Vol. 88, No. 56 2 Sections Council delays building purchase By JIM KENNETT Daily Texan Staff City Councilmembers on Thurs­ day put off buying the building that houses the Austin Cham ber of Com m erce because, although the pnce seemed nght, the building has not been appraised. Vantage C o., ow ners of O ne C o n ­ gress Plaza at 100 C ongress Ave., five-year the cham ber a offered lease worth about $700,000 But for the cham ber to m ove, the city must first buy its present office space at 901 W Riverside Drive, on city park just under $315,000 land, for Mayor Pro Tern Sally Shipm an said an appraisal, to be paid for by the seller, was needed in case q u es­ tions should a ris e later about the deal t ouncilm em ber (..eorge H um ­ phrey said he also was concerned because the building has not been inspected Before we buy a building, 1 think "I we net*d to inspect it," he said it's appropnate that we in ­ think spect a building before we spend $40U.0(X) on it Humphrey said he was most co n ­ cerned about having the roof and air conditioning system vheiked In addition to an appraisal and in spection C ouncilmember Robert Bamstone said he wanted a six month warranty on the root and mechanical equipment C.len West chamber president, said that if the council delayed the purchase beyond iV t 1, the cham ­ ber s deal with Vantage Co might tall through CouncilmemK*r Charles Urdy said the conversation about the pur­ chase was strangely reminiscent of what we did with the Sumiken is­ sue bac k m 1RR8 The pun hast* of the Sum iken Building wh u h houses the Electric D epartm ent, is under investigation by the council "I would caution you, w hoever it the is, w ho w a s critical about Sum iken purchase* to make sure that we do it [the purchase) in this case the wa> you said we didn t do it with the Sum iken, he said The contract signed to lease the land 31 years ago stated that if the cham ber m oved, it would have to sell the building to the city at depre­ ciated or "txxik value. W est said Should the city buy the cham ber building, it would use a grant from Brackenndge Hospital s operating budget to relocate the Parks and Recreation D epartm ent s senior citi­ zen program s to the cham ber In turn, B rackennd ge would move its Ronald M cDonald House — which shelters the fam ilies of cnt- ical-care patients — to the W aterloo Building, w hich presently houses the senior citizen program s. The council is scheduled to vote on the purchase* l\*c 1, after the ap­ praisal of The University of Texas at Austin Friday, November 18,1988 250 Bush appoints Sununu to head executive staff Associated Press W ASH IN G TO N — Presid ent­ elect G eorge j Bush on Thursday named New H am pshire Gov. John Sununu as W hite H ouse chief of staff and tapped cam paign strategist Lee A tw ater as chairm an of the Re­ publican National Com m ittee. Bush's selection of Sununu as his top W hite H ouse adviser prompted Craig Fuller to reveal that he would quit w orking for Bush after the tran­ sition end s in January. Fuller said he informed Bush last m onth he would accept no post other than chief of staff. Fuller said that Bush had let him know on Elec­ tion Day that he was giving that job to Sununu. it comes H ow ever, w hen to guessing w ho else will be in the new Cabinet, the word from George Bush is not "read my lips" but "stay tu n ed ." H e's also sw orn his transi­ tion staff to secrecy, but that hasn't put a dent in rumors. Two C abinet seats already have been taken (State and Treasury) by Jam es Baker and Nicholas Brady, leaving Bush with a dozen other d e­ partm ent heads to name. Here is a look at some of the nam es that have bubbled to the sur­ face. ■ Department of Defense: Frank Carlucci is the incumbent, but he has not been lobbying to stay on. Former Texas Sen. John Tower is at the top of most lists of possible defense secretaries. Also mentioned are Paul O'Neill, chairman of the Aluminum Co. of America, and for­ Secretary Donald mer Defense Rumsfeld. Former Rep. Jack F d - is a dark horse, w'ards, R-Ala., along with retired Air Force Lt. Gen. Brent Scowcroft, national se­ curity adviser during the Ford ad­ ministration. ■ Department of Justice: A ttor­ ney General Dick Thornburgh was one of the late additions to the Reagan Cabinet, replacing the em ­ battled Edwin M eese three m onths ago, and the form er Pennsylvania governor is eager to stay on replacem ents Some nam es tossed about as p o s­ are William sible Ruckelshaus, a form er deputy atto r­ ney general and Environm ental Pro­ tection Agency adm inistrator, and Illinois Gov. Jam es Thom pson. the ■ Department of Interior: Secretary Don Hodel, one of the few Reagan Cabinet members to serve the full second term, is certain to go- Sen. Dan Evans, R-Wash., w ho decided not to seek re-election, is a rumored favorite for interior secre­ tary. Other possibilities include Nat Reed, a former assistant interior sec­ retary, and Rep. Manuel Lujan, R- N.M. New Mexico Gov. Garrey Car- ruthers informed Bush's transition team he does not want the job. the ■ Department of Education: Se c­ first retary Lauro Cavazos, Hispanic ever to serve in the C abi­ net, would like to stay there. But conservatives have criticized som e of the former Texas Tech University president's pronouncements and said he didn't campaign hard enough for Republicans. Thomas Kean, the New Jersey governor, is a possibility for educa­ tion secretary. So is Rep. Bill Goo- dlmg of Pennsylvania, a former school principal and superintendent who is a leading Republican on the House Education and Labor C o m ­ mittee Former Tennessee Gov. Lamar Alexander, now president of the University of Tennessee system, is also a possibility'. Hot rod Ted Warren Daily Texan Staff Doug Peters of AeroVironment Inc took a dem on­ stration drive in the completely solar-powered GM Sunraycer Thursday at the Engineering Teaching Center II The Sunraycer and GM representatives were on campus for a lecture by UT alumnus Bob Francis of GM's Hughes Aircraft Division. J oday ■ AIDS conference fights student apathy WEATHER QerHdo Ahmre Weelher GERACDO My first guest 'loes the weather Dut m realty arrested tryng to ,T arry a sea fume in 1965 aims *“>»• was for abducting and mP WEATHER BOX What? jot • ■ rx;w What you re taix-'ig about B ; ‘ ' day wilt h a v e !ows m highs in the m»d 70$ mid-50s c : GERALDO You re just a scumbag aren't you? MR WEATHER BOX And you re » human tfee sioth The winds W' be blowing from the southeast at 10 '5 mpn about as tast as that c hair that hit you m the face that time GtRALDO Is it true MR WEATHER BOX * tru e that your rea> name is Jerry Rivefs? Answer me or ft! tOSS this so* I or- you By the way there s going »o be a 20 pe" ent chance of rain Is INDEX Around Campus Oassifteds Comics Editonais Entertainment Sports State & Local University Wortd & Nation 15 13 15 4 10 8 7 6 3 By JOSEPH ABBOTT Daily Texan Staff AIDS education and prevention p r o g r a m s face an uphill battle against student apathy and, in many cases, resistance from college administra­ tion and r e g e n t s , said school officials at an AIDS conference Thursday The conference, organized bv the American College Health Association and the Centers tor Disease Control is de­ signed to help regional colleges develop effective programs to combat the spread of the disease continues Tridav and Representatives from more than 40 Texas and Louisiana universities attended the University- hosted conference O n e of the biggest problems, many school representatives agreed, is the feeling of invinci­ bility among many students The perception that AID S is not their problem. "T h e problem with AIDS on campus is more apathv than anything else, because students don't have this belief in susceptibility," said D a­ vid Wiley, an assistant professor in health edu­ cation at Southw est Texas State University "T h e y don't think it can happen to them So it's hard to get people excited about a subject that thev don't think applies even tangentially to them Sherrv Bell, health education coordinator for the UT Student Health Center, said AIDS infor­ mation is reaching the students — but is largely ignored. "I think people in general hear a lot about AIDS, and thev may feel that they're well in­ formed about AIDS, but a lot of times that infor­ mation doesn't necessarily translate into behav­ ior ch an g e,” Bell said. "O u r education efforts need to concentrate more on skill-building than on pure information at this point,” she said. "F o r instance, we need to work with, 'How do you use a condom once you have one? How do you incorporate a con­ dom into love-making so that it's mutually s a tis ­ fy mg^ How do you bnn g up the subject of safe sex with a partner?' Jeff Gould, a member of A CHA's Task Force on AIDS, said one of the conference's main pur­ p o s e s was to bnng together representatives of campuses where no AIDS program exists. O ne of those representatives is Arline Olaza- ba, who was hired in September as the only nurse at Sul Ross State University's student health center. "I have a doctor that comes in every m o rn ­ ing," Olazaba said. "If there aren't any students to see him, he savs 'Good morning. Goodbye.' And out the door " She said efforts at preventing AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases at the Alpine u ni­ versity' have been hampered bv the Texas State University System Board of Regents' decision to forbid distnbution of contraceptive material on campus. "1 can't keep a pamphlet or anything," she said. "N o t even a poster." Jeff Rowe, chairman of the Student Govern­ ment Association's AIDS Awareness Committee at Sam Houston State University, said sexually transmitted diseases have skyrocketed since the regents decision. But Wiley said he sought a compromise to the contraception issue. " W e have to address the board of regents concerns and still offer comprehensive pro­ gram s," Wilev said "W e're kind of looking for that middle, where we can conduct effective pro­ grams and still satisfy the board of regents The system regents control policies of four universities in Texas: SWT, Sul Ross, ^am Hous­ ton, and Angelo State University. Bowl officials fry Rice queen’s appearance Kremlin expresses doubt over Baltic declarations Associated Press fairs M O SC O W The Kremlin sum ­ moned Estonian leaders to Moscow on Thursday and expressed serious doubt about the constitutionality of the tiny Baltic republic's unprece­ dented challenge to its authority In Lithuania, m eanwhile, resi­ dents gathered outside their parlia­ ment building with banners and flags, watching on live television as their legislators convened a session at which they will debate a similar challenge to M oscow 's authority. In Latvia — the third of the res­ tive Baltic republics — residents prepared for dem onstrations and rallies Friday on the 70th anniver­ sary of the birth after World W ar I of their short-lived independent na­ tion. State D epartm ent spokesm an Charles Redman said in W ashing­ ton: "T h e United States does not recognize the forcible incorporation of the Baltic states. ... The people of the Baltic states have been denied their basic hum an rights." The Estonian Supreme Soviet, or parliament, overwhelmingly passed a constitutional a me ndment Wednesday requiring Estonian ap­ proval of any new Soviet law. The parliament also approved a "declaration of sovereignty" assert­ ing Estonia's independence in all areas except defense and foreign af­ M oscow 's first reaction Thursday w as m easured, but deeply skepti­ cal "Taking into consideration that the am endm ent and a number of other docum ents adopted by the Es­ tonian parliament are at variance with the provisions of the current Constitution of the U S S R., the Presidium of the U .S .S R. Supreme Soviet has decided to consider the above-m entioned issue at its next meeting, with representatives of the Estonian republic to be invited," the Tass news agency reported The Presidium is the Soviet gov­ ernm ent's highest executive author­ ity and Gorbachev serves as its chairm an. The Baltics have been angered by am endm ents to the national consti­ tution proposed by Gorbachev, say­ ing they would shift the little power they have to M oscow and eliminate their constitutional right to secede. The Lithuanian parliament met Thursday in a session that will take up a declaration of Lithuanian as the republic's official language, and other legislation following Estonia's example. But Alexander Gelbaf, deputy ed­ itor of the official newspaper So- vietskoya Litva, said in a telephone interview that the parliament took up only budgetary matters. By KAREN ADAMS Daily Texan Staff In past hom ecom ing-queen elections, stu­ dents at Rice University' have picked a variety of representatives — including dogs and a re­ frigerator. But the recent election of econom ics junior M ichael Grubbs created a new problem for Rice officials, who w ere told by C otton Bowl offi­ cials that Grubbs could not attend the bowl as the school's official pageant representative. On Thursday, how ever, G rubbs and runner- up Nancy Jones, an electrical engineering sen­ ior, said athletic departm ent officials had worked out a deal allow ing him to attend the C otton Bowl as Jon es' escort, and Jones would serve as R ice's official representative. "I'm very happy with the way things ended u p ," Jon es said. "I think it's going to be really g o o d ." Andy Karsner, Student A ssociation presi­ d ent, confirm ed G rubbs would serve as Jones' escort. "H e'll be our queen in Dallas, but she'll be w earing the d re ss ," K arsner said. Rice students elected G rubbs as their hom e­ com ing queen Nov. 9, giving him 266 votes. Jon es finished w ith 237 votes. "It would have been cute to see Mike g o ," she said. "I think he really deserves to go. He won the election." Grubbs said he would rather have represent­ ed Rice at the Cotton Bowl, but as queen he would have raised a "stin k " bigger than the one already existing. Steve Moniaci, assistant athletic director for administration, said a Rice policy states that if no female is elected as hom ecom ing queen, the Student Association may either hold a second election or defer the q u een 's selection to the athletic departm ent. The association chose to defer the decision, M oniaci said, because there was not enough time to hold a second election before Cotton Bowl officials had to be notified about R ice's representative. Karsner said that policy had not previously been approved by the association's senate and would be subject to review. "W e 're going to reverse w hatever that policy w as," Karsner said. M oniaci said he expects no problem s from Cotton Bowl officials if G rubbs is allowed to go as an escort. "If that were to happen, then it would be acceptable to th e m ," M oniaci said. C otton Bowl princesses are expected to take an escort, Moniaci said. Margot M erek, a sociology sophom ore, said the idea started in Baker C ollege, one of several residential colleges at institution. But G rubbs also garnered a lot of support from the other colleges, M erek said. that "I thought it would be funny if he w on, so I voted for h im ,” M erek said. G rubbs said there was no special reason be­ hind his candidacy. "It started as a joke," Grubbs said. "S om e­ one told me, 'W hat the hell, go for it,' " he said. "It doesn't really surprise me, because it's something Rice would d o ." Merek said she was "really surprised" Grubbs was not announced at Rice's hom ecom ­ ing gam e Nov. 12 against Baylor. Associated Press Michael Grubbs, Rice homecoming “queen.” G rubbs said, "I was kinda hacked 1 didn t get presented at the hom ecom ing game, but I'm not mad at the athletic departm ent " He said to get on the ballot, he only needed a petition with 25 signatures. A friend, Ben Feig- ert, collected the signatures, Grubbs said. G rubbs' parents congratulated their son, sending him a bouquet red roses. "It was really co o l," Grubbs said. "They both w ent to Rice, so they both understand the a t­ m o sp h ere." I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I » Page 2/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, November 18,1988 I" Cappu ccino regular or decaf (with this coupon exp 11 -28-88) not good with any other offer/one per customer OUR NEW LOCATION NOW OPEN 2 8 1 5 G u a d a lu p e 4 7 8 -9 0 0 3 3 Block* North of Campus FULL LUNCH, DINNER & LA TE NIGHT MENU 11am-11pm SUN-THURS 11am-2am FRIA SAT BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE 471-5244 WANT ADS GOLD RING SALE 6 0 O FF18K $ 4 0 O FF14K $ 2 0 O FF10K $ 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I T h e Da il y T e x a n Permanent Staff Editor Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors News Editor......................... 