•"I v £*7Z£¿ xx 9e w ouj *1951393 m|]:JOJOTA Da iiy Texan Iranian leaders killed in series of explosions S t ud en t N e w s p a p e r a t The Uni versit y of Texas a t Austin Monday, June 29, 1981 (USPS 146-440) ox Twenty Cents Vol. 80, No. 171 ANKARA, Turkey (UPI) — Ayatollah Mohammad Beheshti, one of the three members of Iran’s ruling presidential council, was killed Sunday when a series of explosions demolished the Islamic Republican Party headquarters in Tehran, an aide to Iranian Executive Affairs Minister Behzad Nabavi said. The explosions during a meeting of the fundamentalist cler­ gy-dominated party also killed 24 other people, including 18 parliamentary deputies, and “ more bodies are expected to be discovered,’’ the official news agency Pars said. The aide to Nabavi said in a telephone interview from An­ kara that Prim e Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai and Nabavi escaped injury because they left the building a few minutes before the bombs exploded. Also killed along with the Majlis, or parliament, deputies were the minister of the environment and a deputy m inister of commerce. The blast wounded 30 others, Pars said. “ The heavy steel beams of the building have been twisted and bulldozers are operating at the scene” to clear the rubble, Pars said. “ The roof of the meeting place collapsed. An eyewitness report indicates that more than one bomb was involved,” the news agency said. Fifty ambulances were dispatched to the scene of the blast which came at 8:50 p.m., the news agency said. Pars blamed the explosion on “ counter-revolutionaries.” The blasts occurred during a weekly party meeting of about 90 members of the cabinet and parliament, both of which are controlled by the Moslem fundamentalist party which two weeks ago forced President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr from office and began a wave of executions. Beheshti was appointed to the presidential council, along with Rajai and Hojatolleslam Rafsanjani, after the dismissal of Bani-Sadr. The blast came a day after a bomb hidden inside a tape recorder exploded in a south Tehran mosque and injured a close aide to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Sayed Ali Khamenei, another bomb went off in a Tehran square and a third device was found in a Tehran street and defused. The Khomeini defense aide, Sayed Ali Khamenei, 43, was reported out of danger Sunday. Five more people were executed at dawn Sunday and nine were arrested in a continuing purge of supporters of ousted President Bani-Sadr, who has been in hiding for 19 days. Two other government opponents were shot by firing squads at Nowshahr, 50 miles north of Tehran, Tehran radio said. Nine members of the radical Moslem Mujahideen Khalq were arrested in Shahr-e Rey, south Tehran’s ancient quarter, and charged with injuring two people, the radio said. The group has been blamed for taking part in demonstrations in support of Bani-Sadr on the eve of his dismissal last week, and several Mujahideen were among the 59 executed since Bani-Sadr’s downfall. In other developments, Mir Hossein Musavi, 39, an architect and editor of the ruling Islamic Republic Party’s newspaper, Jom houri Islami, was appointed foreign minister. Musavi was proposed by Prime Minister Mohammed Ali Ra­ jai alter another moderate, Sadegh Ghotbzadeh resigned under fundamentalist pressure last summer. Bani-Sadr blocked the appointment and the post remained vacant for nearly a year, with Rajai looking after foreign af­ fairs himself. Musavi s appointment must be confirmed by the Majlis or parliament, but that is considered a formality. Iran's religious leader Khomeini, in a message broadcast by Tehran radio, denounced the assassination attem pt Saturday on Khamenei, his representative on the policy-making Supreme Defense Council and Tehran’s chief religious leader. Iranian protest groups confront on Capitol soil By DINAH WISENBERG and SCOTT LIND Daily Texan Staff Two Iranian protest groups — one pro-Ayatol- lah Ruhollah Khomeini, the other anti-Khomeini — held sim ultaneous marches near and on the Capitol grounds Friday, with Austin police at one point forming a line between the groups on Con­ gress Avenue as they exchanged harsh words. Business-suited plainclothesmen with walkie- talkies, a helicopter sweeping overhead and about 30 regular Austin police officers scoped both groups as they left the West Mall at different times and confronted each other in front of the state Capitol. The anti-Khomeini group consisted of close to 250 Iranians protesting recent executions of moderates and leftists in Iran and what members said is “ the total suppression” of the people in that country. The pro-Khomeini group numbered close to 75 members. Spokesmen for the group said the stu­ dents came out to show the American people that the majority of Iranians support the ayatollah and that “ there are a lot of biased reports coming from Iran” about the nation’s internal happen­ ings. Both sides carried banners supporting their cause. Vahid Azari, spokesman for the anti-Khomeini group, said the Khomeini government has been executing members of the revolutionary organ­ izations because those in power are “anti-revolu­ tionary.” “ The first sign (of Khomeini’s total suppres­ sion of Iranian citizens) was the dismissal of (President) Bani-Sadr himself,” Azari said. “ With or without Bani-Sadr, the system is rot­ ten,” said Seyed Moussavi. another spokesman for the group. Moussavi said, “ They m assacre people all over Iran,” not just in Tehran. He said the oppressiveness of the Khomeini re­ gime has not come as a total surprise to the revo­ lutionaries. “ They (revolutionaries) knew it pret­ ty well, but they didn’t know to what extent it would go on,” Moussavi said. Azari said there was a deadlock in Iranian soci­ ety between the revolutionaries and what he termed the “ reactionary” Khomeini government. He said two choices existed to resolve the dead­ lock in Iranian society. One choice would have been a peaceful referendum proposed by Bani- Sadr and the revolutionary organizations; the other was to have “more suppression, more op­ pression, more blood” — and the government chose the second choice, he said. Ali Jaffrizadeh, photographer for the anti-Kho­ meini group, said the pro-Khomeini group takes pictures of them and sends them back to the Ira­ nian government. When they go back to Iran, “They send us to prison or they don’t let us work.” Azari said the group was protesting to “ let the American people know what’s going on,” and to tell the Iranians in Iran that the world will hear of their suppression. He said the group also wanted American sympathy for oppressed Iranians. He said simultaneous marches were being held in San Francisco, Chicago and New York. The two groups began their respective marches at different times on the West Mall and then fol­ lowed different parade routes to the Capitol, con­ tinuing downtown a few blocks before turning back. While the anti-Khomeini group rested at the Capitol before continuing, shouts from the pro- Khomeini group could be heard as it turned north­ ward onto Congress Avenue toward a confronta­ tion with its challengers. Close to 29 motorcycle policemen rushed vn 11th Street and formed a cordon between the two groups as they passed by each other in front of the Capitol, shouting slogans. for the pro-Khomeini group, said the pro-Khomeini protesters were out to counter the protests of the anti-Khomeini peo­ ple. spokesman Kazem, “ We wanted to show the American people that there are a lot of biased reports coming from Iran,” and that people who oppose the ayatollah are in the minority in Iran. Answering charges of members of the anti- Khomeini group that the pro-Khomeini group was paid by the Iranian government to protest, Ka­ zem said, “ That’s a bunch of trash. They don’t Anti-Khomeini demonstrators shout slogans during Friday’s march. have any evidence.” are in collaboration with the dissenters. path.” Mostafa, a member of the pro-Khomeini group, claimed that “actually they (the other group) are really getting their support from the CIA.” The group, comprising the Moslem Student As­ sociation and the Persian Speaking Group, con­ demned the actions of the “hypocrites” opposed to Khomeini and the Americans whom they said A press release put out by the pro-Khomeini group stated, “ We are thankful to God that this move by these hypocrites clearly uncovered their faces for the people, and we are certain that our Moslem brothers and sisters will destroy these lackeys of the great satan in the very near future, and the Islamic Revolution will follow its correct “ We have gathered here to once again an­ nounce our total support of the glorious Islamic Revolution, our great leader Imam Khomeini and the Islamic Republic of Iran.” “ We condemn all anti-Islamic forces,” the re­ lease said, casting aspersions on “imperialism, Zionism and their lackeys.” Larry Kotvoora, TSP staff Federal court decision delays prison reforms By ERIC WILMAMS Dally Texan Staff A federal appeals court last week ordered a stay of sweeping prison re­ forms mandated by a lower court April 10, temporarily delaying judi­ cial efforts to alleviate problems Within Texas’ corrections system. The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans granted a stay of U.S. District Court Judge William Wayne Justice's requirement that the Texas Department of Corrections provide single cells for prisoners and reduce the total number of inmates. The stay delays the implementation of Jus­ tice’s ruling until the state’s appel­ late process is completed. The stay affects the mandated ex­ pansion of TDC’s role in community corrections by increasing the number of halfway houses, minimum security prisons and community treatment centers. Filed in 1974 by a TDC inmate, the Case, Ruiz vs. Estelle, has gained na­ tional attention and brought much consternation to TDC and state offi­ cials The stay prompted Gov. Bill Clements to lambost Judge Justice’s rulings requiring a massive overhaul of the TDC. Clements also traded un­ flattering remarks with Texas Attor­ ney General Mark White over the handling of the case. The appellate court also stayed judicial control over building sites and designs, staffing patterns and the rotation of inmate jobs. In a press re­ lease, White sakl, the court declined to stay several other orders but did tevite the state of Texas to submit them to Judge Justice and appeal if dbsatisfied with the decision. Rick Bartiy, assistant director of Ike TDC, said be was pleased by the decision and is anxiously awaiting a dance to look over the 44-pcge find­ ing Monday when it will become available. Clements and White both said they were delighted with the decision and expressed optimism that significant portions of Justice's mandates would be overturned. Clements and White also ques­ tioned each other’s influence and han­ dling of the case in prepared state­ ments Friday. Clements said, “I still feel strong­ ly, as does the Department of Correc­ tions Board, that Attorney General White should promptly retain compe­ tent outside counsel, in the form of a major Texas law firm, to represent the state in the crucial final hearings on this major litigation.” White released the contents of a letter he sent, which asks Clements to use bis influence. “ Because of your close personal relationship with the incumbent administration,” White wrote, Clements should “persuade the federal government that justice must be applied uniformly in aU the states of our nation.” White'was referring to U.S. De­ partment of Justice advice to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals to deny the state motion to delay implementation of several required reforms, includ­ ing providing an individual cell for each rnmatg White sakl this was in­ consistent with a recent Supreme Court ruling in an Ohio prison case that stated petting two inmates to a cell does not constitute cruel and unu­ sual punishment. White sakl the current administra­ tion is either applying a double stan­ dard of justice “or h is its p rio rity dangerously askew when it drafts a in­ plan mandating unneceaarfly creased expenditures for tko houtoug of crim iiols w hflceaartinc «X of ton strength and influence to dougr finan­ cial assistance tn those who tndy need it ” Three-day inquiry in Mexia deaths ends ‘Gross negligence, incompetence’ cited in drownings and reserve deputy Kenneth Archie — the three officers who arrested the three youths. MEXIA (UPI) — A special prosecutor’s assessment that three black youths drowned while in the custody of Limestone County officials because of “gross negli­ gence” was no surprise to Don Caldwell, former dis­ trict attorney who fought to improve conditions in the county. Steve Booker, 19, Anthony Dwight Freeman, 18, and Carl Baker, 19, drowned when a boat they and three officers occupied capsized in Lake Mexia during a Juneteeth celebration at Booker T. Washington Park. The three officials swam safely to shore while the three youths, who had been arrested for possession of m ari­ juana, drowned. Ironically, the drownings occurred only a few hun­ dred yards from a grove of towering oak trees, which according to folklore is the site where local slaves learned in 1865 of President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation. More than 5,000 blacks gather in the area every June 19 to celebrate their freedom. Special prosecutor Larry Baraka — a black, brash and confident Dallas attorney given the task of conduct­ ing a three-day inquiry into the drownings — said evi­ dence revealed that the three youths were not hand­ cuffed as some witnesses had testified. But Baraka indicated negligent homicide charges certainly could be brought against adult probation offi­ cer David Drummond, sheriff’s deputy Kenny Elliot, “I think the evidence has shown for sure there’s ram ­ pant incompetence,” Baraka said. “ I think if those families file suit for wrongful deaths, they’ll have no problem winning. There was gross negligence in the part of those officers.” Caldwell, who six months ago concluded an eight- year career as Limestone County district attorney, said he was not surprised at Baraka’s opinion. “The real basis for this problem, and many others, can be placed in the lap of the county commissioners. They have always allowed the sheriff’s department to be a stepchild,” said Caldwell, a 1940 graduate of Mexia High School in this North Central Texas community of 7,000. “The sheriff’s department was always low man on the totem pole. They got it last and sometimes they didn’t get it. It’s been that way for years. And I can document every word I’m saying.” Although the victims were black and two of the depu­ ties are white, Caldwell said the black community that makes up one-third of the city’s population has not over­ reacted. “There’s been a little bit of outside agitation, but you have to expect that,” he said. “ The black people here are pretty solid.” Caldwell, who hired Freeman to do odd chores for him when the 6-2, 230-pounder was in high school, said present and future law enforcement officers in Lime­ stone County will have to have better training. “You put a gun on someone’s hip and it goes to their head,” he said. “The evidence in this case doesn’t add up. It was a terrible, terrible act of stupidity and some­ body has going to have to pay the fiddler. These were three deaths that were uncalled for. “ I hate to see the headlines every day about our town. But it’s happened and we’ll have to live with it. But let’s be honest about it and correct our mistakes.” Horace Jones, a cousin of Baker’s, agreed. “You don’t put anybody in the water with no safe­ guard, that’s the first thing,” said Jones, 30. “Common sense tells a man that.” The 15-foot aluminum boat the three victims and three deputies were aboard only had a 600-pound capac­ ity. Freeman and one of the deputies, Archie, both weighed more than 200 pounds. Freeman, who often was ribbed by his friends for being afraid of water, could not swim. “ He told those officers he couldn’t swim ,” Jones said. “There just wasn’t any cause for those boys to drown.” Flawn hands down final decision in Kelleher case By AMY MASHBERG Daily Texan Staff K athleen K elleh er’s grievance against the University was resolved Friday when President Peter Flawn handed down his final ruling on the is­ sue. The University would not release the contents of the ruling to protect Kel­ leher’s privacy. Sarah Scott, Kelleher’s attorney, said Friday, “The report has been re­ leased,” adding that the contents of the report were read to her over the phone by Stephen Monti, assistant to the presi­ dent. Scott said, “I can’t comment on the content until I talk to my client. ” Kelleher was unavailable for com­ ment. Forest Hill, chairman of the Faculty Grievance Committee, said Sunday, “ I the Faculty have copy of Grievance Committee, a Flawn’s decision.” received, for Hill would not comment on the con­ tent of the decision He said copies of the decision were sent to Kelleher, Scott, Liberal Arts Dean Robert King and UT System a t­ torney Lynn Taylor Kelleher, a former assistant instruc­ tor, appealed to Flawn after King re­ jected a grievance hearing panel ruling in her favor. The hearing panel ruled that the Uni­ versity had violated Kelleher’s constitu­ tional right to due process The panel found that an Aug 21 meeting between the former assistant instructor and De­ partment of Government Chairman Charles Cnudde did not constitute a fair hearing on the basis of which she could be reassigned to what the panel consid­ ered a lower level job. It ruled she was unfairly reassigned for what she had said during the meet­ ing and was not given an adequate chance to respond to what the panel considered “a political attack on her teaching.” An investigation of her summer course resulted in exhibit 21, a letter from Joseph Horn, acting dean of the College of Liberal Arts to Vice Presi­ dent for Academic Affairs Gerhard Fonken. The letter states Horn’s opin­ ion that Kelleher had given undue weight to her own political beliefs, but that her culpability was moot because the entire Department of Government was out of compliance with UT guide­ lines dealing with assistant instructors. The panel recommended that exhibit 21 be stricken from Kelleher’s record. The panel also said Kelleher should be awarded back pay for the fall support position she resigned from to be eligible for an assistant instructorship to the spring. King’s June 9 rejection of the ruling stems from his, and the administra­ tion’s, belief that Kelleher’s case never have been heard by a formal pan­ el, because her complaint could not be granted relief under University guide­ lines as stated in the Handbook of Oper­ ating Procedures. Barton Springs schedules reopening in time to help Austin celebrate 4th By ED ALLEN Dwfy Te*an Staff Barton Springs Pool lies uncharacter­ istically deserted, sun worshippers and bright-colored bikinis, devoid of the normal pleasant summer sounds because of a devastating 11-day rain and resulting flood damage. absent of Dick Martin, superintendent of parks for the CSty of Austin, said Barton Springs construction workers will put in overtime this week to complete flood damage repairs begun after the high waters brought by the 11-day rains slowly subsided. Martin said six or eight construction workers are involved in restoring the debris-filled pool in attempts to meet the July 4 target date for reopening “ Most of the damage was to the shal­ low end pad < bottom i which is now very uneven. The beach has been washed out so we are having to restore the gravel on the beach and lay concrete on some of the pool bottom /’ Martin said. Martin declined to put an estimated dollar value on the repairs until an ac­ curate assessment of the damage is made. “The water is clearing,” said David Qui sen berry, pool manager, describing the water quality at the pool. The pool manager said, “We are making a highly concerted effort to re­ pair the extensive damage done in the recent flooding.” Quisenberry said most of the repairs involve evening out the shallow «ad pad and restoring the $1,200 worth of gravel, put on the beach after the Memorial Day weekend flood The pool was repaired after that flood, reopened temporarily and then forced to close again during the pro­ longed flooding that “wiped out 11 days of work” done to the pool after the first flood. Quisenberry said. flood gate sustained minor damage as did the fence surrounding the pool, but these repairs are not essential prior to the pool’s reopening, be said. Quisenberry said there are about 10Q springs on the pool bottom but “Since through the flooding, water comes cracks I have never seen it com< through before.” Many of the springs are covered by gravel washed from the beach, be said. The 100-foot by 1,000-foot pool was first patented in 1837 by “Uncle” Billy Barton. The pool was later bought by A.J. Zilker and dedicated to the city in 1918, Quisenberry said. Ordinarily open from 7 a.m. until 9:45 p.m., seven days a week May through October, the pool is a favorite of Uni­ versity students. Admission for adults is $1.25, 25 cents for children 4-12 years old and 50 cents for children over 12. Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. June 29,1981 cappuccino I ^ O A M E R O O M _ IN Tftf-TOW HK I 8 1 9 W . 2 4 th OPEN »0om H> | ■ <2 midnit* ONE FREE GAME 25* VALUE iM h g o s n n • pin boll • pool Um* ww pe» pene» p * »W I TEN LOUSY BUCKS GETS: I n e n d A 3 6 Toim i Y r u r t o f t s f e n e n c * H m r ( * r r i t ¡A>t* L t f t A á t ' u t f r e e S h a m p o o Ac ( o n d u to n e r S o n P U ts ttr A t m o t p h e r t O ju n s o n s O n A n y 's u k fe r t Ke*A A P e e r I N e c m o n C u ts S ty le s F o t I ' m 4 Y o u r H m r 8 V P r rso n m b a e d S e n t e * . 10 B e s t H m r / t é I n T em * . Mon Set. 10-S NO CHECKS 2M i S M* OrniB W C R K * ttn 477 7102 FOOTGEAR FINALES THEY’RE BACK! Now On Special! • v " \ - V * \ " \ - \ - \ - \ - \ - v - \ - \ - \ - \ - \ - V -V -V - \ - v - \ - \ - \ - V - V - L - . ■w Analysis course available \r Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y By ED ALLEN Daity Texan Staff A course addressing itself to cross-cultural communication in international business as it pertains to Third World countries will be taught during the second summer term by Mohan Limaye. assistant professor in the gen­ eral business department. The new course is cross-listed in the Busi­ ness section of the course catalogue as BC 361 and in the South Asian Studies section as AN8 361. Besides business and South Asian studies students, government, public affairs, anthro­ pology and communication students should also find the course interesting, Limaye said. The upper division elective will be an inter-disciplinary analysis of businesses in different cultures,” Limaye said. The new course borrows from areas such as: internal business management and organi-' zational theories, linguistics, discourse analy­ sis and political and economic history. Some of the topics will be: “ Non-verbal Communication,” “Inter-connection between Cultural Transfer and Technology Transfer,” “Notions about Time and Space,” “ Pressuring as a Social or Interpersonal Art,” “Concept of Privacy,” “Communication on the Job,”* “English as an International Language of: Business,” “Verbal Communication,” “ Biases and Attitudes Towards Color, Caste, Class,- Religion and Ethnic Backgrounds” and “ Mul­ tinationals in the Third World.” The course will also review risk analysis! data for India. Limaye said this involves in-; vestment possibilities from both the business* and political standpoints. IC4CTUS £AFE TfexasUnion HAPPY HOUR PRICES! l-4fm free popcorn ThE D u iy T exan PERMANENT STAFF . . E d i t o r ..................................... Do* I Managing Editor . Brian Dunbar . Assistant Managing E d ito r s ................... Karen-Ann Broe, Melante Henboa . . . . Lisa Beyer Assistant Editor JeffSroejkai . News Editor . Associate News Editor. Scott Lind Sports E d ito r ............................. Roy Hess Jody Denberg Entertainment Editor . . . . Features Editor Graphics Editor Images Editor Associate images Editor Wi . . . Ron Seybotd Vicky Thomas ■ ea ch General Reporters......................Ed Alten, Carmen BUI, Charles Í — , Amy Mashherg, Gary Rasp ISSUE STAFF Assistant News Editor Reynolds Cushman News Assistants Mike Barbee, Robyn Lind beck Tim O’Leary, Melanie Hecbt Chris Frink, N ew sw riters Sports Assistants Make-up Editor Wire E d itor. Copy Editors Melinda Machado, E ric Williams Artists Editonal Assistant Assistant Sports E ditor Steve Davis . George Vondracek Photographer Don Pedigo, David McNsbb Harry Potter JoeTedino Melanie Hecbt, Robyn Ltndbeck . Mike Fry, Sam Hurt Kevin Vandirier ice cold mugs TEXAN ADVERTISING STAFF Emily Auld. Kathy Begaia. Calise Burchett, Joel Carter, Claudia Graves, Marianne Newton, Sam Torrey, Jim Wells. KE CREAM ORSK SPECiAl $1.50 (rei.S2.IO) Texas U h o p u The Daily Texan, a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Aantte, is published by Texas Student Publications. Drawer D, University Station, Austin TX 78712 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thweday « te Fri­ day. except holiday and exam periods. Second class postage pnid at Awtia, TX 71719 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (171-4891), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building M S ) or at the news laboratory iConumaucaUan Building A 4.IX ) Inquiries concerning delivery and «•>»—* advert i st e shoald be made in TSP Building 3.299 ( 471-52441 and display advertising in TSP BteMten 3 219 (471-1985) The national advertising representative of The Daily Texan is Unwun—ae. H,— ggg Advertising Services to Students, 1933 West Central Street, Evanston n n ~ , . 