his men
are skeptical of a professor who is experim enting with a new m ethod of
extracting the explosive out of bombs. (Part 4 ) q
© © © 59 0 ©MOVIE A A A V i "M u rd e r o n The Orient Express”
(1974) A lbert Finney, Lauren Bacall Belgian sleuth Hercule Poirot inves
tigates the m urder of an American industrialist aboard a luxurious and
fam ous train. (R)
8*30
© 59 O f f i © ® SUPER BOWL POST-GAME SHOW H ighlights of
Super Bowl XV are presented
© Q3) O © THE JEFFERSONS
9:00
© 59 O ® © ® CHIPS Jon and Ponch attend a stunt show and
discover they do many of the same feats as part of their everyday job
|