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Jerry Gernander, Clarence Hill, Garry Leaved Danny Byram Bret Bioomquist R a che l J e n k in s R o b W alker .......................................... .............. ... ..................... . Art Director News Assistants Sports Assistant Sports Writer Entertainment Assistant Editonal Columnists Editorial Assistant Makeup Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Photographers Graphics Assistant Comic Stnp Cartoonists Volunteer Issue Staff Van Garrett Jo se p h Abbott Je a n n e Acton Alan H ines. R o n Lubke, S te p h e n M erelm an. R o b T harp G eorge B rid g e s R a y D ise Gilbert G a rc ia R a lp h Tom linson, B ryan So lie Greg S a p ire C hristian M cD o n a ld M ark G ra y s o n C o rm a Fu entes B na n Shutts. C h a rlsy e Sm ith G e n e z W a ite John M oore Ted Warren Ashley Bogle V an Garrett. Jo hn Keen, Tom King, D avid M arks R o b e rt R odrigu ez Martin W a g ne r Tony S p e a rs L o c a l D isp la y C la s s ifie d D isp la y C la s s ifie d T e le p h o n e S a le s C la s s ifie d T e le p h o n e Se rvice A dvertising D eborah Bannw orth, M atthew B e e c h h o k l Tony C o lv in Betty E llis S a m Hefton D e n ise Jo h n s o n D avid Lutz Beth M itch ell G in a P a d illa Jo d y Ruhberg, C h n s W ilso n A si C hitrarachis. Keith C o lv in R ica rd o R Fe rn a n d e z Art C a m ilo . Ste p ha nie Bush C h a rle s H ym an M elanie N e e l M artm P e llinat Janet Petrie Juanda P o w e ll S u s a n F le isch a k e i Jennifer H e a d Lind a Martin S h aw n M r M in n Toni Schm itt The Daily Texan (U S PS 146 440) a studenl newspaper al The University o< Texas at Austin is published by Texas Student Publications 2500 Whrtis. Austin TX 78705 The Daily Texan is published Monday Tuesday Wednesday, Thursday and Friday except holidays exam penods and when school ts not m session Second das* postage paid at Austin, TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471 4591! at the editorial ottice (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122! or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 1361 For local and national display advertising, call 471 1865 For rtassthed display and national classified display advertising, call 471-8900 For classified word advertising can 471 5244 Entire contents oopynght 1988 Texas Studenl Publications The Daly Texan Mai Subscription Ratea One Semester (Fall or Spnng) Two Sem esters (Fall and Spring) Summer Session One Year (Fall Spnng and Summer) T S P Building C 3 200. or call 471 5083 Send orders and address changes to Texas Student Publications P O Bor D Austin TX 78713 7209 or tt To charge by VISA or MasterCard call 471 508.) POSTMASTER: Send address changes to TSP, P.O Box D Austin. TX 78713-7209 $30 (X 55 00 20 00 75 00 Council OKs contract for financial services City council m em b ers T h u rsd ay ap proved a $200,(XX) co n tract to a com pany th at will h e lp p ro v id e fi­ nancial services for th e new M anor airport. The vote w as 4-0 to aw ard the contract to the firm of Peat M arw ick Main & Co., w ith C oun cilm em bers George H u m p h rey an d Robert B am stone abstaining. In pro v id in g the services, Peat M arw ick will assist the firm of Sver- drup-G ilhane, w hich w as selected earlier this m o n th as project m a n a ­ the a irp o rt's design and ger for land-acquisition p h ase. AustinPlan presents report After m ore th an th re e years of re­ steerin g the A ustinP lan search, com m ittee Thursday p re se n te d its final rep o rt o utlin ing su g gestions for city grow th and d e v elo p m en t to the City C ouncil The report includes plans for land use a n d h o u sin g and h u m an se r­ vices, a s well as ideas for m akin g the a r t s profitable for th e eitv Steering com m ittee co-chairs Jim Sm ith and Brooks K.is^on said the repo rt re p resen ts the culm ination of into a m aintaining th e health and v iv a n ­ in tensiv e" stu d y "very te of o u r city "This h a s b een quite an en d eav o r on behalf of th e h u n d re d s and h u n ­ d r e d s of p eo p le involved. Sm ith said "it fcxuses on th e quality of life, th e quality of b u siness life and the fiscal im pact of the plan C o u n c ilm c m b e r S m oot C arl- Mitchell praised the steering com saving he h o p es it m ittee s w ork will be planning. influential in future city "It's possible that by next su m ­ mer w e can adopt a plan for this city, one that looks dow n the road 20 or 30 years," Carl-Mitchell said. "1 don't think the plan will be adopted verbatim, but I'm very hopeful that the major com ponents can be adopted as is," he said. City delays action on waste City councilm em bers took no ac­ tion Thursday on w hether to hire tw o firm s to deal w ith hazardous w aste at th e city's Seaholm pow er plant. The council w a s set to consider sp e n d in g $338,468 to hire the com ­ panies, but Councilm em ber Max N ofziger, w ho w as out of town and absent from Thursday's m eeting, had requ ested a discussion. Action w as delay ed until the Dec. 1 m eeting. It is su sp ected that old electrical capacitors b u n e d at the plant co n ­ tain p o ly ch lo rin ated biphenyls, or PCBs a potentially toxic material. O th e r d e b r i s b u n e d at the site may contain asb esto s, w hich can cause lung cancer. City ,>taff reco m m en d ed hiring th e firm of C am p, D resser & McKee Inc. of A ustin to co n d u ct a three- m onth stu d y of how to rem ove the toxic m aterials. The stu d v w o u ld cost $265,000 The btaff also recom m ended h ir­ ing A m erl co E nvironm ental Ser- v ices of K ingsville, M o., to clean o u t tw o u n d e rg ro u n d storage tanks at the p la n t at a cost of $73,468 C o m p i l e d hu A l a n H t n e * a n d f t m K e n n e t t l \ i i l y T e x a n St af f \~ y*\ ROSES $8.95 DOZEN open late 'till 8:00! 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IL 60070 C 1 3 8 Thursday’s Dow Jones Industrial Average: UP 13.87 to 2,052.45 Volume: 141.28 million shares W orld & N ation Friday, November 18,1988 Page 3 U.S. to deport Cuban detainees Associated Press WASHINGTON — Justice De­ partment panels set up in the wake of last year's prison riots by Mariel boatlift detainees have reviewed their first 28 cases and plan to send at least 15 of the prisoners back to their native Cuba "in the near fu­ ture," officials said Thursday. The announcem ent aroused the anger of many in the Cuban com ­ munity in Miami, and attorneys representing the prisoners flew to Alabama seeking to halt the repatri­ ation process. The 15 Cuban detainees are being held in a strict "lockdown" in a pen­ itentiary in Talladega, Ala. N o de­ tainee will be scheduled for return to Cuba earlier than 72 hours after the governm ent officially notifies each of the 15 detainees, the Justice Department said. The 15 the departm ent said should be repatriated have convic­ tions ranging from petty larceny to second-degree murder. M ost of them have more than one convic­ tion. The th ree-m em ber panels will u n ­ dertake further consideration of the rem aining 13 detainees in the initial review g roup to determ ine w h e th e r to they should also be re tu rn e d Cuba or be released The panels w ere set u p at th e Jus­ tice D e p a rtm e n t in the wake of last year's prison riots by C u b a n de­ tainees at Atlanta and O akdale, La. The no ting occurred after a U.S. ag reem ent w ith C ub an President Fidel Castro resu m e sending m any of the detainees back to the island. Deportations of Mariel d e­ tainees from the United States to Cuba were su s p e n d e d by Castro in Mav 1985. to The detainees are a m o n g 125,000 people who came to the United States in 1480 in a boatlift from Mar­ iel, Cuba. The vast majority of these law-abiding people have becom e U.S. residents. "The review s conducted by these panels go beyond anything that's required by law or by court order," Cary C opeland, a deputy associate attorney general, told a new s con­ ference. "They're designed to give the detainee and his representative every opportunity to tell the panels anything they feel appropriate in reaching their decisions." Two attorneys w ent to Birming­ ham, A la., to challenge the Justice federal Department's court. action in One of the attorneys, Leo Ochoa, said the expulsions violate the basic U.S. guarantee of due process un­ der the law. In m any cases, Ochoa said, the prisoners were not permitted to meet w ith their attorneys to submit docum ents for the administrative appeals the governm ent agreed to after last Novem ber's riots. George Calhoun, the Justice D e­ partment official overseeing the Mariel Cuban review process, said the panels "decided that on balance ... they could not subject the society to the greater harm" of releasing the detainees. "I think it is ironic that the U.S. governm ent ... chooses to continue on the unfortunate path of deport­ ing people to a country that our own U.N. ambassador has charac­ terized as 'one of the world's dark­ est dungeons,'" said Gary Leshaw, director of the non-profit Atlanta le­ gal aid organization representing Manel detainees. Since June 1987, the INS has a p ­ proved more than 2,400 C ub an d e ­ tainees for parole. An additional 400 detainees have been reco m m e n d e d for release. Close Canadian race could hurt trade pact Associated Press MONTREAL — P n m e Minister Bnan Mulronev desperately needs to sw e e p his native province of Q uebec to w in a m a jonty g ov e rn ­ ment M onday and preserve th e free trade agreem en t he signed with President Reagan. Pressed hard bv o p p o sitio n alle­ gations he sold out C an ad a, Mul- roney has been selling the pact as the nation's " p a s s p o rt to p rospe n - tv,” an "in s tru m e n t of economic ex­ p an sion." The choice is simple, M ulronev tells crowds: "John th e R ip per” — Liberal Partv leader John Turner, or "Brian the Builder.” M ulronev has tn e d hard to por­ tray Turner as anti-Am erican and anti-progress and points the prosperity th a t has m arked his four vears in office. to His Progressive C on serv ativ e Par­ tv m u s t win 148 of the 295 parlia­ mentary seats to e n su re the agree­ ment takes effect Jan. 1, eliminating tariffs b etw een the w orld 's tw o larg­ est trading partners over a 10-vear period. It w as already p assed by th e U.S. C ongress but can't take effect until Canadian layvmakers a p p ro v e it Q uebec has 75 seats in the House of C o m m o n s, second only as a bloc to the 99 seats of O ntario, w h e re op ­ position to the trade pact is strong­ er. The debate over free trade has electrified the cam paign since Mul- roney dissolved Parliament Oct. 1. At th e time, he a p peared headed for an easy victory. The Uiberals, long a d o m in a n t force in C anadian politics, had sagged to w h at seem ed to be a battle w ith the socialist N ew Democratic Party for r u n n e r-u p sta­ tus. But in a m atter of weeks, T u rn er's persistent attacks on the free trade a greem ent as a threat to C anadian sovereignty a n d identity h ave re­ vived his chances. Polls indicate more C a n a d ia n s o ppose the agree­ ment th a n s u p p o rt it. The polls also pu t the Uiberals and Progressive Conservatives in a dead heat. S u p p o rt for free trade has been strongest in French-speaking Q u e ­ bec, secure in its cultural identity, but T u rn e r has by no m eans conced­ ed the province. leader w as The opposition in Montreal on W e d n e sd a y night and charged the prim e minister is will­ ing to sacrifice textile workers, gar­ m ent wrorkers, food w orkers and farmers "on th e altar of free trade." M ulronev a n d oth er supporters maintain C anada is m atu re eno ugh to com pete efficiently with its p o w ­ erful so u th e rn neighbor The p n m e m inister will sp e n d the w eekend on a final cam paign swing through Quebec, e n d in g up in Baie- C om eaue for election day Miners dem onstrate ethnic support Associated Press Miners marched to the provincia capita! of Kosovo Yugoslavia, Thursday to protest the resignation of the top two ethnic Albanian leaders The Tanjug news agency said Kacusa Jasari. the president of Kosovo s Com­ munist Party, announced her resignation which must be approved by the party presidium. Jasari said Azem Vlasi will no longer be a member of Kosovo s presidium. The two have been the main target of resignation demands from Serbia’s Communist Party, which has been attempting to tighten control of Kosovo South Africa bans right-wing group Asaooatec) Press JOHANNESBURG South Mrn » I he g,»y i t s hrst ban on a em m ent Thursday im posed nght-w m g extremist grou p ami the ex poli e man w hose deadly sh«x»ting spree p ro m p te d tht crackdown w as sent to s mental lu pit ii t- ■ tests Law and O r d e r Minister Adriaan V !>. >'k banned the W hite Liberation M ovem ent t sn ail whit» ’su p re m a c ist g r o u p invokin> th# san e em ergen cy regulations that have b* en used igan st í l a . V ant)-apartheid organizations Barend Strvdom the23-vear o M g u n m .il w h o lulled si x blacks in Pretoria on lu e s d a v h a s not been linked to the W hite lib e ra tio n M ovem ent but belongs to the net» Nazi A tnkaner Kesistai n influential Movement, a much group Vlok, w h o prom ised a broad «.rackdown on nght-w ing extremists Ixvause of the ram page, did not explain why only th< smaller gniup was banned larger more Strydom w h o quit the national polict tori < m Februarv w hile fating misconduct t barges, w a in Pretoria on charge^ of arraigned Thursday m u r d e n n g six blacks a n d w o u n d i n g 17 W i t n e s s e s said he la u g h e d as h e w a lk e d t h r o u g h th e hea rt of th e capital city T u e s d a y , s h o o ti n g hi s victim s fro m close r a n g e w ith an a u t o m a t ic p is ­ tol S tr y d o m w h o s m iled t h r o u g h o u t the h e a r in g , a is sent to W e s k o p p ie s H osp ita l for V) d a y s of >bservation a n d o r d e r e d to r e a p p e a r in co u rt I)ec 1 v The W h ite L iberation M o v e m e n t w a s form e d in 1985 b ut did n o t c o m e to public n otic e until lux ’ Its le a d e r l o h a n S ch ab o rt said it h a d m o re th a n 1 ODD m e m b e r s b u t many m o r e s y m p a t h i z ­ ers \ s i d e from a few rallies a n d an a t t e m p t to m a n h t h r o u g h a m ultiracial area List year, little h a s b ee n h e a r d from the o r g a n iz a tio n . S ch ab o rt a b io c h e m ist w as is s u e d w ith re ­ strictions T h u rs d a y c o n f in in g him to th e area a r o u n d his h o m e t o w n ot Brits a n d b a rrin g him from a d d r e s s i n g m o r e th a n 11) p e o p l e at a tim e l i e said the g o v e r n m e n t 's ac tio n r e d u c e d th e 'o u tle t tor f ru stra tio n of w hite S o u th A fricans \ o w w e c a n n o t c on trol p e o p le w h o are w o r ­ ried a b o u t their race survival S c h a b o rt said Some of them could organize u n d e r g ro u n d Schabort's g ro u p h a s called for e xpulsion of all Jewish and Indian ‘south Africans and the re­ moval of all blacks from white urban centers, including the "clearing o ut' of Soweto, w here 2.5 million blacks live near Johannesburg Schabort said he blamed the g o v e rn m e n t for I u esday s rampage. Members of the resistance m o v e m e n t fre­ quently dress in khaki uniforms and w ear sw as­ tika-type em blem s and w eap ons. Strvdom , w h o w ore a khaki outfit at his ar­ raignment, said he rejected the cou rt's authority Speaking in \frikaan s, strv d o m told the court, it com m unists such as (Anglican Archbishop] D esm o nd Tutu a n d (former am b a ssa d o r to the I mted k in g d o m 1 Denis Worrall are arrested, then i will cooperate I do not hav e any interest in ap pe a rin g before this court u n d e r the current state of g o v e rn m en t.' Since Feb 25, anti-apartheid organizations have been ban n ed G o v e rn m e n t critics have asked w hy right-wing white organizations that a pp ear to e sp o u se violence are not b an ned Bhutto follows political lead of Asian women Associated Press NEW DELHI, India Bena/ir Bhutto of Pakistan is following th« traditional route to p o w e r by worn en politicians m the Asian subcon tinent She capitalized on family t i e s and played on th e em otio ns ot c row ds who remembered her executed ta ther, P n m e Minister Zulhkat Alt Bhutto But an iron will behind the tears served her w ell in her foray into tlu* male-dominated political a rena in a region where most w om en hav e yet to achieve economic educational and professional pant\ Like the daughters and w idow s of fallen leaders in India, Bangladesh and Sn Lanka she is a savvy, char­ ismatic, intelligent stu dent of poll tics w h o graduated into leadership ranks in her o w n right The most fam ous and the one who left the d eep est mark o n her o w n nation and on the world w a s Indira G a n ­ dhi of India G a n d h i w as considered a pli­ able voting ladv a n d ideal the c o m p r o rn i s t* candidate w hen the squ abb ling cronies of her Bhutto f a t h e r , l a t e Prime Minister iavvaharlai N ehru , had to anoint a new leader of In­ dia s d o m in a n t V ongress Party Sin* proved to be any th in g but pli­ able G an dh i governed India as prime minister from 1%6 to 1477, turning a country w h e re bullock carts and bu v d e s an* major m e a n s of trans- portation inte» a nuclear po w er and a mighty military force The first w o m a n political leader in the Asian sub c on tine nt was Sinma- vo B andaranaike of Sri Lanka Her h usb and , P n m e Minister S.W .R.D Bandaranaike, was assassinated bv a Buddhist m onk in 1954. Bandaranaike go vern ed from 1460 to 1965 a n d again from 197U to 1977, w hen voters rebelled against her stn n g e n t economic controls. But s h e h a s re b o u n d e d again a n d is now the leading opposition can di­ date in the presiden ha 1 election set for Dec. 19 All the w o m e n leaders have in­ voked the m em ories and the p o p u ­ larity, as they perceive it, of their fathers a n d h u s b a n d s But no n e has d on e it as eloquently as Benazir Bhutto. In the o p e n in g chapter of her re­ a u tobiography, p ublished cently 'D aug hter of the East,” she re­ c o u n t s the m om ent of her father's execution, which w a s sanctioned bv the man w ho o v e rth re w him, M oh am m e d Zia ul-Haq: "They killed my father in the ear­ ly m o rn in g h o u r s of April 4, 1979, inside Rawalpindi Central Jail Im­ prisoned with mv m o th e r a few in a d e serte d police miles aw ay training cam p at Sihala, I felt the m o m e n t of mv father's death. ” 1 su d de n lv sat bolt-upright in bed at 2 a m. N o1' th e scream burst th ro u g h throat. 'No!' 1 couldn't breathe, d id n 't want to breathe. 