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DOWN TO THI REG. $38 N O W $ 2 4 FOOTGEAR Geared to comfort and quality 2200 Guadalupe Austin, Texas 472-9433 i \ V PAY FOR HIGHEST PRICED PAIR PAY ONLY 1* FOR SECOND PAIR GREAT BUYS BRING A FRIEND AND SHARE THE BONANZA! ALL SALES ANAL, PLEASE! ( N a l a l a to c fc i n d u d a d ) 0 8 t - * * - 4 r a § e e 2 4 0 S Q w d e h » # % Monday, June 29,1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN 4 " - World & National Page 3 China will announce changes in leadership PEKING (UPI) — Portraits of Sun Yat-sen and four Communist giants appeared in Peking Sun­ day in a massive buildup toward announcements of changes in China’s leadership and the 60th an­ niversary of the Chinese Communist Party. A giant picture of Sun, who toppled the Ching Dynasty in 1911 and founded the first Chinese re­ public, appeared in Tienanmen Square with simi­ lar portraits of Marx, Engels. Lenin and Stalin. Testimonials in the official media lauded the Communist Party and the memory of the late Chairman Mao Tse-tung. An announcement of major leadership changes three-day was expected Monday following a meeting of the party’s central committee. Chairman Hua Guofeng, Mao’s chosen succes­ sor, was considered certain to be demoted to a lesser post and replaced by Hu Yaobang, an ally of Vice Chairman Deng Xiaoping, the most pow­ erful leader in China. Diplomats also were anxious to learn who would succeed Hua as secretary general of the party. Other question marks were whether the vacant position of state chairman would be filled and whether Deng would give up his chairmanship of the military affairs commission to make way for a younger ally. Should Deng fill all the top jobs with his allies, it would be his most significant consolidation of power since 1978 when he eclipsed Hua as China’s top political leader. Deng appears to have made some largely cosmetic concessions to military leaders and gov­ ernment officials who are still loyal to Mao's leg­ acy. The newspaper People s Daily announced Sun­ day that as part of celebrations for the party’s 60th anniversary Wednesday the commemorative museum to Mao, which is housed in Mao’s old home in Hunan province, had been renovated and expanded. “This will even better show the role of Mao and the magnificent achievements of his thought in the history of our party,” the People’s Daily said. Maoist stalwarts have opposed Deng’s at­ tempts to tarnish Mao’s image and the expansion of the Hunan museum appeared to be an example of the symbolic concessions Deng was making. Even though Mao has been dead for nearly five years, deep divisions on the value of his thought were believed to be at the heart of the Central Committee meeting. But diplomats believe Deng would not have convened the official session of more than 300 Central Committee members unless he was confi­ dent that the major issues had been resolved in preliminary working sessions. Guerrillas attack port SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (UPI) - Leftist guerrillas assaulted a key Salvadoran port Sun­ day in an apparent effort to divert attention from a secret arm s shipment but did not attack the U.S. military advisers in the town, military sources said. A small group of American military advisers were in La Union, 114 miles east of San Salvador, at the time of the assault, but “at no time were they under attack or in any danger,” a military spokesman said. It was not immediately known whether the ad­ visers, part of the 56-man American team, are headquartered in La Union or were just- visiting for the weekend. A U.S. Embassy spokeswoman said six U.S. Navy advisers stationed in La Union to help the Salvadorans recondition patrol boats for use in a crackdown on clandestine R.ras shipments were withdrawn earlier this month. The Salvadoran spokesmen said local military officials sounded an “ all-clear” in La Union at midday after fighting and sniper attacks through­ out the night. Local commanders reported the army garrison and naval base never came under attack and said they believed incursion was the guerrilla launched to cover up a clandestine landing of arms from Nicaragua, the spokesman said. The coast around La Union, only 40 miles across the Gulf of Fonseca from Nicaragua, has been cited by both U.S. intelligence reports and Salvadoran officials as a favorite spot for secret shipments of arms to guerrillas. Washington has halted loans and food ship­ ments worth almost $25 million to Nicaragua for its alleged involvement in funneling Soviet-bloc weapons to the Marxist-led guerrillas in El Salva­ dor. Nicaragua denies the allegations. Military commanders said that at the height of the La Union fighting they summoned reinforce­ ments from the Third Infantry Brigade stationed in the provincial capital of San Miguel, 27 miles northwest of La Union. Residents said the guerrillas launched the at­ tack from the 3,700-foot Conchagua Volcano that commands a sweeping view of the La Union re­ gion. Caught in the tub UPI Telephoto James Sylvestri, clad In only a bath towel, walks by the ruins of his East Boston home after it suddenly collapsed. The cause of the collapse, which occurred last week, is still under investigation. Sylvestri and other members of his family sustained minor Injuries from the mishap. Weinberger hands down defense guidance *11981 The New York Times i ! WASHINGTON - Secretary of De­ fense Caspar W. Weinberger has in­ structed the armed forces to acquire the capacity to launch a conventional Retaliatory strike against the Soviet Un­ ion wherever it would be to the United states’ advantage, according to senior pentagon officials. i The officials said that Weinberger, in 4ne part of his first full-scale policy gui­ dance to the military services, had or­ dered them to prepare contingency plans, train forces and acquire weapons enable them not only to counter a Soviet attack in one place but also to ¿ ik e back in another. “If the Soviet Union attacks some­ t e r e , ” one official said, “we might Well choose arenas for our response t e r e we have the advantage.” ¿ The recently completed policy gui- £ce, the basic document governing preparation of the military budget the fiscal year beginning in October , hardens and refines concepts that &ve been debated by Reagan adminis­ tration officials since last November’s election. Immediately after Weinberger and his associates took office in January, they revised the Carter administra­ tion’s military budgets for 1981 and 1982 but did little more than add money to programs already under way. The 1983 budget, therefore, provided the first opportunity for the new admin­ istration to put its own imprint on mili­ tary policy. Senior administration offi­ cials said that a significant new feature was the concept of responding to a Sovi­ et threat not just where it occurs but also in other parts of the world. The officials said these were the main points of the policy guidance: • The administration will seek a 7 percent annual growth in military budgets after inflation. That would bring the 1983 military budget to about $260 billion, compared with $222 billion in 1962. • While expanding the strategic nu­ clear deterrent, the administration will emphasize preparations for a long con­ ventional war. • The military will prepare for worldwide war in which operations in one region are planned in conjunction with operations in other theaters, elimi­ nating the concept, followed by several earlier administrations, of wars limited to one region. • Greater emphasis will be given to intelligence and warning systems to alert the armed forces to conventional or nuclear attack and to communica­ tions apparatus to enable the president and senior officers to move forces for­ ward when a threat appears and to withdraw them quickly when it recedes. • While new weapons will be devel­ oped and bought, more emphasis will be given to getting present weapons and equipment ready for battle and to stock­ piling the ammunition, fuel and other supplies to sustain a long fight. • Particular attention will be given to building the ships and aircraft that would enable the armed forces to project power to remote regions and to send ground forces there. • The administration will give priori­ ty to rebuilding the industrial base to manufacture weapons and equipment. Officials said that Weinberger planned to name a prominent industrialist soon to lead this effort. The officials said the policy guidance reaffirmed the longstanding nuclear strategy of precluding a first strike against an adversary. But it added a new requirement, that U.S. nuclear forces not only be strong enough to sur­ vive an attack and to retaliate but also to retain a capacity for further deter­ rence. The policy guidance also instructed the military to prepare to fight terror­ ists and to fight chemical warfare and to explore possible military advantages in space. The policy guidance was drawn up under the supervision of the newly re­ constituted Defense Review Board, headed by Deputy Secretary of Defense Frank C. Carlucci. Composed of senior officials in the Defense Department, it is, in effect, the department’s executive committee. The next step is fitting the budget programs submitted by the Army, Navy and Air Force to the overall policy. That will take most of the summer, the officials said, then the military budget will be sent to the Office of Manage­ ment and Budget for inclusion in the federal budget. Weinberger has alluded to some pro­ visions in the policy guidance in recent speeches but has not proclaimed a sweeping strategy or doctrine, which has led to criticism from some con­ gressmen and political commentators. In response, Weinberger said in a re­ cent speech that little was to be gained “by an early enunciation of some elabo­ ‘conceptual structure,’ a full- rate fledged Reagan strategy.” He added: “Too often in the past these easy and early pronouncements have caused real harm. They prejudged and oversimpli­ fied realty ; they put blinders on our vi­ sion.” In addition to general instructions to the military, Weinberger set forth in the policy guidance other decisions that officials said he and his advisers consid­ ered important. The secretary emphasized the need for the services to stop their traditional rivalries and work together. “That’s like preaching motherhood,” a senior official sighed, “but we’ll make another try.” He mentioned better coordination in air-ground and air-sea operations. Iraqi president denies asking for nuke bombs NEW YORK (UPI) — Iraqi Presi- K dent Saddam Hussein appealed Sun- •I day in his first major statement since the Israeli air raid on an Iraqi K nuclear reactor, to “peaceloving” T countries to help Arabs make nucle- l' ar weapons. K “That will make Israel hesitate before using her bomb against us,” h Hussein said in an interview in r Baghdad on ABC’s “Issues and An- swers.” The interview with Barba- }* ra Walters was his first on Ameri- *. can television. Í; Hussein said Iraqi leaders had I* “never discussed” the use of Iraq’s «•; Osirak nuclear reactor, demolished \\ three weeks ago by an Israeli air strike, for the manufacture of nu- t, clear weapons. The Iraqi president appealed in a I* f. speech last week to other nations of • | the world to provide Arab nations * * with atomic bombs to counteract Is- *• raeli nuclear weaponry. He said I” Sunday his statement came as a ■•.“side” comment. *• “I did not address the countries of the world to provide Iraq the ca­ pacity of manufacturing an atomic bomb,” Hussein said. But, he explained, “When Israel possesses the atomic bomb, all the peaceloving forces ought to help the Aral» possess this kind of weapon to confront the Israeli bomb.” Hussein said no nations would be willing to help the Arabs develop a bomb, although he charged the United States and France had aided Israel in developing nuclear weap­ ons technology. He said any Iraqi reprisals for the Israeli raid “will depend on a great number of factors” and said Arab sanctions against the United States would be imposed if the Arabs agreed Washington had known of the raid in advance. But, asked about the call of Li­ byan leader Col. Moammar Khada- fy to attack Israel’s nuclear station in the Negev desert, Hussein said, “If the Libyans are capable of car­ rying out such a thing, we Mess this kind of thing.” Oil stocks ride roller coester • 1981 The New York Times SAN FRANCISCO — It was a great roller coaster run on Wall Street. Oil stocks, which had doubled, tripled and even quadrupled in price between De­ cember 1978 and December 1980, took a nose dive that left investors reeling. Bui now, with the dust beginning to settle, some big questions are being raised. Did the oils drop too far, too fast? Could international politics mean a sudden rebound? And most important­ ly, is it time to buy? The answers, according to analysts in New York and Texas, are yes, yes and yes. They say that at any moment a cri­ sis in the Middle East could dry up the glut and make oil in the ground as avid­ ly sought after as it was last year. “The market overreacted,” David Dreman, a partner in Dreman, Gray & King in New York and an exponent erf the “contrarian,” or the going-against- the-crowd, theory of investing, said. “Oil stocks went too high and now they’ve dropped far too low.” He added, “People tend to forget that the big oil companies are tremendous money mak­ ers.” Dreman’s contrarian position, more­ over, was not all that contrary to the thinking at larger firms. At Dean Witter Reynolds in New York, analysts were looking with favor (Hi Gulf, Exxon and Texaco. All were selling this past week at prices just over half what they were last December. “We’re looking at the lowest price-to- eamings multiples since the bear mar­ ket of 1974,” Alvin D. Silber, a Dean Witter oil industry specialist, said. To be sure, the rapid drop in oil stock prices during the first half of this year had pronounced causes. And uncertain­ ties in the marketplace remain unre­ solved, particularly those involving pricing and production levels abroad. Market surveys, including one con­ ducted by the Argus Research Corp., showed that the price of most major oil company stocks fell 25 to & percent be­ tween January and May. Meanwhile, when earnings reports were released for the first quarter of 1961, almost all major U.S. oü producers showed lower profits compared with the 1960 first quarter. Hie reason was clear. For the first time in a decade, worldwide oil mar­ kets were confronting an oversupply of petroleum products. And in spite of a price increase by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and federal decontrol of domestic oil prices in this country in January, analysts had predicted as early as last November that a glut of oil products would mean either a leveling off or a reduction in crude prices. The predictions have been proven true. Analysts said they expected further price cuts this year, primarily a result of Saudi Arabia’s excessive production. They seemed to discount the Saudis’ ap­ parent 450,000-a-day production cut last week, most analysts saying that Saudi Arabia would not trim its production enough to immediately halt the price drop. Yet, Silber of Dean Witter said that “eventually the Saudis will show some discipline” in production. He added that a dramatic production cut in Saudi Ara­ bia “would be all that’s required to give a 20 to 30 percent upside movement in big oil stock prices.” Although international policies re­ main uncertain, most analysts said that the bottom in oil company stocks ap­ pears to have been hit. Lawrence E. Tween of Kidder, Peabody in New York, noted that “the market seems now to be discounting the really bad news. That tells me we’ve hit bottom.” World in Brief From Texan news services Negotiations plannod NEW DELHI - India and China agreed Sunday to re-establish cordi­ al relations and hold early negotia­ tions on their long-stalemated bor­ der dispute. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and Chinese Foreign Minis­ ter Huang Hua said after a 70-min­ ute meeting that they had agreed to hold talks at an “appropriate level” to resolve the issue. Indian officials said that the talks would be held in September with a visit to Peking by a team of Indian officials. Haig axpounda WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Alexander Haig said Sunday in a CBS interview that he hopes the U.S. pledge to sell arms to China will not strain relations with the Kremlin — but American policy is not subject to a veto by the Soviet Union. Haig, just returned from a visit to China, said no decision had been made on what offensive weaponry will be offered to the Peo­ ple’s Republic; which he decribed as “a friendly regime with a num­ ber of convergent interests.” Atlanta man klllad ATLANTA — A man armed with a machine gun who took “five or six people” hostage Sunday in the FBI’s Atlanta headquarters opened fire and was shot and killed by a police sharp shooter. Two men, de­ scribed as “FBI support person­ nel,” were injured “superficially” by gun shots, an FBI agent said. The gunfight in the FBI’s 10th floor office took place as Special Agent John Glover and two top Atlanta po­ lice officials briefed reporters on the situation in the first floor lobby. Search baglna WOODS HOLE, Mass. - A re­ search vessel sailed Sunday to begin a second search for the Titantic, the mighty White Star liner gored by an iceberg and sunk in a treacherous section of the Atlantic Ocean 69 years ago. Financed by Jack Grimm, an oilman from Abilene, Texas, the 165-foot Gyre carried a crew of scientists, filmmakers and adventurers who will remain at sea until July 22, spending nine days of the journey looking for the ship. The Titanic’s precise location is un­ known because the ship’s radioman apparently gave the wrong coordi­ nates. Ltland taya gat out AMARILLO — Rep. Mickey Leland, D-Texas, has publicly called for virtual expulsion from the Democratic Party of Reps. Phil Gramm and Kent Hance because of their support for President Reagan’s budget cuts. Leland said Saturday he planned to introduce a resolution asking the state party ex­ to condemn ecutive committee Hance and Gramm, along with Rep. Charles Stenholm, who also sup­ ported the cuts. The resolution would ask the party to officially deny the congressmen all future support and assistance. Klan pladgaa fight ELLINGTON AIR FORCE BASE — Calling Cuban and Haitian refu­ gees “sexual perverts” and “dope crazed fiends,” a Ku Klux Klan member Saturday pledged the or­ ganization’s paramilitary unit would be activated if Ellington Air Force Base becomes a refugee relo­ cation center. Identifying himself only as John, the man told a Hous­ ton television station the Klan’s Texas military reserve would be called in because, “barbed wire won’t hold back these dope-crazed fiends.” Man turna 121 OAKLAND, Calif. - Arthur Reed, the world’s oldest man whose age is authenticated on record, qui­ etly celebrated his I2Ist birthday Sunday. His birth certificate on file with the Social Security Adminis­ tration lists his date of birth as June 28, 1860. That makes Reed five years older than the Guinness Book of Records’ “oldest” man of “au­ thenticated age,” who died last year in Japan at age 115. Reed said he was feeling “real fine” but would not celebrate with cake “cause I had too much Friday.” InvaatlgatJon alowad ATLANTA (UPI) - Investiga­ tors said Sunday they were in no hurry to present their murder case against Wayne B. Williams to a grand jury and are trying to link Williams to some of Atlanta’s 28 slain young blacks through his failed bid as a talent agent. Gordon Miller, assistant Fulton County dis­ trict attorney who argued the case against Williams before a state magistrate last week, said “it will be sometime within the next 20 days” when evidence against the suspect in the murder of 27-year-old Nathaniel Cater, the latest victim, is presented to a grand jury. Opinion* exprewed to The Daily Texan art tbooe of tte editor or the writer of the article and are not oecewartly tftoee of the Umver«ty edmini^Uao, the Board of R«««bU or tiM Texet Student Publication* Board o f Operating Tnmee* Page 4 I Chaos rules in Iran He served as Khomeini’s spokesman and confidante during the ayatollah’s in years of exile in France. While France, Bani-Sadr earned a m aster's degree in economics and wrote several books dealing with Islam ic theology and economic theory When Khomeini was swept into pow­ e r in 1979 during the Islam ic revolution in Iran, Bani-Sadr followed him. He held the position of foreign m inister un­ til November 1979, when he was re­ placed for his reputed willingness to compromise over the issue of the U.S. hostages. In addition to his official duties, Bani- Sadr published a daily new spaper in Tehran called T he Is la m ic R e v o lu ­ tion to project his views on the revolu­ tion and the course that he believed his country should take within the fram e­ work of the proposed Islam ic Republic. In January of last year, he joined 100 other candidates in the Iranian presi­ dential race Bani-Sadr was among the eight final candidates who were ap­ proved by Khomeini. He based his plat­ form on the issues of establishing a sound economy, building a self-suffi­ cient agriculture industry, bringing se­ curity to the nation and aiming for a united Iran. He said he would work toward sound foreign relations "w ith Ira n ’s interests in mind, based on neu­ trality and peace. " On J¿n 25, 14 million Iranians went to the polls, and Bani-Sadr emerged as the landslide victor with 75 percent of the vote. His nearest com petitor was eight million votes behind. Yet Bani-Sadr eventually fell victim to the centifugal pressures that have al­ ways plagued Iran. Power struggles broke out among political groups that vied for control of Ira n ’s arm ed forces and parliam ent Political rivals chal­ lenged Bani-Sadr’s direction of the Ira ­ nian m ilitary and his m oderate views toward the West. On all sides, Ira n ’s new president was blamed for his coun­ try ’s woes. Eventually, the voices of anger and retribution triumphed, and last week Bani-Sadr was replaced by a three-m an council of clerical hard-liners — men who, six months earlier, Bani-Sadr had labelled as "gentlem en (who) have no conscience and want nothing besides pow er." taken one step Thus a voice of reason and m odera­ tion in Iran has been silenced, and that nation has further toward disintegration into feuding trib­ al factions F irst revolution, then revo­ lutionary chaos, then chaos — such is the fate of the republic that Bani-Sadr helped create. ______________ Puffer is Texan editor T 1$ DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 29.1981 ' I '* 1 ............. I ' M — " Abolhaasan Bani-Sadr, the first elect­ ed leader of the Islamic Republic of Irtn, last week became a victim of the republic he helped create ¿Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini re- rrtbved Bani-Sadr from office after a majority of Iran's parliament, the Majlis, found the Iranian president "in­ competent" to carry out his duties cwnpeiem Etani-Sadrs office and home were be- angry protesters, forcing the by ar faimer presi president to flee the capital. It the last chapter in the story of a man who rose from obscurity to be­ come Iran’s first president in 2,500 fltT * Far from the picture of "incom­ petence" painted by his political rivals, Bani-Sadr had all the right credentials to become Iran’s first elected leader. Red tape bluet -Tm fed up with the bureaucratic red tape one has to put up wfth at this university. I’m sick of standing in lines and being referred to other departments because no one wants to take the time to help people with their problems and would rather pass thbminbng to someone else. I hate fee receipts and student IDs wfyh a passion. I’m disgusted with the cheating and brown- nqeing that goes on in classrooms. I’m tired of the impersonal treatment I receive from my professors. But ... other than tfcfrt, UT is a real nice school. SS No. I23-45-67H9 Mad Dog barks rhetoric /is a proponent of the right to life and general civil liberties, I náist oppose the candidacy of Walter Mengden for U.S. Senate. Though Mr. Mengden pays lip service to pro-life groups tftrough a few anti-abortion statements, his policies of voting t^ainst civil rights legislation ami for proposals to kill the in- cerably mentally ill should make it obvious that he is not in favor of human life. Therefore, I only see Mengden’s rhetoric as a play to gain a few pro-life votes to add to a fascist/old/conservative coalition, and I hope that the Moral Majority, Christian Action Council «Dd others favor another candidate — someone committed to the sanctity, preservation and equality under the law of all liiman life, from conception to death. ► «, & * Giveme libertarianism P eter J. Dombrowsky Mathematics Congratulations on breaking through the censorship which ^aded the Frerking and McKinnon regimes. Lisa Beyer’s itijp is a breath of fresh air! The point libertarians are iking is that coercion — the act of capturing a person’s life at ipoint and holding it hostage to gain "cooperation" — is evil. ftthat is, if you attach any value to man’s life. Creatures of socialist persuasion don’t recognize that value, or they use lives as pawns in their social planning games. T fcir main argument is that human needs are too important to * Much like his American counterpart Ronald Reagan, French President Francois Mitterrand has translated his siréeping election-day victory into an economic mandate. With runoff balloting complete and Mitterrand's Socialist Party having wan a strong majority in the National Assembly, it appears certain that wide- r a c in g economic and social changes are in the making for France. fiíot bothering to wait for a party-ma- jorlty green light, Mitterrand promul­ g a ^ a series of executive decrees im­ mediately after his victory in the May 10 national elections In the first of a series of economic mofres. the new French president boost­ ed m e minimum wage 10 percent, fami­ ly housing benefits 25 percent, pensions 50 percent and created 54,000 new civil service jobs. Furthermore, Mitterand announced piaffe tax on impose a higher France's wealthy upper class and to na- to » e the remaining private banks, el industry and 10 other major indgttrial groups "jgfg DOONESBURY r France, U.S. tackle economic problems differently be left at the m ercy of volunteer transactions. Ask any rapist if he believes that sex is a human need and you’ll get the socialist line for an answer. Lisa, keep on writing and don’t be intim idated by thugs of any description. Remember that H itler was a socialist too. industry. For instance, the U.S. Solar Energy Research Insti­ tu te’s funds have been slashed from $100 million to $50 million while the Clinch River B reeder N uclear R eactor has been allo­ cated $3 billion for continued research. The nuclear industry would not exist today if it were not for the m assive amount of our tax dollars pumped into it. The adm inistration plans to continue this funding. Why won’t "screw-up. Politics and punk Hank Phillips Austin Deo*' S®*' Mow are |r\ Aos+w'x ? I Hope $c>v»\ is cpy**} Every4***^ here ^ v AVve, e*(ep4 -for* leAv my fo o t­ o f I prints i* -the t \ m t , I’m dfrcucji \r\ a -feuv N/eavs, no o n e O il, e*ev\ x ire*ne»nbfr my nam e. So «anyuMy, If you ujoold. I fhink c^p some wewwyfo I jcorvfrib AUTTW LOOSe ' M Y FW O RJTt m m paper7 M W Hesm HM»*J m eA O S 1ÜHT YCXJP poucf n jn ep our v B esom - m m rvsH fR m in e w t& r /noesp&tAPOk the im m w r m 6UE35M3RK ANP SOME Ot/T RiGHT FABRCATVN PONT MOW SiR JNBREtl d t PLENTY SCSh I Pm, OR OTHER ¿WR¿P- tutoe cam jN i9T dApi y CONSPIRACIES 70 M fScW \ DOCUMENT, m m TO PRETOR IT ' •. (X A ) I ThfMK TLL QC KJPtNS GREAT: PEA SIR REUEVE ItE PRESSURES OF OFFICE1 fvT 'WRKS FOR C0FVN6 (M R, AL EP h€8E 7EUS ME W FAVORUB m m PAPER HAS TURNED OUTTOBE A fiA/Ry TALE. / m en, m in e conclusions, SIR, JUST THE EAPENCE. ME GOT SUCKEfEP&f H U M ERROR. BUT rYE TAKEN STEPS TO STA­ BILIZE future m o o a m m n . GEE, THAVS 6REAT, AL! NHATA REUEF. I THINK IU GO R tttN G NOW. SHAUIKEEP Gee, COUP AN EYE ON BE m ALT STORE BHLE THATUOUP ^ REASSURE v r WREOUT, S K * v OUR BUJES by Garry Trudeau DOONESBURY by Garry Trudeau Democrats’ redistricting plan promotes Texan incumbents By DINAH WISENBERG Dally Texan Staff A congressional redistricting plan developed by U.S. Rep. Martin Frost, D-Dallas, supported by other Texas Demo­ crats in Congress and which promotes incumbents might “find some favor in the Legislature,” House Speaker Bill Clayton said after returning from a Washington trip during which he met with members of the Texas delegation last week. Clayton said the task of congressional redistricting, which legislators will assume during a forthcoming special ses­ sion, will involve “give and take" on all parts, but “I think we can accomplish congressional redistricting." “I think we can find a middle ground where everyone will be satisfied," Clayton said. The speaker said the new plan out of Washington is one that would be reasonable to the incumbents and if they agreed to the measure, it could win favor in the Legislature. Clayton said, however, he is not completely sure the Leg­ islature would approve the plan.' “I don’t know what the Legislature is going to do. It’s an independent body and it’ll do what it feels is best," Clayton said. Clayton said there could be different proposals for redis­ tricting in which the districts of Dallas Democratic Reps. Frost and Jim Mattox would be spared. Republican Gov. Bill Cements and Republican and Dem­ ocratic members of the state House have been pushing a plan that would split the Mattox and Frost districts to form a new, predominantly black district. Supporters of that plan argue that the new district would assure blacks of the “one-man, one-vote" guaranteed them under the Voting Rights Act. Opponents have said the plan is little more than a partisan move on Clements’ part to empty the Frost and Mattox districts of liberal votes to gain two Republican seats in the area.. Cayton said as far as he knew, Cements’ interest was only to form a new black district and not to gain two Repub­ lican ones. “I think it’s a sad day if we let party politics destroy the unanimity we’ve had in Texas over the past couple of dec­ ades," Clayton said. But he added he doesn’t think that will happen. Clayton said if Cements were to veto a proposed congres­ sional redistricting plan, “it would be in my opinion difficult to override.” Cements said last week he does not like the idea of a plan designed to protect incumbents. Five U.S. representatives of the 24 from Texas are Repub­ licans. If the Legislature fails to accomplish congressional redis­ tricting during the 30-day special session, which begins July 13, it will have to start again with another special session. 2 inmates killed in Huntsville ( By TIM O'LEARY Dally Texan Staff Despite efforts to deal with over­ crowding in Texas Department of Cor­ rection prisons, violence within the walls continues. Three inmate stabbings in Huntsville have left two men dead and another in­ jured, and officials are investigating what they consider to be “personal ven­ dettas and grudges." The three attacks occured within 14 hours of each other on June 20 and 21, and the state “will be seeking indict­ ments on all three cases," said Walter Pinegar, assistant district attorney of Walker County. Indictments, however, often only af­ fect chances for parole because “our statutes don’t call for any penalty greater than these suspects have al­ ready received," Pinegar said. The suspects are serving life sentences, he said. One of the fatalities reportedly con­ cerned a disagreement between two in­ mates over which televison show to watch. The other was disclosed as a backlash from repeated homosexual ad­ vances. Pinegar said no one questioned in his investigation mentioned that over­ crowding was a factor and that the guards were “unaware" of any previ­ ous animosity before the incidents. He added that his investigation was “pret­ ty much concluded." As late as May, more than 10 percent of TDC’s 31,000 inmates were sleeping on mattresses on the floor in cells hold­ ing three persons. The cells were origi­ nally designed for one. U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice’s Dec. 10 memorandum opinion stated, “So cramped is such a cell that two standing persons must squeeze by each other to pass, and an average man can stand in the center of the cell and touch both walls with outstretched arms. “Most of the approximately 9,000 cells measure nine feet long by five feet wide by seven feet high. Inmates in the cells are provided nothing to sit on, ex­ cept for the toilet — which has no seat — or bunks," according to the memo­ randum opinion. “Thus, inmates assigned to these TDC cells can do little more than lie on their bunks or the floor, or use the sani­ tary facilities," the opinion said. The effects of the overcrowding are “harmful to inmates in a variety of ways and TDC inmates are routinely subjected to brutality, extortion and rape at the hands of their cellmates," the opinion stated. It continued with, “Some of the most in heinous examples have occurred triple-celling situations where two-on- one confrontations practically guaran­ tee the capitulation of the abused third cellmate. However, the problems of vi­ olence also occur all too frequently in double-celling situations, where one in­ mate dominates the other.” Justice also ordered that no new units designed to hold more than 500 inmates may be constructed. This action is sup­ ported by a recent Department of Jus­ tice study which reported that “large prisons appear to produce more unde­ sirable effects than units with small po­ pulations as indicated by higher psychi­ atric commitment rates, death rates and suicide rates." * The study reported that “the violent death rates in the high population years (1973-1977) were 40 percent higher than in the (1968- low population years 1972)." The state has long been working to decrease the triple celling as ordered by Justice’s federal court decision in the Ruiz v. Estelle case. However, the state has appealed the decision and a stay of implementation has been grant­ ed concerning Justice’s order mandat­ ing elimination of double occupancy of cells with less than 60 square feet. Use of the tent program, increasing the number of probations and paroles, work release program and “intensive supervision" probation has reduced the triple celling to 1,550 inmates, and “we hope to end the triple celling by July 1," said David Dean, Gov. Clements’ gener­ al counsel. Judge Justice “went beyond his con­ stitutional prerogative and castigated our prison system from the guards ail the way up to the prison administra­ tion," Dean said. “Various and sundry improvements are needed, but Texas is attempting to overcome these problems. Texas has the finest prison system in the coun­ try," Dean added. However, an ex-Huntsville inmate who shared a cell with two others feels otherwise. Curtis Jackson, an Austin halfway house resident, said, “Down there it’s so crowded — just a bunch of confusion. “Every cellmate I had didn’t ever want to leave the cell. I never had any time to myself," Jackson said. Now you can bank 24-hours a day—not only here, but all over Central Texas. With an ANYTIME Card® from us, you have access to your money day or night, 7 days a week at ANYTIME teller locations here and throughout Central Texas. You can withdraw cash from your checking or savings accounts, transfer money between accounts— even check your balances. And at our ANYTIME teller you can make deposits, too. ANYTIME. It’s convenient, quick, and easy banking from . . . v -------------------------------------------------------------- UNIVERSITY CREDIT UNION 30th and Cedar / Austin, Texas 78705 / (512) 470-4676 Serving UT faculty, staff and full-time graduate students. < ( Monday. June 29.1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Pane S BRITTONS SUMMER SALE SUITS We have all of our famous name brand suits reduced for this summer sale! Choose from year round weights in solids, stripes, checks and 2 0 % OFF plaids. SHOES We have a select group of •hoes that are now Vi Price! SHORTS Our walk shorts are on sale for your opportunity to save DRESS SHIRTS We have every dress shirt in the store reduced! Select from a wide variety of solids, stripes, checks and plaids. SPORT COATS Our entire stock of Spring and Summer sport coats are n°W °" 2 0 % OFF OFF any pair DRESS SLACKS Help yourself to the finest selection you could ever want while they are reduced for sale! J *700 __ l SWIMWEAR All our swimsuits are on sale! Come browse through a great selection! 20% OFF SPORT SHIRTS Take your pick from our famous all cotton sport shirts in button down styles. Save on this great summer sale. j Príttons V ^ ON THt OSAO ' ^ 2346 Guadalupe 478-3411 . J - rJT A - MS. BRITTONS SUMMER SALE BLAZERS Come choose from our entire } stock of Spring and Summer <■) blazers. DRESSES Some 25% off Some 50% off 1/2 Price SKIRTS Come in and choose from our entire selection of skirts in solids, plaids & checks in cot­ tons, sicks, mannas and many m o r e ._____ ____ SHORTS Here's your chance! Every short in the shop is on sale. Come take a look at the great selection. 1* S (• HOSE Buy 1 pair Get 2nd pair free! Almost every dress in the store has been reduced for our summer sale. SWIMWEAR All swimsuits are now on sale 25% off SHOES Some are 50% off, some buy one, get one free! (Eat your heart out!) All Blouses Are One Sale! Sundresses and Mexican Dresses and many other item» are now reduced. I f & l l • í i - A h ® * * * * ii • j i a - a. a * a- a « « a * * : < iiríttonó r 1 O N THt ’ V . 2350 Guadalupe 47S4S17 —* Sports Page 6 Texans stumble, 19-18 By STEVE LEE Daily Texan Staff Johnny Paycheck s “Take This Job and Shove I f blared over the loudspeakers at the conefoskxi of the Austin Texans’ 19-18 loss to the San Aivlotuo Charros Saturday at Nelson Field Although a few players wouldn’t be blamed for feeling that way after San Antonio poondad Austin two weeks ago, nobody who participated or witnessed the rematch left with remorse. Austin surged from a 19-point deficit to a 18- 10 third quarter lead before succumbing to a late rally by San Antonio in the fourth quarter. The Cham » scored nine unanswered points, then joyfully watched a 40-yard field goal at­ tempt by Billy Schott sail wide to the right, to continue their domination by defeating the Texans for the ninth consecutive tim e since the two teams entered the American Football Association. Austin dropped to 0-5, while San Antonio upped its record to 3-2 However, this may just have been the m ost thrilling battle the team s ever fought Ex- Chgrros Randy Johnson and Mike Washington w«re expected to open at quarterback and halfback, respectively. But a recurring blood disorder forced Johnson, a former National Football League signal-caller, to the sidelines and the more agile Washington started a t quarterback. Ken Session replaced Leonard Brantley at halfback. “The doctors said not to play, because of my illness,” Johnson stated. “ Kenny’s a really good back. Leonard has been injury-prone.’’ Austin came out of the locker room after a lethargic first half trailing 10-3. On its first possession, Washington drove the team 72 yards, capping It with a six-yard pass to Way- land Gay. Schott's extra point tied the contest, 10-10. After Charros’ quarterback Mark Cahill was sacked and the Charros punted, Washington lofted a 48-yard bomb to Don Walker from midfield. At fourth and goal, Washington faked an Inside handoff and tossed the ball one yard to Walker for the go-ahead touchdown. Brian Davenport, who holds for extra points, took the map and skirted into the left com er of the end zone to up the T exans lead to 18-10 C ahill’s passing set up Rich L anders' 20- yard field goal. Austin failed to convert a firs t down on their next possesion and San Antonio picked up w here they left off. Cahill passed to Steve P a ste rrh irk tw ic e for 23 y a H s and Ja ck son hauled in a nine y ard toss to put San Anto­ nio up by one, 19-18. But Austin w asn 't finished yet. W ashington connected with Gay for 16 y ard s to bring Aus­ tin to San Antonio’s 28 with 1:16 to play. A five- yard penalty brought the Texans to the 23 and set the stage for S ch o tt’s 40-yard a tte m p t, which sailed wide to the right. San Antonio ran out the clock to hand the Texans their m ost frustrating loss of the season “ I thought we w ere going to pull it o u t,’’ Johnson lam ented “ T his is really disappoint­ ing." A ustin’s defense, bolstered by new com ers John Hopson, L.C, Cole and Wifi W ithers, held the C harros to 19 y ard s rushing for the gam e. i ’m a winner. I felt we w ere going to pull it o ff," Hopson said. “ T his is a p re tty dam n good team , and it’s going to be a hell of a team We ju st have to p rac tice to g eth er and get a chance to gel. I’m im pressed w ith this league The C harros scored on their first possession of the gam e on a 42-yard field g ul by L ander and it looked like the first gam e betw een the team s all over again S teve P ast ere hick la te r scored on a 24-yard pass fro m ( at Ü and Land­ e r added the e x tra point to put San kntonio ahead, 10-0 The Texans got on the board by m arching 53 yards capping it off w ith Schott s 31 yard field ?oal w ith 1:13 left in the first half W ashington com pleted a p a ltn 11 of 33 for 180 yards, two touchdow ns and had two in te r­ cepted. W alker caught five passes for 93 yards to lead the Texans. A ustin outrushed San Anto­ nio 89-19, largely due to the T exans much im ­ proved defensive line and linebacking “ They will win som e ballgam es, Roger Gill, ow ner of the C h arro s, said of Austin Austin will face the T exas W ranglers in D al­ las Saturday. The W rang lers a re 2-3 on the year. Look, mom, no hands! Houston’s John Greensage shows his stuff at the fourth annual Waterloo Disc Golf Classic ’81 at Waterloo Park. Greensage, who will enroll at the University in the fall, competed in the freestyle competition with his partner, UT graduate student Stu Farqu. The pair finished fifth in the freestyle event which was won by Allen Elliot and Ray Tipton from Houston. W om en’s finals competition highlights W im bledon week W IM BLEDON, E n glan d (UPI) — The second week of the 8650,000 W im bledon Championships start Monday with the spotlight focusing on the final eight survivors bat­ tling for the wom en’s singles title, worth $38,300 the winner. to A major shock in the fourth round Saturday saw Mima Jauaovec, the 10th seed from Yugoslavia, put out 16-year- old Andrea Jaeger, the fifth seed from Lincolnshire, 111., and Jausovec now must face top seed Chris Evert Lloyd, who is bidding to repeat her 1974 and 1976 championships. She was runner-up the last three years. Hana Mandlikova, No. 2, plays Australian Wendy Turn­ bull, the No. 6 seed; Ameri­ can Tracy Austin, No. 3, plays com p atriot P am Shriver, seeded seventh; and fourth seed Martina Navratilova, the 24-year-old lefthander, plays V irginia R uzici of Rom ania, the No. 8 seed M ore u p sets took place in the m e n ’s com petition s ta r t­ ing on th e opening day when fourth-seeded Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia, ninth-seeded V ictor P ece i of P arag u ay and llth -se ed e d Y annick Noah of F ra n ce w ere scuttled by Aus­ tra lia n C harlie F an cu tt and A m ericans Bill Scanlon and E ric F ro m m , respectively. John M cEnroe plays South A frican Johan K riek in th e q u a rte rs Tuesday and should unseeded Rod then m e et F ra w ley , A ustralia, or T im M ayotte, the U.S. co lleg iate cham pion, in the sem ifinals. B jorn Borg, m eanw hile, had his usual stu tterin g s ta r t w ith five double faults in his firs t se t in his opener ag a in st A m erican P e te r R ennert, but has. since found his touch to b ea t A m erican Mel P u rc ell, W est G erm an R olf G ehring and 16th seed V itas G erual- itis, his p ra c tic e p a rtn e r, w ithout dropping a s e t in any m atch, to rea ch th e la s t eig h t w here he fac es 12th seed P e ­ te r M cN am ara of A ustralia. six th , seeded A m ericans B rian T ea ch e r, an d B ria n se ed e d seventh, G ottfried, the also opening and T e a c h e r’s conqueror, V ijay A m ritraj, plays Jim m y Con­ to surv iv e rounds, failed tw o nors, the No. 3 seed, Tuesday. T im M ayotte, the 20-year- old NCAA cham pion dum ped South A frican B ernie M itton, C harlie F a n c u tt, A m erican John S adri and 29-year-old S tan fo rd g r a d u a te S andy M ayer. The w o m en ’s com petition has had few er upsets, but has shown once again the un­ doubted c la ss of th e top four seeds, who have only lost one set betw een them . □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 29, 1981 Melton victorious in LPGA classic RO CH ESTER, N.Y. (U P I) — N ancy Lopez-M elton ca p ­ tu red h er third LPGA C lassic a t the Locust Hill C ountry Club Sunday, firing a final round 71 to finish a t 7-under par. P a t B radley w as second, th re e strokes back a t 4-under- p ar, w hile Ja n Stephenson, who m ade an ea rly ch a rg e in the final round, w as third. The win w as satisfy in g for Lopez, the defending R oches­ te r cham pion who b attle d a sto m ach ailm e n t in the early rounds but rebounded and closed w ith a 72 hole total of 285 to w alk aw ay w ith the top prize of $18,750. Lopez, w inning h er third title in as m any R ochester fought off B rad ley ’s trie s, the 18th hole challenge on when she finished w ith a p a r w hile B radley bogeyed. Lopez dom inated the 6,154- yard, p a r 73 Locust Hill Coun­ finishing layout, try Club th ree rounds under p ar. H er w orst round w as a 1-over 74 on the opening 18 holes. Lopez, who also won the C lassic in 1978, and B radley w ere neck-and-neck during m ost of the to u rn am en t and w ere the co-leaders a f te r the second and third rounds. Volleyball team off to Chicago By SUZANNE MICHEL Daily Texan Staff In stead of spending th e ir su m m e r lazily soaking up the sun a t the coast, m e m b ers of the T exas w om en’s volleyball te a m have been settin g and spiking th e ir w ay through su m m er to u rn a­ the 10 youngest m e m b ers of the m ents. And on M onday, L onghorn squad will play in th e ir second su m m er com petition in ju s t tw o w eeks a t the Ju n io r N ational O lym pics in Chicago. The Longhorns trav e led to Chicago a fte r a strong showing in the N ational Volleyball C ham pionship for Ju n io rs in O m aha, N eb., from Ju n e 24-27. T exas en tered the finals of the 100-team to u rn am en t a f te r finishing second in its pool. The Ju n io r N ational O lym pics tou rn am en t in Chicago, like the O m aha com petition, is exclusively for play ers 19 y e a rs old and under, so T exas is com peting w ith a squad of 1981-82 r e ­ cru its and underclassm en. Longhorn coach Mick H aley said he expects to see m any fa m ilia r faces a t th e Ju n io r N ational O lym pic tournam ent. “ T here w ere 100 te am s in O m aha and th e re w ill be 88 in C hicago," H aley said. “ So I ex p ect th a t th e re w ill be a lot of th e te a m s from O m aha a t the Chicago tou rn am en t — probably about 30, o r 40 will be the s a m e ." H aley said he expects te a m s from the U niversity of M iam i and te am s from the M idw est to be a t the Ju n io r N ational O lym ­ pics. The T exas coach said he w as especially im p ressed w ith the play of freshm an re c ru it A lisha Beakley. B eakley, a 5-5 fre sh ­ m an from K errville, has been the H orns’ sta rtin g s e tte r for the su m m er tournam en ts. “ I ’m rea lly pleased w ith B e ak ley ,” H aley said. “ She has done exceptionally w ell — ju s t su p e rb ." Ju n io r Irm a Sanchez, who h as tw o y e a rs of ex perience w ith T exas before the su m m er to u rn am en ts, also had a good show ­ ing a t the O m aha tounam ent. “ Irm a w as ju s t excellent all aro u n d ," H aley said. “ She had a superb net gam e — both in a tta c k in g and blocking. She also did a good job of serving and recep tio n of se rv e s .” H aley said all nine of the young a th le te s played w ell tog ether a s a te a m a t the O m aha to u rn am en t, w hich gives him g re a t confidence entering the Ju n io r N ationals in Chicago. Happy Pate takes dive after Memphis victory M EM PH IS, Tenn. (U P I) - J e r r y P a te drove him self to his firs t tou rn am en t win since 1978 a t the M em phis Classic Sunday and then dove into the lake off the 18th fairw ay to let the v ictory “ soak in ." “ I t ’s been two and a half y ea rs since I won a to u rn a­ m en t and I w anted it to really in ," P a te said a fte r soak changing clothes and drying off from his plunge. “ I ju s t felt like going into the lake would m ake m e re a l­ ize how m uch fun it is to win. It s been aw fully dry and I w anted to really soak it in .” P a te said he w as also pleased b ecause the $54,000 first place m oney m ade him the youngest p la y er ev er to earn m o re than $1 m illion in his c a re e r. “ I feel like it was a very for my ca­ important win reer," said the 28-year-old Pate. "It put m e on the Ryder Cup team and it put m e over $1 m illion," Pate finished with a 3-un- der-par 69 for a fcur-day total of 202. 14 under par. Dennis Watson, making his first tournament start since wining his PGA card , finished in a tie for fourth w ith P e te r Jacobsen a t 7-under-par 209. D efending cham pion Lee T revino unleashed a strin g of th ree birdies on the back nine to finish w ith a 71 and go to 6- under-par 210 and a tie for sixth place in the tournam ent. P a te sta rte d the day a t 11 under par. He had a double bogey and th ree birdies on the front nine. He added ano th er bogey a t 14 a fte r a birdie a t 10, but got back in th e groove with birdies a t J 6 and 18. A 35-foot p u tt for p a r a t 17 gave him the confidence he needed to finish w ith a flour­ ish. "T h e putt a t 17, th a t’s the turning point in the to u rn a­ m e n t." Lietzke said. Lietzke added that the win, which was the first since the 1978 Southern Open, would be a big psychological boost for the young Georgian. “ I think this w ill be an aw­ fully big stepping stone in Jer­ ry P a te ’s career,” Lietzke said. “ I think you’re going to hear a awful lot about Jerry P ate for the next seven or eight years." Strike negotiations remain stagnant ' . / , . : i . NEW YORK (U P I) - R a y G rebey, the'ch ief n eg o tiato r of the ow ners, says he intends to be in C leveland Ju ly 14 for the A ll-Star G am e. But w ith the m a jo r league p la y e rs’ strik e having la sted 17 days and negoti­ ations a t a sta n d still, G rebey m ay have to p ass on b a s e b a ll’s m id -su m m er c la s­ sic and the Cleveland fo r B row ns’ train in g ca m p in K ent, Ohio. s e ttle “ W e’re no clo ser to s e ttle m e n t now than w e w ere two w eeks a g o ," R usty Staub of the New Y ork M ets said fol­ lowing th e la st n egotiating session F r i­ day. The longest strik e in b aseb all history has caused the ca n cellatio n of 212 gam es w ith the two sides unable to a g re e on the issue of fre e a g e n t com ­ pensation. F e d e ra l m e d iato r K enneth M offett has said he would probably schedule a m e etin g for “ m id-w eek” an d try to produce som e com m on ground on the single issue th a t h as divided th e two sides for m ore th an 18 m onths. But w ith each fru itle s s day a t the bargaining table, the A ll-Star G am e and even the e n tire season becom e m o re seriously endangered. The ow ners w ant com pensation to com e d ire c tly fro m th e te a m th a t signs a p rem iu m free agent. The p lay ers say th a t would re s tr ic t the m ov em en t and b argaining pow er of fre e ag e n ts and w ant th e com pensation to com e fro m a pla y er pool c re a te d by te a m s th a t d ra ft negotiating rights to p rem iu m play ers. The p la y er re p re se n ta tiv e s insist the ow ners a r e dealing w ith “ triv ia litie s " — such a s w hat co n stitu tes a prem iu m p lay er — and a re , in fac t, extending the strik e. A nother question th a t could com pli­ c a te m a tte rs is the question of lost tim e. P la y e rs and ow ners d isa g re e o ver w heth er s trik e tim e should count tow ard m a jo r league serv ice. The m a t­ te r could a ffe c t pensions and fre e ag e n ­ cy. W hile th e two sides regrouped over the w eekend, the ow ners a r e com ing off a p a ir of legal victories. In P hiladelphia, a federal judge F r i­ day denied a req u est by m a jo r league um p ires to block the ow ners from col­ lecting th e ir $50 m illion strik e in su r­ ance. L ast W ednesday, the ow ners began draw ing $100,000 from Lloyd’s of Lon­ don for each playing d a te m issed. The u m p ire s w ill appeal the decision Monday. And a t th e New Y ork office of th e N ational L abor R elations B oard, the ow ners w e re g ran ted a one w eek delay in a h ea rin g involving th e p la y e rs’ un­ fair labor p ra c tic e ch arg es ag a in st the ow ners. The h earing d a te w as m oved from M onday to July 6. The p la y ers contend the te am s m u st disclose th e ir financial rec o rd s but the NLRB said no live testim ony reg a rd in g ow ners’ claim s of financial hardship would be necessary. FIREWORKS4FUN Advance T ic k e t s $ 1 0 - « T IC K E T » WILL N O T BE SOLD AT T H C G A T E » TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THESE LOCATIONS: AUSTIN-SOWN SOUTH SKATES.T~T-ZE&RA NORTNtlNNER SANCTUM RECORPS SAN M ARCO S-SUNDANCE RECORDS SAN AHTONIO-JAMAJCUY.RtCOROLANO CORPUS C H R IS T !