'Papa, Papa!' 1 felt so cold." the knots in my A nd then she resolved to avenge his death , in her oft-repeated cam ­ paign w o rds, by "re sto rin g d e m o c ­ racy in Pakistan.” Toxin poisons Soviet children N ew s In B r ief Associated Press M O SC O W A disease that c aused 127 children in a Ukrainian to w n to lose their hair has been traced to high doses of thalh um, a toxic metal probably carried by acid rain, a new spaper reported Thursday "Since there are no sources of the dis charge of thallium into the e n v iro n m e n t in Chernovtsy and its e n v i r o n s a conclusion was drawn that the chemical w as introd uced to the area by acid ram s in Julv," th e C om ­ munist Party daily Pravda said Despite the conclusion, au thorities are continuing to investigate o th e r possible caus es for the disease, it reported A criminal investigation has been initiated, Pravda said, if individuals indicating that were found to be responsible for thallium poisoning, th ey may face criminal charges Ten industnal operations have been sus­ pended near C hernovtsy, on the Soviet bor­ der with Romania, Pravda said. "However d espite the m easures being tak­ en, it is reported that the num ber of cases of the disease continues to grow," if said The disease was first reported in the Soviet media Nov. 6. On W ednesday, the weekly Uteraturnaya Gazeta said the cause had been traced to thallium, but did not nam e the source. Thallium is a poisonous metallic element that resem bles lead an d is used chiefly in c o m p o u n d s that are in photoelectric cells or in pesticides T hernovtsy is far from the C hernobvl n u ­ clear pow er plant a n d the areas d o w n w in d of it that suffered from radiation c o n ta m in a ­ tion after a 1986 accident. Medical experts called in for the investiga­ tion were study in g the "stra n g e selectivity of the ailment which affected mainly w e a k e n e d children and adolescents with blue eyes and blond hair," Pravda said. Pravda said the children not only lost their hair, but m an v experienced mild neurolog i­ cal d isorders "re su ltin g in irritability a n d hal­ lucinations.” The children affected ranged in age from 5 1/: m o n th s to 14 years Medical experts be ­ lieve the disease has no lingering effects a n d the child ren 's hair will grow back, the re­ ports said. Uteraturnaya Gazeta said m ost of the afflict­ ed children had been taken to hospitals in major Soviet cities for special attention. Som e of the possible sources, the w eekly said, include a Romanian chemical plant about 40 m iles from C hernovtsy or fum es from gasoline to w hich "tricksters" have added thallium. All the sick children's fami­ lies have cars, or live in the area of garages, Uteraturnaya Gaceta said. Associated Press Red Cross representative abducted by 3 in Lebanon SIDON, Uebanon — A Swiss re p re se n t­ ative of the International Red C ross was k id n ap p e d Thursday' in Sidon, an d police said his captors might inten d to sw ap him for an aircraft hijacker held in Sw itzer­ land. Police said an olive-colored car w ith ou t license plates, carry ing three m en, passed a n d sto p p e d Peter W inkler's car at a main traffic circle. Two g u n m e n pulled Winkler, a 32-vear- old Red Cross representative, from the front pa sse ng er seat, keeping their w e a p ­ on s p ointed at his head. They p u s h e d him into the back seat of their car a n d the third assailant d rove it away. WASHINGTON — A stronger Aspirin can endanger pregnancy label warning against the use of aspirin by w om en in the last three m onths of preg­ nancy w as proposed Thursday by the on Food and Drug Administration, grounds that the painkiller can prolong la­ bor and cause bleeding difficulties for both mother and child. Aspirin p ro du c ts currently m u st carry this sta n d a rd preg nancy w arning: "As w ith any drug, if you are p re g n a n t or nursing a baby seek the advice of a health professional before using this p r o d u c t.” This additional w o rding would be re­ quired u n d e r the FDAN proposal: "IM ­ PORTANT: Do not take this pro du ct d u r ­ ing the last three m o n th s of pregnancy unless directed by a doctor Aspirin taken near the tim e of delivery m av cause bleed­ ing problem s in b o th m o th er and child." Ex-Nazi acquitted in deaths BONN, West G e rm a n y — A former Nazi was acquitted T hu rsd a y of complici­ ty in the m u rd e r of 177 French Jew s sent to Auschwitz, a verdict th a t d rew shouts of "Nazi m u rd ere r!" from victims' rela­ tives and spectators. Count M odest Korff w as accused of or­ dering the deportations of Jews from the Chalons-sur-M am e region of northeast­ ern France, w here he served as G estapo chief in 1942 and 1943. State Court Judge Martin Lickfett said the five-member panel decided there w as insufficient evidence to tie Korff to the deaths of 177 people he was accused of deporting. During the trial, Korff claimed he did not know a bout the exterm ination of Jews when he served as G e sta po chief in Nazi- occupied France. The Nazis killed an esti­ mated 6 million Jew s du ring their rule from 1933 to 1945. Kafka original nets $1,980,000 LON DO N — The hand w ritten m anu- senpt of Franz Kafka's The Trial, w hich was sm uggled to safety' d u n n g World War 11 despite th e a u th o r 's dving wish that it be burn ed, sold for a record SI 98 million Thursday. The 316-page text of the novel, which came to symbolize 20th-century totalitari- was b o u g h t at auction by the Ger- amsm state g o v e rn m e n t of Baden-Wuert- man tem berg for 1.1 million p ou nds. Kafka, a C zechoslovak Jew, completed the novel in 1920 and it was published in 1925, a year after he died of tuberculosis at age 41. The novel's hero, Joseph K., who has done nothing wrong, is arrested, tried and executed without ever being told of what he is accused. A spokesm an for the state governm ent in Stuttgart said the manuscript w ould probably go to the German Literature Ar­ chives in Marbach. Page 4/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, November 18,1988 E ditorials V ie w p o in t o p in io n s e x p rt s s o u -■ T h e D a ily T e xa n ore th o s e of the e d ito r a n d th e w n t c ot the a r t , .e the B o a rd ot R e g e n ts or the T h e y are not n e c e s s a rily th e o p in io n s ot th e U n iv e rs ity a d m in is tra tio n T e xa s S tu d e n t Publications Board ot O p eratin g Trustees V i e w p o i n t D isa ssem b led Stop SA before it reorganizes again bly's perennial efforts to redefine and reorganize itself. M ost students don't take much notice of the Student Assem­ The mammoth "Executive Reorganization” of 1987 passed without much hoopla. So did the constitutional changes in the spring of 1988. Now the SA wants to re-re-reorganize itself. Perhaps if we pay attention they will stop, so let's give it a try. It seems SA representatives have told Vice President James Ray that the system is unwieldy and stagnant Ray agrees, calling the new organ­ ization a "com plete failure.” Nice call, James. The question is: Where should the SA go from here? I o find out, it s necessary to look at how they got into this bureaucratic nightmare in the first place. Executive reorganization, the 1987 chapter in the SA's book of tinker­ ing, was the brainchild of student Sen. John C urtis and Hugh Strange, who served as the SA's first attorney general — a position that went unfilled for years because no one dreamed it was necessary. Imagine that. The pair's bill was born of their frustration at the constant fraternizing between the executive and legislative branches of the SA. Prior to Curtis valiant reform, SA senators and volunteers sat on the same committees, debating and administering policy side by side. Obviously, som ething had to be done. So Curtis, Strange and Co. decided to split the branches — the senate would have committees that would decide policy and other Important Stuff, and the executive branch would have departments, staffed by fresh-faced volunteers. At the time, many sensible people said the restructuring was at best superfluous — like rearranging the furniture in the SA lobby — and at worst elitist, since it excluded volunteers from working directly with the senators. Those sensible people were right. Reorganization has only exacerbat­ ed one of the S A ’s chief problem — an inability to retain good volun­ teers. A system that segregates new recruits will likely lose its talents to other organizations — the Texas Union, the college councils, and yes, even The Daily Texan. So if Ray is really interested in improving efficiency and generating ideas, he should merge the departments and committees. But that just takes the SA back to square one. The next step has to go beyond annual face lifts. Last year s reform, in addition to giving college councils a bigger role, was to make the SA more accountable by calling all the senators "representatives, as if a ny­ one on campus gave a damn what name they chose. The SA can't just change names and structures, it has to change the way it treats people. Give them challenging work, listen to their ideas, involve them in the processes usually reserved for the exalted Student Assembly. That kind of change would improve the SA not just in the short run, but for a long time, as student government recruited and retained better, brighter volunteers. Of course, Ray should look at administrative matters and how to make policies more effective. But the greatest structure on earth will be point­ less without fundamental changes in the SA's internal philosophy and external relations. In short, Ray needs to focus on what G eorge Bush so charmingly calls "th e vision th in g ." The SA must know where it wants to go before it can decide the most efficient way to get there. — Kevin M cHargue M0N 60n y - I Hoffc 6 É0RSE 6USH V/ONT CRITICIZE ME ftR AllOMMG MElNSEtF TO B E CARRIED AVAV 8Y SCME SCRBNY, Rlé«T-VIN<3 FUNDAMENTALISTS Revolution makes strange bedfellows A t first glance, the combination appears ludicrous Chícanos Against Military Intervention in 1 atin America and the Palestine Solidarity Committee are jointly pre­ senting a celebration of the 78th anniversary- of the Mexican Revolution and the first anniver­ sary of the Palestinian uprising the intifada But as with all things in life, a scratch below the surface reveals the true substance within The cost of supporting Israel's repression of the Palestinians affects social spending in the United States More than >4 8 billion in annual military aid flows from the I S Treasury to Israeli coffers. Not only h a s the American taxpayer funded the militarization ot our toreign policy , our tux dollars have bankrolled militarization on a glob­ al scale. The social expense of this militarization mad ness weighs heavily on the Latino community which American policy-makers have historical­ ly held at arm'"- length The dropout rate among Mexican-Americans i s estimated at 50 percent with some education officials saving the real s t a t i s t i c is closer to 80 percent. The offúial figures are based on those students w ho complete seventh grade and many Latinos never finish elementary school Money that should go to our schools goes instead for clubs to break the hands of West Bank youths. Funds needed to improve sex ed ucation, which could significantly reduce the teen-age birthrate, ic spent astronomical l ’ S on bullets to murder residents of the Gaza Strip and bulldozers to destroy their homes Of course, other g r o u p s share the burden of reduced social services But Chícanos arc* also R a lph T o m lin s o n TEXAN COLUMNIST burdened with the memory of living as an o c­ linking their hearts with the cupied nation Palestinian upnsing. Rodolofo Acuña, in his book Occupied A m eri­ ca A History of Chícanos, notes that most Mexi­ can- Americans in the 19th century Southwest hxed under American occupation After the United States invented reasons to steal more than half of Mexico's tem torv, Mexican citizens lived as unwilling subjects of the American invite Furo- government Chícanos did not Americans to conquer their homeland As white Americans flooded the Southwest, these former Mexican citizens watched as the new settlers claimed their ancestral lands New like the Texas Rangers, paramilitary groups, were created specifically to repress the Mexican population Palestine suffered the same fate. As the flood ot Jewish settlers grew to a tidal wave, the crushed under Palestinians' homes were bulldozers The Israeli military enforced the rules of the Zionist conquistadors And just as the Mexican citizens who predat ed American settlement soon found themselves subjected to a foreign culture and a govern­ ment run by foreigners, the Palestinians find themselves under similar circumstances in Isra­ el today Parallels also exist between the 1910 Mexican Revolution and the current upnsing m Israel The Mexican Revolution was the first peasant revolt of the 20th century The Mexican people struggled for self-determination and land re form .ire making today the same demands Palestinians Perhaps today there is cause for celebration The hopes ot the unfinished Mexican Revolu tion have risen again The growing popular movement in Mexico, which includes labor ac tivists. students and peasants, has renewed the democratic dreams of the Mexican people These grass-roots groups unified to support the presidential candidacy ot Cuauhtemoc C arde nas, further fueling mass demands for part in patorv democracy The reforms that died with 1 miliano Zapata and Francisco Villa are shining on the horizon Zapata s legacy p u l s e s through the v e i n s ot the oppressed people of Mexico And hopes are rising m Palestine as well Yasser Aratat and the Palestine National C oun cil have declared their nation an independent state The* air is alive with rumors of diplomatic overtures to Israel The m a s s uprising the intifada has emboldened the Palestinians to stand against the Israeli occupation CAMILA and the Palestine Solidante C o m ­ mittee titled their event Building Bndyes from Palestine to Latin Amerua But history has al ready constructed the b r i d g e s Now it s up to the people to meet in the middle and recognize their brothers and sisters TomlttiMm is a goiYrnment senior Where the hell is Ralph Nader when you need him most? P icture this: You're in one of and the ability to teach it are two separate beasts, and they can be criticized separately B r y a n S o l ie TEXAN COLUMNIST spouse, 2 .7 children and a nice hom e with a picket fence. The professor suddenly makes an as­ signment that perks you up. It doesn't particularly matter what the assignm ent is; it's just one that you don't think is neces­ sary or equitable. It startles you out of your revene. But causing a com m otion won't help you here. There's no m ana­ ger to com e over and preen your ruffled feathers. Surprise. The big, ugly cen­ tipede of UT policy has just done its 100-legged tap dance across the sirloin steak of your Am erican dream . OK, the m etaphor's a bit dis­ gusting, but remains: the there is virtually no protection for students, who are the primary consum ers of education. fact Unlike ordinarx consumers stu­ dents have no monev-back g uar­ antee on services rendered We also don't have a consumer-price index to tell us when we re getting screwed. Students confronted with a situ­ ation like the example above have only two choices I hev can either force themselves through the a s signment, investing a great deal ot their time and energy in a project that is of no apparent benefit to them — or they can refuse to do it and take the grade penalty Neither option is even close to acceptable Virtually all education al consumers (read: students) on campus have reached the majority they age of 18 vears Presumably t h e m s e l v e s can d e c i d e is whether a given assignment worthwhile. for The argument that consumers surrender their right to veto the educational product because of the knowledge of the instructoi is pretty weak. Subject knowledge How many times have students heard the epithet "O h , Professor so and So know s his stuff, alright, but he can t teach worth a damn That's why students are often better equipped to decide how they van get the most out of their classes Twelve or more vears of practical experience at the learn­ ing game give students a keen eye tor how they can best go about ab­ sorbing material. It's Professor So and So's, and the administration's, job simply to ensure that they have the oppor­ tunity to absorb the material, not to badger them through an arbi­ trary experience" tnat students don't want, yet are torced to pay for. "educational I he view of students as educa­ tional consum ers began evolving as early as 15 years ago. In early 1973, a subcommittee of the Federal Interagency Com m it­ tee on Education compiled a list ot educational abuses that impinge on students' rights as consumers The list included "arbitrariness in administrative policies, "d iver sion of institutional resources to athletics and other luxuries,” taking advantage of students as cheap labor” and "requinng them to stand in long lines for reg­ istration, etc somebody's One would be hard-pressed to find an institution that wasn't vio­ lating rights with these "abuses ” But just because nghts abuses are universal doesn't mean students should take them lying down. As a college degree becomes more and more critical for success in the working world, it becomes more and more critical for stu­ dents to assert their nghts of pro­ tection as educational consum ers In her presentation at the 11th Annual Conference on the Lead­ ership Role of the Trustee, Joan Stark, professor, offered an inter­ esting anecdote A colleague new to the ^vrdcusc faculty was ap proached bv a voung temale stu­ dent in class The student wanted to know how she would be as sured that she was getting her SHK) worth out of the course Students at the I mversity could benefit from her example Students need to take time to look at the favts and determine it they are indeed getting everything they bargained for From minor f r a u d s like the ster­ ile monotony ot Jester Dormitory' dining, to the more subtle exploi­ tation ot the inflexibility ot course work that's only offered under one professor, L I students must learn to look critically at the brand of education they have contracted to receive And if, under an appraising eve, you notice centipede tracks, for G od's sake send the damned thing back. Solie is a history >ertwr Austin's many fine dining establishm ents, munching cheerfully on a juicy sirloin steak. Suddenly, out of your half-eaten salad com es the biggest, hairiest, downright ugliest insect you've It proceeds across ever seen. w hat's left of your steak, down the table leg, and across the floor. Naturally, you yell, scream and cause a general com m otion. An obsequious coat- and tie-wearing m anager com es over to the table, bobbing his head apologetically. He says he's sorry, pays your tab and probably offers you a free meal next time you com e in. The insect episode fades to an unpleasant memory, and every­ body com es out better for the ex­ perience: you get a free meal, and the manager kept, or did his best to keep, his patron. Fadeout. Now you're in philosophy class, idly daydream ing about the fu­ lovely tw o -car g a ra g e , ture: F ir in g L in e Blond waitresses unite What a nasty response by Robert Den­ nett and friends to Jennifer Bradley's cn- tique of the TV movie The Accused ( " 'Accused' stands inn ocen t,” Firing Line, Thursday). Besides ignoring most of Brad­ ley's points, Dennett assures us that the world is not populated with professionals, saying, "T here are, believe it or not, stu ­ pid, gum -sm acking, bleach-blond w ai­ tresses. If you don't believe m e, go to an IHOP at 2 a.m . on a T h u rsd ay." The Accused makes an attem pt, how ever lame, to point out the readiness of some "professional p eop le" to view working- class women as bimbos. Dennett evidently shares this readiness. He hardly could have adopted a m ore tone toward women who w ork as w aitresses. insulting There are, believe it or not, stupid, eli­ tist, spoiled rich kids. If you don't believe me, try waiting tables at an IHOP at 2 a.m . on a TÍhursday. Monica Brennan Law/public affairs Logic errors plague letter The Daily Pravda? Even Pravda wouldn't print gibberish as mindless as Mike letter McMown's and Russell Holt's (" T he Pravda' strikes again," Firing Line, Thursday). Few starters — and the only FIRST PKTII STEMIHFKHT1 RES OF THE RE AGi Ui/BO SH ED STEALTH E ■R HOMELESS ¿ a m PR06RAM RECORp STEALTH PRU6 PLAN £STEALTH MICSPOUCV M ***a sa s»id— --- :---------- 1 - Fear feeds arms buildup Our generation has seen the gradual transition to a world economy. This goes along with the arrival of our species to the point where we control the resources of the planet, harvesting them to our needs as a species and world society. I would like to point out that, as the world eonomy becomes more tightly inte­ grated and the rivalries between strong nations become acute, there are those who have much to gain from fear. No one wants a war, but making money making tools for making war is big bucks in this most powerful nation, and those who are doing so need you to stay afraid, to keep business up. way to follow the logical errors in their letter is chronologically — there is a vast difference between growth, which has been steady, and "economic exp ansion ," which has not. Our GNP has increased, but only thanks to old-fashioned Keyne­ sian economics. Reagan's spending spree has made FDR look conservative. And, of course, the collapse of the U.S. economy in the late 1970s was energy-re­ lated; somebody forgot to tell the Republi­ cans that we can't afford to be dependent on a foreign oil, and now they're repeating that dreadful mistake. Why should w e ex­ W pect Bush to suddenly decide, after eight years of personal malaise, to com e up with an energy policy? You should also check into a writing class. The diction in the last part of your diatribe is terrible. Still, I see your point. W e'd better get ready to fight World War II all over again. Hitler, Tojo, Stalin and Mao are certainly bigger threats to us now than poverty, homelessness, hunger and substance abuse. Meanwhile, the weapons themselves slowly accumulate in our fields, occasion­ ally getting in the way. And there are oc­ casional leaks from the plutonium plants, and where are we going to put the nasty 1,000-year waste? Occasionally, some of us, practicing in our helicopters to fight the enemy, crash and die. To keep these internal risks and losses acceptable to; Americans, our fear of the enemy must be constantly renewed. * T-shirts' racism offensive "Black by Popular D em and ." This slo­ gan has been printed on T-shirts and is displayed throughout the UT cam pus by black students The slogan, however, seems to be creating the same segregarion that the civil nghts m ovem ent seeks to eradicate But, my black co-students, times have changed. No longer is there segregation of races in sports, governm ent and housing. Therefore, why are T-shirts being sold in the lobby of Jester C enter that proclaim "Black by Popular D em and" and "Black to the Future?" Is this not claiming superiori­ ty and dom inance? C om e on, "Popular D em and?” How does one dem and to be black? If students of the white race were to w ear shirts that said, "W hite by God-given Right?" Would this not create a fury am ong the black stu­ dents? It certainly would. I am also sure that the shirt would not be allowed to be printed after.. UT students and the UT administration must look and realize what mood this is creating on campus. If blacks want recog­ nition, they must think of some other way to create it. Mark McGee Government Trains Gallagher Biochemistry Brad McKinney Business T h e Da il y TEXAN/Friday, November 18.1988/Page 8 All-you-can-eat buffet $2" Now you can satisfy your Longhorn appetite with a Tex­ as-sized meal for a very small price. Introducing the multi­ item buffet at Pizza Hut®, now available on Sundays from 5:30-8:00 p.m. and on Tuesday evenings from 5:30-8:00 p.m. It’s a great Italian feast at a great American price! You get all-you-can-eat Pan or Thin ’N Crispy® pizza, spaghetti with savory sauce, hot garlic bread and a salad bar. Come to the Pizza Hut® buffet...and come hungry! Sunday 5:30 ’til 8:00 p.m. Tuesday 5:30 ’til 8:00 p.m. C elebrate Tradition With a Balfour Class Ring H ours M on-Fri 8:30-5:30 Sat. 10:00-300 DEADLINE-THANKSGIVING DAY $40 Deposit Required 2304 Guadalupe 476-8767 DELIVERY COUPON 1 MEDIUM: THIN CRUST PAN PIZZA HAND TOSSED $ 5 » 9 (and 1 Topping) Good at: 1811 Guadalupe i> r i i \ f k \ 320-8000 Expires 11/22/88 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5244 Smokers try to outrun addiction By TONY SPEARS Special to the Texan You can't sm oke and run at the sam e time. That w as the principle behind Thursday's 2.2-mile Longhorn H ealthy Lung Walk sponsored by the Stu­ dent Health Center in conjunction with the Great American Sm okeout. The event attracted 50 people. "It w as hopefully to draw som e sm okers out," said Kim Toom ey, a kinesiology senior. "It's to give them som ething to do during the day so they won't light up." S tu d e n ts an d faculty follow ed San Jacinto Boulevard to M artin L u th er King Jr B oulevard an d retu rn e d to cam pus d o w n S peedw ay. Brian A lper, go v ern m en t junior, cam e in first in just less th a n 10 m in u tes. "I quit sm o k in g a b o u t a year ago, successfully," said A lper, 22, w h o sm oked from age 13 until he sto p p ed cold turkey at 21. "I ru n , I w ork o ut from tim e to tim e, and I eat h ealth ier n o w as a p art of it." Jennifer W hite, physical ed u catio n junior, said she began sm oking five years ago as "a w ay to fit in and have so m eth in g to d o ." Ironically, W hite decid ed to run an d has quit sm oking for several days at a time because it interferes w ith her running. The 12th Annual Great American Sm okeout was sponsored nationally by the American Cancer Society, which calls sm oking the N o. 1 cause of lung cancer. Kessler, a health educator for the health center, said 1984's Sm okeout proved that such events can work. That year, 38 percent of U.S. sm okers tried to quit, and of those, 5 percent — 3.1 million people — succeeded. The health center offers a "Quit Sm oking Program" for students only, in w hich students receive individual counseling with a health educator at the student's pace. Kessler said the $15 cost covers tw o books for the course, which uses a form of behavioral modification. "N ico tine also increases the h eart ra te ," said Scott Zetka, a ph arm acy senior. "It is a self-ad m in istered a d ­ diction in w hich you control the d osage by h o w d e ep you sm o k e." Besides health problem s, sm oking is n o t as socially acceptable as it once w as, said Betty G a m e r, an e d u c a ­ tion senior. G am er, w h o has been sm o kin g for 17 years since she w as 13 — q u it for the d ay and w o rk ed at the S m okeout carnival on the W est Mall. "T h at w as the in' th in g to d o ," said G am er. "It w as cool. I got 'in .' N ow , I sm oke a pack a d a y ." Students go to camp for Maccontest By LINDA MILCH Daily Texan Staff UT M acintosh u sers are the apple of at least one co m p an y 's eve To heig h ten stu d e n t aw aren ess of the A pple M acintosh c o m p u te rs, Co is sp o n so rin g a cam paign c o n ­ test for eight S o u th w estern u n iv e r­ sities Garv Wilcox, UT p rofessor of a d ­ v ertisin g , are charged w ith researching the best wav to reach n o n -u sers an d p o st­ t e a m s said th e testing to d eterm in e th e cam p aig n 's results. The 12 stu d e n ts ch o sen by Wilcox picked as a them e C am p M acintosh, a tw o-day fair featu ring w ays to use personal co m p u ters, the benefits of the UT M icrocom puter C e n te r and A p p le's S tu d en t L oan-to-O w n p ro ­ gram , said Laura H e rn a n d e z , an a d ­ vertising senior Patty Perez, an adv ertisin g se n ­ ior, said m e m b e r s of U niversity M a­ cintosh U sers C ro u p an d Project a gro u p of faculty and staff Q uest in terested in v arious c o m p u te r a p ­ plications — perform ed d e m o n stra ­ tions. Wilcox said th e g ro u p will p re se n t an explanation of th e cam p aig n and its results in Dallas on Dec. 2. The w inn in g school receives a M acin­ tosh co m p u ter laboratory. Perez said she expected th e UT team to win the com petition. "I know w e re going to w in ," Perez said "If we w in w e 're going to let evervone know ab ou t it.' Balfour TURKEY DAY SALE BEVO'S tour Gas Ring Center 2304 G u a d a l u p e 476-8767 Balfour. Xo out U P TO $ 8 5 ° « O F F /// so mtinx iÜ unÍon m ullí Mill Caribbean Culture Celebration Texas Union Ballroom November 19, 9:00 p.m. Live Music with Steel Power Admission $2.00 Come dance, eat & be happy! Play Caribbean Trivia & Win Prizes For more information call 471-1945. Friday, November 18, 1988 Page 6 U n iv e r sit y ACT to revamp tests By RON LUBKE Daily Texan Staff The American College Testing Program will begin providing universities with more detailed admissions-test scores for the fresh­ man class of 1990, an ACT director said Thursday. “ College faculty members wanted more in­ formation than we could give them for place­ ment pu rposes," said Carolyn Kostelecky, director of the ACT Southwest Region Kostelecky said the ACT v. ill calculate sub­ scores within three of the four sections of the tests. There will be two score breakdowns in the English section, three in math, and two in reading. Even though colleges will receive a more detailed set of scores, the basic scoring scale of 1 to 36 will not be changed, she said. Neal Hartman, UT associate director of freshman adm issions, said the University did not call for more detailed scores from the testing companies such as ACT and the Col­ lege Board — which oversees the content of the Scholastic Aptitude Test — because of the University's admission policy. “ UT has been generally satisfied with the SAT and the ACT because we use it in con- juction with the high school academic per­ formance and class ranking," Hartman said. In addition to more detailed scores, ACT will add a science reasoning section in 1990. The reading and math sections will place more em phasis on writing and problem-solv­ ing skills, and the social studies section will be discontinued. Since the old and new tests will not be comparable, ACT will publish a conversion chart. Hartman said he expected no appreciable difference between scores on the revised and current tests. Kostelecky said the ACT program started the review system five years ago to assess the test's role in education. “ We wanted to verifv — with all the edu­ cation reform going on — what we were doing was still right," she said. "We found what we were doing was quite good and we want to do it better." Following the ACT's lead, the College Board is conducting a review of the SAT to see whether the test should undergo major changes. The review project is expected to take three years, and any changes would be implemented within three to five years. Bursting with enthusiasm D u r a u i i y w i i n c i i i i i u a i a a m Christine M aziar, assistant professor of com- dents cheer the winning m achine in a R ube puter and electrical engineering, and UT stu- Goldberg balloon popping contest. Ted Warren Daily Texan Staff Conference on fighting hunger draws low turnout By STEPHEN MERELMAN Daily Texan Staff A “ Strategies for Ending Hunger" confer­ ence Thursday, billed as a “ major, campus- wide educational effort," drew sparse atten­ dance despite the presence of several major figures in the fight against hunger. The conference, co-sponsored by the B'nai B'rith Hillel and Students for Ending Hunger, attracted about 20 people to the Texas Union Building Ballroom, including the six panel­ ists. The panelists included U.S. Rep. Mickey Leland, D-Houston and chairman of the House Select Committee on Hunger, and Lar­ ry Simon, field director tor the American Jew­ ish World Service. Originally planned to involve keynote a d ­ dresses, two workshop sessions and a panel discussion, the conference became an infor­ mal “ round-table" discussion moderated bv Rabbi Kerry Baker, director of Hillel. “ I'm verv disappointed we had such a small turnout," Baker said. “ We have 50,tXX) students. There were hundreds of fliers, an advertisement in ¡he Datlu I'exan 1 would not be honest if 1 were to sav I was not disap­ pointed. "1 feel bad that these verv eminent people were here and so few took advantage of their resources," he said, adding, "We will not be deterred." Baker said the "silver lining of the confer­ ence was the high quality of discourse among those few present. Leland addressed the problem of "political starvation" — the withholding of food for and needv nations on an ideological basis urged that the United States "open its bread­ basket in a more generous wav.' Jeff Brookner, liberal a r t s sophomore, said his fraternity. Zeta Beta Tau, had adopted an elementary schixil c la s s that ate dinner at the fraternity house occasionally. "When they come over to the house, there are people who are amazed that there are lit vear-olds who eat more than we do because they never see that much finxi " he said "I wonder what these people would do if they were taken to the depths of a ghetto he said. coupon, ROFFLER SCHOOL OF HAIR DESIGN SHAMPOO a CUT « § BLOW DRY S o r v t c e t p # f1 o f T tt # d b y supervised students) 5339 Sum #! 45S-2620J IMMIGRATION H-l Work V isas for professionals Labor Certifications for Post-doctoral Research Associates and Faculty PAUL PARSONS r . A ttorn ey A t Law Board Certified immigration St Nationality Texas Hoard Of Legal Specialization 704 R IO G R A N D E 477-7887 EVERY WOMAN S CONCERN C o n f i d e n t ia l. P r o f e s s i o n a l R e p r o d u c t iv e C a r e s A doption S e rv ic e s s F re e Pregn an cy T esting s Problem P regn an cy C oun seling • A bortion S e rv ic e s s B irth C ontrol • Pap Test ,nr, ,Q7n i s m I REPRODUCTIVE SERVICES IS • B oard Certified O b-Gynecologists • l icensed Nursing Staff • Experienced Counselors • On R R Shuttle 458-8274 1009 E. 40th “My friends moved into Riverpark Apartments. I wish I had.” T h e Da i l y T e x a n MTV scouts video talent By JEANNE ACTON Daily Texan Staff It can be disjointed, musically rhythmic but not linear or logical. MTV is lookinj for the unusual in the world of videos for its College Talent Search. About 30 students gathered in Beauford H. Jester Center Auditori­ um Thursday to view a MTV video showing ideas for the contest. Until Jan. 30, UT students, along with students from 10 other univer­ sities or colleges, have the chance to enter their video program s in the talent search contest, said Scott Kentros, the University's MTV rep­ resentative. "The reason for the contest is that MTV is looking for talent before stu ­ d e n t s make it b ig," Kentros said. "Basically, they are scouting for tal­ ent." Kentros said the videos can be concerts, sitcoms, docum entaries, talk shows, animation, music vi­ deos almost anything, especially the bizarre Most of the students at the pres­ entation had not started their p ro j­ ects yet but came to hear the ideas and guidelines But o t h e r s came prepared w ith ideas Jeff Mayoff, a radio-television- film junior, said the plot line for his video is a “ really bizarre story about the sniper, kind of a documentary interacted with a musical melodra­ m a." Mavoff said his video will be a long-form video, which means it will be 10 to V) minutes long. BAUSCH & LOMB BAUSCH & LOMB CONTACT LENS SPECIAL BUY ONE PAIR RECEIVE SPARE PAIR FREE Sofspin . . . U„ U., O., O.. Tinted . . . Optim a E W . Toric . . Bifocals. . . . . 2pr/59°° 2 pr/6900 2 pp/109" 2 pp/89" 2pr/189" 2 pp/199" • A ll other brands available at re­ duced pnces also e Doctor s Prescription required e Exam s available at our office e Hurry, offer subject to change ( eyeca re} 441-9771 1909 E. Riverside In The Rtverhills Shopping Center Offering the latest m contacl lens technology At afford abie poces 476-1000 1904 Guadalupe MLK at Guadalupe Graduate Study in M olecular and Cell Biology at Texas A&M University Cell Differentiation & Developmental Biology DNA-Protein Interactions Gene Expression & Control Molecular Virology & Oncology Parasitology Plant & Animal Genetic Engineering Signal Transduction I Transdu Graduate research fellowships ($12,000/year) are available for an inter-disciplinary program. Ph.D. degrees are offered in the Colleges of Agriculture, Medicine, Science and Veterinary Medicine. For additional information: Dr. Terry L. Thomas Molecular & Cell Biology Program Department of Biology Texas A&M University College Station, TX 77843 (409) 845-0184 * PRE LEASING FOR SPRING 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms starting at *219 JLontJon Square Riverpark Apartments 2400 Town Lake Circle 1101 Trace Drive 445-5122 444-3917 Immediate occupancy! 0 /Fl'Oinr» VnHJ, T h e Da i l y T e x a n State & L ocal Friday, November 18,1906 Page 7 Austinite guilty in UT student rape By MIKE ERICKSON Daily Texan Staff An A ustin man faces 99 years in prison after a Travis C ounty jury Thursday found him guilty of sexu ­ ally assaulting a UT student last M ay. The jury of n in e men and three w om en took about three hours to find Jam es L. W illiam s, 22, of % 19-B Point Vista Place, guilty of attacking a UT student w hile she w as looking for her dog near her N ortheast A us­ tin home. According to court docum ents, W illiams raped the student and then cut her w ith a knife on the neck and stom ach. After finding W illiam s guilty, the |ury heard testim ony for the se n ­ tencing phase of the trial After d e ­ liberating an additional hour, it re­ turned w ith the sentence o f 99 years and no fine During the sen tencing hearing, I think you have to ask yourself, ‘How many op­ portunities is he going to get to commit these acts in Travis County?’ ’ — Ashton Cumberbatch, assistant district attorney Assistant District A ttorney Ashton C um berbatch urged the jury to give W illiam s 99 years or life im prison­ m ent. The possible punishm ent for aggravated sexual assualt, a first-de­ gree felony, ranges from five to 99 years or life im prisonm ent and up to a $10,000 fine. C um berbatch told the jury that W illiam s, who was on probation for a 1984 sexual assault w hen he a t­ tacked the UT student, should not be given another chance at proba­ tion or earlv release "1 think you have to ask yourself, 'H ow m any opportunities is he going to get to com m it these acts in Travis C ounty?' " Cum berbatch asked. C um berbatch said d efense argu­ m ents that W illiams would be un­ able to reform him self in prison should not be heeded by the jury. " I hope he does ch a n g e," Cum ­ berbatch said. "B u t it needs to take place in the Texas D epartm ent of C orrections, not on the streets of Travis C o u n ty ." G ordon Rubinett, W illiams' attor­ ney, asked the jury to show mercy on his client. "A ll of us can look for the better in our fellow hum an b ein g s," he said. "T h ere can be no rehabilitation w ithout h o p e ." In addition to the guilty verdict, W illiam s' probation for the 1984 as­ sault was revoked. State District Judge Jon W isser to serve 10 sentenced W illiams years in TEXT for the 1984 assault. W hen convicted of that assault in February 1986, W illiams was sen­ tenced to 10 years in prison. But W illiams was placed on probation after serving five m onths in TDC. He will get credit for time spent in TEXT w hen he returns to prison for the 1984 assault. W illiams will serve his sentences consecutively. Prosecutors flew the victim of the 1984 assault to Austin so she could testify during the sentencing phase of the trial. Two of W illiams' form er proba­ tion officers, several police officers and a form er job supervisor also tes­ tified. All that the w itnesses testified Williams did not have a reputation as a law -abiding citizen. Rubinett said Williams can appeal the verdict, but, as a normal prac­ tice, the court will appoint a differ­ ent attorney to handle the appeal. Police return suspect in robberies of elderly to Austin By ROBERT THARP Daily Texan Staff A 28-year-old man suspected of robbing 17 elderly Austinites was returned to Austin Thurvdav from S in Antonio, w here he had been treated for a bullet wound lames Eibbs Jr charged with one count of robbery with bodilv in jury-, a second-degree felony was returned bv w arrant officers Thurs dav afternoon, said 8gt Ralph IV LaFuente of the Austin Police Dc partment iibbs would not answ er ques tions about the robbery until a law ver was present, D eLaFuente said cam e from the gun fired bv an eld ­ erly robbery' victim last w eek, De- l^aFuente said Dan Collins, 83, was w'alkmg in an Austin apartm ent complex park­ lot about 9 20 a.m . Sunday ing w hen a man knocked him to the ground and took h i s wallet, s a id po­ lice spokesm an C 1 Adams Collins then drew a 22-caliber pistol from his belt and fired two shots at the man, according to a M unicipal Court affidavit Sunday night, doctors at the Medical C enter Hospital in San A n­ tonio told Austin police they had adm itted a man with a gunshot wound A bullet pulled from I i b E leg At the hospital, San Antonio p o ­ lice could not detain Iibbs because he had not been charged with the robbery at the tim e, D eLaFuente said "T h e only thing we had on him at the time was a m isdem eanor theft w arran t," he said Tibbs learned from relatives that police were on the way "s o he just walked o u t," Adams said O n W ednesday, San Antonio po­ lice arrested Tibbs at a relative's house and charged him with the robbery. O n W ednesday he was moved to the Bexar Countv Jail with no bond set Police will question Tibbs about a string of robberies of elderly A ustin­ ites, EVLaFuente said. Since Janu ­ ary, police have recorded 17 similar cnm es, he said. "W e re going to pull up all of the old cases to ask him about th e m ," D eLaFuente said. O ver the next few days, police will contact robbery victims and ask them to identify Tibbs in a lineup, he said. But D eLaFuente said he doubted some victims would be able to link Tibbs to the cn m es because of the nature of the attacks — the robber approached and subdued victims from behind. "M o st of those people w ere elder­ ly," D eLaFuente said, "and 1 don't know if they're going to be able to pick him o u t." Lawyer: Drug bill ineffective, costly By BARBARA LINKIN Daily Texan Staff Proposed legislation to increase penalties for drug-related crimes would be costly to the state and do little to deter crim e, a leading Tex­ as defense attorney said Thurs­ day. The bill package, w hich will be introduced during th e upcoming Legislative centers on session, three major issues — expanding capital punishm ent include drug-related m urders, pushing life im prisonm ent w ithout parole for repeat narcotics traffickers and creating a state statute that would make it easier to prosecute those involved with organized crime. to Rep. Dan M orales, D-San Anto­ nio, w ho is putting th e package to­ gether at the request of Speaker of said the H ou se G ib L ew is, W ednesday legislation the new would be an effective way to deal with drug-related crim es. But Gerry G oldstein, a San An­ tonio lawer and adjunct professor at the UT School of Law, said in­ creasing the penalties for drug crim es will mean more prisoners in already-crow ded correctional fa­ cilities. "H istorically, these kinds of so­ lutions really haven't proved to be very effective and in essence have been extrem ely costly to the pub­ lic," he said. "W e already have a prison system that's bursting at the seam s." How ever, Morales said part of the package includes a proposal for a m ajor expansion of the Texas D epartm ent of Corrections. Besides possible overcrow ding, legislation G oldstein would bring other costs. said the Increasing the penalties for drug trafficking will drive drug prices higher, he said, and that would raise the num ber of crim es stem m ­ ing from criminal activity, such as burglary to support a drug habit. G oldstein said a death penalty for drug-related m urders also would not be as effective as law m akers hope. "The idea that killing people w ho kill people is som ehow going ... dem ago- to deter crime g u ery ," he said. Politicians are pushing the death penalty because crim e prevention has becom e a popular issue, G oldstein said. is "I think it's a drum they are going to beat on h a rd ," he said. But Morales said the state is fac­ ing "th e greatest threat to the w el­ fare, safety and future of our citi­ z e n s." "C learly, past efforts aimed at reducing the narcotics flow in T ex­ as have been u nsuccessfu l," M or­ ales said. The legislation, which would al­ low state officials to seize property derived from organized criminal activity, would shut down drug kingpins, he said. The legislation does not focus on casual users. G oldstein said the best way to fight drug crime is to center on ed­ u c a tio n . BEEN NAILED LATELY? 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SOCI ETY 474 17## SIM GUADALUPE 1911 LI See Page 8 444-5554 W e s t e r n D a y s C e l e b r a t io n R e g is te r to Win Y ou r Own LIVE TEXAS LONGHORN a t y o u r lo c a l BURGER KING “W f i e s t a f l o w e r s Feast your eyes. f j b a n l t i y u iruf i J flliu rS cL u j. / Joivm Ler 24 Teleflora’s Shaker Basket Bouquet Free local delivery M995 or anywhere in the U.S. *24® ROSES 1 dozen arranged w/free Fudge Love Candy Free local delivery *29* 1 doz. cash & carry *8“ 0f WEEKLY CUT FLOWER SPECIALS 3.991 15.99 2.99 Daisies - per bunch Alstromeria - per bunch Liatris - per bunch Cash & Carry 990 each Hours: M-F 8-6 Sat. 9-5 3830 N. LAMAR 453-7619 A p . I8 I 8 REGISTER TODAY FOR YOUR OWN L IV E IO N 6 H O R N AT BURGER KING AUSTIN, SAN MARCOS, ROUND ROCK DRAWING 12-1-88 r r i « re p rese n ta tio n only. CHILI D O UBLE C H E E S E B U R G E R Two fia me-broiled burgers, topped with WolMSrand* ChiU, fresh onions and real melted ch eese. B U L L S -E Y E B A R B E C U E BU R G ER Two flame-broiled burgers on a Western bun. With melted cheese and sizzling bacon. All topped with a smoky barbecue sauce-West- em style. — ^ REGISTRATION FORM NAME ADDRESS BURGER KING PHONE # AGE FILL OUT THIS FORM AND DROP INTO BURGER KING WEEKEND T W O D A Y S SATURDAY & SUNDAY NOVEMBER, 19 - 20 NOON TO 6:00 p.m. FREE SHOE RENTAL U T IO R E Q U IR E D downstairs in The Texas Union Friday, November 18, 1988 Page 8 Sports UT’s luck may change with stadium name Injured Horns pit winning season hopes against Bears By JERRY GERNANDER Daily T e x a n Staff TCU faces A&M, page 9. T he B ook O n TEXAS-BAYLOR T h e Da il y T e x a n 1988 opener: Down Under visits Texas By JERRY GERNANDER Daily Texan Staff The Texas Longhorns have gone through all the preseason basketball formalities — learning new Coach Tom Penders' system , playing in­ trasquad scrimmages and m eeting the press at Southw est Conference Media Day. A final one remains — the season- opening exhibition. The Longhorns get that out of the way at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Erwin Center against the Adelaide (Australia) 36ers. A d­ m ission is free, and Penders and the plavers will be available for an auto­ graph session an hour before tipoff. ■ ■ ' T' MEN’S : ; Í B asketball "1 just w a n t to g e t u n d e r w a y . W e 'v e b e e n practicing s o lo n g ,' junior g u a rd T ravis M a y s said fol­ lo w i n g T h u rsd a y 's p ractice "It'll be a c h a n c e to get p e o p l e in th e s t a n d s o n o u r side A d e la id e will be p la v in g its s e v ­ e n t h g a m e of a t w o - w e e k U . S . tour I ht 9x-rs w e r e 3-2 b efore p la v in g B aylor T h u r s d a y Their w i n s h a v e c o m e a g a in s t San Jose State, Santa Clara a n d Rice A d e la id e is led bv n-fvnit-11-im h ce n te r Mark Bradtke w h o p la v e d o n Australia s O l v m p u team A m er ica n s A1 G r e e n w h o p la v e d at LSL an d M ark D a v is a 6-6 fo r w a r d w h o p la v e d at O ld D o m in i o n , a l s o start for A d e la id e A g a in s t R u e Bradtke tallied 21 p o in ts e ig h t r e b o u n d s a n d fiv e b lo c k e d s h o t s a n d G r e e n a n d D a v is ea ch scored 15 p o in t s A d e la id e is a fast b r e a k in g team like th e 1 o n g h o r n s í h e Triers ou tre h o u n d e d R u e 44 28 and o v e r c a m e a h a lf to n e d e h c it W e d n e s d a y w ith a 51-34 s c o r in g a d v a n t a g e in th e s e c ­ o n d half I e x a s lost its e x h ib itio n t w o vea rs a n o th e r A u str a lia n a ga in st the Brisbane B u lle ts a g e te a m W h e n y o u plav an e x h ib i t i o n it s n ot a m atter ot b e i n g e m ­ g a m e barra', sed M a v s said A n e x h i b i ­ tion g a m e is b a sic a lh to s h o w you w h e r e v o u 'r e at 3 o u ¡ust l o o k at th e film s a n d e v a lu a t e w h e r e s o u re at a n d w h ere vou can im p r o v e I e x a s w ill start M a v s at th e o f f ­ gu a rd p o s i t io n , Lance Blanks at sm all fo rw a rd , A lv in H o g g s at p o w ­ er fo rw ard an d Jos** N a s s a r at c e n ­ ter said w h e t h e r C o u rtn ey Jeans or Joey \N right will start at p o in t g u a r d P e n d e r s h a s n ot vet 'E v er y b o d y s tryin g to learn th e s y s t e m M a v s said I tell v o u w h at W e re w o r k i n g real hard, an d that s th e p o s i tiv e t h i n g fa ­ tig u ed a n d w e re p u s h i n g th r o u g h it I s e e n o t h i n g but p o s i t i v e s ig n s C o a c h s e e m s to th in k so, to o said W o get M a v s Time: 1 p m TV: none Radio: KLBJ AM 590 Une: Texas by 1 Records: Texas is 4-5 2 3 if' SWC Bayior is 5-5. 1 5 KEY MATCHUPS Texas vs. Brucev«e-Eddy-Waco triangle — Something happens to Texas on the two-hour bus trip to W aco which goes through the small towns of BrucevHle and t ddy The Longhorns have won ¡ust once in W aco since 1972 In 1974 Texas was rolling at the half. 24-7, but lost the gam e 34-24 That v c to ry keyed Baylor's test conference cham pí In 1978 it was generally expected that Texas had 'he better team onship m 50 years But the Longhorns ¡ost big 38 14 In 1980, Baylor shut out Texas 16-0 Texas battered rush defense vs. Baylor's battered rushing game — Texas oe tensive end B obby Duncum pulled a groin m uscle m p ra ctice W ednesday and is ques tionable It he misses he would be the sixth player from the defensive line not available for this gam e l in e b a ckei Duane D uncum is questionable still nursing a shou'der m|ury The Bears have been tut hard by miunes at every position in clu d in g running back Eldwin Raphe and Anthony Ray have not been 100 percent this season Baylor pride vs. Texas pride — Both teams st* have a chance at a w inning record but not m uch else Neither is m bow' contention which leaves pride and com petitive dnve as the only rea 1 m otivation: for this gam e The reputation of Texas secondary vs. its most recent performance — The young l onghorn defensive b a ckfie id finally showed signs of m aturing as! week against iw up this week ' B a y lo r quarterba* k Brad G oebe hasn t had TCI i But w hich o r e w a lot of heg ‘his sea: in pick aparf a secondary on a go o d la y • t>ut THE EDGE Quarterba. k Running pac k; Receivers Oflensive Une Defensive bon Linebackers Secundar y Kicking jame UT BAYLOR P* p. ►>* i-** p 4 Brad G o e t* S the pest bung afo ul fhi Her Last wee»- Dam e Norris was bai. k ■ 1967 to»" Texas ’ as be"<” speed d ept' and hands Baylor's ‘00*. 1 better recen* ,• puts* very young v* »‘*as rray ' ave B ut.¡ames f ra1 v* V'xas *' * ■ rTl •• ner v “ s *»*♦•- ' .oe • m d Gary Jcx? ¥ -nnt> make t • os 11 ■ .** 1 : UT s ret mem rr ¡sf communicate but i* * Senior linebacker Britt Hager has extended the aura of Texas' No. 60. an d Leiding from C o . u h McWulli ams, 1 realized t h i s was a n u m b e r you need to live u p to S»»u d o n 't know t h i n g s like th.it until v u get there through adversity But he sees it as a team taking on the personality ot one its m o s t fervent leaders 0 .* ’v T0O1 StlP Speaking of expectations 1988 has been a d isa p p o in tin g senior year tor the mat w h o will he leav ing a s on e o f linebackers in levas h i s t o r v t h e m o s t acclaimed these to win ” 1 w an t tw o gam es b ut m o s t of all 1 gist w ant u s to be rem e m b e red a s the L o ng ho rn s w ho never gave u p ,' Hager said last McWilliams agrees that the 1988 1 o n g h o rn s hav e consistently tought s a i d I think he s plaving hard er Ix* cause he s had to plav b e hind a dtf terent tackle every week McWilli of I h e a m s op portunities h e s hud to make tac kies h a s been a lot less h u i van t blame h i m w h e n thev re th row ing the hxitbul! u p a n d d o w n t h e field But w e 'v e plaved well against run rung teams n u m b e r I h a t ' s Bnt t 1 l a g e r No coach, th a t's No 60 COME VISIT OUR NEW RIVERSIDE STORE AND ENJOY OUR DINE-IN LUNCH SPECIALS FOR OCTOBER... SUB, CHIPS AND TEA ALL U CAN EAT BUFFET $ 0 9 9 L PIZZA, TEA AND SALAD BAS $ Q L 8 5 ENJOY ALL FOOTBALL AND BASEBALL GAMES ON OUR BIG SCREEN TV WITH THE FOLLOWING SPECIALS DURING ALL GAMES... * 2 ° ° PITCHERS $6 W1T0PPWG PIZZA THERE ARE A FEW REASONS BEHIND OW GROWING SUCCESS... ® WE USE MORE INGREDIENTS ON OUR PIZZA THAN ANYONE IN THE CITY. •WE DON T SKIMP LIKE OUR COMPETITORS Wt TAKf PRIDF IN DELIVT RiNO QUALITY FOOD © WE USE ONLY THE HIGHEST QUALITY PRODUCTS. •WE USE ONLY 100% WHOLE MU K MOZZARELLA CHEESf •WE BUY FRESH PRODUCE AND SLICE DAILY •WE BUY ONLY HIGH QUALITY MEATS. NOT CHEAP PROCESSED BEEF AND SAUSAGE THAT OTHERS USE <3> WE HAVE A CHOICE OF 3 TYPES OF DOUGH (PAN, THIN AND NEW YORK). © WE MATCH A LL COMPETITORS SPECIALS AND COUPONS. •OUR COMPETITORS ARE DOMINO S. PIZZA HUT AND GATTTS © WE ALSO DELIVER OTHER GOODIES. •SUBS. SALADS. CALZONES. STROMBOLIS AND BEER © FAST, FREE DELIVERY. •99% OF OUR PIZZAS ARE DELIVERED IN 30 MINUTES OR LESS © INEXPENSIVE PRICES. •EVEN THOUGH WE RLE ON QUALITY INGREDIENTS, WE ARE LESS EXPEN SIVE THAN OUR COMPETITORS BECAUSE WE LET OUR PRODUCT SELL IT SELF WITHOUT SUCK TV ADS © WE ARE OPEN LATER THAN ANYONE IN THE CITY. •SUN-THUR 1100 A M - 2 00 A M 1100 A M - 4 00 A M •FR1 & SAT MONDAY MED 2-ITEM PIZZA AN0 & SOFT DRINKS $6.99 WEEKLY SPECIALS TUESDAY LARGE 1-ITEM PIZZA $6.06 WEDNESDAY LARGE 3-ITEM PIZZA AND 4 SOFT DRINKS $9.79 H aving failed, for the most part, to win at Baylor Stadium for the last decade and a half, the Texas Long­ horns received a break this year. Baylor has changed the nam e of the facility to Floyd Casey S tadium . That may be as tough as playing for hom ecom ing,” I'exas Coach David McWilliams said. "That's tough to have to go in a n d play at the dedication.” Actually, the dedication took place tw o w eeks ago at halftime of the hom ecom ing game against Arkansas, w hen the Bears trailed the Razorbacks 16-3. In their first o p p o rtu n ity , the Bears struck out in Casey 17-0. The L onghorns have won just once in Waco since 1974, a n d will try to break the spell of what McWilliams referred to earlier this week as "the Waco-Bruceville- Eddy Triangle” at 1 p.m . Saturday. "My feeling is, if it's tw o or three times you probably do n t think too much about it,” McWilliams said. "But for 15 years it's been that way. Som etim es you get to w orrying about that.” Baylor Coach Grant Teaff does not think too much of the trend , considering Texas has not lost at home against Bavlor since 1951, w ith a 17-0-1 record since then. 1 d o n t think that w here the gam e is played has a n y th in g to do with the ou tcom e,” Teaff said. "Most of the time, the better team wins. It just so happens in the past tew years, w e've had the better team in Waco and they ve been better in A u stin .” O n e team will see its chances for a w inning season gone at g a m e 's end. Baylor, 5-5 overall, is playing its season finale w hile Texas, 4-5, must win Saturday to keep hopes of a w inning record alive. Baylor w as wirdess in the Southw est Conference be- fore beating Rice a w eek ago, and Iexas ended a four- game losing streak against TCU last Saturday. "I don't think you can say one game makes you strong, but w e did play better,” McWilliams said. "I hope we're on a little surge. It is difficult for either team to be on a surge with the injury situation. Baylor has lost nine starters tor the season, including defensive end Eugene Hall and fullback Eric Gilstrap, both of w hom are extrem ely questionable tor Satur­ day's game. Free safety Mike Welch (a preseason all SWC pick), tight end Steve Stutsm an, tailback Michael Moore, defensive tackle Greg Oefinger, linebackers Darren Ligon and John Godfrey, and tight end Scott Michael all have gone dow n for the count. On the Texas side, three of the top tour defensive tackles are out for the year, along with two w h o were m oved from other positions to provide help at tackle. Both teams' running gam es are re turning to form Eldwin Raphel rushed for 108 yards last w eek And Texas' Darron Norris and Eric Metcalf com bined for 248 yards rushing last week. "Against TCU thev plaved a lot of eight-m an front, and against Rice thev played an eight-m an fro n t,” McWilliams said. "The last two gam es, I'm not sure but th.it w e've run the ball better than w e've thrown it I'm hoping we 11 make them be a little more balanced in w h at they do against us defensively.” Metcalf has not practiced m u c h t h i s w eek w i t h h i s sprained ankle still tender. He will start in the bac kfield but will not return kickoffs and p u n ts C h r i s Samuels and Willie Mack Garza will return p unts, and Samuels and Tony Jones will return kickoffs The