- k a l e i d o s c o p e A T U R L O N G PR O D U C T IO N IN ASSOCIATION W ITH JONM SCMCR ANO N L B J * O r i New Zealand Shorts desuaned for the riqorou*, swanea i .tn a s e com fortable and sp or^ of rugbv.tnafce comfortabl on international sh orts stylish atl-cotx< have two roomy side pockets 4 a draw- string/elasticixed w a ist. They look, s o good and fit so welt , you’ll want more than one pair. Men’s and womens sizes in many colors. Easy Parking at North Store, betw een Lamar i E>urnet Rd ■ WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2410 5AM Amtonio 47&-I577 RtSfcAKCW Leonard captures second boxing title THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 29, 1981 Page 7 Kalule hesitates, loses crown Sugar Ray’s prediction of ending fight realized Before his junior-middleweight championship bout in Hous­ ton with title holder Ayub Kalule, Sugar Ray Leonard predicted the fight would not last past round 12. He was right. With approximately 20 seconds left to go in the ninth round of Thursday’s bout, Leonard, 25, unleashed a rapid, well-balanced and well-timed attack of left-right combinations that sent Kalule, 27, backing up and visibly vulnerable. It was then that Leonard, the World Boxing Council wel­ terweight champion, used his determination to land that one extra flurry, which ended with a powerful right-cross and sent Kalule to the mat. Kalule was up with the count of 6, but the referee never finished. He stopped the fight even though the bell had sounded, because Kalule, who had never been knocked down before, was obviously in no shape to continue. He lost on a technical knockout. Although Leonard, who is the only boxer to have concurrent titles in two weight divisions, had won most of the nine rounds, the fight was not at all one-sided. Throughout the bout, Kalule had proven a very worthy and dangerous opponent as he and Leonard exchanged blows. The World Boxing Association champ allowed Leonard to set the pace in the first two rounds, which is something Kalule should not have done. Kalule needed to establish a pace that best suited his style of fighting, one he could have best worked with. In round three, Kalule became more aggressive and scored well to Leonard’s body. This helped to establish him as a credi­ ble opponent against Leonard. After this round the fight shaped up as more of a match. Both rounds seven and eight were Kalule’s best of the fight, as he came out on top of most of the encounters. In these two rounds, Kalule had two or three excellent chances to really hurt Leonard, if not to knock him out. Late in round seven Kalule rocked Leonard with a hard com­ bination that had him momentarily standing up straight and not moving. In round eight Kalule again' stunned Leonard, backing him against the ropes where Leonard again made no spontaneous move to avoid the junior-middleweight champ. He waited for a follow-up attack by Kalule. But the follow-up attacks never came. For some reason Kalule always hesitated when Leonard was most vulnerable. It was precisely in these instances that Kalule lacked the one thing necessary of all champions and the one weapon Leonard used so successfully in the ninth round — killer instinct. Instead of storming in with an extra flurry of punches, Kalule would simply let up on his offensive, simply stop punch­ ing and stand there as if deciding on what to do next. This allowed Leonard just what he needed, a few precious seconds to move out of danger and clear his head. If Kalule had not hesitated, he may have retained his title. In his dressing room after the post-fight news conference, Kalule, now 36-1, embraced his wife and received condolences from a few friends and his trainers. He made no excuses for losing, no attacks on the referee’s stopping the fight after the bell. He simply summed up his defeat by saying, ”1 tried all I can. The guy dropped m e.” Leonard, who has now completed stage two of his career goal of being world champion in three weight classes, said Kalule rates among the top five of his toughest opponents. Leonard also said he would give Kalule a rematch, but declined to set a date. Leonard is expected to fight the WBA welterweight champi­ on, Thomas Hedrns of Detroit, on Sept. 16. This fight will unify the welterweight title. After Hearns, Leonard plans to meet middleweight Marvin Hagler, who is the only professional fighter to have both the WBA and WBC titles, which makes him the only fighter with a complete, unified championship. Story by Don Pedigo Photos by Kevin Vandivier Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday, June 29,1961 CLASSTpT E D A D V E R T IS IN G Consecutiva Day Rate* 15 word m inim um Each word 1 tim e Each word 3 tim e* Each word 5 tim e* Each word 10 fim e i I coi I col I coi t l 00 charge to change copy Flr»t two word* m ay be «II capital letter» 25 tor each additional word in capital latter» * ! inch I tim e * I inch 2-9 tim et * I inch 10 or more times S4 4! 5 '7 * 3? * ** J ft *5 1/ W 66 S T U D E N T /F A C U L T Y ST AFF (P riv a te P arty Ad» Only) Student», fa utty end »ta*t ot the uni v a n it y m ay purch ase c ia » *ifi« d a d v e r fltln g at o n e -h a lt the a p ­ propriate rate Indicated above Ad» m utt be placed in perton at the T5P b u tm eit otfice, TSP Building 3 TOO, b e tw e e n la m a n d 4 3 0 p m Monday identification througn F rid a y UT and advance payment are required 50- charge to change copy First two word* m ay be all capital letters 25' for each additional word in capital letter» Ads must be non com mercial M A M IN * SONOUU Monday T en » Tuetdey Teian Wedwatday Te«an 1 Sun day Texan N day Texan Aóday 1 pm Mendey I t e m fvetdey 11 e.m W dnaxday 11 a m Thuoday I t am . In the event ef erran made In an adver­ tisement, Immedie tx netisa m int he gtvan a t the pvtdtahen era raspatn lM a far enty O N I intsrrart Insertlen AN ctaimt fa» ed- (vttmantt sheidd be made net later then JO day* after pvfdtcatten FOR SALE Fats-for Serf* F R E E A D O R A B L E pupfXet Wttl bp small dog Si* weak* old M oth er it a tewei 322-5506 a fte r 5 30 p m M o m * * - F o r S o lo _______ UT C O N D O M IN IU M S next to campus, iB R A ppealing architecture, celling fans $39,950 and up 472 4037 or 443-93)4 1990 L A V E G A M H 14x60, 2 I, some ex *14,500 M ,500 equ ity F H A loan. tra» 444-9660 P E R F E C T L IT T L E COTTAGE WEST AUSTIN-*56,600 Hardwood floors, room y 2 1, excellent condition, nice fenced yard Just w hat e v e ry o n e * looking f o r 1 C all M a r y Cullen at 788 2078 ( h o m t) or Offlca 447-7833 The Cullen Co. Attention, Parents two years old In Beautiful duplex T R A V IS H E IG H T S Good, assum able loan. 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Units c o m ­ pletely separate, connected by carpo rt A bargain at *117.000 Beautiful, quiet re s id e n tia l neighborhood V e ry n ea r shuttle Call M a r y Cullen, home 288-2078, otfice 442 7833 The Cullen Company AUTOS FOR SALE installed, VW E N G IN E S rebuilt, *549 exchange G eneral vw rep air, reason­ able rates 452-3021 W e buy broken VW» I.A M E N T E R P R IS E S _____ 1973 V E G A Wagon, AT, AC, tom e dam age *450 or best offer 443-9290 afte r 3 1976 A U D I Fox, good condition, A M / FM , AC. stick shift, *3200 454 0782 1970 BUICK E lectro Good tires, power, ru n *g reat |7 5 0 flr m 474 8320 DATSUN 240Z, 23, 4 speed, air w ire wheels, excellent condition M ust tee to appreciate 928-3108, I 396 3188 G R E A T E C O N O M Y 19*0 Citation, 4 dr HB, 4 cyi, 4 »pd Special order car F u lly equipped 21,000 careful m iles 471-3971, B R A N D N E W Datsun-310 sport 198L Interior, Need m oney, air, very nice must sell Call 478 2783 ____________ 1976 M U S T A N G II, V6. excellent condi­ tion *2500 1972 M a v e ric k , V8 *750 or m ake offer 477 6457 an ytim e 1977 TR AN S A M 30,000 mitas, o rig in al ownar, 6 6 liter, brown, AC, power w in ­ dows and locks A M /F M cassette, trla x fat speakers, excellent condition *4850 478 7748 E X T R A C L E A N Horn«t-'76, F M , air, yallow, llttb ack *1,950 459 1057 a lte r 6 ....... p m _____________________ 1971 G R E M L IN , one owner Good trans portation, call 451-7051 afta rn o o n t and evenings 1979 H O N D A Civic 4 speed Good m ile age 39,000 m iles *3,500 471-6740 before 9 a m . _______________________ 1976 A U D I good condition *3,600 473 2963 I00LS Brown, four door, S P E C IA L E D IT IO N Aspen, 1977 S ilv e r. 4-door, AT, power b ra k e » /» te e rln g /w ln - dow s/seat. Stereo ra d io /ta p e L u x u ri­ _________ ous $2495 442 5933 LE A V I N O TO W N 1970 V W H atch back 4)4 6125 *600 72 VW 65 VW BUG Runs great BUS R ebuilt engine *1400 471 5590 or 474-1111._______________________________ 1979 P O N T IA C G ra n d LeM ans 4-dr, 42,800 m il#*, A T , AC, A M / F M cassette, excellent condition Jay 453 5601. A C O N D O FO R YOU A N D T A X W R IT E -O F F S FO R D A D It m akes sense Student condos are our s p e c ia lt y . V a r i e t y of p r ic e s a n d locations Linda In g ra m and Associates 476-2673 Attention, Parents tw o y e a rs o ld In B e a u tifu l d u p le x T R A V IS H E IG H T S . Good, assum able loan. F l r * t day on m a rk e t P riv a c y , elegance, fireplaces, tre a t U n it* com ­ pletely sep arata, connected by carp o rt. A b arga in at * 117,000 B e autiful, quiet re s id e n tia l neighb orhood V e ry n e a r shuttle. C a ll M a r y Cuitan, hom e 288-2078, office 442-7833 The Cullen Com pany __ Garago-For Sal* M O V IN G S A L É F u rn itu re m u tt got Cane b arsto o lt, *25 P illo w chair, *10 W aferbed, *75 C u rtls -M a th ls T V (needs re p a ir), *25. G lass w are w /ln ltla l " N “ , 85, Cali 251-4829 M ÍK *llan*ou8-For Sol* ___ S A L E ' IN D IA N je w e lry is 25% off! N e l­ son'* G ifts, 4502 S Congress 444-3814, 10 6, ( losad M ondays IM P O R T E D P IP E S , Kung »u shoes, L i­ b e rta ria n books, science (teflon, natu ral soaps, sham poo* P A C IF IC S U N R IS E , 1712$. C o n g re t» 441 M 5 6 S . _________ Ti 59/PC-ÍOOC calculator /p rin te r W ith modules and accessories. Both *360 447- 6646 after 6 p m S H O P P E BL IT Z d o th ln g of the 1940's, 50's, 60 s. 307C E 5th 476-5087 ___________________ for 'fu n k and junk- I E a v i n g USA M u st sell Panasonic stereo/c assette 9 m onths old. O nly *140. 474 7181 N akano W H O A T H E R E ! ! ! Student w ith looks', brains, and need for food needs |ob. Can w ork ev e ry d a y a fte r 3 00, weekends. Able to do any |ob, re a lly , and w ill. 442- 1821 a n y tim e 20 IN C H gas range W o rk * w ell $95 00 1 7“ Sears color TV Beth, 454-9234 __________ __________________ *140 00. S T E R E O Kenwood KR 4070 Receiver *775 00 Speakers *110 00 each T u rn t­ able *85 00 Tog eth er *550.00 Beth 454- 9234____________ __________ 1979 F IA T Strada, 26-30city mpg, lu xury package, low m ileage, *4,300 or best of­ ______________ fer 444 0682. _ __ Teacher's F R E N C H BOOKS, m anuals and lite ra tu re . All prices. 451- 4940, a fte r S p.m . used S U R P L U S J E E P Value *3196 Sold for *44. C all 312-742 1143, ext 9013 for Info on how fo purchase bargains like this! R E F R IG E R A T O R *75, m en s 10 speed bicycle *65, u tility tra ile r C all 836-6350 afte r 5 30 and weekends 1980 H O N D A Civic 13000 X All extras, like new. Call and laava m essage. 476- 7336. 68 C H E V Y C a rry a ll. 458 6865 G ra a t tru ck. *900 FOR SALE Mo»ortyclo-Fof $qlo 1980 H O N D A 750X 7,500 m ltM . fairin g , loaded w ith extras. M o ving, m ust sell ___________ *2,250 Call 476-6319 B E T T E R T H A N a m oped 80 Honda Ex press w ith baskets O nly 740 m iles. *350 447 5735._______________________________ 1977 Y A M A H A XS7S0d 11,000 m iles, one owner, recent tune-up, battery, and n#w rear tire Best otter E venings 926 3182 B k y c l o - F o r S o l * ________ T E N S P E E D S Ladies Schwinn w orld super sport, *160. M e n s M lzu ta n l seraph, 72 lbs. *350 W ill sell both for 1500 Pecks and locks Included 479-8486 or 474-5500 ___ M IY Á T A 7)0 25", one Inch tires, ridden lets than SO m ilts *325. 346-0726 a tta r 6 p m T W O M E N S ten-speed bikes tor ta le Good condition, price negotiable Call 34)8660. for cam pus I0 -S P E É Ó bike transportation , good condition. Ask for B a rr y , 478-8463 or 477-6412 *55 00 perfect St*r*o-For Sal* C IR C L E S T E R E O ; prom pt, reasonable au d io /vid eo service Used equipm ent bought and sold P a rts and accessor las D U Red R lv a r 476-0947 R E E L T (> R E E L T A P E D E C K , stereo Sony m odel 250 Old but h a rd ly used *4°' 444 ^ 5 ? ° ___ __________ Muskol-For Sol* W E B U Y A N D S E L L U S E D R E C O R D S Highest p ric e * paid D isco very Records, 2100 G uadalupe 474 7487 __ D R U M S A N D accessories Lud w ig Slingerland Z ild gian condition W ill sell individu a 474-4562 R o g e r* p i excellent (dually R obert Ibanez S IN G U E P IC K -U P solid body e le c tric g u itar *189, best offer 478-5643, keep try in g H O F N E R V IO L IN (B e e tle ' bass brand new S500 (1)732 7483 or 472 5392 G IB S O N S ' Solid body electric guitar and Fen d er Princeton p ractice a m p li­ fie r 327-2633 evenings and weekends tu rn ta b le M A R A N T Z 6025 belt d r,v e E m p ir e c a rtrid g e *75 Under w a rra n ty , ca ll a fte r 5 3 0 p m . 282-0639 Photogrophy-For Solo____ N IK K O R L E N S , 300mm , 4 5 w ith le a th ­ er case end lens cap Good condition V200 fir m Canon 0 U E m ovie c a m e ra E x c e lle n t condition, *200 447-8581 7-10 p .m _ Pot»-For Sal* - 3 AKC IR IS H Setters, born 3-10 m a le *, l fe m a e le ft W in d y H ill* F a r m , S m ith v ille (1 ) 237-3839a fte r 7 p.m We buy lew elry, estate jew elry , diam onds and old gold. Highest cash prices paid. C A PITO L D IA M O N D SHOP 4018 N. L a m a r FURNISHED APARTMENTS O L D M A IN A p a rtm a n ts , 25th and P e a rl IB R , efficiencies Fo u r blo ck* U T , shut­ tle. cable, pool. 476-5109. SOAK U P the sun — sundeck, pool, laun­ dry. L a rg e 2-2. June lea*e. *360, 2900 Swisher 477-3388 G O O D L O C A T IO N , students w elcom e, on shuttle, A B P . No c h ild re n , no pet*. 452 8385 S U M M E R R A T E S W alk" to cam puiL Pool, city and shu ttle bus. E ffic ie n c y *179 50 2B R-2BA e fficien cy *239. Phone 472-2147 _______________________ W A L K L A W and LB J Schools, shuttle, \ bedroom, *200 plus E One block east of law school on 26th. To w er v iew Apfs. 471- 4 0 6 6 . _________________________ _ _ _ _ _ l t d , S U M M E R R A T E S efficiency, IF shuttle, pool, cable, 2B R /2B A On laundry Ch im ney Sweep A p t*. 105 W. 38 , 454 2339 ^ sum m er rate, J U L Y ‘ O C C U P A N C Y w alk to cam pus S m all, quiet, m odern IB R com plex, a ttra c tiv e ly designed *275 p lu t E Lease and deposit. Jack 472- 2277 Charles 476 726) Wes» W orld Reel Estate E X T R A LOW S U M M E R RATES Furnished IB R near UT, shopping and shuttle P riv a te patio *1 )0 plus E ACT VII 4303 Duval 345 8550. 453 0298 T I R E D OF IM PERSO NAL A P A R T M E N T 1 L IV IN G ? New M anor, Austin's only - C L O T H IN G O P T IO N A L — a p a rtm e n ts o tte rs a u n iq u e a lte r n a tiv e a com m unity w here your neighbors a re you? friends • L arge heated pool • F ree H B O and Cable • W me Club • Children * playground • 24 hour Security • UT sh u ttle* (4 b lo ck*) • E fficien cies and 2 Bedrooms a v a ila b le fro m *195 to *250 A B P except e le c tric ity 476-5875, 477-3125, 458-9042 FOR SALE FOR SALE S T U D E N T C O N D O vs. R E N T I N G FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS DO ALL THESE ADS DRIVE YOU BANANAS? WE RENT AUSTIN, FREE! apartments duplexes, 8 homes all over NORTH 458 -6 1 1 1 SOUTH 4 4 3 -2 2 1 2 NORTHWEST 3 4 5 -6 3 5 0 PAUL S. MEISLER PROPERTIES <8 IT ’S H E R E !” SATELLITE ¡y TV including 24-hour Movie Channel and Superstation Carriage House 2304 Pleasant Valley 442-1298 Barry Gillingwater Management Company Sign a lease with us and WE WILL PAY YOUR SUMMER TUITION (limit per hour) 1. THE ARBOR 1500 Royal Crest 444-7516 2. THE CASCADES 1221 Algarita 444-4485 3. CARRIAGE HOUSE 2304 Pleasant Valley 442-1298 OPEN 7 D AYS A WEEK Barry Gillingwater Mgmt. Co. 476-2633 Tf ;%K 4 , - . - 2606 E N F IE L D . Several la rg e 2-2, *300 plus ele c tric ity or *390 A B P. nice pool, shuttle 474-5930 WARWICK APTS. Preleasing newly furnished e f­ ficiencies $235 plus E. and IB R 's starting at $285 plus E. w ith ceiling fans. G ard enlike setting, pool w ith w a te rfa ll, bar-b-que pits and sundeck. W alk to campus. 2907 West Ave. Call or come by. Phone 477-1630. U n e x p e c te d V a c a n c y 108 PLACE F U R N . E F F . A P T . • D isp o sa l, D ish w a s h e r • S w im m in g Pool • P a tio B a rbe cue • In d iv id u a l S torage • B o okshelves • V i b lo c k to s h u ttle bus • C a b le TV • L a u n d r y fa c ilitie s • R e sid e n t M a n a g e r 108 W . 45th *190 plus E 452-1419 453-2771 ABP Sm all 2BR, 1BA $230 E fficien cy $179 C A /C H , w alk or shuttle to U T 2211 Leon (su m m er rates) ABP N e w ly remodeled large IB R $240-$260 dishw asher, disposal, w alk or shuttle to U T. 2212 San Gabriel (su m m er rates) Special Summer Rates ( .l o s e to ( a n ip tis IBR Furn $200-215 Plus E S m a lle r C o m p le xes Pools S h u ttle L a u n d ry Patios El Cid 3704 Speedw ay la Paz 401 W. 39th 4S9-0267 451 4255 El Dorado 3501 Speedw oy 4 7 ? 4893 El Cam po 305 W 39th 457-8537 ARRANGEMENT t wo l l f i c i s n c l s t , o n * A bedroom unite a valla bio on shuttb. Featuring twimming pool and dub room. 4 4 4 -7 8 8 0 21 2 5 Burton Or. BARCELONA t A 3 Ip e p e ne e ffM e n d e *, •partm anH mvaUaUa from * 2 0 5 phn f . fu rnahad or unfvrnhhad Patio», pool, dubroam 8 t oblo TV. Lototod on ibuttio. ChUdran accepted. 444-2468 2201 Etmonf Tri-Towers Enjoy a unique lifestyle all oummer for aa little as $330.00. Close to campus with swimming pool and security. 8 0 1 W . 2 4 t h m i m _____________ ESTRADA two A three Studios, ono, bedroom apartments available from $220. Shuttle, cable TV, 3 pooh, takeviews. 4 4 2 -6 6 4 8 1801 So. Lakeshore 25% OFF ti n t month* ront w ith thh coupon 453-4002 302 W. 38th E ft, 1 & 2 B d rm s ., fu rn -u n fu rn , a ll a p p lia n c e s , gas & w a te r paid, s h u t­ tle , pool 8, frie n d s , s ta rtin g a t $ 169. 9 1 0 W. 26 th 4 7 7 -2 1 6 0 f t t itartinff | f 79. furn-unfum , pa* 8 w ater pm Id. MARK XX - Sum m er Special - • 1 BR Furn. $225 • 2 BR Furn. $270 • Shuttle 2 Blks. • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 3815 Guadalupe 451-2621 A °(_ all sizes, prices and locations 474-6357 3507 N. INTERREGIONAL 088 Northwest Hills 451-2223 Riverside 441-2277 FREE - apt. referral service FEE PAID BY APT. O W N E R ^ £ : ■ V'. ‘ '' " ' ' t ' \fc ‘V ROOMMATES ROOMMATE NETWORK look first to Austin's oldest reputable service h r the largest sale chon of QUALITY appAconH. Now in our 2nd successful year. 4 7 3 -2 8 0 0 1611 West 6fh ROOMMATE INC Whan you nood a roommate in a hurry call Austin's largest roommate locators. ROOMMATE INC. 452-0420 S E C O N D S U M M E R session. 7/10-8/15. N ew a p a rtm e n t w ith pool. 5 blocks west '/a bills. 478- cam pus. *260.00 m onthly, 7418. F e m a le . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E M oses 441-0031. w a n te d . C a ll M A T U R E N O N S M O K IN G sober co-ed w ith C h ristia n convictions wants sam e to share 2BR house in good area north of town. Call M a r th a a t (713) 785-5946.___ S E M I L IB E R A L , clean, and studious fe m a le to share nice 2¿2 ap a rtm e n t on shuttle for fa ll and spring. Need own bedroom fu rn itu re . Upperclass pre­ fe rre d . Appx. *190 plus Vi elect. 443-6798. R O O M M A T E NEE~D E c T T o T "beautiful 4B R-2 story student-owned home. Resi­ d en tial neighborhood. M ust be neat and responsible. 928-3108. H E T E R O F E M A L E room m ate, non­ sm oking engineering or other serious student, needed for 2BR apt. *115 plus '/j E /M O . M S /E R shuttle. 476-2953 a fte r 10 p.m . m a l e " RD O M M A Í E "fo T T b 'r"" duplex^ 4709 C asw ell, near CR, fro m July 1st, p a rtly furnished, television, appliances, e xc ellent stereo. *132.50 plus Vt bills. C all Doug. 454-9704 a fte r 4 p.m . G R A d 's T J J D E h T f T o T h a re 2B R Barton H ills 4-plex. N ice. *140, Vi bills. Trlsh 452-3084, 476-6015. M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n t e d T l B R " ^ plex, N E Austin, C A /C H , fenced ya rd . *115 per m onth. R o bert 926-1793. Y O U N G ~ R C O M M A TE S ~need ed to share new ly furnished condom inium in N o rth ­ w est H ills. HB O , pool, clubhouse. *165- fra c tlo n utilities. Call Rod 345-2828. M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted. Share larg e furnished 2-2. *170 plus e le c tric ity . N e a r cam pus, U T shuttle, shopping cen­ ter. 458-8883. , R E S P O N S IB L E Y O U N G l e m a ie adu lt to share house in W est Austin. August 1st. 255-2980. F E M A L B '""ñoñ-TmokTng W A N T E D ": ro o m m a te for furnished 2BR townhouse. *125 plus E . 447-3399. H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D to Share 2B R, 1BA. N o rth cen tral. VS re n t *175.00. Non- sm oker fe m a le . Begins July 1. Call 452- 7451 a fte r 5:30 p.m . R O O M M A T E W A N T e F I o"share three bedroom house w ithin a m ile of cam pus w ith two m ales. Porch, trees. Call a fte r six 476-0836. R O O M M A T E ~ "Ñ E e "0 E D to share 3BR house n ea r CR bus route. *117 month plus VS bills. C a ll C hris or Boyd 458-2037. F E M A L E W A N T E D to share furnished m obile hom e. No sm okers. *100, half bills, *50 deposit 385-4483. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed. 2 6 R, 2BA nea r Z ilk e r P a rk . G re a t view. *195 each plus VS bills. C all Suzanne 327-5266, 443-4603. L ea ve m essage. G R A D U A T IN G S E N IO R needs fem a le furnished duplex ro o m m ate w ith W /D . F ro m July 9-Aug 31. *180/m o. plus bills. Shuttle. 451-0575 Ellen. fo r 2BR S U P E R S O U T H suburban 3-2-2. *175/ m o. plus VS u tilitie s & deposit. C ity bus. Contact Noah 441-5483, 477-6511 ext. 2605 w ork. L A R G E B R . In 3BR house. Own bath, AC, entrance, next to Eastwoods, fire ­ place, nice neighborhood. *190. 474-2863, 477-5479 .________________________________ L A R G E E L E G A N T L Y furnished g a ­ rage apt on H a rtfo rd Road A v a ila b le June 21st-firsf w eek In August. 453-6149 nights._________________________________ IBRT U N IV E R S IT Y A R E A , efficiency, share bath, A B P , *110-5220. 477-7558, 459- 6042,___________________________________ T H R E E BLOC KS to cam pus. 2BR, 1BA, laundry. *250 sw im m ing pool, cable, plus F.. 478-6808 O N E BLOCK fro m U T , efficiencies. *150 A B P, IB R s *235 A B P 300 E . 30th 478- _____________ 3507 a fte r 1 p.m .________ 2BR, IB R . Pool, near cam pus and down­ town. Rio House, 606 W. 17th. 472-1238. CLOSE TO cam pus. One room furnished efficiency, share bath. B ills paid. Lease. Si6 5 /month 926-7243. 2800 R IO G rande cam pus. 477-8533 1BR-J195. Close fo CO ZY CO ND O , w ell appointed, one bed­ room. 3000 G uadalupe. 11 m onth lease beginning Ju ly 1, firs t m onth fre e. Call 476-1701, leave m essage. N O R T H U T cam pus-lease for sum m er to assure lodging in fa ll. Nice e ffic ie n ­ *210. H ow ell cies. C A /C H , carpeted , P roperties 477-9925._____________________ W A LK U T -to u r sep arate bedrooms plus living, kitchen and bath com prises en­ tire upstairs of carpeted c e n tra lly Ideal for cooled and heated building. group of friend s desirin g individu al p ri­ vacy. *660 A B P . H o w ell Prop erties 477- 9925.___________________________________ 2502 N U E C E S . B row nlee D o rm ito ry , *170 AB P, w alk to cam pus. 478-4038. o U T e T ^ C O N V E N I E N T e f fic ie n c y . A v ailab le second s u m m er session. Jim 471-5351.________________________________ IB R furnished 30TH A N D G uadalupe. condos, close to U T. P a rk in g space, laundry room , ceiling fans. No children, no pets. S u m m er rates *200/m onth. Call M o n d a y -F r ld a y 8 a . m . -5 p .m . Ed Padgett Co. 454-4621. S M A L L E F F IC IE N C Y g arag e a p a rt­ m ent, 3 blocks fro m cam pus. G re at yard on W aller Creek, *150 A B P . 477-6191, 477- 3444 N E A R LA W school. E ffic ie n c y *165 plus IB R * 1 15-Í130, 27th and Red R iv e r. E. 479-0928. UNFURN. APARTMENTS BRAND NEW ANTON HEIGHTS TOWNHOUSES 800 S. 1st St., 2-2, fireplace, p a tio , W / D c o n n e c tio n , 3 m inutes fro m downtown. $450. 474-9918. Guadalupe at 45th 1-1 with loft, ceiling fan, W /D connections, on shuttle. $280 plus E. 835-5713. PA R KSIDE APTS. 4209 Burnet Road fu lly L a rg e one bedroom a p a rtm e n t, carpeted, C A /C H , larg e w a lk -in closet, across the street fro m Ransom P a rk . P re fe r serious student. No children, no pets. C all 454-3251 betw een 9 and 6. G A R A G E A P A R T M E N T , 2B R, kitchen, livin g room, San G a b rie l, *255.478-8905. O N E RO O M a p a rtm e n t. A B P . 2703 Rio G rande. M a y be seen betw een 6:30 and 7:30 p.m . 477-4802. U T A R E A . IB R nice duplex, *275. Gas, w a te r paid. C eiling fan and AC. A v a il­ able July 1. 327-1301, 471-4106. FURNISHED HOUSES R O L L IN G W O O D 3-2, larg e fenced yard, possibly furnished. 327-0339. living, C A M P U S -O L D E R ho m e-fo rm a l larg e dining room, firep lace, kitchen, 2B R, 1BA, fre sh ly painted. Lease *450/ m onth, gas paid. 926-7243. N O N -S M O K E R fo r unfurnished 2BR du­ plex. *115 plus VS utilities, negotiable. No pets. M !ke, 472-4391, 453-4265. N O N -S M O K E R to share 2BR duplex. 1 m ile fro m cam pus. A v a ila b le July 1st. 478-5009,443-8991. PRIVATE PROPERTIES I'I. -M f.s I.A I f |5k\ 4 I K . s \ \ " \ v ' ! M i ‘ I V . ' M .jix 'r K a x l V , I " f, » Manor Rd. at IH 35-On EC Shuttle Everyone Needs That Private Place FREE Apartment Locating 472-2477 ROOMMATES F E M A L E TO share 3BR house 15 m in ­ utes fro m U T . *125 plus ‘/S b ills. 926-7440. N E A T , S T U D IO U S , hetero fe m a le to share 2BR 1BA cute house startin g Aug. 1. N e a r “ Su ndow ner", Stacy P a rk , and shu tt's stop. *125 mo. plus vi. C all 442- 5703. N O N S M O K IN G W O R K IN G fe m a le w ith sense of hum or w anted to share 3-2 du­ If interested call Jan et 870-3527, plex. 452-3344. *175 plus bills._________________ FEAAA LE S T U D E N T w anted to share 2- 2 apt. in R iverside are a . M u s t be neat, clean, and fin a n c ia lly stable. P re fe r up- perclass. Rent *210 A B P . On shuttle route. 441-7453. FURNISHED APARTMENTS 7 see fun in the future Apartments GREAT SUMMER RATES EFFECTIVE NOWI Largest Pool in Town 2 Racquetball Courts Planned Social Activities BRAND NEW CABLE SYSTEM (F ree) ASK ABOUT OUR FALL PRE-LEASING SPECIALS Choots From Effsdoncy, Ons I Two Bodroom Modott “The Fun Place To Live. " 2005 WMew Crvak Dr, 447-4696 • Liphfod Tennis Cevrts • Shuttle Bits Step • Security Service • Free Cable TV VI age 2101 Burton Dr. * Exercise Reenu/Seenes * Putting Oreen * 2 Peels • I large, * Walk-in Cleeeh * Ice Meher 1 447-4130 n n x u w w w a x SUMMER RATES Walk to Campus or Shuttle Bus 1 BR, 1 BA, shag carpet, C A /C H $175 or $210 $185.00 $170.00 $175.00 $185.00 $175.00 $190.00 $175.00 $170.00 $170 00 4312 Speedway 3311 Red River 2801 Hemphill 2808 Whitls 2803 Hemphill 301 W. 29th 409 W. 38th 506 W. 37th 2806 Hemphill Act III Act IV Act VI Act VIII Act IX Act X Thrn Oalu Paean Square W«tt«m«r 27l 1 and 2712 Hemphill H> PADGETT COMPANY 454-4621 453-0540 474-8125 476-0411 474-5650 4764)411 474-5650 453-3383 459-1597 472-0649 472-0649 4505 Duval 454-4799 NOW PRE-LEASING * Special Summer Rates * All Bills Paid * Exercise Room A Saunas * Pool A Clubhouse * Efficiencies, 1 A 2 Bedroom Call or Coma By Todayl Profs—ionmlly Manegod by M artino Properties, Inc. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D for July and A ugust to share two bedroom apt. *125 plus E . 472-6188, 472-1238, 476-1215, Joe. N O N S M O K IN G V E G E T A R IA N m ale, serious student seeks room /house near cam pus, m eal sharing. M ik e 478-0880. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D f o r T b e d r o o m C la rk s v ille house. M ust have color T V and 18* sailb oat. 474-0159._______________ F E M A L E S H A R E three bedroom house. *100 plus t h ir d u tilities. Q uiet neighbor­ hood, shuttle. Sept. 1st. 451-4367, 453- 5945. F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E S : S ta rtin g August 1, 3B R , 2B A on CR shuttle, C A / C H . *150 plus bills. 459-4671. room m ate N O N S M O K IÑG F E M A L E needed to share 2-1 ap a rtm e n t ( fu r ­ nished) on N R shuttle for fa ll/s p rin g . >172 plus >/i E . T in a 445-2863.____________ room m ate. 2BR G A Y M A L E needs house, H y d e P a rk , near shuffle. *175 plus ’/z u tilitie s . C all 454-2376.___________ R O O M M A T E F O R 2BR 1BA furnished apt, C A /C H , 1410 W. N orth Loop. *140 plus ’/i bills. D a v id 451-6198.____________ for M A T U R E H O U S E M A T E needed 3BR dup lex on H e m p h ill P a rk , No pets. *60 deposit. *150 mo. plus V5 bills. 478- 7022 aft.__________________________ SP A C IO U S H O U S E on golf course 3 m iles n o rtheast of cam pus. C ity bus. Rent negotiable. M ornings, T im 928- 0124. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D , m a le ~ o r fem ale, to share 3B R house In South Austin. 442-9420. R E S P O N S IB L E M A L E share 2-2 du- plex. *180, h a lf bills. No gays. T im 441- 1216, 477-2383 ROOM AND BOARD 21st S T R E E T COOP F a ll vacancies fo r wom en, successful e x p e rim e n t In educational housing, 19 m e a ls /w e e k , AC, singles and doubles. F o r in fo rm a tio n c a ll 476-5678 or come by 707 W . 21st St. louer chez La M atson C H A M B R E S A F ran c alse , 710 W est 21st Street, tel 47$. 6586.______________________ H E A L T H A N D n u tritio n oriented co-op seeks responsible individuals. W e offer resid en tia l neighborhood near quiet cam pus, v e g e ta ria n , sm oke-free envi­ ronm ent, sundeck, open field and gar- den Royal Co-op, 1805 P e arl, 478-0880. V A C A N C IE S F O R w om en for the fa ll se­ m ester in edu cational and cooperative en v ironm ent. L a u re l House Co-op, 1905 Nueces. 478-0470. M A L E O R fe m a le vacancy for second su m m er session. L a u re l House Co-op. 478-0470 1905 Nueces. LOST & FOUND LO ST B L A C K briefc ase between Royal Crest and R iversid e Saturday June 20 Contains v e ry im p o rta n t papers. Please call O scar at 443-6280 if found. R ew ard. E N G A G E M E N T r in g and L O S T , m atching band of g re a t sentim ental v a l­ ue Was left in B E O B , 6th floor Substan­ tia l re w a rd . B A G E R A IS lost (b ig black Lab w ith red c o lla r). If seen please co l 477-42)3 or 478-0013 ____________ LO ST M O D E R N gold *'“ e ry necklace, *s looks R e w ard ! CaH 454-9831. fla tte n e d gold nugget like LO ST: 8x10 blue com position b o o kTk p.m . Thu rsday, nea r oak north of Hogg and Union V a lu a b le notes! Please call 471-1392 or P a x 5591 TYPING R O O M S SERVICES HELP W ANTED ZIVIÍY S CZ3 wprfna, Jim, jivuir MBA / / i TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING The Com plete Professional FULL TIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2707 HEMPHIU PK P le n ty o f P a rk in g econotype econocopy * I Typing, Copying, • Binding, Printing ¿IBM Correcting S eiecfrk* Rental A Supplies • 5C copies ! North M-F 1:30-5:30 Sot. 10-4:00 ; • • • 37th A Ouodalupe • e e e e e 453-5452 • e e e • 1 2 • E. Riverside A lakeehore South M-F 8:30-5:00 Sat. 10-1:00 443-4498 • • • • • • • • • • • • e e e e e e o Melissas Typing m w i< set c s typing, reports A resume* 500 E. Hrv«r»t l m » ; and Dr. Pteo Gag, efactrtcsl g aI Ü M iM vataitfol fMafite>.HHSHB| ^ f í p í w i rBqpteh to light <»* XI ■tochever roa ase, will discharge ’ I plate," Marsh said, ‘‘the latent / &• plate,” which is the electrical i y iK Mdahig after esposare, to scanned by a laser| ^ H O a o t e r nMDMoras and records the data as a four* pflB T pftctars made ep at over 210,000 numbers, >'ins SétoÉMlar oto manipulate the tofonnationsoitcanbe if tyjfce laser aedtigasniiUed onto photographic film, «■The Mote to Ihe real Invention’’ of the whole sjrs* Mbeiaa used, but the patient to I Standard radiattoii «nosed to n tossar Mof rays. “Our plate to inherent* ■BÉÉfllm. as it taMÉÉBtf to m srt ssH ftoi ihaa s jtaoe of film. 10 to take» lesa X Bjf” toneoidan satoM anh. Therefore the patient M B amounts of radiation. from radiation posad Ittsif stMManfc. The oompatcr edftiip the intfn* v> stof ef Iho^totoieia^ after the llnct Thto decreaaes die man* •- '.her e f .,. stoMMiMpd^ mfd;?ttodhwMtoM pm ent exposers n d I * f said* motioa,” lie ■B B M M K M B W H M H M B B The plates are tocharfed and used again once the infor­ mation to recorded onto (he computer, a process which I saves flto p i# m sad the hospital the coat of expensive film, Marsh asid*- I At pr esold eato a laboratory model of the system exists, botMnnfc Slid they hope to have commercial models avail* able by thd sammer of ifitt. Computerised radiology to not new; computerised tran- saxtol tomography, called CAT-ecans, have been used for j yean, arid a medical doctor from the Brackenridge Hospi* tat radlotejy depertinent who did not want to be identified. C om pite! can manipulate X-ray information and repro- j duce it a t a hard copy photograph or as an ordinary X-ray film, he aa& Althoagh he was not familiar with the Anderson System, be said in the tost, few peers, “computer application in ra­ diology has jost mushroomed,” hat “the basic recordiog f medium for X-ray has been photographic film for years and years.“ ., < , The Anderson project was originated with a 3250,000 grant from the National Cancer Institute to reduce the amount of radiation oo cancer patients receiving X-ravs._______ j C a n a d a m o u r n s m a r a t h o n e r C a n c e r v i c t i m T e r r y F o x r u n s ‘l a s t k i l o m e t e r ’ NEW WESTMINSTER, British Col­ umbia (UPI) — Terry Fox, who lost one of his legs to cancer but still managed to run halfway across Canada to raise $24 million for research to fight the killer disease, died Sunday. He was 22. “Canada mourns the passing of a young man whose courage and awe­ some determination inspired this coun­ try as no one has ever done,” said Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. Flags were ordered lowered to half m ast throughout the country for Fox, who was the nation’s youngest recipient of the Order of Canada, the country’s highest civilian award. Doctors said they would not perform an autopsy the exact to determine cause of death, but a spokesman said the young runner “ ran his last kilome­ ter’’ after developing pneumonia Satur­ day and lapsing into a coma late in the night. He died with his family at his side. His “ Marathon of Hope,” began April 12, 1980, when Fox dipped his artificial leg in the Atlantic Ocean at St. John’s, Newfoundland, and headed for his home town of Port Coquitlam, British Colum­ bia, more than 5,200 miles away. “The only way I ’ll come into British Columbia to running,” he vowed. Cancer decided otherwise. Fox ended his marathon after 144 days and 3,200 miles on a hospital stretcher in Thunder Bay, Ontario, when doctors discovered he had lung cancer. After beginning the run in near-ob­ scurity, Fox’s quiet dignity and courage captured the hearts of Canadians and town after town welcomed him with television cam eras watching. Fox, a former high school basketball player, was first struck by bone cancer in 1977, forcing amputation of his right leg. At the time, he was a student of kinesiology — the study of human movement and reflexes — at Simon Fraser University. During the next few months of che­ motherapy, he became intrigued by an article his high school basketball coach had given him about an amputee who ran in a marathon. Fox now had his own reason to fight on. He would cross Canada to raise $1 million for cancer research “ even if I have to crawl every last m ile,” he wrote later to sponsors. “ Somewhere the hurting must stop ... I’m deter­ mined to take myself to the limit for this cause.” For eight months, the second son of a railway switchman and a card shop manager trained to run on his artificial leg. He worked up gradually from a half-mile to 15 miles a day. During his marathon, Fox averaged nearly 30 miles a day, ignoring cold, spring rains and summer heat in his al­ most relentless drive to carry a small bottle of Atlantic Ocean water to Brit­ ish Columbia. When news broke of Fox’s hospital­ ization after raising his goal of $1 mil­ lion, contributions poured in finally raising the total to $24 million. In and out of the hospital for months, Fox was readmitted for the last time June 19 with what doctors reported was a chest infection. New 23-channel system offered to Austin cable viewers By MELINDA MACHADO Doily Texan Staff Austin’s cable capacity will be upgraded to 23 channels by July 1982, according to Charles Gramlich, manager of Capital Cable. “We will meet that deadline and give people the opportunity to have 23 channels as soon as possible. ” Gramlich said. Capital Cable Company is being bought by Time Inc. and will be run by its cable susidiary, American Television and Communications Corp. In its 15-year agreement with the city, Time Inc. has promised to provide up to 54 channels of service within five years, with a capacity of up to 108, if the City Council decides Austin needs that many. Time Inc. to installing two trunk or main cables of which only one will be activated to 54 channels. Subscribers will not be charged for the other cable until more than 54 channels are ac­ tivated. Gramlich said Capital Cable added a 24-hour sports channel two weeks ago and said, “I don’t expect any other changes until the 23-channel system is in operation.” In the 23-channel system, according to the city’s cable ordinance, the subscriber may choose the present 12-channel system for $4.95 without the option of Home Box Office or 23 channels for $7.20 including the option of HBO, Cinemax and Galavision. There is a $15 charge for basic cable installa­ tion. Movie channels, such as HBO, Cinemax, Showtime and the Spanish-language Galavision are 38 a month each. Within four years, Austin will have a 36-chan- nel capacity. Tier one service (12 channels) will remain the same with the addition of a Galavi­ sion option. Twenty-three channel (tier two ser­ vice) will be expanded to 30 channels for $8.20. Thirty-six channels and 36 text channels will cost 311.95, adding options of the Movie Channel, Showtime and Family Premium Service. Text channels include news, weather reports, classified ads and other community information. The Tocom 55 Plus is a converter that will allow “two way interactive functions” by giving viewers the “ability to send signals back down the cable,” Gramlich said. Tocom 55 is an option that will be available beginning with the 36-channel system. It will pro­ vide a 24-hour emergency alert system that warns subscribers of national disasters, floods, fire or civil defense emergencies. When the alert is activated, the television set turns on and com­ mands the viewer to tune to a designated channel for more information. Gramlich said individual Tocoms will be no r xi* LAZY DAISY RESTAURANT Í ♦ offvm the following breakfast specials J Monday through Friday 5 a.m.-II a.m. g ♦ EARLY BIRD SPECIALS t •««•, any tryi*. W i bcawm (•*»! m ktw wtt* * 1 b iH v ili o« to o f t I>iii «I Inm J * wHh un*d wtth «my bfMkfatt f 1 *65 1 .8 5 .3 0 A wtrt, 1 yli n , botan or w vM fa A CK otc* a t h o t h o m a m o d . t w a a t ro ll ot 1 b a a k h i l t o t * MMvad w / t o r t a * A ( M m h M Hook I I •.m .-h M p m 7 doy* Serwefil vvtth dadoed fvessch b in (h reHs •Mm mSmhM MI V m A M i I n Bmt U m tS II i * 4 p m LOCATIONS: 0 I 1*01 Ovadofvp* l l p h A Ovodotvp*] Have Dinner With a Friend at Ulo/fli it Down f o r l i f t F R O M N O W T H R O U G H J U L Y 4 , C O M E BY A N Y OF O U R A U S T I N H A M B U R G E R S BY G O U R M E T , R E S T A U R A N T S F O R O U R F A M O U S C H A R - B R O I L E D H A M B U R G E R S , C H A R B R O I L E D W H O L E C H I C K E N B R E A S T S A N D l W I C H E S , H O M E M A D E O N I O N R IN G S , O R A N Y ' O F O U R D A I L Y F R E S H F O O D A N D Y O U C A N E N J O Y A N ICE C O L D B E E R F O R JU S T 2 5 * . Y O U C A N E V E N C O M E IN J U S T F O R T H E 25« B E E R , N O O T H E R P U R ­ C H A S E IS N E C E S S A R Y . T H E P O I N T IS, C O M E I N I WE K N O W Y O U ' L L C O M E B A C K . 1 9 1 1 A n d e r s o n L a n e 3 1 1 S . L a m a r 2 2 0 0 G u a d a l u p e V --------------------- * hooked up to a central computer. The computer can store specific information about the resi­ dents and if there is a home emergency, a push of a button can summon police, firemen or an ambulance. The Tocom will allow viewers to respond to polls, pay their bills, look over classified ads o» movie reviews and have a pay-per-view system for certain events. In the 54-channel system, tier one will remain the same, tier two will provide 37 channels for 39.20, 49 channels for 310.20 and 54 channels plus 54 text channels for 312.95 a month. Shoe Shop *üa»SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN 1614 Lavaca Capitol Saddlery Austin, Taxas 4 78 *9309 11 " ■—"V Let this tifa help you put l l l m o n e y Mo\J this! Um a Texan Want Ad to sail unnaadad item*! Call the hotline: 471 -5 2 4 4 and say, “Charge it!” L (suuscTTOTsrauofTPouacs.) j BEAUTY IS YOURS with individualized skin care by Erno Laszlo. No. 5 Jefferson Square Colt 452-8846 $13 DOLLARS CASH! f --------*13.00 CASH j I I Tes ess tern a M * by ho* 1 N • Ussi ftsssss hem. 2 I talas stay 1H haws, I n i y n « i n r i i m q 1 71 Mon. >■ ‘ ‘ 4 ¡ J | I Ysa w f l ra c d w $ M t isr firs t Ssasrtas so4 ysor S I M S far a sscsad ésoa- ■ Osa h fita sans wssk. | tfyoo k ta | AisMiawfib | T ~ yes wfil rscsfas a I A U S T I N B L O O D C O M P O N E N T S , I N C Phone 477-3735 | 510 West 29th ■ Ommss M m . I I f a n . • N N f a s t . I W . I t m U p m Try a New Peach Milkshake U ’ m ’ m ’ m ’ m — G O O D ! ! 5400 Burnet Rd..................... 451-3760 1715 Guadalupe .................. 472-1582 .................... 892-2058 4411 S. Lamar A m e r i c a '* roast beef, yes Sir! IQ* I q * 2 > Buy One A r ty ’s Roast Beef Plater (Inc. potatoes A cols slaw) Get One FREE (Limit 8 Offers) tagU r m / m t y t l , m i C e s é e m t f m /U r 4: M *«*. I I I I l f i Buy One Arby9s Beef ’n Cheddar Platter f i n e , potatoes A coleslaw) Get One FREE (U m U tO ffrn) KmpirmJmty 11, m i Q s o 4 wmty « / t o 4:9$ p m . Buy OneArby’s am ’n Cheese Wich Get One FREE (L im it 8 Offers) E sp irm Jm tytl, m i C M anty « / t o 4:S9 pm . & 2 Arby’s Roast Beef Sandwiches For *2** (Lim it 19 Offers) ,JI. m i Omá m tr «Mr 4.-SS pm . I I II Jean-Luc Godard — most Influential filmmaker of the last 20 years? Page 1C could hold the answer. June 29, 1981 Mikhail Baryshnikov, consid­ ered by many to be the next Nijinsky, will perform In Austin this week. Images previews this event with a review of a recent biography by dance critic Gennady Smakov. Page 5. YOKO ONO INDEX Music................................ page 3 Theater/Dance............... page4 bS U ; ............................. page 4 r v ? .............................. page 5 S í f 1810" .......................... Pase 9 R lm ................................ page 10 TW¥njen*MpMn« wHiaij uno t "t v io i s.oanr »“«o ««Au pm mxrms M p***>n w-w SM--SSÍ 3U 03S HVd □ 0 0 § § @ 0 § § @ @ ® E Ü 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ® oonr as upamos s m w o + T im te jg ' - -*» iwt © onvw, PAGE TWO Once in a while we get a letter here at Images questioninq everything from our qualifications as critics to our parentage \ HaUtnffore bommenj Otter, because I don’t ask poten­ tial staffers for a rundown of their family tree. What I can do is tell you a little bit about the ¡magas and Entertainment staff - hy we feel we have something worthwhile to say about the ads and entertainment scene and why some of our featuíes others P'eC6S po,ished and insightful than th? n l n ! r 6 reai'y excitin9 about this magazine (and the Daily Texan in general) is the remarkable variety of peo- it!!!0 work he|’e- The tat of contributors located elsewhere this page includes everyone from the most naive under­ graduates to perpetually jaded PhD candidates. We’ve got cnt.cs who have been working for years. We've who never saw a video display terminal before this semester This is a crucial point. Recognize the diversity of our staff and you'll understand the magazine a lot better Now there’s nothing we’d like better than to turn out the n o í h I T ° f professional arts and entertainment magazini iS jUSt What we try t0 d0 eadb week Sn the o t h t ’ S ,mPortant t0 remember that this is a stu­ k,. Itont nt publication and that gives us some rather unique and at times, contradictory, obligations C6rtainly inC'Ude serv'n9 our readers as We ° we our writers something as well The m 2 , a? themIS the °PP°rtunity to learn. Believe it nr not tnt9 iTe a h i n l l ^ t0 beCOme 8 critic; ¡t takes more than just a big ego and a mouth to match. Only very rarely does a full one who has b < 7 a M y devel­ blown critic come along - oped critical methodology and the writing skills to communi- ,le t co™plex ,deas w e’re all still learning here We take a test each time you pick up an issue of Images. Lioanaad by Selehom and Rtghtar Co., ownar of tt» rtg M trtd tndamarK SCRABBLE. G H Ij R ’ Id A i |flM 3 |T S ii BRAND □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ □ 0 0 0 0 0 0 ® □ □ □ □ □ □ □ RACK 1 Triple Word Score RACK 2 RACK 3 4th Letter Double RACK 4 2nd Letter Triple RACK 5 □ □ □ □ □ □ □ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PAR SCORE 155-165 b y JUDD FIVE RACK TOTAL — T|ME LIMIT. 20 MIN DI ECTIONS: Rearrange each row of letters to form a 2- to 7-letter word. To total points of your words, use scoring directions to right of each row. 7-letter words get 50-point bonus. “ Blanks” used as any letter have no point value. Proper nouns, foreign, slang or hyphenated words are forbidden. Warren Spec tor 7 8-81 © 1581 W eed Feature Syndicate. Inc. FILM WEEK WHIRLWIND: (1967) Directed by Monte m ? Heilman, with Jack Nicholson and Millie Parks. At 9 p m Monday on the Union Patio. Admission is free and The Platters. At 7 p.m. Wednesday in Batts Auditori- iQ EDEN: (1955) arected by Elia Kazan with A ™ ^ 0 * (1? 5/ )Directed by Stanlay Donen, with t S t ^ 2’ 6 and 9‘45 P m' Monday in Union in Batts Auditorium.0 * * “ A' 9 P m ' Wad" aaday ANIMATION FESTIVAL: (1977) Fourteen short masterpieces of animation. At 4:15 and 8 05 p m Monday m the Union Theater. P t h D^ C K f ° UP: ^1933) Directed by Leo McCarev with S e r 6" * 2' 6 * d ,ft« ^ Imades D .!? DA? LED: <1968) Directed by Stanley Donen, with Dudley Moore and Peter Cook. At 11:45 p.m. Monday through Thursday in the Union Theater F ™ Ew S T i ^ * ™ (1940) “ » « « by John Da,we" and Joh" O ™ - At 7 and 9.15 p.m. Monday in Batts Auditorium. UFE OF SHERLOCK HOLMES: (19701 Di BtakSy^t 2 ,in r t T der' 7 * Rob6ft Stephens and Colin ONE r « * . ! » * PONY-' (1980) Directed by Robert M ng. With Paul Simon and Rip Tom At 4 15 and 10 ns 10 05 u6aday in * * Union Theater p m. Tuesday in the Union Theater a n r t ^ n l INr3,HE i,9 S 2 > Direc,e D'r6Ct6d Laguna Gloria. 3809 W a S h s T ^ “ " " amphithea,er at 9C~ Ti s^ ~ Sunday ,n the Union Theater L^ a n d ^ S V l 6Jandn man A, 3Afa CndFL7U3hE: ^ At 3.45 and 7 30 p.m. Sunday in the Un.on Theater D'reC,ed by Berg- Graphics Carol Thornton Vicky Thomas Contributors Nick Barbaro David Bicknell Louis Black George Coleman Jody Denbfcrg Lucretia Finklea Ed Lowry Robert Mead Harvey Neville Alex Plaza Susan Solomon Richard Steinberg Judith Walker H a in ty U n g fo r M en & Women I a B ra id in g P re c is io n Cuts P e rn rs F ro s tin g s H en n a s S12 and up C o n d itio n in g 2004 Guadalupe Next to St Austin t 478-0022 2819 San Jacinto ! N ext to Tower Reefaurant 472-270> ykwiAe B E V E R A G E S 704 474-9888 *** 2 . 1 9 M ichelob M ichelob Ligbt ^ 12 ox. B a M n 6 Pack 2 . 1 9 Lone Star u „.u ^ *, 4 ^ f . 5 9 M iller 16 gal. Keg 2 9 . 0 0 Hu* Deposit _ MUSIC 'Glass' reflects spectrum of human emotions SKVSOMX'OIASS V M H A O by Jody Den berg “Season Of Glass”; Yoko Ono; Getten Records. "Season Of Glass” provides an oblique re­ flection of Yoko Ono’s swirling sentiments. Cautious optimism, wistful mysticism and pain fraught with fear are alternately conveyed in its 14 musical vignettes — scrapbook snapshots of a woman inexorably caught in shifting tides of feeling. Yet Yoko Ono doesn't need anyone to throw a life preserver into her emotional whirlpool. She is rescued by her music. the record Because there are so many shades of pas­ sion on "Season Of Glass," and because many of the album’s songs were composed before is an John Lennon’s murder, opaque account of Ono’s reaction to her hus­ band’s death. Most of the references to lost love, grief and loneliness are open to interpreta­ tion, and as a result "Season Of Glass" is nei­ ther a self-pitying eulogy to Lennon nor a ploy by Ono to achieve commercial success in light of public sympathy. It is simply the latest chap­ ter in a series of autobiographical accounts which began with the couple’s "Wedding Al­ bum” and continued through "Double Fanta­ sy." Which is why the album's cover art — a pho­ to taken by Ono of Lennon’s bloodstained glasses sitting on the couple's living room table reflecting the Manhattan skyline — is an artisti­ cally valid statement. John and Yoko’s art is her method of expression now, especially when there are people who hope to better assimilate Lennon’s death by getting Ono’s perspective. Instrumental^, “Season Of Glass” fluctuates between ethereal ambience and weighty disso­ nance, depending on the lyrics of the song. The same group of musicians who played on last year’s "Double Fantasy” also appear here, and their performances prove that studio musicians can indeed transmit emotion while maintaining their technical virtuosity. "Season Of Glass" was co-produced by Ono and Phil Spector, and as a result the record’s sound mix is a compromise between the sharp echo qualities Ono prefers and the bass heavy wall of sound Spector is famous for. A tumbling, airy cascade of vibraphone, sax­ ophone and guitar unfolds to introduce "Good­ bye Sadness," as Yoko’s voice hovers above thé instruments, nearly cracking with tears. The melancholia of this track gives way to the lilting placidness of “Mindweaver,” with its acoustic guitar and Ono’s gently soaring vocals. Al­ though each instrument on “Mindweaver" is sparse and well-defined, together the musi­ cians blend to create an expansive atmospheric piece These seemingly conflicting production qualities are no doubt a compromise between Ono’s and Spector’s work. One of the album’s eeriest moments comes when 5-year-old Sean Ono Lennon makes a cameo appearance to tell "A Little Story." In soft tones the boy attempts to tells his mother a tale, saying “You should remember this one You know why? I learnt this from my daddy you know. You see, it can end anytime, any­ where. Oh, forget the whole story. ” This inter­ lude seems gratuitous until the story leads into "Even When You're Far Away," where Ono lyri­ cally resigns herself to accepting fate. Chimes and percussion provide extra texture to the as­ cending bass/piano coupling, while the al­ bum’s rich instrumentation breaks for the first time to reveal a stinging, dramatic guitar solo. Nobody Sees Me Like You Do" may help to silence the critics who have constantly com­ plained about Ono’s voice because of her ex­ periments with free-form styles of vocalisation Even though for every screeching dirge Ono in the past there were numerous recorded songs with acute melodic sensibilities, it seems critics either never heard them, or refused to. Chicago newspaper columnist Bob Greene went so far last March as to claim that Ono is a terrible singer and songwriter” whose music is excruciating trash." Ono’s double-tracked har­ monies on "Nobody” disproves critics’ closed- minded attacks on her vocals, although other songs from earlier in her career would do the same (“Waiting For The Sunrise" (1972), "She Hits Back" (1973)). fall between Campy torch songs like “Turn Of The Wheel" and “Will You Touch Me," as well as the alle­ gorical tales "Silver Horse," "Extension 33" and the melodic and “Toyboat," "Season Of discordant compositions on Glass.” While most of the songs on the first side play it commercially safe by remaining melodic and non-abrasive, a few tracks on the second side go straight for the jugular. But Ono’s pain and fury do not stem only from her recent mis­ fortune. Just listen to the mesmerizing single “Walking On Thin Ice" (1981), or such earlier compositions of existential angst as “Midsum­ mer New York" (1971), “I Felt Like Smashing , ^ T ? ce Through A Ctear Glass Window" ( i y / 2 ) and Give Me Something" (1960). On "Season Of Glass," a Jew’s harp in­ terspersed among the scratchy guitar chords of Dogtown ’ lays the framework for Ono’s rapid phrasing and the delivery of her brutal lyrics The town’s dawning I ’m the only one awake The streets are whistling I light my fourth cigarette I think of my friends They were once not so dead What are they thinking now? Another of the aggressive tracks, "I Don’t Know Why," begins with birds screeching — a cacophuny which suddenly stops, leaving si­ lence to be shattered by drumbeats. A churning undercurrent of slide guitars grind throughout the track as Yoko laments "you left me without words.” The sliding guitars retreat momentarily as Ono vociferously growls into the micro­ phone. “You bastarda. Haters...hate me. We had everything." Her shrill moan blends with the sound of a guitar as the track fades. The two songs on "Season Of Glass" which truly capture the chaos of Lennon’s assassina­ tion and Ono’s resultant trauma are frightening to listen to and painful to discuss. The sound of four objects piercing the air, followed by four gunshots and a blood-curdling scream, precedes No, No, No." The guitars oscillate with mechanical rhythms as Ono tells her pro­ spective lover she can take care of herself. Don't hold m e /l don't want It/You’re think­ ing Rock Hudson when we do I t ... Don't do it/I can't do It/I’m seeing broken glees when we do It." The guitars continue oscillating as the song fades, echoing endlessly like a phone left off the hook. ‘She Gets Down On Her Knees" deals with [the physical manifestations of Ono’s being left a f widow, the sickness which she had to fight •through to feel whole once again. The pain is transmitted over the vinyl as Ono moans and groans and the guitars resonate the gruesome squawks. These songs, like much of Ono’s work, will not appeal to everyone. They delve deeper into the murky depths of the human psyche than most of us would care to go. And denying that such misery exists — ignoring the pain that mil­ lions wake up to each morning for whatever reason — is easier than learning to deal with anguish and despair. Those brave enough to face the darkness of adversity may eventually see the light at the end of the tunnel. The broad spectrum of human emotions which pass through "Season Of Glass” emerges as a rainbow. Yoko Ono and band 4 by Susan Solomon DBDV” : tUrmntmH fcu rw ..L. . ^ ^ r a p h y by Judy D/%n; acana daatgnar Ann Musaatt, BiH Fagan J p Yorf(’ D*bomh Lannyi KHchriat, Mark da V a a rK ^ m n iT L * !* ’ RMmrd C n/0, < ^ z s: z z ^ z ^ r ¿ r s ? ^ « * satirical look at the I n s L l o n o ‘ it S E S T A s Z Z ^ ' ' man named Robert, played by Joe York «♦ í y° Ung friends’ lives to discover Robert is like a child hoDninn fr Í 9 tUd,6S h,s married ' P ^ P 1® get married, 8 pl^ ground of cooptes , X g "o9 & y everVone else seems content with iust nn. to he arrives at *ha conclusion That each m L r Z i y' ^ form of protection against loneliness P ^ te * 8" 1’ m0r8ly 3 pair ^P ^or f^e sake of "company." r n Í ^ — » t h e a t e r / d a n c e * -------------------- C a b a r e t T h e a t r e a s s e m b l e s g r e a t ' C o m p a n y ' ^Composer Stephen Sondheim has fashinn*w Q invenre“ c o re T h epno t T s e2 l , aS ' f Shi° ned a w°"<*erfully Piemen, to G ^rg e W i M some of Sondheim’s best knnüü o e ,ncludes Hundred People " “Side bv Sirte h °n< r i| ? is X X I a t e c I t l! °a wa^covered" b y ^^9^ 8^ 8^88^*8^8 , y 3 map of ihe New Vork subway system Th« f i t »? 8? el9Va,0r and « sPiral s,a,rcasey and Ike V captures ,he unpredictable pulsebeat o, New York nv1’'t o t t e d 'Pu“ throws ou, wisecracks questioning Z Z L Z o f Z Z T e aahk9L°Und ,0r ’he C8st - "Compa- seemed to to relying upon actor’s te rhn in Yet his linaa °«e" ahicai fashion, as if he were rest o ? c : r i t r :°rkins wi,h ,ha enjoys himself on staae and hac a w ear’ however. that he The times when this e n th u ^ m ? b,ast<=h imnm ■ curiously romance v le ^ o M r ? ' 0™,5"0 Í UrTOund,rl9 ~ ceeo green iawns S fnttes ou, tionsg,ve the pamtmgs a universal appeal. S t a S T Í l l ? m° mins or e n l * * * “ mbma- stark realism that niavc 1 ne landscape f ¡ 5 5 o ? 