legendary 60s Hager tackles job of filling jersey number’s tradition, adds name to ah-inspiring list of Longhorn standouts By CLARENCE E. HILL JR. Daily Texan Staff Jette named in OSU case, page 9. in to the Nobis- In less than 10 davs refer­ Treadvvell-Leiding factor ence the w earing of Texas L onghorn Jersey No. 60 will forever be altered. time, linebacker Britt that Hager —- the 1988 All-American cand id ate and current wrearer cat No. 60 w h o s e Longhorn career will d ra w to a close Thanksgiving Day will be p ro m o ted to ranks of a In L onghorn legend. C onseq uently , anv athlete w ho dons the old ”six-oh” at the Univer­ sity of Texas will be ultim ately as­ signed the stigma of having to live up the standards of N obis, Treadwell, Leiding, and y es — Hager. to Yet this com es as a surprise to no one, as the hallmark of Hager is tru­ ly a vision realized. in Wav back during the m onth of the year 1984, Texas March coaches were in the m idst of the an­ nual recruiting scramble — an event that m eans visits, phone calls and long hours of him clips. Each time, then Longhorn Coach Fred Akers and defensive coordina­ tor David McWilliams view ed a cer­ tain O dessa Permian linebacker ter­ rorizing opposing ballcarriers, a burnt orange N o. 60 popped into their psyche. They saw him make 22 tackles in the Cotton Bowl against Oklahoma, 28 against TCU, and 26 against the Texas A&M A ggies. This w as the guy, they reasoned at the time, w ho could carry on the legacy set forth by the revered N o. 60 — the num ­ ber of tw o time All-American Tom ­ my Nobis (1964-65), 1962 All-Am eri­ can Johnny Treadwell, and 1983 All- American Jeff Leiding. The number is a virtual institution thus, great itself at Texas. And things are expected of its wearer. Five years and more than 450 tac­ kles (a UT career record) later, the brash Mojo has more than lived up to initial expectations, w hile prov­ ing his coaches quite prophetic. Hager etched his name in history as a junior w hen he recorded 187 tac­ kles to break the school single-sea­ son record. He also ha^ recorded do u b le fig ures in tackles 19 t im e s , including five gam es w ith 20 or m o re tackles — marks that accent the o pinion McWilliams, not UT's h e a d coach, had years ago about H ager Thev are also on e s that make Mi Williams feel Britt a n d the No 6(1 are a match m ade in h e a v e n b u rn t orange heaven. "It there is a better linebacker in the nation, 1 haven t s e n : him McWilliams said " H e 's a tre m e n ­ do u s leader lor us and 1 really ap t ft s precíate the w av he c o m petes a L onghorn thro u g h a n d th ro u g h Hager has seem ingly h a n d le d the so-called pressure of th< Nohis- Treadwell-Leidm g factor with rela five ease. But he savs it was a m atter naivete instead of having u e m his veins. "I d id n t know the tradition of 60 w hen it was given to me Hagt r said. "I d id n t follow Texas football until 1 was a junior or senior in high school. 1 just had better things to do than w atch football on Saturday W hen I heard ot I n ldvvel! Nobis Don't let airport parking gobble-up your wallet TAKE CAPITAL METRO TO THE AIRPORT THIS THANKSGIVING Going home for Thanksgiving? Capital Metro has 42 daily connections to Robert Mueller Airport. Rus you'll save $5.50 a day to park your car. Catch the #20 Manor Rd./LBJ High route on Red River at MLK. Just show your UT student ID and you won't have to pay a fare. And don’t worry about lost luggage, because it 's welcome on-boardl For additional schedule and boarding location Information, call 474-1200 #20 MANOR RD./LBJ HIGH SCHEDULE I W E E K D A Y S E R V IC E S A T U R D A Y S ER V IC E T H A N K S G IV IN G & S U N D A Y ARRIVE DEPARTS RED RIVER MUELLER AT M.K AIRPORT ARRIVE DEPARTS REDRIVER MUELLER AIRPORT AT MLK DEPARTS REDRIVER AT MLK AMIVE MUELLER AI990CT DEPARTS RED RIVER AT MLK ARRIVE MUELLER AIRPORT ATX) A A 20 A 6:41 A 7 01 A 7 21 A 7-41 A 8 01 A 8:21 A 841 A 9:11 A 941 A 10.11 A 1041 A 11:11 A 1141 A 12:11 9 1241 9 1:119 1419 2:119 2 4 2 9 34)2 9 8:12 A 8:34 A 8:68 A 7:16 A 7:36 A 7:66 A 6:16 A 6:36 A 6:64 A 9:24 A 9:64 A 10:24 A 10:64 A 11.24 A 11.-64 A 12:24 9 12:64 9 1:24 9 144 9 2 2 4 9 2 *6 9 3:169 3:229 3:42 9 4:02 9 4:17 9 4:37 9 4:67 9 6:17 9 6:37 9 6:66 9 8:16 9 8:369 8:66 9 7:16 9 7469 •4)69 6:369 94)69 9:369 104)69 10:369 1)4)69 124XA 3 * 6 9 3:66 9 4:16 9 4*1 9 4*1 9 6:11 9 6*1 9 649 9 64)7 9 6 *7 9 647 9 7 *7 9 7 *7 9 7 *7 9 6:179 •4 7 9 9:179 9 4 7 9 10:17 9 10479 11:179 12:17A BUSES WILL RUN EVERY 20 MINUTES DURING THIS INTERVAL 8.4)9 A 7 *9 A 6:09 A 9:09 A 9:39 A 10:10 A 1040 A 6:109 6409 6 *9 9 6:39 9 7 *9 9 6 *9 9 9 *9 9 10*99 11*99 6*1 A 7*1 A 1*1 A 9*1 A 9:62 A 10*3 A 10*3 A 6 * 3 9 6:63 9 6*1 9 6*1 9 7 * 1 9 6*1 9 9*1 9 10*1 9 11*1 9 U fX r a i/v ic n x ) ^ ~ ^ --------- 6 *7 A 9 *7 A 10:08 A 11*8 A 12:08 9 14)89 24)89 3:08 9 44)8 9 6 *8 9 4 *7 9 74)8 9 84)8 9 8:19 A 9.19 A 10:21 A 11:21 A 12:21 9 1*1 9 2:21 9 3*1 9 4*1 9 6:21 9 4:19 9 7:18 9 •:1B 9 FREE DELIVERY DOWNTOWN 444-5554 OR 474-1700 1911A E. RIVERSIDE (ACROSS FROM MINIMAX) $1.00 OFF A 12'* PIZZA COUPON NOT VAI ID W SPECIALS $2.00 O FF A 15' PIZZA COUPON NOT VALID W SPECIALS $2.00 Any 2 OR M ORE TOPPING PIZZA COUPON NOT VALID W SPECIALS THE BIPLANE T W 0 12" PIZZAS— $8.77 NO COUPON IS NECESSARY FOR THESE TWO CHEESE PIZZAS JUST PAY A UTTLE MORE AND MAKE THESE PIZZAS EXACTLY HOW YOU WANT THEM WITH THE TOP­ PINGS OF YOUR CHOICE TV station alleges Jette’s violations at OSU From staff and wire reports OKLAHOM A CITY — An N CAA investiga­ tion turned up 63 alleged rules violations in the including Oklahoma State football program , some that involved current Texas defensive coor­ dinator Paul Jette, an Oklahoma City television station reported. The station said jette, then an assistant coach with the Cow boys, w as named several times in the official inquiry for such alleged violations as offering recruits $600 for ostrich skin boots to allegedly telling a recruit "h e had a briefcase with money to buy a recruit a car upon gradua­ tio n ." Jette voluntarily testified Sunday before the N CA A's Infractions Com m ittee at the hearings in Tucson, A riz., but he will not com m ent on the situation until the N CAA officially announces its conclusions. KOCO-TV said W ednesday the alleged viola­ tions included cash paym ents and automobiles provided to at least one player, and that several players participated in gam es while academically ineligible. The Tulsa World on Sept. 4 published a similar report outlining the sam e NCAA allegations. Oklahoma State officials met with the N CA A's Com m ittee on Infractions last weekend to dis­ cuss the allegations. KOCO-TV said the NCAA allegations primari­ ly concerned wide receiver H art Lee D ykes, w ho allegedly received $5,000 cash, a new car and monthly paym ents for signing with Oklahoma State in a scheme directed by former recruiting coordinator Willie Anderson. The station also reported that the NCAA al­ leged that cash and a cost-free car were offered to former Mangum High School star Robert Lee Conner, a lineman who signed with Oklahoma and now is at a Texas junior college. The station said the N CA A alleged that most of the academic problems occurred from 1982 through 1985. The NCAA, the station reported, contends John Chesley, Arthur Price, Harry Roberts, Ken Zachary, Charles Craw ford, Tavie Ham pton, Mark Moore and Dana Hawkins all participated in several regular season and postseason gam es while they were academically ineligible. Underachieving TCU returns to hostile A&M territory THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, November 18,1988/Page 9 ’ *i r Graduates! Your Caps v ^and Gowns -J Are Available. swe nothing new to th e SW C. Form er Arkansas basketball head coach Ed­ die Sutton used to draw the ire of his colleagues, especially ex-Texas basketball head coach Abe Lem ons, by allegedly intim idating the offi­ cials. W ith Sherrill, W acker's com plaint has been running up the score. Not coincidentally, Sutton used to dom i­ nate his nvals in the w in-loss co l­ umn the sam e way Sh em ll has since he revived the program at A&M The events at noon Saturday at Kvle Field don't prom ise to be much d ifferent for W ack er's Horned Frogs With 32 seniors and talent rated better than the 4-6 record it has posted, TCU will try to end the season on a positive note for the first time since 1975 when the Frogs beat Rice for their only win of the year. "N o question, this year has been disappointing at tim es, frustrating at tim es," W acker said. "It's been a season in which we have not achieved the things we wanted to. And the people I feel mo*t sorry for is our sen io rs." The only suspense left for the Ag­ gies is sophom ore running back Darren Lew is' pursuit of Earl C am p­ b ell's SWC single-season rushing record of 1,744 yards. Lewis needs 498 yards to break it and A&M will give him every opportunity to do so against the Frogs, Texas and Ala­ bama. For a team with a 5-4 record and looking forward to plenty of spare time during th e holidays because of NCAA probation, the Aggies were surprisingly outspoken after last w eek's loss to Arkansas. But Sherrill tned to tone dow n som e of his play­ ers' assertions that A&M is still the best team in the conference. "A gainst A rkansas, we kept shooting ourselves in the foot and you can't beat anybody playing like th a t," Sherrill said. "W e simply did the not execute. A rkansas won game and th at's w hat counts. W e have no ex cu se s." They w on't need any Saturday against TCU. L C O L L E G E G R A D U A T I O N A C C E S S O R I E S ’ The Graduate Located in WRllRCC'S BOOKSTORE By GARRY LEAVELL Daily Texan Staff If Texas A&M C oach lackie Sh er­ rill ever confirm s o ne of the co n ­ stant rumors that he is bound for Alabama, the NFL or w hatever su c­ cess-starved com m unity needs a football savior, nobodv else around the Southw est C onference will lose any sleep In fact, one guy in particular, TCU Coach Jim W acker, might pri­ vately dance a little |ig For one thing, W acker has not beaten S h er­ in his previous five rill's Aggies years at TCU. And the gam es have not been particularly’ close A&M wins by an average margin of more than 30 points per gam e W acker especially took exception to the treatm ent his team received on its last visit to C ollege Station, a 74-10 pasting in 1986 This sort of family squabbling is 9 B r e c k e n r i d g e Ski-In Condos & Lifts Doble Mall • 469-0999 i FREE INITIAL LEGAL I CONSULTATION iwiit mo m 1 — RATION ASSISTANCE • m • A rt .rtjs > ‘¡msxm ^mmcrrn * ty-ww* flooairo • .Mx* mytxMar mmfo • c* Swua • C«OMi *>-oroomg S • 1 • Gloria Lee Vera Attorney St Lew s. 443-4788 I I 2512 S. §4-36, Ste. 100. All— l, TX 71704 Tjuasuawwi court met NmRmtotiMimim 1 ■ t a r t U9MT 0 6 D A M M B I It 1 N d r t 1 A -mawy H A ffP B H t f t ■. PmOmU «1 iwiw * PHONO M iff 1 1 « *a*Mct«(CNm IW 1N KIU BCE* 13 a* feotfMrt a* MoOanrf PEGAN ST. LAOCt 13 at N aw l to Toms ST PAUU O lt l M O f 1 aa. PttMNt •* OwHMMr « I * 1 . 1 9 - . A * o o o >i S N O NB I H » 13 at Product ol Nmoy A U M W im aH R O O O O C K 6 lor 3 . 4 9 f t oo. b o w l to EHnawto . . A O KTO M tFCfT SPATEN * lor 0 . 4 9 ft oí. HiOid oI •onnony . , A ANCHOR STEAM BEER * lor 3 . 3 9 It oo to»— to tow owe lac a , , A ■AM OOO PAU A ll . Hot 3 . 7 9 t Mor batttobodicloI to^ond . . BOMBAY e s t r T /u e /n f II 38 By JEFF TURRENTINE Daily Texan Staff It is 19th-century Paris, and Violetta is a beautiful courtesan to the Baron Douphal. Immersed in a world of endless parties and wasteful extravagance, she secretly longs to be genuinely loved by one man — the dashing but sincere Alfredo. For him, she would give up all of the luxury and ele­ gance that mark her life as the best-kept woman in Paris. 1 rom this simple storyline Guiseppe Ver­ di crafted his most famous opera, and one of the most beautiful and acclaimed operas Opera of all time, La Traviata. Its tale of lovers brought together and to m apart by fate, set to Verdi's lush score, has attracted opera- goers worldwide for more than a century. The Austin Lyric O pera's production of La Traviata is a feast for eves and ears, a rich weaving of fantastic sets, lavish costumes, moving music and heavenly voices. The re­ sult is one of those all-too-rare performanc­ es in which everything — sound, visuals, mood — comes together perfectly to create a stirring theatrical experience. The opera is sung in the original Italian, with supertitles displaved on a screen at the top of the stage. "Supertitles" perform the same function as subtitles do in foreign movies; throughout the opera, the translat­ ed libretto appears above for all to read. This opens the door of understanding for everyone, and — unlike having the voices sung in English — doesn't corrupt the in­ Arts & E ntertainm ent T h e Da il y T e x a n r ^ O delivers exquisite version of ‘La Traviata’ with grace and believability. Likewise, bari­ tone Brian Steele, who plays Alfredo's fa­ ther, mixes a genuine element of sympathy with his patriarchal pride — and his voice subtlv captures the change that occurs in his character by the opera's finish. The opening night of Im Traviata will also mark the 80th birthday of baritone Jess Walters, who also teaches at the University. His performance of Dr. Grenville is remark­ able in its ow n nght; the fact that Walters is 80 years old and can still sing with such authority is, quite simplv, unbelievable. faux paintings The sets, originally designed for the Eng­ lish National Opera and used by the inter­ nationally renowned Houston Grand O p­ era, are every bit as elaborate and detailed as the r e s t of the production, down to the rococo the w a l l s The costuming and choreography are also outstanding, although the mata­ d o r s dance sequence at the beginning of the third act could have been much tighter. But more than likely, the aw kwardness was merely a »ds O f course sint'- Bukowski himself left such retroactive internalization out ot tlw ongina) storv the director must pull tt out ot the blue IV rud- dere turns to conventions so com ­ it s not even apparent mon whether or not he s trying to get am thing extra out of the storv that His tailure to make the effort, or perhaps just tus inability to make it. is a bit disappointing Bukowski's stones gave /*>:> the potential to be beautiful and an moving experience As it stands, it's Hist beautiful cxtraordmarilv l i n e is a D o# From H ell, sh o w ­ ing at Dobie C inema, 2021 G ua­ dalupe St. See W all, page 11 Chris WaR — cowboy > DOMINO S PIZZA DELIVERS THE BEST PIZZA DEALS! I $5.51 Any medium (12H) pizza with your favorite topping only $5.51 plus tax. UT 'til 2am Mon-Thurs, 'til 3am Friday & Saturday | Please mention coupon when ordering. One coupon per order. Expires 12/31/88 | CAMPUS Now Delivers | | ■ ■ 476-7181 447-6681 | 404 W. 26th St. | 474-7676 458-9101 j ‘ ------ 4 1 1 5 Guadalupe | 913 N. Lamar m /Cm E-------- J ® 1931 E. Oltorf DT Ad 10.88 (D196) They might be funny These guvs might thrill you, might chill you, might do abso­ lutely nothing for you, but They Might Be Giants (who call them­ selves "th e Hall and Oates of m u­ sic") will be at Liberty Lunch Fri­ day night. Their tour is in support of their latest album, Lincoln, said by sev­ eral to be one of the better alterna­ this year. tive records released Come to the Lunch and hear their classics like Youth Culture Killed My Dog, (She Was A) Hotel Detective and Don’t L et’s Start, plus a batch of new favorites. Several p e o p le w h o loiter around The Daily Texan offices doing nothing but bothering us the Dash Rip Rock swear shows Friday and Saturday nights at Club Cairo will rival any other show in town this year. T h e Chron­ that icle feels similarly, if that means anything to you. For total sound saturation, show up at Club Islas (217 C ongress Ave.) Sunday at 3 p.m. w here the Benefit for a Probable C ause will be going down all damn day long. 11 bands (including Hoi Polloi, Hickoids, Weeds, Mind Splinters and Alejandro Escovedo and the Wannabees), three famous Austin DJs and special guests Spot and Ken Lieck. Major show, dude. There's some other great shows this weekend, too: Robert Farl Keen (Cactus Cafe, Friday and Sat­ urday night); Club Sandwich's Class Reunion (Mercado Caribe, Friday and Saturday); Joe Ely and Alejandro Escovedo (Cactus Cafe, Sunday); and a KTSB benefit (we need that frequency, y'know ; Mer­ cado Caribe, Saturday). By LEE NICHOLS Daily Texan Staff Music Jerry Jeff Walker can sure pick 'em. The legendary Austin singer has spent his career not only making great music, but also exposing many of his talented, folk-singing friends to country fans around the nation. Gary P. N unn, Ray Wylie Hubbard and Butch Hancock are among the local singer/songwriters whom Walker has helped achieve cult status, if not outnght fame. latest is a Montana native named Chris Wall — a newcomer to the world of mu­ sic, and a verv talented one at that. "p ro ject'' Walker's Walker was first told about Wall by none other than Guy Clark, and he managed to hear him after playing a gig in the Big Sky State. Jerry Jeff was so impressed that he brought him back to Austin, with plans to cover his material on a new album and let him open up a few shows tonight's Para­ mount Theatre performance). It was a very big break for Wall, and very sudden as well: Despite being in his "mid-to-late 30s," he has only been performing for two years. (including "I started in July of '8 6 , " Wall x, XX, & XXX. Chili, that is. Also serving Tex-Mex Specialties and All-American Hamburgers. 