6- r a Terminal” has a m° dem struclures on a flat, pra,- S art exhibit* f a r ? ART W E E K í j I • CMS ONLY.Texas Fine Arte oí w o *, Tm m iW° loh Ju^ 31 -¿ ■ r ^ K ? ^ ? " Ol PIKAO- and John Glorii at First Federal. ay * La8 ^ a Gloria, 3809 W 35th g Ptehl. S? EWridge, David Sta/k, • f ough Aug. 15 at the Bots D 'A n -'r? ? * Shop, 803 Old R ^ T ? Ga,l6fy- " * » a ™ » Book C«n- Auq. ttte Harrv Rwwnm r í ? Wednesday through ■ a s a T B K K s a s i ? - * - S 0WA1WWQ8 ANO SCULP- Otnstian. Pat ^ ^ at toe Texas Memorial OUfSSE H m Ia W M b v Í 2 LT, ' Í Í & of pottery Through July 10 ^xjncerner.te, exc^ng z z ¡ E x t £ r * > ' m>* * < * * * ™ R i c t e l d ? ? show t o n t e a r a ? 8,’*' simple architectural stviP of h and Hye. A d“ bTUe ? f ^ K be rather solid edifices to have such decoration. The ironv of thp imagination. ♦ ° ° mate decorat,'on w ? dadp^ b u 9S S8em ♦ be!icate gingerbrej the viewer V ° th8 C° ntrast capt^ e s tw0 litho9raphs «on are t Waiker’s brazen slashes of c o lo r and^t^T80(3 N e i' W e,live scenes suggesting confusion and vivacity irf T h 318 C7 a° Í! town. Wellrver’s bright, simple woodr USy dowr t f* ashing river and racing clouds ,n h *s ame maK8 000 fe< : the « “ Z he canvases of Aristodemnc K-aiw ¿ I P,eces 6 1)660 cenrral1 placed so that the whole aal Pn e bold colors and forms of this inf7A!^ err!S i0 frarne ihem- Th< century non-f,guratt4^ n Z Z S T 2 5 emDod^ “ • 201' Kandinsky contributed. The five W o r k s * * '? » ? K8'diS anc 3re certainli a major attraction of the exhibit S « In a more traditional vein there is Pleasant outdoor landscapes r w S ?! 6 samP|ihQ ol the mountains in Colorado and th^ 7 ^ ser s Photographs ol prov.de expansive vie^s of ,n New Y° * now’s small oil paintinos show n. 7 settln9s- Marjorie Port- ? ! Madofa Ayhens offers watercotors in a sttte S she describes as abstract impressionism." ? landscapes 1^ebdivws?vt*oT ^ co 'Smtkor- iahM InÚTttü ^ * - lrVP*CC* t>l* to th* po,rt " ••« » " » » • tahas Into the ineffable ... He pursues the extremes of Its (classical gesture's) logic so that every step takes on an unforeseen dimension..." l. Arlene Croce, 77» New Yorker No observer of dance has so totally captured the essence in of Mikhail Baryshnikov’s unique ability and his function the ballet world as did critic Arlene Croce in her first review of Misha (as he is popularly known) In June 1974. She travelled to Montreal from New York City to watch him perform with a Russian touring company. Soviet authorities had not permit­ ted the company to perform In New York because of earlier defections by Russian dancers. The only fact missing from Croce s review of the Montreal performance was something which no one could know for sure: Baryshnikov was going to defect within days. Ability and “function," I say, because Baryshnikov is not just a brilliant dancer. He is truly an historic figure — repre­ senting the past and future of an art come together in the present . By chance, will, fate or what have you, Misha's career has both prepared him for and proven his unique function within he dance community: his selection as a student by one of the test teachers in the classical imperial ballet tradition (Alexan­ der Pushkin), his work with the Kirov Ballet company rather than the Bolshoi, his defection to the West, his joining Ameri­ can Ballet Theater, his defection from ABT to George Balan­ chine s New York City Ballet, his return to ABT in the triple role as administrator, dancer and choreographer, and his television and film work in "Baryshnikov on Broadway" and T,urn,ng Poln,H ,f Gennady Smakov’s recently pub- lished Baryshnikov: From Russia to the West” has any un­ derlying theme, it is this view of Baryshnikov as the embodi­ ment of tradition and potential. What the reader must dig through to appreciate that, however, is another story. - Smakov first observed and met Misha in 1965, when the dancer was a 17-year-old student — one whose reputation I°Ii!? SOrbi!!9 and executin9 classical technique was already traveilingahead of him. At the time, the author was acritti °- Europoan lí1eraíur» at the Leningrad Institute of Theater, Music and Cinema and he defected to the West soon after Baryshnikov. Their personal « n d ^ S í o r ! rete- ionships gave Smakov a potentially incomparable blographl- a b i ^ ^ 6’ ^ SmakOV empha8izes that his book is not 1 have "ot attempted to write a biography. Baryshnikov is at the height of his talent, and a biography always marks if 1 not the end of a career, its im m in e n t^ *!? . WhS ;r :s r ¡süsr10 LJ* 8 My sitial purpose in writing about Baryshnikov was strictly theoretical: using him as a model could certainly cast light on the general question of what contributes to the mak­ ing of an exemplary dancer...my interest in Baryshnikov's R n ío P ne?0Ssanly snowballed into a comparative study of Russian and western dance schools ..." Smakov's book ends up being not enough of anything — not biography, not theoretical treatise, not comparison study Apparently, the author has neither the linguistic facility nor ttte powers of observational dissection and e x p S to oo !^ h n il^ y0nd desi r,bin9 * * various discrete parts of Bar­ yshnikov s career. The most illuminating passages are those commentaries by °teer writers on dance The personal relationship between the author and Barysh­ nikov ultimately clouds the subject, rather than serving as a basis for clarification. At times Smakov writes like a publicist or an apologist (especially in the section dealing with the dancer s experience with Balanchine). This has been the fate of a I too many dancers as their lives have been reduced to print. (The biography of Vaslav Nijinsky by his wife being the most infamous example.) Although Baryshnikov has been re­ ferred to as the most worthy successor to Nijinsky, who was known as tf-e-god of dance" in his «me. Misha deserves^ attention of a better writer than he has received to date - one of comparable genius. Bailo 1p.m. Friday In the UT Performing Arta Cantor. B* ry9cH!!L0''. p0rform " *> Auadn CMC v Creation' - a tour of 5th century B.C. 9 U A U « B l e u by Alex Plaza M o s tré *» by David Btefcnair 'Misha* "Creation"; by G ore Vidal; Random Houaa Inc.; $18.96. Gore Vidal’s "Creation” is a long, shiny, steel pin of a novel wh!rh c P° ,nt '¡'ell‘ honed’ ready t0 Prick the romantic aura which surrounds our notion of history. Scintillating pessimism ,mK ~ dlsdain have always been Vidal’s stock in 1 t e le but in Creation" he blends his acute sense of mortality on 9 W s ^ nmnhl157B C L Í yrUS Spltama- a 9«tndson of the Persian Ath«n« nlor°as.ter: 13 sending his last days in Periclean rather 8ick of ^ rin g the historian ^ ?dothus account of the Persian wars, Spitama decides to dictate his own memoirs to his nephew, Democritus. Not much comes of Spitama’s account, since he was in fact serving as Persia’s ambassador to India and Cathay during ’ ° US by Herodotus- The "«*" achievement of hk I n ? ti of his recollections is to preserve for eternity the days when the Persian Empire under Darius and Xerxes was the greatest power in the known world. No other man has traveled in as many lands as I ” SDita- ma says. And few of us haw, rubbed shoulders mg an array of notables. He has discussed the nature ofthe ^ ddh! 8nd Gon,ucl>»: been a friend to emper- X e r é £ Í " 98 ®?d °eneral8: • “ bool chum of Xerxes, and an employer of Socrates ("I hired him to rer»!r epalr the front wall of the house”). as All of these characters are treated by Vidal with his usual vigor and imagination, but some of his views are rather diffi­ cult to accept. It seems unlikely, ¡or instance, that Herodotus could have exercised the influence he did on his fellow Ath iians were he as inept an historian as Vidal expects us to believe. But this, perhaps, is nitpicking. There is certainly a great wash of information included In “Creation"; the sheer quantity of historical evidence is enormous. One of the nov­ el s chief virtues is the skill with which Vidal brings together in a chapter or even a few pages, discussions which range from the growth of ancient religions, to the effect of efficient road systems on trade anri prostitution in Babylon, from gambling in India, to the lack of organized industry In Persia. «i í ¡ ^ V C,! Bt,on" P0*808808 som® <* *be characteristics of the traditional historical novel, it is far more the story of a fortur te traveler — a man who journeys to the farthest reaches of civilization at a time when it is possible to meet some of the greatest men of history. It Is Spitama’s unbound- ing curiosity and audacity that give "Creation” its force, yet is elusive, at times no more than a provocative tour Spitam, guide. And if Cyrus Spitama does not emerge as full-bodied a creation as many of the great figures he talks about at length he is at least given the chance to comment widely and freely on an age of great learning beset by major calamities. Spita­ ma finds his world in disorder, a masteriess ship with the wheel spinning free. Vidal has evoked the human cost of setting the ship back on course — but as Spitama ruefully i or esees, that is only the long way round to doom. Illustration by David Blcknell Gore Vidal 'Love Mary' - just another "I love NY' novel R i f a n ñ l i n h a r by Brian Dunbar "Love, Mary-; by Mary Qwynn; WUUam Morrow Co.; 192 pegea. Mary is an editor at a publishing house that deals mainly m torrid romances. Barbara, her best friend, gets involved in self-destructive affairs with editors at various magazines. Peg- gy, another friend, once an ardent feminist, has fallen in love with a completely unliberated Italian. Mark is gay — but wait a minute, now he’s fallen in love with a woman. It’s been years - ^ I ° ? L and * * wants t0 Practice on Mary. To ’ I4®0' 18 receív,n9 'ove letters from some guy she’s know# ev®fythir>g about her. Ione * teose "GoHy gee, to il life wonderful and crazy here in this crazy, wonderful town called an^ New York?" stories that Nell Simon used to be so gooo at 81 *• Simon * * * backdrop for exploring his characters; Gwynn never seems to gat around to character development t e 80 The primary problem is the format she has chosen for her S t e T . 8 S ’"9? 01 f 8rS to m 01 “ “ T * 'bends. The reader sees only Mary s point of view, and the only descriotion of events that comes through to the reader comes with her inter­ pretation already stamped on it. ¿ S t!*»- Mary» just not that sympathetic a character uP.0v?f !Wf *r°uWes; a love affair, her Poetry reading scheduled Richard Howard, Pulitzar Prize-winning poet critic and translator, will read a selection of his poems and most recent translations of Baudelaire at 8 p m. Wednesday in the Commu­ nication Bidding Auditorium. Howard is the author of seven including “Quantities," books “Fdow Untitled Subjects,** Feelings" and "Misgivings.” His critical anteology, ‘Alone America," is a comprehensive 8tudy of 41 contemporary Amer­ ican posts. For the test five summers, ■Howard has traveileb from his home in New York City to lecture si UT. He Is teaching a course •ntitied “How Religion gats mío and out of Poetry.** The poetry reading is spon­ sored by tea Department of Speech Communication. The Hitch-Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy. EPISODE TWO Our hero, Arthur Dent, after being saved from certain death during the demolition of Earth, now faces a hopeless choice between certain death in the vacuum of space, or finding something nice to say about Vogen poetry. MONDAY AT 6:30 PM IQJT90.7fm THI SOUNDS OF THEATRE FROM NATIONAL PUSIIC RADIO lo n i i t m m n 454-2711 6757 AIRPORT BLVD. RAIDERS OF TH I LOST A M a® 12:35-2:50-5:05- 7:30-9:45 SUPM M ANII (PG) 12:00-2:30-5 00- 7:30-10:00 4 MASONS IIIIWIII __________________________ IX C A U B U * (R) 1:45 -4 : 30 - 7 : 15- 10:00 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ! • • • ! ? • • • • • i • • • • • • • • • • • • « • • • . • . V Comedy by Neil Simon t » * . # * • • • * J * • • • • June 1 2 - July 19 i « | Zachary Scott Thursday & Sunday $3.50 Theatre Center Friday & Saturday $6.00 Riverside & Lamar Reservations 476-0541 Produced with the assistance of a grant from the Marathon Foundation R£8 £I# Drive-In 6 9 0 2 Burleson Road Radio Sound System 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 Privacy of Your Auto XXX Original Uncut m s p r ® ★GOING TO FT. WORTHS We are only ONE HOUR AWAY from Ft. 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Iden Payne Theatre 23rd and San Jacinto Tickets $5 general admission, $4 students Performing Arts Center box office or Frank Erwin Center Information 471-1444 4 7 9 - « 5 0 _ p (IS DAILY! !T t 9to51‘ iA JANE FONDA U LILY TOMLIN s 5 :4 S -Q 3 á O (ro l SMMM.CV MmLAINC ANThOMV BOOCMK 1’l f t _ 7 *4 t rm assssssssM ssrm r rP W E S O u MIDNIGHT SHOW! v a r s i t y 4 ^ g r n n m * W ■ ■ a d a i pr im o *to m o h o w FtOM THI DIRECTOR OF «mu* o» T*f stssts Empire O f Passion p r, n n w u rM 11 :30-200-4:30- 700-0-.30- 1200 MPWQMT MIDNIGHT SHOWI CHEECH A CHONG'S G IN » ^ C l a s h Ti t a n s W B B a m I 10O-*e15-MO-1 m VILLAGE a 2 7 0 0 A N D E R S O N * 451 8 3 5 2 12:19-2:15-4:1» I | •: 15-0:15-10:151 " ta lO T s M R ^ s te p th rifc .” lÜ B ill Murray in HH a fth a L O S T K R K US) o o m i 10:30-12:50-3:10 5:30-7:50-100^ ROGER MOORE. JAMES BOND OOTT I O R Y O l R I M S D M A M C I. ; i lOOO-12:20-2:451 ^ ^ H - i o o o | 1100- 1:10- 3:20- 5:30- 7:40-000 MEL BROOKS’ HISTORY OF THE WORLD PARTI 0D 1000- 1200- 400-0300 CMffCM A CMOMG'f 200-000- Tht relationship continust... RICHARD PRYOR l á i á S I 200-400-600- I - 1 LYJ d - I r l | ■ ] ZM 150-1:50-540- REDUCED PRICES UNTIL fcOO ■ MON. THRU FBI. Liberty Lunch 405 W. 2nd 477-0461 Jimmy Gilmore Band and David Rodriguez 4 i i i 4 4 4 i X yff At the Lutheran Church i 30th & Whitis Tu Th 5:45 6 45 H rjaSSeS| 396 JuO? [a tasto of Sugar | Starring George SpeMn OPENS 8:00 STARTS DUSK Continuous registration before class! SCREENS |£ I t í .1 1 *»<“ • » c h i « . . “ jrjsrws.‘^ 2nn d ° l° 0 - - T - L c e in G inny’ » Cop y i^ 6- 9 l7 1 ° ° b l * 1 Ü ’ th r u H I 7 A ROMAN POLANSKI FILM As tim ely today as the day it was w ritten. m film . ” • 'TESS'-'Tb* y io r'i beat Charla* ChompHn, L .A . Tim a* 1 v ............ DOBIE m o v ie s n ALL SUMMER - X i Caddyshack \ ¡ BLL MURRAY CHEVY CHASE 1 l Galaxina (R) — I T I H / SJ I TUESDAY NOW OPEN TO MEN ALL EVENING LADIES POOL TOURNAMENT CASH PRIZES NO COVER WEDNESDAY BEER BUST 7-11 pm ^ 00 *be beer you can drink Free Popcorn l ) k THURSDAY TRICYCLE RACES FRIDAY & SATURDAY GREAT MUSIC & DANCING 'til 2 AM SUNDAY d r i n k & SINK 52.00 All You Can Drink 8-9 pm POOL TOURNAMENT 7 J H A P P Y HOUR 7-9 p.m.--- Tuesday-Tbursday i for the price of 1 1523 Tinnin Ford O H R i v e r s i d e O p en 7 -2 T u e s -S o n GRAND OPENING SALE! OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICES HAVE BEEN greatly r e d u c e d * THROUGH JULY 4TH! 2 9 4 5 W. A N D E R S O N LN. ( W e s t o f N o r t h c r o s s M a in 1 0 -7 M O N -TH U R S • 1 0 - 6 FRj & SAT 4 5 1 -2 7 8 3 * 1 * ^ 1 v s a m a st er c h a rg e AMERICAN EXPRESS ' ■ TELEVISION M ead by Robert Mead ^ O rnln re?UlíS ° f th® annual síudy conducted by the Roper telev^s'c- andt0mürVey "evolvin9 bub,ic ^uóes toward , h ^ er mass r71edia” have h^en Published The study half-heartedly attempts to examine some questions in- tanc^ThL0713^ " 0 hp o the questions are all wrong PUb,iC mat are of Paramount impor- 1 matter of the report is r'9ht on target but Í y ThI f e i W S ° f ^ StUdi fai' t0 reveal any new information, he fact that the majority of the public turns to television for its news ,s well-known. So is the finding that the pub.fc regards •n eréstínnneWfS m e ously prefers and trusts the news on television the m° St cr**,ble medium. What would be 9 ' in fact necessary, to know, is why the public obvi­ haL bee1 made late,y of the vio»ations of “trust” by thp Ü í 3y EpSte'n’ 3 media analyst, conducted a L d v ^ r t p f S J j betermine the extent to which editorial processes are affected by internal pressures and commercial needs After hvo years spent examining the editorial workings of the three 3 news d,d not deserve the type of trust it received. the rfnsu,ts of the stuay were ~ he reasons for this conclusion are varied and not easilv undersl00d- * * networks prepare and £ £ m 2 ! £ they present in their 30-minute shows with more than a sim- p e desire for the truth. There must be something about each Story which makes it different, more exciting than what the « ^ n e tw o rk s are broadcasting. Second. ¿ ¡ £ ¡ £ 2 ® uommercially successful aspect of the network schedu|e each day, with more toes to step on and. of greater portance. more reason for competition to stiffen. the s u rv e T a L s 09Dnpfaf S| t0 examine these Problems. When S'° n d° ¡tS JOb in your communi- ty® -H e a le c ts tn 2 2 h Federal Communications C o m S o n o u t i t ^ ^ ^ ?d censU6'rne^ublcadCa.S'9rn ,U,,'n " ’hey are 10 keep ,he,r censes. The public is, for the most part, ignorant of thesp responsibilities because the television broadcasters source i ” , information, rarely point them out. The study is Z IS composed of questions that are either leading or elicit an swers favorable to the television industry T Under the sting of criticism from the new right activists the Television Information Office, known for its p ^ n n d u su ! stance, was happy to publish the Roper Organization s find ings In the opinion of those surveyed, family life remains the mos, important activity in the daily lives of most Ameifoans leading television viewing by a significant margin. Ironically! m rm I H 1 9 0 7 E R iv e t S K d e 4ÜSTIT1 443 1 6 9 5 | WiEKLYSPECIALS Tumtdoy L p d i e s F r e e , S t u d e n t * w i t h ID Free H a p p y H o u r til 1 1 p.m . W » d n * t d a y , L a d i e s F r e e 12 o z . D raft Beer 2 5 c til 11 p .m T h u n d a y L a d i e s f r e e U n e sco rte d Lad ie* 2 Free D rink| til 1 1 p.m. Coming This Week MON TUt WID LEWIS A THE LEGENDS ANGELA STREHLI MIDNIGHT ANGELS mu TEX THOMAS DAN A DAVE CALL CLUB SAT FMI examination the same report reveals that TV viewing as a family act,v,tv is senK^ ln sponses oMhp9 ,0W’ Whi,e v,ewinfl itsetf 18 'ocraaaing. This pre- the re- ponses o the people surveyed were not entirety honest a " * * * 8UW * 8 not uncommon problem with surveys of this kind. t,nn!rho PS I!?8 mosf start,ing failure of the Roper Organiza- eport on changing attitudes toward televisen is the w ^ ^ t h T i ^ ,mPT week after the 1980 presidential election, the survey failed to nt ,SSUe- Joumahsts^dp1 C° " trovers,al and searin9 question of the day u nalists devoted massive amounts of copy to critiquing e evisions coverage of the election: most importantly, the early projections of a Reagan victory, before the polls were S a r m t h e R * 88' ^ ^ appear in the Roper survey prompts one to take the rmri¡hii¿Kv of the entire report with a grain of salt. Had the Roper Orgam- n e w a n d ^ 'f o f i 'h8 na" ' n9 qumtk** ^ « d the re w o rk news and its influence, it would have been a viable s.udy( However, the Cose t,es o f ^ C í o Ü Ü S E Í Í T ,ndus,ry and ,he sha«owneae and im propria* of he Ü in v t Z n 9,k empl0>'9d in * * report tend t o Z c o u n t it « anything more than a glorified National Aaaociatfon of Broad- casters press release. i H E f : ¡ ? i n CONTINENT; I CLUB Pr****** JSSei | a>a* ¿ ¿ a * HU A | « U TUESDAY-SATURDAY GUNPOINT X H ■ KILLER HOURS 3 for 1 12-7 M-F MON TUt WED Jess DeMaino Steven Fromholz W.C. Clark Midnight Angels The Cobras « / * SAT THU Hondo’s Soloon 2915 Guadalupe 477-9114 R2-9904 — i 1 | 1 * _ *• C t Monday Special $009 f l V (per person) All the Salad you can eat from our 18 ft. Salad B ar mLeaf ft To Us’ S¿fúLÚ Open Mon-Fri, 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m 476-9187 (All orders to go!) r Caddy Corner from Scholz’ Garten * ®a n J a c i n t o HAPPY HOUR 5-9 TUI THU WtD JOHN REED ALVIN CROW STEVEN FROMHOLZ ALLAN DAMBRON DUTCH HANCOCK SAT nu 1201 S. Congress 443-1597 ft Nc^ Z Z Z Z Z Z 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 Getting into Godard and the anti-realistic musical * FILM # What makes watching Godard so much fun for the movie fan is that he draws his inspiration from such a wide variety of mov- ¡ ♦.? ^ rtac,ear,y his mode,s for “A Woman is a Woman” are H¡¡ín it " o t9'ni 'n th,e Ram’” “Funny Face” and “The Girl Can’t ? euverly’ Ci nema Texas happens to have sched­ uled all three of these movies during the two days prior to the screening of Godard’s entry in the genre. Each of these films deserves recognition as a highpoint in the Fifties’ musical, and each provides a clue as to what Godard is up to in “A Woman is kind of movie onlv a iaH«H intoiia^*,.ai — ..1^1 i kind of movie only a jaded intellectual could love. You thought you d give him another chance, so you went to see his new film Every Man for Himself," and it was the most depressing experi- w_ _ 2 L T 2 ! VG With that kind of track record it may be hard to convince you since whatever Bergman film you saw last Í H í ? . C ,'iS a! L l ! ? h t' that Goc,ard is at least the greatest a m Z Kl ? Í ^ i 9608' if n0t ° ne of the four or five most import­ ant directors of the century. But that’s not going to stop me from trying. Because until you see a film like “A Woman is a Woman ” which happens to be on campus Thursday night, you haven't given the guy a chance. Really. rJ * W ° man is, ,a w °man” is the film that did it for me. It’s what < A neo-reahst musical^" which means that the char- nI?.daPR ye. V Jean"Paul Belmondo, Anna Karina and Jean- than l L r l p T r da'l°6 ,m° re like your avera96 Parisians ^ y or Lesl'e C8™"' 1 sffll remember the mnmJl, , a moment it dawned on me just how tunny that was, and that's struction of one of my favorite genres. able,t0 Sl! back m d en¡°y Godard's loving decon- w Godard has always maintained a love-hate relationship with Hollywood. His first film, “Breathless," was both a gangster mov- Hnmnhrt ° f f gan gster movie, full of fond tributes to Bogart and fllm noir, and full of defiance against the taJ hn,guef of ^ classic Hollywood cinema. “A Woman Woman is a Woman, made two years later in 1961, is a full- musicaT SCr9en trÍbUte t0 the anti‘ realism of the Hollywood As a young French cmephile. Godard championed a certain type of American film in the pages of “Cahiers du Cinema ” He ¿ 8 f,lms which were formally audacious, which de­ fied the conventions of realism in their search for the potential of cinema. I. was Nicholas Ray's "Johnny Guitar!" O r S f t S t ? Touch of Evil and Frank Tashlin’s “The Girl Can’t Help It” which caught his fancy. P n e í o 1 r Z , FrenC!! ,ilmmaker' G°«ard found that the slick- « « J ' i hHollywo° d movies he <°ved was out of his reach He settled for his own brand of audacity, not shying away from the was born' of t h e T w 9 " 3 m0dern image' This new ima9e was born of the light-camera. location-shooting style of the stored away in his memory. W3Ve 35 Wel1 as of a Hollywood movies b In A Woman ,s a Woman" Godard takes the musical (surelv ! f ?en,e Hollyvvood ever Produced) away from •he M?M so i e MGM sound stage and onto the actual streets of Paris He e,U m T Z V T r ° can nei,hei sing n dance and s ~ mus ca r n Z J , r0mantiC thangie which cries for música comedy. Along the way he nods fondly to every cliche e genre^ tilting each one of them to fit the ongoing self- J Í cntique which the film provides. What he gets is a movie about people who wish they were in a musical, who dance down the sidewalks on their way tTa c í e who sing to one another instead of talking about the problems of their very modern love affair. Occasionally, the music swells for no apparent reason, then ceases just as abruptly. At other times t o screen ,s washed by some bright color, in'boto v St aS 3Ware as are that something unnatural is refuses tcHet S 5 5 ^ * * * 8 m° * ’ Godard • '‘Singi ’ in tbe Rain,” which has undergone a popular revival ? 9 water4mark for the highly artificial, good-na­ turedly self-conscious MGM musical. Directed by Gene Kellv and Stanley Donen, it is a movie musical about people who make movie musicals; and it’s no surprise that a movie like that should appeal to the self-reflexive modernist in Godard as well as to his sense of humor. But A Woman is a Woman” owes a more direct debt to “Fun­ ny Face, another MGM musical directed by Donen. “Funny tJühn StarsFr8d ^ staire as a dancing fashion photographer (whose photographs were provided by Richard Avedon) and Audrey Hepburn as an innocent girl who becomes a high fash­ ion model A sizeable portion of the film is set in Paris, but shot in the kind of Paris only MGM could build, with musical numbers occurring in such atmospheric locales as a beatnik cafe. A film about photography, "Funny Face" emphasizes the artificiality of every shot, filtering light and dressing the set in bold colors to create the properly unnatural setting for romance. In one scene, Astaire sings to Hepburn in his darkroom a setting which provides an excuse for completely bathing the screen in red light. Godard does the same thing in his movie, but without an excuse. The artifice he offers is not passed off as a natural outgrowth of the scene, but as a formal convention which suddenly forces itself upon us as that and nothing more. When bodard sets his musical in the Paris of the New Wave, with its anS ¡ l eetf . and ' V 631 cafes’ he is payin9 homage to the artificiality of Funny Face" and “An American in Paris” even as he demonstrates the absurdity of those conventions in a realistic SGuinQ. Yet, more than any of the MGM musicals, it is Frank Tashlin’s The Girl Can t Help It” which provides the key to Godard’s inspiration. What might be called the first rock musical, “The Girl an t Help It offers performances by such immortals as Fats Domino, the Platters, Little Richard and Gene Vincent, wrapped fnTct an toverdrawn and outrageous comedy about the music ' 13tarnng Jayne Mansfield, Tom Ewell and Edmund S O Brien Suffice it to say that O'Brien himself ends up as the new 2 the Rock p 'i ” h,t h6 Wr0t6 'n th8 slammer cailed "Rock Around k i0nQ way from "A Woman is a Woman,” it is F r l ? T S°M H o IkL S S p W ? P[ovides the real link beWie/en Godard and hecommg a film director, Tashlin directed c a n ^ t r w ° r w the kteH and P n l p Í / acter actors S ^ found SlfL 8rS' and his fi,ms somahow maintain , antKeai'Sm we associate w>th Daffy Duck W'th SUCh ,arger-than-|ife cartoon-char- ¿ 7 W'S and Jayne Mansfieid, Tashlin always ^ S^ h' ^ if that doesn’t explain Tashlin’s link to Godard, consider the credit sequence of “The Girl Can’t Help It," where Tom Ewell explains Cinemascope to the audience as he pushes back the n0a^ * 1 s des of the movje frame tQ reveaj the fu|| wjc¿ ^ credit sequence of "Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter ” where andali sits at a drum set in front of the famous 20th ony Tashlin — never one for understatement Sex appeal Godard style Frank Tashlin by Ed Lowry ^ « 7and 9p.m. Tueaday at Bam Auditorium by G#n# * • * Stanley Donen; ; ? !? ? • * • * ”< * * ’ Doneld O'Connor, Cyd Charlase w n s a e . 4mn9f*e*d’ Tom Eweit; at 7p.m. Wednesday at Bam Auditorium. L íS * .! * * d/r^ ^ b7 Frank Tashlin; with Jayne d Z UH ^ ! ! ? l o 7 ct9Í ^ L ? t9n/0y Don0f1: "H * Frad Aataira> Au- Y • piH/rn- at 9 P-m Wednesday at Bam Auditorium. Pm! by J" n' Luc 0o* ' * Joon- er o M t o í^ ! ¡ ! j! e,?n”Í ^ Godard is •*» 01051 'mportant filmmak­ er of the past two decades, that he has revolutionized the cinema “ Í Í S C f mt0í e ^ You know that Alfred Hitch- cock cock ts a genius and that Orson Welles’ “Citizen Kane" is a century- But you’re stiil skeptical yousawa Godard movte - maybe “Sympathy ¡ w í ^ r w r - for the 0«vN, the one with the Roiling Stones - and it w <£\te Jean-Luc Godard Century-Fox logo and plays that thunderous drum roll all by himself. That’s the kind of convention-smashing Godard himself *s atter. It was in 1957 that Godard wrote, “In fifteen years’ time people will realize that "The Girl Can’t Help It” served then — today, that is — as a fountain of youth from which the cinema now — in the future that is - has drawn fresh inspiration.” He may very well nave been right. Barely a week goes by in Paris that “The Girl isn’t playing in some movie theater around town can Help It Of course the French like Jerry Lewis, too. But then it was Frank Tashlin who directed so many of those Jerry Lewis movies and w o, in the process, taught Lewis everything he knows (and seems to have forgotten). It may be enough to say that Tashlin and "The Girl Can't Helo ave never been properly appreciated in this country, but that 'o btain of youth from which Go- d n of independent. betWeen them offer 311 S t s a n f aun»©* and services to produce just about any media pack- age anyone could want to put together. There’s a video^m - ducDon and editing set-up, a sStod stage for fifm d«o 8 Sep8rate 24*track audi0 recording stu- and mde¿ena- * * * * * All of this activity is coming at a good time for Third Coast Studios, and Third Coast is coming at a good time for local production people. T exas — and particularly Austin — has a lot of good youno film and video talent But the state has lacked adequate stu- d!0 ^ Post-Production facilities. Typically, the major studios ‘ave come to Texas, shot their location footage, and then gone back to Hollywood to put the picture together. This has £ L ? f ^ t R f r f o n for local filmmakers, who have often oeen frozen out of key positions and left out of the crucial editing and post-production phase altogether. to fin « £ T ^ 7 ^ T 7 kX.3TO,* C*’ “ *»v'9 in Texas from start to finish. Local tedao and audio racondinQ will oat a similar Thin) Coast to lest a out n e !^ d ñ n ^ 9, r ly. Mac ’ Wming teeentfy, the producers p S f c FUrn ,or 006 set. Texas - ° ° e of the original Third Coast compa- n ,« b ^ n T t e ^ I ! 7 ^ ! L Cabin tiOW °h » » sound stage. Thafs 7 7 7 S^ dard Practice in HoHywood for 75 years but thev couldn t do it in Austin until just recently. ' Texas £ ’ TWr1? ' ^ " 1? "? t a d S ^ r S L *^8® was the setting for another Thifd Co« Soond hosted Austin', comouterized ^ 7 » .teChnology « W "9 i? ™ ~ 8 vlrtu#l|y distortion-free ‘ Tstem- When a Houston com- r rr d a d a « ■ * . hfought their machine to Third Coast Video boaats t ie moat aophistlcated video eat- - aa ^ f Z Wlth ? de?re in 7v> b^ ef ‘ocal ads on TV, and more films being made 1 m RTF- We'" con,inue » see more thecable X ^ n ^ T y % l £ f * ° " n bU< perteCtly comP*«ments McNichol's per- t a a e e a M o i The long term impact should be more dramatic. Put very media jobs means more f ^ i f yj 7 works '*ke thl8: people. Austin has always posed a dilemma to £cai med«¡and entertainment people: Ifs a great place to live but a ternble place to try to make a living. Organizations like Third Coast make it easier to foresee the day when top-flight musi­ cians, filmmakers and technicians wHl be abte to stay in Aus­ tin without the risk of damaging their c a re ts . And when that day comes, if II be to the benefit of aH of us "The Night the Lights Went Out In Georgia" seems almost as it it was designed with Joe Ely'» rendition of the song "Whv 0 ° ^ m l 80 Easy to Me" in mind. Set at dusk nfl or people who use toe day as a decorative m num u , nighLalmost as an accent for the actions of life. Midday 1 .2 , grUt . n® .P? lude 10 * * " 8 drun< d«"> s poette ^ 01 •totfng or t night of lovemakin The low ardeachother* ^ ^ 8 nd* * * realty offers, to Auatn and to the big n a t x t r u i i ^ J ^ Z «rmpames. e the convenience of a packaged®»! pf0ductl0n by M ichel Lyon vine editing area aucoon center. Music has been big business In Austin tor ofher media h a w some time nam within the IM few "Night7 celebrates roads, romance by Louis Black F 0ut ln Q§or9ia"; directed by Ronald r. Maxwell, written by Bob Bonney; with Krlatv McNkshol Dmnnt» Quaid, M a r k H a m iila n d D o n S tr o J i;a ttb e ^ m S ^ U ^ There is something about the road, romance and music together they blend like the matched tones of a skewed rain­ bow seen through a crack in the front window of s car after ° ° ™ cl\ t0 dr,nk lb® niQht before. Facing the morning in a body that fits as if it were two sizes too big and way too ugly is one of those horrifying conditions that makes even the mun­ dane stink of a kind of crazed poetry. "The Night the Lights Went Out In Georgia” is another of the many movies to plug into this milieu. A film of backroads, pick-up trucks, country singers, honky-tonks, sex and cops it meanders its way along slowly. The fllm is as much about hangovers as about getting drunk, as much about unrequited 'ove as about sex, as much about the almost existential rhythms and moods of the road as It is about romance Loosely based on the hit song of a few years back (ex- ti;emely loosely based), “The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgo unfolds leisurely, conveying more about its setting and its characters than its narrative. It's not that the film is without a plot, but in the long run the plot M only a minor component. ’ The Night" is about a country singer (Dennis Ouaid) tra­ velling on the road playing honky tonks, with the possibility of Nashville always in a corner of his mind. There is a hint that at an earlier time he had some kind of success in the music he’s just 006 of to® many musicians who 'ndua!7; tuJ hve off fast food, neon and gasoline. He is accompanied by his 16-year-old sister (Kristy McNichol) who is not only his personal and business manager, but the team’s driving force whose street smarts and ambition keep them both going Along the way to Nashville (which has become the south­ ern equivalent of the great cross-country, "On The Road” type journey), they get derailed in a small southern town. The circumstances have to do with a barroom brawl, a run-in with ^ sheriif’ a short iai1 terni and some other odds and 3 ends. A problem arises after the mess is cleared up — McNi- cnoi wants to push on, but Quaid has fallen in love with a local woman and would just as soon stay put for a while Meanwhile, a state trooper (Mark Hamiil) has more or less fallen for McNichol: It should be pointed out that she is very much m love with her brother. If you are beginning to think there is something strange about a movie in which the main character is a young girl who is not only in love with her brother, but also becomes romantically involved with a cop at least a half decade older than her, you’re not alone I had to see this movie twice to figure out exactfy what was going on. 'Admittedly ttw concept of “Kristy McNIehoT might n m ) a Httte prtclous, but ths woman tea dynamite ptrformsr.’ Which is not to say that the film is not Intriguing and amus­ ing as it unrolls its rather bizarre story. Director Ronald Max­ well ("Uttfe Darlings'’) doesn’t develop the tightest structure e could and occasionally seems totally uncertain as to what s try,n9 t0 do He more than makes up for this, however, in his brilliant handling of actors, getting the best possible per­ formances from the whole cast. Kristy McNichol and Dennis Quaid, in particular, are stun­ ning McNichol has clearly emerged as one of the young American actresses to watch. The only people snickering as they read this are those that have not yet seen one of her cinematic performances. Admittedly the concept of "Kristy McNichol” might seem a little precious, but the woman is a dynamite performer who monopolizes and utilizes screen space like few other performers currently working regardless of (heir ages The idea that she is going to star'in the next barn Fuller movie is cause for excitement. Quaid not onlv AT SYMPHONY (MON) BACHTIME BAND (TUE) ®LOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC AT THE HOLLYWOOO BOWL J O B # ® TOOAY I CAPTAIN KANGAROO MORMNG WITH CHARLES KURALT J # # (DQOOO MORNMQ AMSVCA I SLAM BANG THEATRE I T V O M O T V I ® A.M . 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FAMILY FEUD <ü APRENDIENDO A AMAR © O ® © ® TIC TAC DOUGH (¡D JOKER'S WILD 6‘30 D THE BEST OF CON8UMER REPORTS Highlights of past specials present valuable buying information on food, medicine, household products and safety devices. © ® © ® © $$ P M. MAGAZINE A summer cheerfeading college In Maryland; a male fashion model in his fifties. O © (DMACNEiL / LEHRER REPORT © ® HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie is driven to see a psychiatrist after reading a book on abnormal psychology. ® (DHAPPY DAYS AGAIN Election time becomes a complicated one for Richie when he gets a crush on a girl campaigning for Stevenson. © © ROSA... DE LEJOS •1$ MOCK NEW8 7 *0 O © © ® © ® LITTLE HOU8E ON THE PRAIRIE Joe Kagan sells his land and moves to Walnut Grpve to court Hester Sue. (R) Q © (ED O ® WKRP IN CINCINNATI A station employee asks Venus to talk her 16-year-old son out of dropping out of school. (R) ($} MOVIE "ffolkes" (1980) Roger Moore, James Mason. A dapper, woman- hating frogman is called in to thwart the plans of extortionists who have hijacked a supply ship and are threatening to destroy two North Sea oil rigs. PG' Q © (©THE MONDAY REPORT © ® e < 9 © ^ ^ ^ h ed, unaware of the girl's reputation. (R) © ® QUN8MOKE A mild-mannered bank teker, about to be dismissed, foils a bank robber but takes some money for himself. © PA88AG E8 i (©BREAKING AWAY Cyril makes a date with a gorgoeus co­ 7 *0 © © B ® THE TIM CONWAY 8HOW Guest; Carol Burnett. (R) © © (©OVER EASY "Older Exercise” Guests: Buster Crabbe, Dr. Herbert DeVrtes..(R)g ©©CHESPtRTTO 8*0 0 © 0 ( © © G D FLAMINGO ROAD Skipper Weldon has to reconsider Ms decision to leave Truro after his father is critically injured. (R) © © © ® M *A *8*H Hawk eye puNs one too many practical jokes on Charles and is ostracized by his cohorts. (R). © © (©GREAT PERFORMANCES “Three Cheever Stories The Five Forty- Eight" Laurence LuckinbHi and Mary Beth Hurt are featured In Cheever's story about an “ordinary” man who is shattered when he finds hlmeelf in a situation of mortal danger. (R) © ® © © S (©MOVIE ★★★ “Ail God’s Children” (1980) Richard Wid- mark, Ossie Davis. The welfare of an entire community is threatened when school busing is forced upon the racially mixed population. (R) © ® MOVIE ★ ★ ’A “Pursuit” (1972) Ben Gazzara, E.G. Marshall. A political activist matches wits with an agent who tries to stop the former from destroying a large U.S. city. 1$ ACC SPOTLIGHT 6 *0 © ( O B ® HOUSE CALLS Ann, Charley ortd Dr. Weather by are all In upset moods for different reasons. (R) © © C O L O R IN A ® ESPIRITU DE AZTLAN 8*0 O © O ® © ® t h e LAST CONVERTIBLE Unaware that Chris Is pregnant with his child, Russ goes off to war, where he is soon joined by Georgp and Terry. (Part 2)(R) i ® LOU GRANT The Trib is the target of a huge libel suit because of an expose of a headline-grabbing scandal sheet. (R) !© MOVIE “Urban Cowboy” (1980) John Travolta, Debra Winger. A blue-collar worker who fancies himself a modern-day cowboy falls in love with a girt he meets in a popular country-and-weetem bar. 'PG' © © (©RUNNING FENCE The adventures of innovative artist Christo in his struggle to construct a controversial, 24-mile white fabric fence through the northern California countryside are documented. (R) © © NOCHE A NOCHE Host: Taiina Fernandez. ©BOTTOM UNE 8 *0 10*0 10:20 © © 24 HORA8 I f CAPITAL EYE Host: Winston Bode. 0 © 0 ( £ J ) © ( © 0 ® © ® © © © ( D O ® NEWS © © ©NAACP NATIONAL CONFERENCE HIGHUQHT8 Carl Rowen anchors coverage of the day's activities from Denver, Colorado. © ® THE OOO COUPLE Oscar and Felix are shocked to learn that a comput­ er dating service has matched Oscar with Gloria, Felix's ex-wife. © © REPORTER 41 10*0 B © © ® © ® WIMBLEDON TENNIS Reports and highlights of the day’s tournament action in the prestigious All-England Tennis Championships (from Wimbledon Stadium in London, England). “Earthquake" (1974) Charlton Heston, Ava Gardner. Los © © MOVIE Angeles is destroyed by two massive tremors which wreak havoc on both the populace and the terrain. © ® ALL IN THE FAMILY Archie is bedridden with a painful backache and Mike is sure it is psychosomatic. > ABC NEWS ¡NfGHTUNE , second-string baseball player comes to Bob for help with his career. © © M *A *8*H Hawkeye writes a letter to Ms father, telling him some of the wacky goings-on in the 4077th. © © MOVIE “Soy Un Golfo” Resortes, Luz Maria Aguilar. 10:46 B © B ® B ® TONIGHT Guest host: Joan River-. Guests: Dick Van Patten, Gary Coleman, Fred Travaiena. 11*0 “Viva Max” (1989) Peter Ustinov, Jonathan Winters. A © ® MOVIE group of Mexicans relive the Alamo in present-day Texas. © © (©THE HCOEN STRUGGLE Mentaiy retarded people share their feel­ ings and accomplishments Hi a combination of film and panal discussion, with a focus on Clausen House in California and its unique educational programs. 0 ® © (©FANTASY I8LANO A famous mystery writer's tan becomes involved in a murder plot, and a harried executive becomes a beachcomber (R) © ® MARY TYLER MOORE After agreeing to baby-sit with Bess for ■ week­ end, Mary gets a call from a former boyfriend. © © 8TAR8KY AND HUTCH Hoodlums and law-abiding citizens skke are endangered when a Fagin-Hks character usee a mentally deranged teen-ager to inflict revenge. 11*0 i© MOVIE “The Lady In Rad” (1979) Robert Conrad, Pamela Sue Martin. In the violent days of the lawless 1920s, an Idealistic young farm gkl becomes the moil of the infamous gangster John DWInger. ‘R* 11*0 “Appointment With A Killer'’ (1975) Joanna Pettet, Brian © ® MOVIE Blasaed. An anonymous note written on a copy of a Shakespearean piey pro­ vides a valuable due tor a private detective's wife investigating a five year-old murder case. ® TOMORROW Guests: Anthony Quinn; author Sidney © © O ® • Sheldon; Thelma Toole, the mother of late author John Kanntdy Toole; entrepreneurs Grsgory Flbble and Cynthia O'Toola, owners of a “Strip-O- Gram” service. (R) © © ABC NEWS MGHTUNE 12:10 © (©ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS “I KWed The Count” A police detec­ tive finds that he has three murderers who admit kHNng the same men. (Part 1) 12*0 S© JIMBAKKER I FANTASY ISLAM) A famous mystery writer's tan becomes Involved In a murder plot, and a harried executive becomes a beachcomber. (R) 12*0 ® HBO 8NEAK PREVIEW Husband-and-wife comics Jerry StJHer end Anne Meara introduce the movies, spsctata and sports events coming to Home Bom Office in July. © ® NEW8 O ® ® ® n ew s © © N E W S ® ® NEW8 8S NEWSWATCH PRE8ENT8 COMMUNITY CALENOAR 11:40 12*0 1:16 1*0 1 *6 1:46 ¿ n m c T H E A T R E S JIME S S H O * V \ h / H T 'llJA r < r mmmm m ee t — sm m m i a — m m m m m m*c cm » rwi urni se w u n e to A M E R I C A N A ^ 4 5 3 -6 4 4 1 ttMMsuct mm 1 m n K M n m . UftfiCI IK VMM Ml lit l © © © i m m m im M I L . 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ARENA BAREFOOT MISS ^^pofting Feet Abo Mrft lonsot for lb I correction of anttstigmatbm Price does not include professional services and an examination. Contact Lana Proocripnoma Accurately FtUad 2021 GUADALUPE 472-SB 10 DOBIE MALL 3 8 1 0 ME D I C A L P K WY . . . suite ,os IMAGE OPTICAL (512) 451-8229 ¿ 1 14 DAYTIME SPECIALS £00 (^ALEXANDER'S BACHTIME BAM ) Young string musicians wtio come from alt over the country to play in Carnegie Halt concerts perform under the direction of Alexander Schneider. 430 (£; BARRY MANILOW One of the foremost names in the entertainment world appears in a concert performance of his greatest hits, including “It’s A Mira­ cle," "M an d y" and “Looks Like We Made It." DAYTIME CHILDREN'S SHOW 1000 © 6 (D8TU0K) SEE “Clearwater" Two teens take an ecology expedition down New York’s Hudson River; become part of the crew of the sloop Clear­ water; the story of an island track team. (R) 100 IB CD A A A “Roman Scandals'’ (1933) Eddie Cantor, Ruth Etttng. A man takes a fun-filled daydream )oumey back to the time of Caesar and the Roman Empire. DAYTIME MOVIE EVENING 000 3 ) ® 3 ) ® 3 ) ® ( D ® 3 ) n e w s SEE “Clearwater " Two teens take an ecology expedition New York’s Hudson River; become part of the crew of the sloop Clear- the story of an island track team. (R) WELCOME BACK, KOTTER The Sweatbogs take matters into their own when a “Career Day” speaker tries to lure Gabe to Chicago to work for down! water I ® ( Z ) hands I him. FAMILY FEUD APRENDIENDO A AMAR O ® 0 GD Tic TAC DOUGH 830 _ JOKER'S WILD WIMBLEDON TENfH8 The wom en's quarterfinals are presented from Eng­ land, with commentary by Barry Tom pkins and Arthur Ashe. 0 GD ® ® 0 ® P.M. MAGAZINE A profile of actress Sally Field; a three- year-old boxer. QDMACNE1L / LEHRER REPORT HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie wins a date to escort a Hollywood starlet to the school's victory dance. “A SEQUEL THAT READILY SURPASSES THE ORIGINAL” RICHAHD SH lCKt_ r/M f U i G A Z M i "Superman if" moves faster than a speeding bullet BRUCfc WILLIAMSON PLMfBOT MJGAZmt n “ A perfect blending of humor and heroics. BONA BARRETT NBC TV 12:00- 2:30- 5:00- 7:30- 10:00 V I L L A G E A 2700 A N D E R S O N . 4S1 8352 11;30-2:00-4:30- 7:00-9:30-m idnight TEXAS TAVERN Monday MUSIC Tuasday GUY VAN SYCKLE Wednesday BELLYDANCING ORIENTATION NIGHT AUSTIN ALL.STARS $1.50 U.T. ID $2.50 Without Saturday Texas Union Thursday MUSIC Friday CLOSED Sunday CLOSED tuesday television ® CDHAPPY D AY8 AGAIN Richie persuades Fonzie to star in the title role of a fund-raising performance of “Hamlet.” O ® ROSA... DE LEJOS 15 MAKING THE NEWS 700 O ® © ® © 3 3 LOBO Lobo searches for a mad bomber who is terrorizing Atlanta. (R) I (D WALTER CRONKJTT8 UNIVERSE Host: Oscar Garza. _ © 3 3 © ® 0 (DHAPPY DAY8 Jenny and the Fonz are accidentally married. (R) 0 3 ) QUNSMOKE The abduction of a teen-age girl by Indians involves Matt in a long trek to rescue her. 15 ACC GOVERNMENT 730 0 ( 0 ) FLO O 3 ) FLO Fk> makes Earl escort her to the formal bail marking her member­ ship in an exclusive dub. (R) O © (DOVER EASY “Older Exercise" Guests: Buster Crab be, Dr. Herbert DeVries. (R )g © 3 ) © ® © ¡D IA VERNE & SHIRLEY Lenny and Squiggy fantasize what life would be tike if they were silent movie stars. (R) g 0 ® M S CHACON 15 ACC GOVERNMENT 800 0 0 0 9 ) 0 ( 3 ) HILL STREET BLUES Captain Furiiio is given the difficult task of insuring peace during a presidential visit to the precinct. (R) O (0) 0 3 ) TRANSPLANT Kevin Dobson portrays a 35-year-old business­ man who has worked all his We to attain a piece of the “American Dream ," only to discover that all he has worked for, and even his survival. Is dependent on a risky operation. (R) O © (DNOVA “The Science O f M urder" Scientists, law enforcement profes­ sionals, doctors and convicted murderers discuss the realities of murder. (R) g © 3 3 0 ® O (DTHREE'S COMPANY An older woman adopts Jack as her surrogate son. (R) g 0 (f) MOVIE “Sarah T. — Portrait Of A Teen-Age Alcoholic" (1975) Linda Blair, Verna Bloom. A 15-year-old girt who has difficulty coping with a new life with her mother and stepfather starts to drink secretly. ® ACC BUSINES8 830 £ MOVIE "The Electric Horsem an" (1979) Robert Redford, Jane Fonda. A Las Vegas cowboy steals a $12 million thoroughbred horse to save him from his exploitative owners. ‘PG ’ © 3 3 0 ® 0 (DTOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT A pro football star hires Muriel to photograph him in the nude for a magazine centerfold. (R) 0 ® COLORINA 15 AMERICAN ATHEIST NEWS FORUM 9 0 0 © © O 3 ) © 3 ) NERO WOLFE The general manager of a cruise line disappears white aboard ship. (R) O CD (DMYSTERY “Rebecca” A young woman (Joanna David) weds the rich and handsome Maxim de Winter (Jeremy Brett), whose first marriage to a wom­ an named Rebecca ended in tragedy. (Part 1) (R) g © 3 ) © ® ffl GDHART TO HART Jonathan is mistaken for a hit man who is himself the target of another hit man. (R) g © ® NOCHE A NC JHE Host: Talina Fernandez. 15 PASSAGES 0 ® 24 HORAS O ® O © O 3 3 O 3 3 © 3 3 0 ® O 3 3 © 33 NEWS O © 33NAACP NATIONAL CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS Carl Rowen anchors coverage of the day’s activities from Denver, Colorado. © 33 THE ODD COUPLE Felix and Oscar attempt to escape the turmoil of modern living by taking up residence in a religious retreat. O ® REPORTER 41 1030 O ® O S3 © 33 WIMBLEDON TENNI8 Reports and highlights of the day’s tournament action in the prestigious All-England Tennis Cham pionships (from Wimbledon Stadium In London, England). © © MOVIE ★ “The Hlndenburg" (1975) George C. Scott, Anne Ban­ croft. A wary Nazi security officer tries to prevent sabotage aboard the historic and ultimately doomed 1937 flight of the German dirigible. (53 M O VE "The Island" (1980) Michael Caine, David Warner. While investigat­ ing a rash of ship disappearances in the Bermuda Triangle, a journalist stum­ bles across an isolated, 400-year-old colony of pirates. ‘R ’ © 3 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY When a swastika Is found on their front door, the Bunker household goes into a frenzy. 9:30 1000 1020 PAT PAINTER'S Family Hairstyling Centers 1011 E. 41st St. ONLY 454-3676 OPEN UNTIL 8:00 THURS & FRI Coupon Spatial © © I "SUMMER LOOK/ / 11 SPECIAL INCLUDES: HAIRCUT, SHAMPOO, AND BLOWDRY OR SET- 0 C U T 0 $ or 2 for 18 (longer hair slightly moro) offer expires June 30 Pat Painter's "N EW M A N " 1011 E. 41st St. Freo Consultation Hair Studio 454-3676 Hairpiece Strvict and Repair Products for hairpiece cars :d e n 454-3676 O © (DCAPT10NED ABC NEW8 © ¡X © (DABC NEWS NKJHTUNE © ® BOB NEWHAHT Bob resists Emily’s plans for a European cruise for fear of the effects it would have on his patients. 0 ® M*A*8*H The personnel of the 4077th are besieged by a tone sniper who believes he’s firing on U.S. Headquarters. ® ® MOVIE 'T iem pos De Chicago” Peter Lee Lawrence, William Bogart. 10:46 O ® 0 (53 © 3 ) TONIGHT Guest host: Joan Rivers. Guests: George Gobel, Mac Davis, George Hamilton. 1100 0 3 3 MOVIE “Terror in The Wax M useum " (1973) Ray Milland, Elsa Lancbester. A young woman acts as bait to trap a killer who lurks in the shad­ ows of a waxworks exhibition. O ® (DTHE DUCHESS OF DUKE STREET ”A Bed Of Roses” By the spring of 1902, the Bentinck has become the toast of London; a private dinner party given by Charlie Tyrrell dramatically alters the course of both his and Louisa’s lives^lPart 5HR) © 3 ) 0 GDMOV1E "M urder On The Orient Exp ress" (1974) Albert Finney, Lauren Bacall. Belgian sleuth Hercule Poirot investigates the murder of an American industrialist aboard a luxurious and fam ous train. (R) ® 3 3 MARY TYLER MOORE When the apartment directly below M ary’s becomes available, Ted decides to move In. ® ® ST ARSKY AND HUTCH A beautiful calf girl creates a conflict between the detective partners. 1130 O 3 ) MOVIE ★ ★ ★ “Honky Tonk” (1941) Clark Gable, Lana Turner. An unlikely love match occurs between a gambler and a weU-bred lady from B os­ ton. 11:46 O ® O ( B 0 ® TOMORROW Guests: Rex Humbard, attorney Rick Hor- row, New Wave rockers The Plasmatics, actor Daniel J. Travanti. (R) © ® ABC NEWS NKJHTÜNE 1236 (53 MOVIE "G o Tell The Spartans" (1978) Burt Lancaster, Craig W asson. A veteran soldier Is mystified by the unanswered questions surrounding the Viet­ nam W ar while he com m ands a youthful platoon in the midst of battle. ‘R’ O © JIM BAKKER ® ® MOVIE k k k '/ t "M urder On The Orient Exp ress" (1974) Albert Finney, Lauren Bacall. Belgian sleuth Hercule Poirot investigates the murder of an American industrialist aboard a luxurious and fam ous train. (R) 1200 1230 12:50 1:15 1:30 1:35 1:45 0 3 3 NEWS O ( £ © 33 NEWS O © NEWS © 3 ) NEWS © 33 COMMUNITY CALENDAR OR SELL THING! with classified ad in The Daily' 'Texan. Call the hotline: 471-5244... and sayf "Charge it!" (SUUCCT TO TSF CMDTT POUCKS.) I S I,..II— Now Serving Lunch Weekdays from 11:30 Light International Menu Cheeseboards, Fine Wines by the Glass Austin's First Wine Bar Open M o nd ay through Saturday 11:30 a.m. to 1 a.m. Sunday 1:00 to I ? m idnight 172-3790 11:46 0 3 0 ® © ® TOMORROW Guests economist Lewis Lehr men, Sister Sledge, Helen Reddy’s former manager Jeff Wald, Atlanta police officer Nicho­ las Marinelli, filmmaker Ron Harris. (R) © ® ABC NEWS NIGHTUNE 1220 12:10 © QDALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENT8 "I Killed The Count" A police detec­ tive finds that he has three murderers who admit killing the seme men. (Part 2) 12:30 ® LOVE BOAT “The Audit Couple” Phyllis DUIer; "The Scoop" Joyce Dewitt, Ray Buktenica; "My Boyfriend’s Back" Jennifer Salt, Richard Kline (R) 12:50 © C D NEW8 O ® © ® NEWS © (ED NEWS ® ® NEWS © ® COMMUNITY CALENDAR 1:15 1:30 1:35 1:46 Austin Outhouse Happy Hour 5-7 50e Longnecks Entertainment Nightly No Cover Ever 3510 Guadalupe WEDNESDAY JULY 1, 1981 DAYTIME SPECIALS 2:00 © (D 0DLOS ANGELES PHILHARMONIC AT THE HOLLYWOOD BOWL Zubin Mehta makes his last televised appearance as conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. Virtuoso violinist Itzhak Pererlman is featured as soloist. 4:30 jjD SAMMY THE WAY-OUT SEAL After two boys sneak an injured sea Hon into their home, a wave of mayhem engulfs their neighborhood. (Part 1) 5:30 ($) WHAT ON EARTH? Orson Bean probes many questions which have gone unanswered for years in a far-reaching exploration of the planets, the stars and mankind itself. DAYTIME CHILDREN'8 SHOWS 10:00 _ © © (DSTUDIO SEE "TV, TV" A family that doesn’t watch television; kids teach each other on their school's closed circuit TV network. (R) 4:30 6 SAMMY THE WAY-OUT 8EAL After two boys sneak an injured sea lion into their home, a wave of mayhem engulfs their neighborhood. (Part 1) EVENING 6.-00 0 3 0 ( 0 ) © ® © ® © ® » © © (DSTUDIO SEE "TV, TV" teach each other on their school’s closed circuit TV network. (R) tear B C D © ® n e w s A family that doesn't watch television; kids WELCOME BACK, KOTTER Gabe learns that Julie is pregnant. FAMILY FEUD 1! 