1409 Lavaca • 472-2828 THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, November 18,1988/Page 11 OPEN 24 HOURS k in k o 's the copy center 2346 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TX 78705 4 7 6 -4 6 5 4 2917 MEDICAL ARTS AUSTIN, TX 78705 4 7 6-3242 Graduates! Your Announcements Are Available Racine’s Phaedra Molíéres November 12 • December 11 (Phaedra on n m ■ ail rad dajril 'Misanthrope on odd aiunbarad days) Wednesday through ftoaday Bnaanartona lot Wm Tho Acting WwUo, Ml I Bnmot Rond Wall Continued from page 10 " I w a s ju st c o m in g d o w n here to do b u sin e ss w ith Jerry J e ff," Wall said , " a n d I h ad n o in tention of stay in g . But S u sa n h ad oth er id e a s — sh e w an ted to tak e ch arg e, a s sh e 's w on t to d o . "I like A u stin so m u ch b etter than N a sh v ille ," h e said . "Y o u h av e that liberal, o p e n -m in d ed attitu d e ab ou t th in gs. The C o n tin en tal is o n e o f m y favorite clu b s. I d o n 't know w hy — it's kinda w eird an d b o h em ian an d I like it." C h ris W all's futu re is so m e w h at u p in the air right now . H e sa id S u ­ san W alker p la n s to sh o p so m e of h is s o n g s aro u n d N ash v ille, b u t he can 't predict how the com m ercial p ro d u c e rs will react. W h atever h a p ­ p en s, Wall k n o w s m u sic will b e­ com e a p erm an en t p art of his future — an d p erh ap s it is the life he w an t­ ed all alon g: "1 saw H an k S n o w w hen I w as ab ou t 12 y e ars old in L iv in g sto n , M on tan a, an d he h ad that suit on with and th ose w ag o n w h eels rh in esto n es, an d I sa id 'that looks like a lot of fun to m e' T he C h ris W all B an d o p e n s up for Jerry Je ff W alker at the P ara­ m ou n t T h e atre F rid ay night at 8 p .m . T ic k e ts are $11 and $15 at U T T M ticket o u tlets. .Cactus-' Tonight & Saturday Robert Earl Keen Sunday Spec ial Soto Appearance Jo e Ely special guest: A lt ja a d r o u coeeét T e x a s I ’nion 24th & G u a d a l u p e D epartm ent of DRAMA Coile^eof 1 mr kn\ the Unmeoay o* Trio* o* AgUm LA RONDE by Arthur Schnrt/lef romancing t«-ctós to aughs when ten A er, >,nters scorcb 'he s’age *n a roundelay (♦love ■’'Vo s'hemad tbearstoaat the a ’*• *ne arty > the evening - we" you ge* 'he dea Nov 1112. 16-19 B Wan Payn* Theatre ; ,e adutfs iind that the only way out ot act * % s rhfough?tx? >utr O' iy « wha* modem children s o xyamm.ng s a atX)ut Nov 19 »t 2 end 4 p.m. A Nov 20 at 2 p m Opera Lab Theatre ’ -;*efs on va’»* at aft U H M TicfcetCenters Zharge a T enet 4 r7 6060 Ca 471-1444 for more n* VThtflOn BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE.. WANT AD5...471-5244 B A T S H E V A ! IN A ROOM SOMEWHERE : v u/ar Zeder Modern Dance from Israel Tuaaday. November 22 8 p.m. Baas Concert Halt Cherge-e-Ticket: 477-6060 Advance Salas H2 $10 19 50 18 f AN $10 75 $9 Group Odoount and Smcuot jb A m T cfcwts •! a UTT M T*cfcwfC*«Mr'S HUSK FOR LESS! IN LINCOLN VILLAGE ACA e f O H O NEXTT0B00KST0P 4 0 H - | £ | Z Monday-Saturday 10-10 Sunday 12-7 TEXAS C i u ) SALE (í OnC1-*1 1PN;) $2.00 off single full length CDs 10% off Multi disc sets $1.00 off Pre-Owned CDs Students Only Muat preaent vattd student I D Good Hoe 18-23 1988 • Austin s First ft ontf Exclusive a VIP Program CO store (Buy 30 get 10% off or life)* • Price, Service. Selection • Buy 12 Get One Free Program' • Pre-owned Oiecs $8 00-110.00*' • Trade PrivSegea • Programa Coincida ~ Uaad Dlaca Quarsntaed. Avaiabia tor Listening A Claaning Bafore Purchase a Preview PoScy-Usten Before You Buy • Feet Special Orders • Hard to And items a Staffed by fu l time CD experts T O V / V / X / X X 4 1 C O L L E G E G R A D U A T I O N A C C E S S O R I E S ’ The Graduate Located in WALLACE'S BOOKSTOAC 1XENO " s o u n d , in c . SOUND & LIGHTING RENTALS DELIVERY • SET UP • ENGINEERS • AVAILABLE BOOK YOUR EVENT EARLY • THANKSGIVING • CHRISTMAS ■ NEW YEARS ■ LARGEST SOUND & LIGHTING RENTAL COMPANY IN AUSTIN STOP BY OUR SHOWROOM 3615 Willow Springs Road • Austin, Texas 78704 (512)447-1103 T H A N K S G IV IN G T A K E O U T C eleb rate y our T h a n k sg iv in g with our C h e f s s p e u a l stu ffe d ch icken served with two k in d s o f sau ce , and v eg eta­ bles O rd e r by this w eekend and receive a free d e sse rt for tw o by m e n ­ tionin g this o ffer Featured highlights tram the Cuisines of South China Sea Thailand, Malay­ siai, Singapore. Indonesia, the Philip­ pines. Vietnam. & regional Chinese dishes Bring this coupon for $1 off any dinner entree Good Sun.-Thurs. fcrp 12 ¡S-88 N o M S G Added SH O A LCREEK PLAZA A t M opac a n d A nderson i n B e h in d R ooster A n d re w s Lunch: M-F 11-2:30 S-S 12-3 Dinner: S-Th 5-10 F-Sat 5-11 467-6731 □ Your Christmas Gifts Have Arrived! ART I S A N S h a s col le c ted the Hnest h a n d m a d e c r af t s f r o m a r o u n d the I .S.A. for e v e r y o n e on y o u r H o l i d a y C1111 list. O u r I m m artists have been w o r k i n g o v er - t i me to p ro v i d e v o u with e x c e p t i o n a l on e- o f - a- k i n d gifts. C o me in and pick out your special i>ifts now. The selection has never been better. (iitt Wrapping and Shipping available. C .illcrv Open M o n d .lv -S a tu rd .n 10am hpm I bursdav til s, Sundav I 2 v H o lidav H o u rs Nov 25 t k v 24 M o n d a v -S a tu rd .n lO jin - Y p m , Sundav 1 2 - 5 In the Arboretum. Second Level, 14V 1001. LP’S NOT AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES PRICES G O O D FOR O N E WEEK SAY NO! TO DRUGS hastines We’re Entertainment! \X /(^ ’r

21 T H O M P S O N O F f 1 8 3 1 Mil F S O of M O N T O P O l f S Phone 3 8 5 - 5 3 2 8 OPEN 24 HOURS CAUOHT FROM BEHIND t (XXX (XXX) jM 15511 1WWT ■ MOM. t TUt. 2 FOR 1 TAPE RENTALS ■■ d e v i l i n m u i j o n e s H 0E55IE DOES DALLAS H 1 4 . 9 5 T I T L E S H DEEP THROAT I O T H E R T I T L E S IN S T O C K ■ S4 25; All Seats ■■ WkU AII Wm R O O ER R A B B IT I lllll l a s t w i n SIS MARRIED TO THE MObT B ■ c o m in g TO AMERICA M ^ubhnhhSSI ,-:3 : mo» jq TOMCBUtSi cocktail 1*** ,y*■ ««Iconics IS AUSTIN READY ? THE TRIUMPHANT RETURN OF... Paae 12/THE D a i l y TEXAN/Friday, November 18,1988 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE 471-5244 WANT ADS ¿ im e THERE IS A DEFERENCE TODAY S TIMES T H E B E S T M O V I E P P I C E I N T O V A /N ONLY $ 0 7 5 CHILDREN TWILITE $ 0 7 5 STUDENT ^ MATWtE 4 30 6 P M E V E R Y D A Y D ES IG N A T ED B Y ( ) MA 'INI f S INlTAt « > | WESTtiATf MALL S 1 AMAR & BEN WHITE 892 ?696 | 1 WESTGATE 8 I I HIGH SPIRITS ftaj] 2 10(5:15 f.i $2 751-7:25-6:35 FRESH HORSES I>gj3] 2 00-(5:25 (a $2 751-7 45-9:56 I EVERYBODY'S ALL AMERICAN ® H X H 6 M (a $2.751-7:35-10:06 MYSTIC PIZZA 01 (a $2 751-7:35-9:45 1: H WITHOUT A CLUE m 56 N I \ EXHILARATING” J, tin % I lonv INN " M \K CHI VI1 U >. I'Hs I V JEAN de FLORETTE> P G - O A O iY L m CEL F r id a y , S a tu rd a y a t 9 :3 5 p.m . U n io n T h e a tre BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE... WANT ADS...471 -5244 «Hb TNI! OUTLAWS Or COMEDY BAND Special Guest: CAE IUBOVE W ED N E S D A Y • NOVEMBER 30 • A U D IT O R IU M T l o k u t s : $ 1 4 . 5 0 I P M * ALL SEATS RESERVED TCtrl', h t $?# Ttcfcrt tacafcons f u iy l't phofw € 5 G3C3 A f lM M M C I POOOUCnOfl I S O C I E T Y 474-1700 SIOS GLAD ALUPI 444-5554 1911 L I Stc Page 8 PRESIDIO TH EATRES M R S 2 1 S 5 H fc = : 4 I m x ■ B e f o r e t im e H B W H M g a n **- - 1 1 2 5 5 - 2 4 0 - 4 2 5 1 - 3 1 0 - 6 0 0 - 1 0 0 0 "«La n d (1 2 5 - 3 3 0 - 5 3 5 1 - 7 5 0 - 1 0 1 0 - 1 2 1 5 HIGH S P I R I T S W I T H O U T A C L U E T H X : n Th x _ T m x ~I ’«Land Before tim t . 12 0 0 - 4 0 0 - 3 « » ■ ’ i n M V FEBS <2 2 5 - 4 1 51 <1 0 3 # 0 0 9 3 3 Child sPlay m ( 1 2 4 0 - 2 5 5 - 5 1 0 1 - 7 3 5 - 9 5 0 - 1 2 0 5 I N . •2 1 0 - 4 0 5 - 6 O O i - ? 3 5 - 9 3 0 H T H E G o o d m o t h e r (2 1 0 - 4 4 0 1 - 7 1 0 - 9 4 0 - 1 2 1 0 R IRON E A G L E 2 (1 5 5 - 3 3 3 - 3 3 5 1 - 9 0 3 - 1 0 1 0 K _________ (3 15-5 351-7 40-9 50 W C K 2 9 á\\ \ D W 11 ¥ <2 $0-5 10) “ I Ernest Ckrlstsiasl (2 45-5 001-2 20-9 30 »*ti IRON EAGLE 2 ( 9 1 0 - » 3 0 1 - 7 $ 0 - 1 0 0 0 P t i .... Claras Heart Th x ______ (2:16-$ 301-7:60-10 10 U 2 lu x R A T T L E & HUM s* ~ . -«G (2:90-5 061-7 30-9 46 OD. ULA.KN '<•« y ‘ • W I T H O U T A C L U E (3:00-5 161-7:40-6:6$ J B K \ CD *>* - 3PC B A T 21 TRx ( 3 1 0 - 5 1 * 1 - » 1 0 - 9 4 0 R U 2 - RATTLE A HUM *» ( 3 2 0 - S 2 5 1 - 7 4 5 Claras Heart 2 (3 2 5 - 5 3 5 1 - 7 5 0 - 1 0 O 0 T’’ - »» 15 WEEKS OF E XC E L L E NT MOVIES! A T T U I A R B O R F O l ' R K R I A S A ! M M I U S I ' . H f r ' j f W OF THE L O S T ARK ; T h x " Q Qfbt*«n i " w I k t R o a n IlM C n d f t / W i n n e r o l '» B e lg ia n *"% • \ i a d e r m • \ v s jr d '' • B F s I P K I I k l / \ , ,ii i 1«-n(h -' .it ii ii i !u n m It ixh-f t r i-in jr L . i l i U if'fv», i f t ’ iin ijfH t I )i , M i I ( I I I | U I nit . ,f lh« I I t ■< l i t l< t t 11 111.1 V .1 1 li t « I ■ i n n v\i >r l<1 ' m.l|i >’ ill' n t* " ' tin i myt -h*-i r lilin in .ik in y .kill )»« iii|ci t' .i i k I h u m .m iti mti > i i n m ( l l. lf l f ' K llk iir t'k - si i if it v ★ ★ W ^ ( I iftiji.isMi >! I.l! t H t ni I s f r i. iliu - li itim t V r i-Mi.if k.lhlt H ’ in v i-f * u-nf .inti .1 rt-Hi.itk.lhl* i \|)t fu fu i 1’ it .1st ill If! t M ill' if M >• . I M ,( i*. ■ M- 4:46 <% 2.00 7 4 0 * 4 0 (a 3.80 UOHM WATE K i n p e r s o n T hursday, Dec. 1st PLU S 12 houn of films a# w v QHIOU co b — t • M d b O n B l i l j j i ^ * A s j : I" >N N !i Ik. I i H ARl 1 s BUKOWSK! m m inolSf* suwY-Ttf > The World s Best Animation K M I I i W M T h f 2 1 U ln t M f ia t lo n . 1 T o u t n M o l A N I M A T I O N .. 4 ,0 0 / Í f i U r W M * W ■ n d B w a 2) s t»«i Guadalupe 477-1324 # - 1 - 9 1 L e& ji m s L ^ e - 24th & San Antonio Open Every Night Until 1 ¡30 Open 11.00 am Mon-Sat Open Sun 4 pm Happy Hour Mon-Sat 5-7 n a n n ALL DAY A C L S E A T S - A L L S H O W S 892-2775 4608 W E S T G A T E B LV D tr\jcm mm n DIE HARD B » e 0 7:96 10:90 M O M MUfpHV r> CO M INO TO AMERICA 4:46 7 16 9:46 S 8ot>Hom>nttr WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT? 4:46 700 9.26 PC] ■< < ( t i m e s p u b l i s h e d a r e r o w t q q a v o n l y ) General Cinema BAROAIN MAT1NK1SIVWY BAY AU SHOWS BIPOM • FM D O i B Y C T — O » * BARTON CREEK M O N K a t L O O P 3 6 0 3 1 7 - 1 1 11 SAM I DAY ADVANCE TICKET SA ID it OUVER AND COMPANY • t h x 4:3» 5:55 7 J H J I ★ GOOOMOTHIRr 1:153:38 5:35 74» 114» ★ THEY UVE b 1:30 3:30 54» 7:3» 9:3» CROSSING DELANCEY « 1:05 3 :» 5:35 7:309 AO B I Q p g 1:003.-055:107:159:30 H I G H L A N D M A L L H IO H I A N P M A U . I L V D l 4 5 1 - 7 3 S A ★ EVERYBOOYS A U AMERICAN ■ 1340 340 5 J0 7401040 ★ LANO BEFORE TIME « 4 0 C A P I T A L P L A Z A M l «0 CABMRON RBl 4SS-7A4* TNIYUVIr 1403485:107:13940 MLAYo l:1 0 aU S c3 0 7 4 S fJQ GORILLAS IN TNR MMT otto 13403 4 0 S 4 0 7 4 0 1 M B F r id a y a n d S a tu r d a y a t 7:30 p.m. S u n d a y a t 7:00 p.m . U n io n T h o a tre 0 | S u b w a y | h a s b a a n c a n c e lle d d u e to s h ip p in g p ro b le m s . (HIGHEST RATING) ~ l* A TODAY -P L A Y B O Y MAGAZINE MANONOF THESPHNC P G ». *r^S®í,w A u s tin P re m ie r F r id a y A S a tu rd a y at 9:30 p.m . S u n d a y a t 5 A 9:25 p.m. H o g g A u d ito r iu m ______________ /am Tnrm M / LA W M O W a t l 1:45 I F r id a y a n d S a tu rd a y I U n io n T h e a tre S u n d a y a t 4 :3 0 A 9:1 5 p.m . U n io n T h e a tre t u r n s t o o . G F R A L D IN E C H A P L I N A i I R N A N D O t G O M t Z . , ... - - ( A R LO S SAI RA F r id a y a n d S a tu rd a y a t 7:30 p.m. S u n d a y a t 3 A 7 :30 p.m. H o g g A u d ito r iu m h l i Picture & Poster Sale H undreds to choose from: «"Laserphotos «"Posters «"Fine Art Reproductions «•Foil Etchings «"Original Art Most Posters and Pictures are $6.00 or 3 for $15.00! ( p ric e s ra n g e fr o m 75« - $25.00) LAST 2 DAYS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Sale continues through Saturday, November 19 ejgas Union Commons (across from th e Information D esk, M ain Lobby) 110:00pm T h e Da ily T exa n C lassified A dvertising F r i d a y , N o v e m b e r 1 8 , 1 9 6 8 Page 18 VISA/MasterCard Accepted For Word Ads, call 471-5244/For Display Ads, call 471-8900/8:00 a m -5:00 p.m. Monday-Friday/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitis Avenue VISA/MasterCard Accepted — - ----- --------------------------- A ..................... THE D A ILY T E X A N CLASSIFIEDS TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION RIAL ISTATI SALES MERCHANDISE RENTAL RENTAL 20 — Sports-Foreign 70 — M otorcycles 120 — Houses 260 — Hobbies 3S 0— R ental Services 3 6 0 — Fum . A pts. CLAHMEO i u t A f u m I km* ' Q i w y d b y A w w o rd 15 w o rd mam- mum Sal m 5 p t typ» onty Ratat an lo> conxexutor» d o y* ta d i word toch word 3 tmtm Each word 5 Omm Eoch word 10 tones Eoch word 15 «mat Each word 20 toms 32 % S 17 $ 1 3 0 $2 70 $2 55 $2 80 $1 0 0 ettorg» to change c o p , fmt tw o w ords m ay bo a l to p x o l M a n 25< lo r c u is iF m U M A O ’ U T U ‘O to rg a d b y t*w tow O n * colum n mch nwwnum Awokofato m 5 to 14 pi tyo* $7 45 I col ■ I mth I Tan* WOOD AMO U N I AO 04A0MMI K H tO U il Monday Tuatday W *d n *a d a y Tkwndoy Friday Friday D a m M o n d ay Dorr Tuoaday Dam W adngadoy D a m Tbundoy Dorr TO P tA C IA WOOOOO U N I AO CALL: 471-5244 C L A M W M O O tS P lA Y * A O OATVS * Ckorged by #»# • CO* A *w?*py o* N D * i / n r tnch t o t * OFkd u o i aind borémt% tm iéuMo M i ta r n 1 Moy 30 1 >0 4 9 coho**" dMC^MM M O r o * 5 0 c o l vi por w»©ndfc r o l k * cPes C l A W F I I O D I t F U T O tA O U S tt tC M C O U L I M o n d a y Tueedcry W t dwaado y T N exderr fm ta rr W e d n w d o y 4 p m rK jm d a y 4 p m I n d o . 4 p m M o n d o » 4 p m ' u**dsy 4 p m TO S U L C I A C lA S IIS N O 0 1 5 0 1 4 Y A O . C A L I i 471-4900 A©r V* *w a# • r*or% -vkO w* cw* «mI A c* **%*» bo gr*«er> by 11 #b« ArO éetf m #*• pmfaAohon k, wl w 1 (IF V"»# M f onu-o* MOsctr- cpfkd 4 gmttynd o* OOifs $2 00 Sfap OWE b« prwoon»wd Vw bw wcibd a 4 *r 90 4km CLASS’! n TRANSPORTATION 1 0 — N U * c . A o i 2 0 — i p o r t i - F o r t l « n A u t o * N — T r u c k s - V o n * 4 0 — V * M d M t o T r o d * 9 0 — $ * r v k * - N p * l r M — P a r t s - A c c e * * o r t * « ** - r ------------ *-- r V M o v o v r y c ie f •0 — V ehkle La— Ing 100 — V *M d w W *n la d RIAL KSTATI SALIS 110— Servfce» 1 2 0 — M o u * a* 1 3 0 — C o n d o * - T o w n h o u s o a 1 4 0 - M o k l E * H o n » — L o t* 1 3 0 — A c r * * | * t o t * 1 4 0 — D w p t * * * * - 1 7 0 - 100 MERCHANDISE 1 4 0 — A p g A s n t M 2 0 0 — Fww d t u r o - H o u a o l i o l d 2 1 0 — S to r o o T V 2 2 0 — C o m p u t a r a - 2 3 0 — F l i e t o - C e rn ie re s 3 4 0 — O o o ts 2 9 0 — M u * l c o l I n o tiu m o n t » 2 0 0 — I p o r t l n g -C o w ip ln g F u m k u r a -A p p M B n c a O o rs g i - E u m m o g a 2 7 0 - 3 0 0 310 MERCHANDISE 3 3 0 — F o ts 3 4 0 — M l * * . RENTAL 3 0 0 — l e n t o ! t e n d e o * 3 4 0 — F u r r . A p t * . 3 7 0 — U n i . A p t s M 0 — F u m . P u p l a » a s 3 4 0 — U n i . Du p la » a s 4 0 0 — C o n d o * - T o s m t i o u — » 4 1 0 — F u m , H o u * o * 4 2 0 — U n f . H o u sa s 4 2 9 4 3 5 - 4 7 0 - 4 9 0 — lA o S S e M o w n » -L o t s * StO CER^O SfRPKO • W sim d to N v it-U o M $7 4 5 Per C o A w f r * k 3 3 0 - - W o n t o d t o B u y ANNOUNCCMINTS 5 1 0 — I n t e r t e t o m e n t - T k k e t * 9 2 0 — N n o n o b 5 3 0 — T r o v o l - T r o n s p o r t o t t o n 9 4 0 — L o * t A F o u n d 9 5 0 — L k a n — d C h M d C o r o S 4 0 — P w M k N o t ic e 9 7 0 — M u s k - M u s k to n s EDUCATIONAL 9 0 0 — M w a k c d In s t r u c t io n 5 4 0 — T u t o r i n g 4 0 0 — In s t r u c t io n W o n to d 4 1 0 — M is c . I n s t r u c t io n SERVICES 4 2 0 — L o g o i 9 o r v l cos 4 3 0 — C o m p u t a r S o n d e o s 450 — Morln g-MouWng 4 7 0 — F a in t i n g SERVICES 4 0 0 — O f f k a 4 4 0 — O e n t a i E q u ip m e n t 7 0 0 — F u m l t u r o R o p a ir 7 1 0 —* A p p H e f K i I t p o i f 7 2 0 — i t o r o o - T V O a p o tr 7 3 0 — H o m o R o p a ir 7 4 0 — O k y d e R e p a ir 7 9 0 - T y p i n g 7 4 0 — M is c . S o n d e o * EMPLOYMENT 7 7 0 — E m p lo y m e n t A g e n c ie s 7 0 0 — E m p lo y m e n t S o n d e e s 7 4 0 — F o r t t i m e 0 0 0 — O e n o r o l H e l p W o n to d O l O - O k k e - C t e r k o l 0 2 0 — A c e o u n tln g - Ooobkeeping 0 3 0 — A d m ln l s t r o t l v e - 0 5 0 0 4 0 Sole* Retail Engineering Technical M e d ic a l 0 7 0 0 4 0 — P r o f e s s io n a l 0 4 0 — C iu to s -R e s ta u r a n t s 4 0 0 — D o m e * t l c - H o u se h o ld 4 1 0 — P o s itio n s W o n te d 4 2 0 - W o r k W o n t e d BUSINESS 430 — Business Opportunities 4 4 0 — Opportunities Wanted ! V Bxttdmg Room 3 200 2 5 0 0 w h c in M> * r d o y t». -Kjgb 1 - d a y 8 OOom 5 O O p r r E R H M I TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Autos 10 — Misc. Autos 20 — S poils-Foreign ’ 9 8 ’ C X D 5 0 * * 4 G A 5 7 0 0 0 -~ tax •> t . D e v i 4 5 ; 7 5 J * t o A d m o e 1 2 XX T? t * / « • f o e o e s c o « t g t b«o<». y , W k tt % iemtaA A C A M F M < •u n rn fld > 0 0 0 0 «d-ss $ 5 9 0 0 3 4 6 9 ’ 7 F O R 0 W m e r x V A M 4 ' ! 64129 6 Bpm 12 *9 r g x ta to r ‘ 9*. w te s a t BS tu n s g o a d $ 4 0 0 1984 k j # 0 TEMPO '. J m $.1 I V 4 4 “ v s q i ' . ' I . m l t o ’ 4 VW SuperbeuAe btoe ( « r *4em •.ksxun lebsxA ersgwse N e w $ ’ « 0 0 C a t Caro. 4 6 ’ 7 7 5 4 U 19 __ - m N O C tlD tT N f F D f r *> speed $' vosJa. ax captad J / ‘r ' -s' , V . dawn i t ' 5 Sprmi 4 tr ‘ 9 —■ m tN f 12 9» T9R4 P O N T W K U v l Ssqnxfcxrd A I A M TM to p e 2 4 0 0 0 - w . d 8 3 6 “ 0 0 $ 3 # 0 0 v b e * 12 »9 ’ 9 « s K 3 R 0 H D C m w e r * $ 2 0 0 0 -'ndtoxir- $9400 349114012 19 V .S ivvj Ex. ax l i e ™ S*rao4 i O A M D « ‘ 3 ( A p k i A s -V» N e w %res Bu tte c «tterrsoaw 323 9033 , 3 le a th e r - * e $ 9 5 v .arm ' - m a y s to M « n o w Rf 04T N i l > *x eXem ■ ■ down- $ / 4 ' W Ter xr - nvvsthTy 129 N i «,seed $ > 2 5 0 104’ 12 9F x X w iw S t N O RE0.nxg, « i pOWff 4 6 ’ $ 3 8 9 5 r n d itu i- rVr ’ >1 AC mfvoo* 2 doo# 7 0 6 4 11-28 _ _ hcprhtoock 5 $p4M»d A M f M ' * 34 r N i. ctrp upon $ 3 9 9 5 12 19 5 3 0 6 ‘9 8 5 h <;>n C O i O L A M f M td # d A C 5 3 0 6 $ 5 9 9 5 1? 1*? A N y h 'Kl*d ■ Ww/ 2 *3 0 $ * A 5 TpDtoi! $ 4 9 5 0 n 4 dCK K A M , 34?1 N :WMF«* 1 9 8 4 N IS S A N S e n tro AT PBrPS A / C c -tmdiSion A M * M Stereo $ 3 6 0 0 , n e g o N s b t* 4 5 4 4 4 6 7 E x< e lle n t 4 9 5 4 8 2 7 IT 28 !9 7 ’ D A T S U N 2 4 0 Z 2 r# o rs 8<1 e r g . n * W 'e o e . tjr tiu r e to r s W e s te rn wKeeK S u n r o o * 4 s i t m $200C 3940 11 28C 5 8 0 1 153 _ 30 — T r u c k * - V a n * i O i HSW a .f n SO i t 9 C C O $ ' 9 0 0 ae»c*t 4*. 4 -v 86 1 11 27 tv. ' V 8 4 #r X ) 4 * 4 A M . ( M AC f»r>n $ 6 0 5 0 8 3 6 2 IK ) 12 19 ,;> w -n»kK>9 « 4 sp«MHl w corvd* '9 y 7 fCyftO W W x Io w V an AC n#»*» »tr#s jr'<} 3 4 3 693/ 11 2 3 R u ó * q ra a t4 $ 1 9 0 0 O B O _________ _____ $ ‘ 1 5 0 50 — S c r v i c e - R e p a i r 7 0 V W B U G 19 0 0 0 m iles o n e n g in e M irH e fcm V e ry r e lia b le $ 1 0 0 0 o r best o « e r 2 5 9 2 2 0 2 D a ys 451 2 4 2 8 Even ings 12 9 1 9 8 4 7 0 0 INTERC EPTOR , c o rv e tte w h ite Im m o c u lo te c o n d itio n w ith o n ly 8K m iles $ 1 8 5 0 3 8 5 8 4 5 8 a tte r 6 0 0 p m 11 21 Autos 1985 V O L K S W A G O N JETT A, 2 -door, whtto, 5 speed. AC, A M /F M cossetto ^ood corsdthon ( 4 4 0 0 8 3 4 -9 0 0 8 12- 1986 TOYOTA TERCEL AT/PVPB, 4dr, AC, FM cassette stereo $ 6 0 0 0 Excel­ lent condition Enc 251 -4 25 5 12-5 1974 DATSUN 2 6 0 Z Run, G ood Cold AC $ 12 00 Please cot otter Bpm 467 7819 12 19 1980 TOYOTA TERCEL 2 door manual AC. 8 0 ,0 0 0 mites O ne owner Call 343 1619 12 58__________________________ tranimissK>n, A/C, 198T T O T O T A C O R O L L A T e rc e l A u to - motK new paint $ 1 9 0 0 or best otter 458-1617 4 79 12-6F_______________________ 2 6 7 3 1979 FIAT BRAVA Runs great, 4 7 2 1152 $1100, negotiable 12-7 1 9 7 9 TOYOTA SUPRA 5 speed. A M / FM, AC. PS, PW, sunroof runs and tooks good $ 2 3 0 0 4 7 8 -6 1 3 5 12 7__________ 1985 SUBARU G l. 4 door. fully (ooded, 1 owner excellent condition $ 3 9 5 0 453 - 1550 1? 