3 ) APRENDIENDO A AMAR 6*30 3 0 ® © ® TIC TAC DOUGH © JOKER'S WILD WIMBLEDON TENNIS The men’s quarterfinals are presented from England, with commentary by Barry Tompkins and Arthur Ashe. O (3) P M. MAGAZINE Home parties for selling sexy lingerie; the life of work­ ers on the Alaskan pipeline. © © (DM ACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT D ® P.M. MAGAZINE A photograph of dragonflies; the life of workers on the Alaskan pipeline. ID ® HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie irritates his friends with his new image when he gets his own radio show as a teen-age disc jockey. © ® P.M. MAGAZINE Texas sport of polo; the life of workers on the Alaskan DiDeiine © (¿ H A P P Y DAYS AGAIN Before Richie can realize what's happening, an old girlfriend decides that they are going steady. CD <3) ROSA... DE LEJOS # ALTERNATIVE VIEWS "Texas Vs. Civil Liberties” 720 O S ) © ® © ® REAL PEOPLE Featured; a man who can talk and write backward and forward; a man who lives in a covered wagon; female bodybuild­ ers; tandem skiing. (R) O d D O G D LIGHTS! ACTION) AFRICA! Rimed on location in East Africa and Kenya, Ed Asner narrates the adventures of renowned wildlife photographers Alan and Joan Root. ' BEAT Host: Kate Feiner. ® © QDCHARL!E*S ANGELS While scuba diving off the coast of Hawaii. Kris and a friend discover a sunken ship with a cargo worth millions. (R) © ® GUNSMOKE Newley’s best friend becomes the victim of a con game perpetrated by a pretty young girl and her partner. 7.30 © © (DOVER EASY "Alcoholism" Guests: Gail Storm, Jan Clayton, Dr. Gil! Ayotte ( R ) g CD © LOCO VALDEZ 10 MAKING THE NEWS 8:0° O S O ® © ® DfFFRENT STROKES Kimberly accepts a date with a 29- year-old athletic coach who believes her to be much more mature than she actually is i R ) g © (E Q CD MO VIE A A ’A "W h o ’ll Save Our Children?” (1978) Shiriey Jones Len Cariou A childless couple is pressured into taking on the responsibility of two young children deserted by their parents. (R) lOAbT T * Wednesday television © © ® T H E NEW DEAL FOR ARTISTS Narrated by Orson Welles, this spe­ cial examines the federal funding of the arts in the 1930s, featuring Interviews with leading artists, writers and theatrical personalities who got their start in nationally financed Depression-era programs. © ® © ® © (DM O VIE A A "Make Me An Offer" (1979) Susan Blakely, Patrick O’Neal. A naive young woman who was dumped by her husband becomes a real estate agent. (R) © ® MOVIE A AW "Open Season" (1974) Peter Fonda, Cornelia Sharpe. Three mentally unstrung Vietnam vets play a sadistic cat-and-mouse game with a young couplé whom they kidnap to take p a l In their perverted sport. I f YELLOW FLOWERS AND UTTLE MIRACLES 820 0 3 © ® © ® THE FACTS OF UFE Mrs. Garrett’s son visits Eastland and cdnvinces Natalie that she is a talented songwriter who is wasting her time where she Is. (R) © 3 COLORINA 9 *0 0 3 © ® © ® QUINCY Quincy sets out to prove the Innocence of a woman accused of killing one of her twins. (R) ® MOVIE "The Shining” (1980) Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall. Directed by Stanley Kubrick. A former schoolteacher hired as a winter caretaker for a remote, and apparently haunted, Colorado hotel, is snowbound there with his wife and clairvoyant young son. ‘R’ © 3 ) NOCHE A NOCHE Host; Talina Fernandez. 1$ BOTTOM UNE 9 *0 © © ® TH REE PORTRAITS Three award-winning Michigan artists — a potter, a choreographer and a sculptor - share their work and their feelings about creating art. © 3 ) 24 HORAS I f HERE IN AUSTIN © © © ( E D O ® ® ® © ® © O ® ( D © ® n ew s © © (DNAACP NATIONAL CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS Cart Rowen anchors coverage of the day’s activities from Denver, Colorado. © ® THE OOO COUPLE Oscar befriends an attractive young lady, then finds he must compete with Felix for her affection. 1020 1020 © 3 ) REPORTER 41 1020 O 3 ) © ® © ® WIMBLEDON TB4NI8 Reports and highlights of the day’s tournament action In the prestigious AN-Engiand Tennis Championships (from Wimbledon Stadium in London, England). © (Q) MOVIE A A Vt "Fire” (1975) Dennis Weaver, Diana Muidaur. The nephew of McCloud’s girtfriend dies in a fire which appears to have been set by a professional arsonist. © ® ALL IN THE FAMILY Concerned about getting old, an encounter with an old buddy convinces Archie that looks arei • everything. O © © CAPTIO N ED ABC NEWS ) ® © ® A B C NEWS MGHTUNE © ® BOB NEWHART Jerry takes up permanent residence at the Hartleys white recovering from a broken romance. © ® M*A*8*H Hawkeye is the only doctor left to operate when the flu bug hits the 4077th. © 3 ) MOVIE “Jovenes Y Bellas" Gaston Santos, Begona Palacios. 10:45 O ® © ® 0 ® TONIGHT Guest host: David Lettermen. Guests: Pete Bar butt i, Joe Gar agióla, Bess Armstrong. 1120 © ® MOVIE AAV4 "The Other Love” (1947) David Niven, Barbers Stanwyck. A concert pianist and her doctor fall in love during her stay at a Swiss TB clinic © © (D8POLETO ’81 "How Grand It la" A look is taken at some of Spototo’s opera offerings which indude Gian Carlo Menotti’s "The Last Savage" and a trilogy of one-act fantasy operas by Stanley Hollingsworth © ® © (DLOVE BOAT "The Audit Couple" Phyllis DMler; “The Scoop” Joyos Dewitt, Ray Buktenica; "M y Boyfriend’s Back" Jennifer Salt, Richard Kline. (R) © ® MARY TYLER MOORE After Bess writes a composition, Phyllis wants Mary to use her influence to get it published. © ® 8TAR8KY AW) HUTCH A man who believes he is a vampire preys upon young women 1125 6 MOVIE "R io Bravo” (1959) John Wayne, Dean Martin An old cripple, a former deputy-turned-drunk, a young quickdraw gunslinger and a girl help a sheriff to outsmart a powerful rancher who wants to get his killer brother released from prison. 1120 © © (DTHE ORK3INALS: THE WRITER IN AMERICA "Wright Morris The effect of the Nebraska plains on the life and art of this award-winning novelist and renowned photographer is explored (R) © ® M O VIE ★ A AV4 "The Thin M a n " (1934) William Powell, Myrna Loy Nick and Nora Charles get deeply involved in a murder case CONFIDENTIAL COUNSeilWfr u ON AUTEMVATives TO PREWn/AKJCY - x n f w w t i o n * * e f e * * A u o n VOOM6NS HEALTH CONCEAN9 — - w e p e f e k t o Au s t in ffcsoufices- ffiEE mWANCV TEST'S 6 0 3 W 1 3 - ^ ¿lO ^ 7 6 - 6 8 7& ~ * MOW, - FfU, 9 - 5 ~ on MS Shuttle aoure i ntum« |nto an te* guy one* h * • O S 4H 0R A 8 ^ ^ CO!r? TF* .LA W eff *"*"— ■ " t o of ah**p from a hungry coyol* fam ily on thoprow t. (to r n -, aog Pfalo w ,Q n ,r .^ . r~$j SAMMY THE WAY-OUT SEAL A fter two boy* anaak an M urad aa* km w n ^ «* hw . w o, (ÍS? • • ®FAM N.YFEUD O a HOGAR QUE YO ROBE §8S£S&?CMCDOüaH a-an ® ® ® ® P-M- MAQAZME A Texas mtNonaka who an* tn ___ ® ^ .MAGAZINE A Taxaa mMonaire who plana to raise th * Titanic- a O O REPORTER 41 Mu<1'Tumd* * •* * - A happty m arried M arin ^ c o u p i* ara apurrad by ttia ir trandy naighbors Into axplortng aRamadv* «ggf cert has endured to r osnturiea. HeT^ UVO ^ Ph*p Abb0,t vWts th * Cenyontonda w«d*me*a of Utah and Hueco Tanka In w*«tem Tax** - two SfVfSS* ® ff ® .® .® ffi**1 Th* cabbie* don elaborate coetumaa and aal out to S^ooSSSS¿rm 'mt,mc’ •CULPTURE M PUBLIC PLACES m S jL S iS iiS P 1? LA* DIWQ F* * in 8 Pf* " ur’» from hw Peers, Diana Fair- Cafó ® C D ® # ® ( £ a o / 2 0 ® O NOCHE A NOCHE Hoat: TaSna Fernandez. * ® ® m o d ) • (D ® (D ® a ® c m (D new s MAW: LQOWNQ PON WIN The w itty comedian travels to hum orou* aspects of some o f to * most ! Í £ 2 T *5 *0 O ^tf2 ^ /*o c tM tie 6 fro m Denver, Colorado. ^ C 0 N re ^ Í ! ^ J ! ? ! 5 WGHUQHT8 Cart Rowan anchor* ° ’c*' d^ n* )m" ^ VM fl 25 •i«s^1srs^r^ °*,“ L*w™n- °—*^ R"*a 5 S T a S ^ fl^ r ^ ,0 8 ^ ,1 * * M artin MHnar. Two heiicop- «own devastated by a ftood follow ing the collapse Rob* r1 ® MOVW Ttolkas ’ (1980) Rogar Moore, lemon Mason A d m n e wtvnan. N j^ e ^ ía im o iv 3Molut^arm ‘PG* ptan# 01 ,xto rtlonW * who have ***** *hip and are threatening to destroy two North Sea ok rigs. ta u d ^ v u ti Iv J fü rf - ^ * !:Y A^!0f t m*®az*ne and a found poem Initia te a fam ily ka to o n m * right of privacy which provoke* Mice. G loria and Edith to m oveout © •^ C A F n O N e i ABC NEWS ® Cg ® GDa b c n ew s m q h tu n e 9 O MOVE "Caradura Y La MMonarta" Juan C «tos A ltavista, M aria Vanar. 11^)0 ^ í c! i#b t t 2 . chortorhalicopteraarvic*inH aw M L 7vY S f^E TI ^ UT ÍÍ ^ ? r M o¿r*. (Part 2 r t 2) ^ tyte" (19fl6) “ WwMoy, Suzanne W K fS L*pf Staraky and Hutch, suspected o f shooting the * Qovemment agent, find that the ir Nves are in danger. ■ J t a g W a X WMBUDOH TP — 8 MgW igM. ' Uhey tokowa th * tra il of industrial aoiea who M tor Stov«won everyone expect* him HERE SI AU8TM ■ ^ Ss^^sSSSSSisSSSS ioETnSíSfsr^^ s 1l$7Sy£y!5E!a‘Y HoW: wcw^iy- MIN0V Moifc * • •" • • «W Nad singer of a y g ü “ ° 8* r * * S L S L h riS ??iy i. A . ? ^ >0p" thtc outlaw tMkm ovar Dodo* in M att’a * ""> » » *• * " * • e n frta ln e r. ÍR1 ®*n '* t^u m from th * war to i ,S S ¡,o S l.<^ ? £ 3 ^ ^ • ao' ^ o ™ y. C l- N « | 7^0 ® O CASA OE HUESPEDES 99ACCBU6M E88 ■ j a g ® e a «eaaAwiAifñ h g ratawng rn. a ^ p n ^ n o <•*!—■ *«~¡? •— toSSSnrSi 3 » . (P arM l ( R ) ^ StavanaL end Tom a son Weatey aaarchea fo r his father's PJ- Magnum agraas to find a man who dropped out of I H A L F -P R I C E ■BOOKS") ^ Ü u y& A e€ € eld plays handsome, young Dr Noah R|ck Drake, recent arrival at “General Hospital,” airing eve­ ry Monday throagh Friday afternoon on ABC. ________ flh to w ir— rrttke rta N to make 1>rt min*l« ekm^m.) £%SSSm9JS.9M ® a c c b u s m ^ m T A d tt/ w e w n it i to ^ 2® * Main Store: I5I4 LAVACA- HOURS: MONDAY - SATURDAY 10-10 1 2- 6 'SUNDAY Up cNorth: 6103 BLR\ETrd. And South 1914 E. Riverside H O U R S : MONDAY-SAT URDAY 10'6 12- 6 SUNDAY pir BRENDA A JENNY Haircutting by appointment only 451-4565 $12.00 A |S E S 5 M S ' S ^ * = t Office in July. ' specials and sports events coming to Home Box . > ® REPORTER 41 10:20 1030 Rpoto,° Ar“ ^ lndua“ ■ S S London, England). J S S i i J S S r S • « n o » Anal (from Wimbledon Stadium in l S B S 12 = 2 r friday television ^ J S K S » s ^ - - - W j 3 5 ed. IR) 8SS»ÍS£Í!S?an,qhtl,ne uncomfortable. rtlt tokfchL b lSah li hta* qU^ ?r . An commoners foiling the plana of ® © ® © (3) S C T V N E T W O R K g o * • O ABC NEW8 NIQHTUNE 1* °° • GDMOVME ★ a h -El Condor - iJnm gang escapee and a white Apache ie J^ í l ? ! ^ ^ ! L Van ° ml * chain ^ Manic o to steal a mNNon- dollar fortune in gold - on . S im m o S l2 ta « !S e T w JS o ^ K w S r.^ ° aVfd Lat1*rm*n- Queste. Richard q T S ^ ^ N E v K r y0UnQ w o m a i v ^ his next victim meeta up wtth a country-«nd-westem b ^ .°^ y ,aJ'8 Winger. A blue-collar *>ve with a girl he S*m EWot Tha promise of a •argeteshjraa'a p2*Sf a ^tcnm y S i? ? r ^ ^ thay meet a strange group of g u eets*arit«!2 C Í?Mn® En0M*h mansion guaats and discover the terrifying reason behind their Invitation. R’ Anderson. An English aristocrat c a ^ re d °b ? thi1 Q|0) Rtehard Harr,#. Judith *— • O © & F ^ ef 5 S a ^ of the trite * ^ ^ • © N EW S I® NEWS A college security g u a rtre i^ ia ^ « a JU V te a ^ t'1Lancaster, Su*«n Clark, ^ f y stalks the shadowy killer who murdered a campus co-ed. 1:90 1:36 1:40 £■?%)? bulidlng kvviti haTo^on a data0™* archrtect wh ° has come to sketch ¡* 2 1 °" " arChrtect who has come to sketch Marys of n¡¡*n9 the Professional football team on the efforts psychic. IAY8 Guest: Al Jarreau. (R) Rita Cooiidge, ^ k j BurTmtte°Th^ D lrtS^ íd Geraldine Hunt. Galligher Johnny Mathis Guests B* 1d* Taana M*r*. Dusty SpringSd ’ © QD COMMUNITY CALENDAR 1 wen lina i ifw ! «Qa^ by the arr,vto^h^mother^(R)S Careful,y Panned wedding is thrown into w eteo m ld ifSSjf Qty - 00 probat,on from « » county JaH, are v o ra^ _ at the jí^itíte 'S s'1A ^^hTas^aNch °vU^ r ERrc^ H°8t Ed Asner ,ook8 ,eamwork Music by 0 ® f lT r~Sa9er and MarV)n HamlSh 09 datewith ^ th e r^ v S S a n .^ tri6810 m8ke Evefyn jealous by accepting a blind H o ^ rd ^ o lh o ÍÍ” ! ^ ^dack 7ua|LstIS t h /! ek’S Mid-Year Review” Quests- © ® © ® © ® I* M A Bra in !rShemmas wlthout their mates (R) ® © E D U A R D O M A N Z A N O ° 8nd Diana try ,0 c°P e with their ®r’ Martin Zwe)9 © © Q ® © ® beggarm aw S i c o Cannes Film Festival, where Billy’s mNtent «SrifriSJTS m0Vl6 '® en,ered in the " 'ka (Tovah Fe «*• *0o we, S £ S ‘ s*™"« ® ® c o lo rín a 8:30 fcOO 0:30 KfcOO FfiSk™ " ^ ¡*£* ¿5 10 'ilKr,d" bo^ . k ft*D ee -r^ auapect In a murder O É CfFREE to CHOOSE ■ cusses his belief that the w e lf ^ lS Í!^ ? I ? .Gr_ave" Dr. Milton Friedman discusses his belief th a tth e ^ a r i^ £ !d.te 1 ° Grave” ^ Milton Friedman ful and that the best answer to it i« a U.S. Is dangerous and waste- ?? ® © N O C H E A N ^ ^ anan? C ^ e,aX(R^ Investigation. •«■ ® © 24 HORAS © I ñ í ÍS Í% w * £ ,¡ í! ~ fr«" Denver. t S ™ Rowe" « * « • dass of fraudulent advertising' 8000868 th® d,rector 01 F<*x’s creative writing “ *Rowen ® f f i ® NEWS n u can. Telephone Counseitruj 476-7073 Anytime Cut Costs! 1 Clip coupon» in ^ Doily Texan • and save on ^ ooything from t eggrolU to tune-up» to T-shirts! Check y o u r h o s t JO E PO W ER S P R E S E N T S Tradltiofiol SUNDAY BUFFET I Í a.m. H/ 2:00 p.m. / f i t 1/ A JOE POWERS Joe Says: “Help yourself to” • Our DEUCIOL? ¿ u p and S r a y o? Salads " £ • A v a r ie t y ' o f " e S " S “Standing Round of Beef ” feat • H o m e n ^ ^ ^ fX f Fashioned Fruit Cobbl^M^^Tl Cake ^ ^ ^ our regular Sunday! f ^ ir)ciudln« Old ler’ Mocha Angei Food Cake. 7 Layer Senior Citizens • A Medley of Vegetables • Coffee or Tea. .» » 64.86 Children 12 and n U n d e r $3.26 B e v e r a g e an d H o m e m a d e D e s s e rt In cfnded v / 4764171 i B t f t l (pesUffl Í Austin’»Finest Country A Western Nightclub W .d. S r “ * htC O X • » « * » « t C O I N ' p V w | T p $ m u m m iu W^ R IV E R C IT Y O U M D ii Sp#Cio1 THURS.-NICKLE BEER nIgHt Drawings. i t " * cs ™ ^ f s t r s s s z s r « a w “ -J S il"» " * « " » ■ ™ , V 'S S S i f O® V#EI Saturday July 11 Tickets $4.00 SS.OO Cover *37-3924 ^ OOORS OPEN • P.M. EACH N IG H T « I V « D O U AR IN fO SM A T lO H U N I wW thm /iope a Special at the b r a n d i n g i r o n . . ALL YOU CAN EAT! w eekdays from 5-10 p.m. ¿S3 MONDAY: SIRLO IN STEAK SH RIM P ONLY *8” i w 2504 Lake Austin l 478-8645 Omelette» Extraordinaire Gingerbread, Whole Wheat B uterm U k Pancake» c I ^ u p * . Salads, Sandwich*» and Desert» Llasuc American Breakfast» Great Coffee _ — and — N othing on the m enu i» n more than ¿3.60 & C en Mon. 7 a.m .-3 p . m ^ £ fue».-Sun. 7 m.m .-9 p.m .1 f a ^ ¿m) ¥/ CATFISH A TUES t BO ILED SH RIM P W E D ONLY *6” IW ir l o in s t e a k ^ ■ S H R IM P ^ © THUESDAY: e . i th ¡^'^•¿Pahaui O O A BETTER WAY B © CARTOONS I ® AGRICULTURE U.8.A. 630 ) BATTLE OF THE PLANET8 ) R.F.D. 6 I NEW3MAKER8 Host: Glen Hartman. ) HOT FUOQE 730 _ I® THEFUNT3TONE8 I ® TOM AND JERRY IO CONCURSO OE LA TV © B ® B ® BUQS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER O CARA8 Y GESTOS 730 £00 S ® ® W IM BLe)0N TENNB Live coverage of the men’s singles S ? WMN In me prestigious AJi-England Tennis Championships (from Wimbledon Stadium m London, England), a a ODMISTER ROQER8 (R) a GD NEWS IN REVIEW a ® a (XPONZ ANO THE HAPPY DAYS GANG A H COMPLICADISIMO a a ® th e v ic to ry g rad en a GD EXTENSION‘81 a ® a ODRKHE RICH / SCOOBY OOO a <3 CARAS E GESTOS tcSO 8 2 ® POPEYE a a (SSN EA K PREVIEW S 8 ® HOBA8 O Í M A80M EN08 a a ® T H « OLD HOUSE a ® YOUNG WORLD MAGAZINE a ¡9 a CDTHUNOARR THE BARBARIAN 8 0 BURBUJAS 9:30 __ * 2 8 ® . ® ® ta "ZAN / LONE RANGER O 8 ®ROM AGNO US TABLE (R) 8 $ L ^ fC Q ^ T R Y F18HING Host: Gene Coffelt. 8 © 8 CDHEATHCUFF AND DINGBAT _ _ ^ 1030 a a (D JU U A CHILD ANO COMPANY 8 a a O a GDPLA8TICMAN / BABY PLA8 8 O LA VIOA EN CRISTO 1130 PEOPLE Host: Jerry Thomas. a (D FAT ALBERT 8 ® MOVIE ★ ★ “ Necromancy” (1972) Orson Wattes. Pamela Franklin A young couple discover to their horror that the husband’s employer manufac­ tures toys that are actually Instruments of the occult. 2*0 ■ CD WESTERN OPEN Third-round coverage of this PGA Tour event (Uve fromthe Butler National Golf Club In Oak Brook, ID ) 8 a (DA WORD ON WOR06 ID ffl WESTERN OUTDOOR8MAN O ® FUTBOL INTERNACIONAL Bologna vs. Brazil O a (DM ISTER ROQER8 (R) a GD 8PORT8 AFELD a CD MOVIE ★ "The Day Of The Trtffkis" (1963) Howard Keel Nicole Maurey. After » meteorite shower leaves most of Earth’s inhabitants blind neaMbenT96 ***** turn into man-eating plants which engulf anything coming a (0 I LOVE LUCY a® SPORTS 8ATUROAY Acapulco Cliff Diving (from Acapulco, Mex.) Chun- 8ichl Cup Gymnastics (from Nagoya, Japan). ® GDELECTRIC COMPANY (R) ® NA8CAR DRIVER8 ROAST 8 © WILD, WILD WEST A beautiful girl upsets West's efforts to onaii **** "Wo Bravo” (1959) John Wayne, Dean Martin. An old crlooie a y0un° °ulckdraw gunslinger and a girt help a rn M ^ fro m iS w j8 P° W6r^ i ranchar "**> want* »o get his kINer brother ,jr.|~ n—i — — Er^ iarS' ^ ® C^’ WORLD OF 8PORT8 Firecracker “ 400" auto race Worid °u p Show Jumping Final (from London. £00 330 430 M O O B ® L 0 8 ANGELE8 PHILHARMONIC AT T>« HOLLYWOOO BOWL Zubki Mehta makes his last televised appearance as conductor of the Loe Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. Virtuoso violinist Itzhak Perertman is featured as soloist. a ® a ® a CDFANTASY i8LANO A talented gymnast is given special powers to win an Important meet, and a poor dirt farmer and his family get to Hve like millionaires (R) n 8 ® LAREDO _ g a© a ® a ® a ® a ® a ®a ® n ew s ®N AA CP NATIONAL CONFERENCE 8PEO AL REPORT Journalist C«1 Rowan hosts this special highlighting the issues and events from the NAACP National Conference of the past week held In Denver, Colorado. 8 ® WRESTLING © BOXEO DE80E MEXICO 1030 1030 O © O ® a ® SATURDAY NIGHT UVE Host: Anthony Perkins. Musical Quest: Betty Carter. a © MOVIE **V4 “ Sherlock Holmes And The Scarlet Claw” (1944) Basil Rath bone, Nigel Bruce. Shertock Holmes and his trusty sidekick set out for the remote wikis of Canada In search of an evil swamp creature. A MOVE “ The Shining” (1980) Jack Nicholson, Shelley Duvall. Directed by Stanley Kubrick. A former schoolteacher hired as a winter caretaker for a remote, and apparently haunted, Colorado hotel. Is snowbound there with his wife and clairvoyant young son. ‘R* a (2) MOVE ★★V4 “ Good Sam” (1948) Gary Cooper, Ann Sheridan. A com- puwve Good Samaritan usually ends up in trouble. 8 ® ABC NEWS 8 ® M OVE +*'/> “ Pork Chop HUT (1959) Gregory Peck, Harry Guardino. American forces battle to take the famous Korean hill hoping to stop the com- muntsts. a ® M O V E "The Big Country” (1958) Gregory Peck, Charlton Hes­ ton. An Easterner becomes embroiled in a bitter feud between two Texas ranchers over water rights. ® 3 ) MOVE Don t Just Stand There” (1968) Robert Wagner, Mary Tyler Moore. An American writer’s attempt to smuggle Swiss watches into Paris ends up as a series of misadventures. 10:46 RoSer Eb6ft ^ 0606 Si8*e< review “ Raiders Of Women, “ I Sent A Letter To My Love” and “ Cutter’s JOHNNY CANALE8 _ ®AU8T1N CITY UMÍTS “Tom Walts” 1130 b00" “ • ' « ^ ™ k> 5 « k1 A pN Ih. hi, ,akM v)~ ~ > “ • STMd tour 01 t h . GOES THE COUNTRY Guests: Gail Davies, Tompail and the IEM BAJADORE8 DE LA MUSICA COLOMBIANA 8 ® ESTA 8EMANA EN BQ8BOL a ® a © N E W 8 | ® t h e MUPPET8 Guest: Buddy Rich, 530 a ® FOCU8 S L t W ^. ’^R) ® A LOOK AT AU8T1N ® LUCHA UBRE 8 530 ) NBC NEWS ) 8 G D C88NEW S t^^GGOM “ Expedition Gerónimo” - 2 S Ü Í 2 , newt)- renovated Bigelow House. (R) n 8 P IODUP AND COMING ) MINORITY FORUM A n»hJLli ? VI! L V * 'Tarzan'* Greatest Adventure'’ (1959) Gordon Scott Anthony Quayle. Tarzan pits his wits and strength against a gang of Jewel J 5 h 2 ír ! !f iv ÍíiJ,C,Í? míí 0nS 01 J ’i8,tea" (1955> Dayton Moore. Jay Sil- 0,r * n frarn6d ,or murder depends iolety upon the credibility of a blindman and a five-year-old who were witnesses. 130 130 2 2 W 8 *" ®^WCH Host: Johnny Bench. f t ® HUMAN DIMEN8ION 8 ® FIESTA MEXICANA | $ ^ M O R E 8 OF THE SUPER BOWLS i ) VARIEDADES MUSICALES I Y AHORA... QUE? Host: Johnny Bench. 230 5 t t e ? f ü S r ^ r Íl!Z h6 L0,T 8t«[^ y” (1962) John Wayne, Robert Mitchum. ° ‘ °* > UP° ° " " '>“ > * " ° f ‘ S u í ' p í S y í ¡¡¡ü S .ÍS íiS * ’” '’l"n *,hlnl“ ,h* °“ h0™"“d * P* K*T,kl B*ck 0n Th* F*nn" (1954) Mar lorie O ® B ® BASEBALL TOOA Y d a y 'S JS ÍS to t L ¡Í¿ !ÍS L K1Ü !Í: S y€LDunaway The ‘eoendary Doc Holli- aay travels back to Tombstone, where he visits hte frien Wyatt Earn and settles wNhaiproMula he won in a poker game. ‘PG’ a a o D B Y U N E is captured o n B- 'm tü d o n flü f5ER8 ^ 6xc,t,nfl’ ot1en humorous sport of mini-motocross Stataiv e ® n JL » L M A ^ ^ ° m* Corone»*" d»09) Telly Savalas. Edith Evans. ,ar06t# ° f * ° rouP of th*evir»g gangsters. 2:16 l® e ® « C * P O R T * SUMMER SEASON CART A1l««. '125 • In d ,^ » ® N E w l 200 Years Of American Music” 2 Slim Picken8’ Jotw Con lee. THE MUPPET8 SOLID GOLD f ^ “ • “ r00^ ,HoSt: x0!0006 Warwick Cohost: Billy Preston. Guests: ^ i S s ! « ¡ ¿ S T ’ ® ® ^If^CIAL Nobody Does It Better Than You, America” Host Ed A&nar tooks at me incredible results America has achieved through teamwork Music bv Carol Bayer-Sager and Marvin Hamllsch. U«c O 51) MOVIE "Corazón Salvaje" Julio Aleman, Angelica Marla. 8 "Sea Snakes Of The Swains” ® MOVIE Candleshoe" (1977) Jodie Foster, David Niven A street-wise tom o— m w RE0 £30 An9ete9 8Udd6n,y flnds heraeM th* »o a tattered English S w iJo G ' 8 ® COMEDY SHOP ^CM COTTLE SHOW "My Body, Myself” Two women talk ooen ffrrrn ir^omf.*.0.^ 060*the ,mP«^ctions of their bodies. ® T H E MUPPET8 ed due S ^ ’LstHr 2 S °n ^ ^ ^ ^ may * 730 MD ™ E MANOREU-3BTERS • « « ® 5 ÍP 8 80(1 Turk bec°m e fugitives from the Secret Service in Q 0 8 ® A CAPITOL FOURTH WITH THE NATIONAL SYMPHONY M stislav 8 fl8n° of c Nlchotes Jeremy try to h*1* Qu“ ,‘ Su*^ ‘ " “ x » —.«r. 8 ® NASHVILLE MUSIC Guest: Faron Young. 730 £00 M°Y !E **** "Woodstock Relived” (1970) Documentary the up8t8,e ^ York vtíla*> o» W« m m. ■ ®*9N. '* 2 ^ 5 N# * * * A4MMCA m tm m J u t M t o n 2:00 » W.L HORNSBY: SCRAPPY A R T M T ^ t p 5 immigrant. (R) r S t * c ^ v í > • w u ri noi on a local when H is Mamed ha is sponsoring a Cuban . 0 ( B w e s t e r n o u t d o o r s m a n r 'TfoJkee” (1980) Roger Moore, James Mason. A daooar i i S IS ?J ír°Oman ** cNiad in to thwart the plans of extortionists who have Wjacked a supply ship and are threatening to destroy two North Sea oil rigs. -sis 0 0 ® °R E A T PERFORMANCES "Three Cheever Stories: The Five Fortv- Í2ÍÍ 4 *-*urenoe Luckinbill and Mary Beth Hurt are featured In Cheever's storv < s s n * **''hux,na*m |,M3) s,an *“ * ^ T to c h te f^ a í l ’í ,’Z Ü ÍS S ? " (1974) John Í Ü oss of key personnel and the hospital’s use of controversial drugs. Pat Harrington Jr. 06 m6dtcal c®f1t®r tries to cope with crises invohrlno the M fS ™ " " 1 A «po rt «1 the Tour d . Franco bicycle race: Survival S L S u ! ^ í ! ! í , ^ FENCe. n " Innovative artist Ctuiato In his ? ,?, # ruct a COf1troversial, 24-mile white fabric fence through the g^J^Cajiitom taM untryslde are documented. (R) 0 O 0 ® 0 ® HEAVEN SBfTThres i jopie are refiwen . 5? ? . inATPER JOHN, M.D. A con artist who was in turad !? »“ ! MANILOW One of the foremost names In the 00 Earth (R) [R| ° K M — .P W n , . m u appawe In a concert performance of Ms greatest hits in e lu d E íía T Í 2 awM^ j ® ' ’ 8nd "Look* LHi* Wa M a d e » n c i u d l n g Lidy Bountiful” Fn Noq rMoofiftlhk #«# Its A Mira- ** hu Ch'“n*,n",o Til HERE IN AUSTIN * * * an named Rebecca andad In tr a g U -(^ 1 H R ) g WOfn 0 ® CBS NEWS f f ? v ^ o i í . n H ^ ! L ^ ^ dra”1(5l967) Cameron Mitchell, George Mar- fü *"*ertean draftsman on an isolated island struggle to ° lt# *tr#n8* «nú perverse ruler. ^ 0 dD HOY MI8MO Host: Qutllormo Ochoa. 0 ® EYE ON BUSINESS _ O ® PERKXXCO 0 ® 8UPER MEMORIE8 OF THE 8UPER BOWLS co m 9 ‘ ° ' m ,F m v* a ™ « Prt> M,LL Bermy r#turn# **“ • own version of the nursery rhyme 0 0 MOVK AA'A "Never Give An Inch" (1971) Henry Fonda. Paul n« « . ^ O reg o n logging family devias a way to d s # ¿ T 2 m T £ S e r when strikers sabotage their equipment. schedule t ^ S r 'w S o U ^ Í Í ™ * 0 1 1 au« ,,: " < •'« « I " 0 1» % Hatch, Bruce Davison tS o Ce íS íS two California teen-agers, Jan Barry and Dean Torrence becnnw wnnim __ orrence, become singing sen- satkms during the 1950s and 1960s. (1978) 0« d l I . CM M n « ‘"tM^n-ovwn atconoNc lawyer comes out of seclusion to defend his dauMrter1* osughtsr . doyfoere^Mtohas been charged with murder. •ff 1* » REPORTS Highlights of past specials present buying information on food, medicine, household products and safety i T0,“ AKE MUSIC Daniel Barenboim, Itzhak Perlman, Pinchas Jacqueline du Pre and Zubin Mehta perform Schubert’s “The "Rebel Without A Cause” (1986) Jamas Deen N e e . 0 ® M O V* Wood^A young men )oins a tesrv-ags gang bacsuss of his kKftcrf «eapact^Tiia TMf i l m l , u T | i i ’ T 1 W O T" “S ? ' ^ 0 ® SOUOQOLD 0 0 MEXICO, MAGIA Y ENCUENTRO Host: RaulVefasco. 0 ® BLUE JEAN NETWORK “Sfophsn StWs And Journey” 0 ® DAKTARI “Clarence’s Love-In” 2 Ye* r* WAmeric*n Music’’ Island That Time Forgot” 0 O HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL 4:30 oStos i í j [ ^ mOVk“ ’ ,pacl,“ ,!>REVIE^ Husband-and-wifs comics Jerry StNsr and Anne «Port» «vwrt» coming to Home Box ff0,k* i " (J980) Roger Moors, James Mason. A tfopner women- h ttiü íP y * Ki!lÍ5L Ír^ man c***d *° to thwart tha plans of extortionists who hav* Ngckad a supply ship and are threatening to destroy two North Sas oN rtgs S ® I88UE8 AND ANSWERS ® 5 MINUTE8 TO UVE 0 0 0 ( 0 ) NEWS 9:00 0 ® C88NEW8 Sra. 0 ® 0 ® A B C N E W S (197®) Ro*x*rf Radford. Jane Fonda. A Las «o « v hkn from hi. fnMHO° ,hOrOü0hbfed ^ 00 Am*rican Wtty" Q^ * «^d 0 0 300 MILLONE8 NETWORK StaphanStWsAndJoumay" ® MON f t CARLO SHOW Guests: Charo, TTfitoicfs «id YamaM i h Atxfoson, Jolts and Simons, the Black whs 0 ® WAYNE ANO SHUSI tR "8hakaapaaraan BaaabaR” ano ramsll. Rowan 0 0 E^^FTBoi^^^ P f Told? Guests: Gene Johnson. Rev. Hoses Williams ^ ^ 8 human br*‘n J P ^ DOW N'S JOURNAL "Martin Luther King: Has The Truth Boon ^ that th* * * (rwtrument for space ® BLUE JEAN NETWORK "Stephen Stills And Joumay" Atkin»onMJ o S ln S s S iS ^ ^ Ch*r0 ShWd* Yarn^ . Rowan SbOO i« u 10:19 10=29 10:30 10:46 10-go 11’M 114ft 1230 12:20 1230 12:35 u n a n s w e re d fo r^ e a n T ^ a fo ^ M c h ^ a x ^ r!!^ t u u Í'°n* Wh*Ch hav* 9°°« *xplor«ion of the planets, the sta rs V * mankind itself ^ ss » - ss 6:30 8® 0 ® NBC NEW8 ® CBS NEWS NEW8 ABC NEWS y^HVILLE MUSIC Guest: Bobby Bare «EMPRE EN DOMINGO Host: Raul Velasco EVBBNG 0 ® DIALOGUE ’81 0 % suggest using an amateur dram s parents. (Part 4) (R) (BONCE W ON A CLASSIC "The Swtsh nr t h * r * •• Curtain The children competition to prove their abilities to the . Red River h«P a gang of cattle thieves operating along the a f t e r n o o n 1 2 :0 0 S ® S P O R T S AFIELD ® f a s t c o m p a n y l l s s R s g n s s " * ” © X LONE8TAR8PORTSMAN 0 0 5 MPfUTES TO UVE H o w a r ^ c ^ T S I SlS ( © ® NATIONAL COLLEGIATE S n Host: Freddie ® 3 # CDSSUES AND ANSWERS © X WtLD KINGDOM 12:30 Grant 12:45 © 3 ) FUTBOl ® ® Di8NEY’8 WONDERFUL WORLD "Goofy Takes A Hot. © O ^ O O M IN U T K h0USW,0,d 'n,t' 8 * ara*5 PK,pl« >to ' '•» - 0 Blm aM pan,>,* « » » « ' . «M .a college and joining the Coast Guard A le x f r w n íJ ¿ ^ Í Nan Branch; h a ¿ in fc ttm ! carear (Part 6) (R) g dropping out of f f T T i f T 1 T ’a aM m K , * ‘ y a white officer, begins his writing A pohca captain c o m S"m otTetiram añt ío *ra c » r a w o n m a tor a a c u tt^ , n , Ja^ M 0 la m J 5 2 5 ¡ J £ Í ? ? ¿ 5 S i 0* n’ 01 mot>a' " a S t r E y ^ o S n S 1. ^ ^ ^ “ — T M Oh to, a ^BTÍL"Z’i!!2 ftayno,as j**» G,aa»" ¡s^arsí',,op a ia,,rafl u'd year Revww' Guests Zwe*S (R) •re performance of Gershwn s "Strixe Uo The B an- Í.6 ALTERNATIVE VIEWS "Texas vs Civil L ib b ie s ” ^ 0,CTas,ra * * 800 8 7*30 0 0 T ONE DAY AT A TIME Barbara decfoes to drop out of college (P, TEXAN CLASSIFIEDS 471-5244 0 ® HENRY B. 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