8 1 9 8 2 N IS S A N 2 8 0 ZX. T ops 15 5 0 lo a d e d fu lly 12 8 to r b o $ 3 9 5 0 red, T 4 5 3 - ____________ 81 H O N O A A C C O R D b o d e d 5 speed, ste re o p o w e r s to e n n g , p o w e r brakes, v e ry g o o d - o n d ttto n $ 2 2 0 0 O B O 8 3 6 9 4 1 3 12 8 1 9 7 9 SU BAR U W a g o n 4 w h e e l d riv e A C A M /F M cass e tte ro c k . $ 9 0 0 3 4 5 0 9 4 7 ______________ 12 8 tire 1 9 7 8 H O N O A A C C O R D F o r Sole C h e o p 1 G re a t p h y s ic a l s h a p e N e e d s 3 4 6 - 3160 iseod gaske t I e o v # m essoge Best o tte r 12 9 1 9 8 5 CAM ARO Z 2 8 tp o r t c o u p e T top, a u to m a tic AC . fuB y lo o d e d s p o rt w heel, s h a rp $ 6 9 0 0 4 72 4 2 5 3 J 2 _ 9 _________ 1 9 8 0 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A 4 d r o u to m o tif A / C s te re o /c a s s e tte G r e o t little o r i $ 1 8 5 0 A u to Trends 6 / 2 4 B um et 4 5 0 - 0 1 2 8 2 L ’ 8 f ___ _____________ m C-B 1 9 7 ! U n u to a tty d e p e n d a b le an g m e O K b o d y s a lt o« b e st o tte r « 2 8 2 0 0 4 to p like n e w $ 1 7 0 0 11 1RF M U S T SELi B e o u tih ji d e a n 1 9 8 6 H yun d o i E xcel Ac'C. rm leoge $ 1 8 9 0 7 0 7 2 4 4 4 2 7 2 7 9 2 9 ___ _________ ossette a w R u i i e l i 11 2 2 1 9 8 4 T O Y O T A C O F O lL A LE E xce lle n t - oncktson 4 d o o c m o n u o l 5 speed $ 3 7 0 0 C o * 4 6 2 1 5 4 4 o tte r 4 p m o r on w e e X e n d s '1 '8 ’ 9 8 2 TOYOTA ' O R O L l A SR 5 kCafeock. c o s s a ite % r ,n r e > o l Joia gr->d*x?tmg A M FM osXrr^ $ 2 5 9 9 7 A 3 2 3 9 0 2 3 11-18 i i| c mí 'NOA V H ’ 4 door uutomotsc tr r jn s m is e o n . AC AM, T V 32 0 0 0 m4es w s*d gloss $ 6 7 0 0 2 58 4 2 5 0 U 22 ’9 8 6 H O N O A C TVtC 4 d o o r a u to m a tic ir o n t m s s s io n A c A M T V 3 2 0 0 0 m ile s 1x4*4 gloss $ 6 7 0 0 258 4 2 5 0 12 19___ 8 4 F f R O O n # owner s u n r o o l A M F M 4 - 0 0 0 m. p e c k h 479 8251 asset** L A * n#w < $ 4 ?0 0 M u t t sell 11 23_____________ red 4 speed s s s r hr*s '9 8 3 M i TSu B i S h Cordso S to n d o rd A A M 1V a s se t** b lo c k g re y sporty .m pse te ty servw * d exce d e n r r - >ndrXor' le a v e A u s tin M ust >*+er $ 3 !0 ) Best sen 4 95 « ’ 9 8 1123 xx. a m i H O N D A . Come ride with us 459-3311 Full Selection o f Motorcycles & Scooters WOODS HONDA KAWASAKI FUN CENTER 6 5 0 9 N . L A M A R l A > North Austin Cycles 2 b 8 8 5 6 0 ,;xr?pk»ff» MéCtiune Wot* Servn p Ssm p97fs <4 Ac c es f re n P ic k up & D e liv e ry f O R SALE 19 78 Puch m o p e d G o o d co n d m o n $ 3 0 0 2 4 4 361 6 11 14 H O N D A HAW K 4 SOT 1983 low miles new hre, runs, -ides and looks great! Registered Inspected and reliable $ 8 5 0 11-17 negotiable Must sell 4 / 8 3941 H O N D A AERO 1 /5 Scooter (or sol# G ood condition 1984 Going cheap $ 5 7 5 N eed cosh coll For Noeem 4 7 7 2 4 2 6 . red color 11-18 M A U W U . M A C X 1985 V 3 0 Hondo M agna motorcycle only 7 0 0 0 onginol -mies must sek 8 3 6 019! 11 ! SK '9 8 3 YAMAHA SECA 4 0 0 cc, only 68UO mi Perfect beginners bike $ 8 5 0 meg C h o d e s 4 79 0 8 2 5 11 21 __________ ___ 1987 SUZUKI 5 0 cc M oped Red and block Onfy 8 0 miles G rea t < onditton 1! $4 25 or best otter Call 4 5 3 3 3 3 5 2 2 _______________________________________ 19 75 H O N D A 4 0 0 Supersport 4 cylm ders 18 0 0 0 miles Sitting for years, needs some -epam $ 2 5 0 very cheap O e g 343 n 0 2 34 j 8 5 9 4 1123 1984 H O N D A ASCOT V T 50 0 Block low mileoge never wrecked great condition $1000 negotiable CoH Don a* 480 - 9 7 7 1 1! 23F :9 8 6 RED H O N D A n?t« 8 0 koo»«f G o o d C o n d fh o rv o n q t n o l Ow d « t $ 9 7 * > 3 3 5 5 / 8 6 M kjv# 11 2 8 80 — Bicycles ’87 MOUNTAIN BIKE C10SS0UT! Csyrvto t h t t v lo *T l BUCK’S BIKES 4 4 1 3 S p r t n a d o t * 9 2 8 - 2 4 1 0 vTSA mi; att' f «p Do c o f ? TMaicoma * fTUOURr OmXHJKTtt • 75 BIKES $25 and UP 2 A u s t i n L o c a t io n * V.lHb y4#t i A*n»h* %cX)o«« Sottowvxy SoM*b 5 W ÍWto «A/SrBto Sahrwsjy F V ffV SATüROAT V 6 A U S T tM B I C Y C L X t A L V A Q I * 2 8 4 * 0 0 PRESTIGIOUS TRAVIS HEIGHTS High on hill, beautiful 1920's ar­ chitecture. Approximately 1000 square feet. 2-1-2 wilh study, breakfast area 50 x 140' lot. A/ C, central heat. Hardwood floors. Approximately 20 blocks from downtown $79,000. 442- 4901 11-28F 140 — Mobile Homes- Lots SALE MOBILE home 8 2 model 14X40,2 beds, Brockenndge M S route 4 7 4 - 5 9 5 5 Pnce moderate negotiable 11-23 7 0$ RENTl Invest in housemg instead fo throwing money aw ay each month. 1981 14X56 Mobile home $11000 negoti­ able ICoH 4 6 9 -0 8 4 7 11 23 MERCHANDISE 190 — Appliances 5-PIECE E T H A N A L L E N B e d ro o m sat p a id $ 2 2 0 0 sell $ 4 0 0 0 8 0 D is h w a s h e r A C $ 5 0 a n d $ 1 0 0 W /D $ 3 5 0 , $ 6 0 ic e b o x $ 7 5 M e lto n 4 4 8 0 1 3 9 n ig h ts & w e e k e n d s 11-23 200 — Furniture- Household SA F A A N D o n d b e ig e s tn p e d , g o o d c o n d itio n , cle a n , n o L O V E S E A T -B ro w n te a rs 0 7 6 6 f o r b o t h 3 4 3 - 11-23____________________________ $ 1 5 0 C a ll 210 — Stereo-TV cosse tte H IG H Q U A L IT Y A U D IO C O M P O N E N T S In te g ra R e m o te c o n tro l A V O n K e y o tu rn ta b le 1130F re c e iv e r TX 108 $ 6 0 0 $ 6 0 $ 6 0 , TA 2 0 2 6 de ck Y a m a h a d ig ita l s o u n d p ro c e s s o r DSP-1 $ 7 5 0 2 4 c h a n n e l a m p lifie r N 3 5 $ 2 5 0 Klipsch H e rs e y II sp e a k e rs $ 6 7 5 /p a ir , M N E C & K s u b w o o fe r $ 2 5 0 c o re C L 9 re m o te c o n ­ tro l $ 1 5 0 Phillips su p e r V H S H i-F i VCR $ 7 2 5 casse tte deck $ 4 0 . T u rn ta b le $ 4 0 m ix e r $ 1 2 5 M in im u s 7 speakers $ 5 0 e och M e fto n 4 4 8 - 0 1 3 9 mgbts & w e e k e n d s s u b w o o fe r V X 7 R ealistic $ 3 0 0 11 2 3 ALPINE A L A R M 8101 $ 2 0 0 A lp in e A m p 3 5 3 3 $ 2 0 0 A lp h o s o m c A m p A - 2 4 0 8 $12 5 C o b r a C o u stic A m p -1 5 0 $ 1 2 5 CB PA w a n t $ 5 0 C a ll M a rk 4 7 4 - 11 21D 0 6 4 7 P IO N E E R LASERDISC p la y e r - - $ 2 6 5 Pio neer d u a l cassette w ith o u to re v e rs e $ 12 0 P io n e e r '2 0 w a tts R eceiver $ 2 6 5 Koss h e a d EPt s p e a ke rs $ 2 0 0 / p a ir pho n e s 3 8 5 - 0 2 5 0 Evening s 3 2 7 1 7 0 9 t w o a t $ 2 5 e o c h 11-23 220 — Com puters- Equipment 45 IN C H LO O M in nwtt con Alton accessories. Indud** bench $ 8 0 0 451-1581 11-23 " 3 280 — Sporttng- Camplng Equip. G O IN G DOW NHILL? Sin, with bndingt, new book, {sue 11), and poles $150 4 7 6 -5 0 1 7 11-28 290 — Fumttura- Appllanca Rental FINGER FURNITURE RENTAL • Complete Living Room, Dining Room & Bedroom from $49.95/ mo. e TV Rental from $ 29.95/mo. 7801 N. Lamar 459-4125 2030 E. Oltorf 445-5973 1-13D DOUBLE BED with extra firm motrexs $100 Judy 2 8 2 -7 9 2 6 «veningt. SOFA BED Only 4 4 7 -6 0 0 8 11-23C $ 85 Choir $ 5 5 Cash Q U E E N -S IZ E D s le e p e r sofa W a s $ 6 6 0 n e w , s e llin g fo r $ 2 5 0 . Tad s ta n d , a b o u t 6 ’x 3 'x 2 ', d o rk w o o d , glass shehrer $ 6 5 . IT -2 8 _______________________ 4 7 6 - 5 0 1 7 320 — W anted to Buy or Rent L IO N E L TR A IN S w o n to d . P leose C a ll Ed. 12-2_______________________ 4 5 3 - 0 9 0 7 330 — Pets G U IN E A PIG, w ith c o g * o n d w o to re r G o o d p e t $ 2 5 A u q o riu m , 10-goR on w ith lig h t, stand o n d pum p, $ 4 5 4 7 6 - 5 0 1 7 11-28 340 — Misc. UMOMMMMCtt F ly y o u r s c h o o l c o lo r s w it h U T e m b le m $ 2 4 0 0 S e n d c h e c k o r m o n e y o r d e r P 0 0 0 * 2 0 1 7 2 B e a u m o n t T e x a s 7 7 7 2 0 (409)7554601 C A S H » Buying G o K h S B v e r ^ m Broken Chains, Class Rings 1 Unwanted 3*w*iry gf Serving S tu d e n t» S in c e 1979 I L ib e r ty C o in s i , 4 S m * 0 u n d * M » 4 3 2 -3 8 1 1J IBM C O M P U T E R system B o ppy d**c. morvTtof, s o ftw a re $ 7 4 0 0 6 0 441 9 5 0 8 11 2 2 r vole H o rd ll S A N Y O M BC 5 5 5 T ñ te i 8 0 8 8 2 5 6 k Bytes A m d e k A m b e r m o n ito r I N K JET best p n n te r m o d e m s o ftw a re $ 3 7 5 o ffe r C a ll P aul 4 4 4 4 6 9 1 11 18 TOR SALE M a c in to s h 5 1 2K, k e y b o a r d m ouse o v e rs iz e p rin te r w a re 6 9 8 6 van o u s o r O B O C a ll $ 7 5 0 b 18 soft 4 5 3 - FOR SALE i>ke ^ e w H e w le tt-P a c k a rd HP 28C p ro g ra m m a b le o k u la t o r in clu d e s p fo ttm g a n d m o re S o c n fic e a t $ 1 3 5 4 6 2 2 3 7 9 9 a m 9 p m 11-23 I 180 FO R sole 4 7 7 M H z . 6 4 0 K . 2 3 5 ” disk d o v e s call 4 6 ' 2 4 4 3 a h e r 9 3 0 p m 11-21 o m p fe te w ith s o ftw a re 2 5 0 — M u s ic a l Instrum ents D R U M S £ ’ i .tie s uctw ig , h ig h h a t, cym b a h ^ o *e s G re a t s o u n d sm ooth p e d a l, n o t p re tty le a v e m e s s o g e fo r lo r r y 3 2 2 9 H 8 $ 1 5 0 0 0 11 2 ! ’ B A N E Z G E O R G E B E N S O N G B -1 0 hot k>w b o d y e le cta c g u ito r B ea u tifu l so u n d / e x c e lle n ! c o n d itio n ¡ooks a classic $ 7 0 0 4 6 9 0 3 4 6 M o rn . Eve 11 2 2 fo r « M M gk * ' 4 g Iknytng up to $110 k e e n 'd U p t o $ S l ¡(tody-d A tto to ty K X / 1 4 K 8 W K a *W je w e lry A ny coxxdHton. ( 9 3 0 * n « - o pm M-F) ; JAMB LEWIS 0010 HCHANN 458*263# j 1 9 8 6 E D IT IO N E N C Y C L O P E D IA BRIT- C oll T A N IC A , m int c o n d itio n 11-28_______________ M ik e o t 4 5 2 -1 1 8 9 $ 8 5 0 A IR B R U S H S E L D O M uted, g r e a t d o u b le o c tio n B a d g e r m o d e l 150-X F Leave me s s o g e 2 7 2 - 5 1 5 2 11-18______________ N A G E L C o m m e m o ra tiv e $ 3 5 0 n e g o tia b le M ust sell C all V e n a t 4 5 2 - 0 4 0 4 o r lea ve m e ssa g e 11-22 # 9 SKIIS-FISHER supe rg ia ss 2 10cm N ó rd ic a b in d in g s N o rd tc a b o o ts p o le s a n d c a r­ ry in g b a g in c lu d e d A ll fo r $ 2 0 0 Call B o b 4 5 4 9 0 4 5 1 1 -2 3 A CALL 471-5244 TO FLACIA CLASSIFIED AD F R E E L e r ttmg S e rv ice m s R K C o n d o * e A*ef*ttem* r t a . . Lease Xie hunang to um< fte re - ' ’ 4 ■ « 1 a H R RRRW.R » [habitat hunters Looking tor an apartment? FREE LOCATOR SERVICE 1W* tpBdalize m «udam houaing Call Ben McCalip 338*4374(M hre.) JBGa twin FREE LO C A TO R SERVICE Fr*e trnnipnrtcticn prov'c1t*j B e d a n d In e n a i'e s ’ « e rw p m t o wn T h o m » * G T h o m p s o n Jr T - - p P ’ J r R E A L T O R S 4 5 2 - 8 6 2 5 ?? h o u rs a day 9 1 2 E 4 8 T H 2-1 w ith fe n c e d y a r d a n d C A /C H . $ 3 7 5 4 5 4 - 3 5 1 4 . 1T-18A 360 — Fum . Apts. DIPLOMAT APARTMENTS B A R G A IN RATES For Jem 1 4 1MfeCoqp»* 478-2250 Manager Apt. #205 Davis & Assoc. UTAREA NARK EMBERS SpocKMaporimnls w ik Fare • Cainal • 2 Pom ■ } y i ■ • OnFShu* Only A few Laft Col for inovt Inspadol 478-6005 13100Spaadw ay El lookktt t o Wmt C a m jm f C o m k i v t a lo o k a t « a . I t ’s only a 5 E iia it t w alk . • 6 block* W. of Campus • 5 0 a t e p * f r o m W C a t o p • 1 block from grocery, pharmacy, shopping • Low electric bt 2 BR: $475 i m d b t e t t t s w t o t toa**» f o r ( p r i n g 25 Va St. between San Gabriel & Leon Summit Apartments 1MÍW.25V»* 495-9477 M A R K X X L E A S IN G F A L L EFBOM RATEE Beet the High Bedric Ratesi 1 Bedrooms & 2 Bedrooms Available 459-1664 3815 Guadalupe D a v i s A A s s o c V illa Solano A p a r tn e n ts 51st A Guadalupe • Shuttle Bus/City Bus • Shopping Nearby • 2 Laundry Area • Nice Pool 1 & 2 Bedroom Aph. Across From Intramural Fields 451-6682 MOVE IN TODAY EFFICIENCY A P A R T M E N T ABP $ 2 2 5 . $ 2 0 0 s e c u rity d a p o u t person, n o pets, a ll s tre e t p a rfo n g . 4 5 9 8 9 3 5 1 1-30H ___________________________ T WEST C A M P U S 1-1'» 1-Vs $ 2 9 5 A v a ila b le n o w . Smalt, g u re t c o m p le x e s . 4 5 4 - 7 9 0 0 S a n d lin 8 C o . 1T-18F_________ u n ftim is h e d -$ 2 1 0 -$ 2 7 5 . fu m » h e d - $ 2 6 0 - A U T O M O T IV E R fP A IR RpéarToi S a rv K * KJv« m ofv»y o n yo u r n # * t a u * t rp p o ir *t>« t p u r c h o t i n g a O? ♦ o ctt y o u p o y 4 4 5 * $ 3 1 3 12 2H L A G U N A CRUISER 2 6 w h e e ls sin g le spe e d p e r fe c t c o n d itio n S h im a o o h ubs A r o y a a llo y nm s A v o c e i s o d d le S u n to u i iw ic tte s $ 2 7 5 C o ll4 5 8 5 881 11-18 RENTAL 370 — U nf. Apts. L A S S * - 6 6 M *r'* « .ie » . ! ' ” . i A * r Sx«rvnA r gu»-te« -ynty $ ! 2 0 0 0 ' tK x jk rvSK «ye $ '4 5 0 0 ,’ 64 - y re o r M e 14*. 0 3 70 » 11 78 FI A G ! 5 n e e d A . lit- ,# g. - x.3 $ 6 0 0 T9 7 T ( ‘ sE V tllE 2dr navy At gutamanx e to ud 3 5 0 G o o d y e a r i x j.w i m ogs '.js*et*e Exc M e rit o r x h o r $ 2 8 0 0 3 4 3 6 3 5 4 11 7 9 784 f. , d R e p u b trto i h a r e * 5 v p e w ! $ 9 0 0 0 h .m - ,i 17 19 RED B M W 1 8 - w e d s sun 4 ’ 6 ta * y 6 5 7 0 A Her ' pm to o d e d v e s $ 8 ZCK;, n e g iits o h ie 4 4 4 714 } 4 ’ 4 . i r í o >8 B E A U T ttU l b tu * ! *s ndes $ )450 441 -uns o n d k>ok> * w P< 2 000 .P1ÜE R ne 198 4 A , ‘ A , w i e 4 X X ) m iles o * 12 2 $C90C 46 7 67 ¡ « H>p e p n r e s e p ts nr Sts MERCHANDISE 340 — Misc. 70 — M o t o r c y c l * * TJ’s Cycle M m A S#rvic« B u y • S e« • I r o d e * i | ♦ * -------------------- ★ 1 0 % D I S C O U N T ! k O M Y U N I - U F 8 ♦ ____ r s ____ j 4 5 3 -6 2 5 5 •219 N. LAMAR M A R U tS H I AT 6 red. 6 speed ju s t 3 m onths o íd x jo k s IA e n e w w ith G e n k a lo c k , $ 1 7 5 4 7 3 2 7 1 6 I ! 18 m e n s 2 2 ' S H O G U N S A M U R A I m o n o 105 c o m p o n e n ts 5 6 cm O B O 5 8 9 3211 I I 18 12 speed Sht $ 4 0 0 W O M E N S $ 8 0 H o n d 4 ' 6 5017 11 28 10 SPEED b .k e - a n t yffe e g n n d e r ike n # w $ 2 5 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD WANT ADS... 786 M A Z D A 6 2 6 ! « ,'d tt,, n 4 ’ 3 0 0 messs Wisr-’jn ty «Ktstr! . . w le n l -lew G re a i F hce * o r Parts 4 R ccessones je m c e Dy S e g o te re a le c fY N o a n s W A L K T O c a m p s» . S huttle bus. 1 b e d ­ ro o m $ 2 5 0 ,lo r o * e ffic ie n c y $ 1 9 5 + E o r $ 2 5 0 A 8 P fu rn is h e d o r u n fu rn ish e d N o w o r J a n u a ry 3 2 2 - 0 3 7 4 11-21F 511 BELLVUE UPSTAIRS, lo r g e ro o m w / m a n y b o ih -im . C a rp e te d , w in d o w unit, ceilm g fa n . Lease. $ 1 5 0 , 9 2 6 - 7 2 4 3 . 12 - 2H Tired of looking for the perfect place to live? CIRCLE OAKS Q Apartments * Free phone & electnc hook-up. * C l o s e t o U T s h u t t l e * Ceiling fans. * W D connections. * V a u l t e d c e i l i n g s R e n t s s t a r t a t * 2 9 5 00 P r e - le m s e n o w f o r S p r i n g . C a ll 4 5 9 -1 9 9 5 MOM PROVIDED TWICE WEEKLY m ^ r One of the best things about living at Dobie v i is that it's alot like living at home. Twice a •ó week the rooms are cleaned for you, so even if you're a slob, no one ever has to know. So if you've got better things to do than clean house, call us at 472-8411. We are now leasing for Spring, Summer and Fall 1989. D O W O K Dormitory A ll w e have is everythin g you want. 2021 G uadalupe Street Austin, Texas 78705 472-8411 ITS WORTH A CAREFUL LOOK... OAKRIDGE APTS. A new concept in S tudent L M ngl Located in the prestigious NW Hills neighborhood, Oakridge Apts, is just a few minutes drive to shopping, fine din­ ing & recreation. Recently remodeled homes featuring: • UT shuttle • Tennis court • Fireplaces • Vaulted ceilings • Great views • Water voieybal • Swimming pool • Wal-to-wal carpet • Large kitchens • Clubhouse 3517 North Hills Dr. 345-8938 Y n i J ’R F l l W f f f f l l $100 D e p o s i t CALL A N D ASK ABOUT OUR SPECIAL » * . / t a - ' 1 n i R • b y i ■ i- •” • . P !,nq ( ; j r >, ~ - i rr. ^ x ■ - - I • y Vv 0Sr’ A-r* 4 t i e 1: se P 'e m • V ■ ,< Co-, -h • 1 rue ’ . H r I 4 ! » • S w m m ^ P 4 R o s r e t v '’ & v o ’-e- i y t V N L _ M ,'u ! ' A H P , i : i ' , . j i f • A * < - h i. P i - o r r • J 0■ 1 . ■ « - i ' v a . ( I p - / ■ u : ' ■ N ' i l l r K ’ i ’ O i n Professionally Managed by 447-4130 2101 BURTON OR • a g a r 2 ’ V 9 6 6 M U 51 A N . • x X m * . tte a r m ^ . 1 9 ' 17 1« > iy v " . x.irv townxj e y r e -w w p o m t W e t -etoxM p o wer AC 4 4 2 $ * Y0t- ’ 9 8 6 M U S lA W G I * Al ty «xereo caeeeito a p e a n • x t m r y mám. $ 6 1 5 0 17 ’ 9 i r * a r wxxrrcto gre y veenxir T9 7 7 D C X J G t M a n u re $ 5 0 0 to«x 3 2 0 8 6 7 6 Se pier e ta t x e I U » ___________ * 9 8 2 P O N T y k i P S p o w * A . g o o d - w e * 1 19 4 4 8 X g re a t o r $ 1 1 0 0 6 p m 17 T9 ( x re B e n t t o n H>85 H O N O A A f C O t b dXton 5 spe e d A M f M x m n «»*.*.■ A/C tour n e w v e s $6 ’ 0 L Co* 8 9 / 4 0 7 3 4 6 3 4 7 * 1 T1 22___________ G O V E R N M E N T S I l Z t D $100 Chewy» Vurpfce Buyers GsnUe 1: 8 0 5 6 8 ’ 6 0 0 0 Ext S 9 4 1 3 f o r d * M x r t e d x i -en*, w s 17 19 • 'vetoes t r o » * 9 8 2 Puntoox PSoenui A C g o o d m Aeoge g re a * 5 3 0 p m a n d '9 8 3 - *oé b r a n d sew a * me e k ends ib e iw 4 4 7 5 0 3 2 11 » _____________ 19 8 0 M A Z D A 6 . 5 s ta n d a rd . 2 d o o r Ilk * * T M I 4 5 9 3 99 5 11 30H fin a n c e w ito $ 5 9 5 d o w n 1 9 7 9 C H E V Y C hevatt* 5 5 0 0 0 4 d oo - a u to e x e c W R $ 5 9 5 d o te n . 4 5 9 3 * 9 5 I I 30 M to s o n x * m l h 1981 P O N T IA C P H O E N IX 4 d o o r o u to m a m o n d e a n , 4 5 9 3 9 9 5 re d 11 3 0 H e x c e l* rst C A N Y O U b u y Jeeps C a rs 4 x 4 » vo iced # l d ru g rosdx fo r u n d e r $ 1 0 0 ? CoR fo r fa d s to d a y 6 0 2 8 3 7 3 4 0 ! E xt 7 7 3 11 18 1 9 8 8 T O Y O T A C E LIC A ST D o rk m e s o lt. r e d s u n ro o f 5 ip e e d U n d e r e x te n d e d w o r r o n t y a s k in g 8 2 8 !.h o n s * L e a » * m exso ge 12 19 $ 1 1 . 0 0 0 4 4 0 1 9 6 4 C H E V Y 8 IS C A V N E 4 d o o r 6 c ykn irxkes, g o o d c o n d to o n , dttr. 5 0 .0 0 0 $ > 0 0 0 4 5 2 9 8 9 4 12 2________ 1 9 8 6 C O U G A R LS 1 o w n e r excsritont c o n d to o n . p o w e r w in d o w s , w h e e ml re d m to n o r. m e * 251 lo u n d o u _ _ _ _ 4 4 5 4 o tte r 6 12 5 r o o f Í W 9 I W C M D O O ? V e ry s a te v e ry c o m fo rta b le , w a y re tw b to , lo o k s g o o d , ru n t w e l $ 1 7 0 0 4 7 8 8 9 0 0 12 19 N O CREOfY N E E D E D > 9 8 7 s peed, at, s te re o m o o d ily $ 1 2 5 0 d o w n 3 7 9 1041 ts x o o 5 to w n u le t, $ 2 0 7 17 9 f 6*> DOOGE D a rt Six»» * «ngww d o r d 2 doxir w h e e lu r r e n t tags $ 7 5 0 * 7 3 ’ 2 3 W ave m e xxijge • n»w»y n tp e r to d ’ 1I7 usdtvrduxii CUTE <•-.>« S tw n fc ,, i R e d d e r A- ! 9 8 ’ P tym outo M rrsuCxsr w e e d AR w m xkrw s 4 s p e e d 6 8 0 0 mdes $ ’ '• ■ * C a * R * » 4 ' 9 6 2 4 4 1! 21A /LTTE ’ A R ’ 98 ’ P tym ooto AAirv C-sn, . u * h xto h b o x i R e d g re y AC w r x to w s . C a l I - . » 4 '9 6 / 4 4 '7 19a 4 s p e e d 6 ¿ X ’ m .iex $ 5 5 0 ; sn»»»! >974 CHEVY M A . * 79 0 0 0 mties $ 6-.* >027 11 7 8 3 5 0 axA ornoto ’tt*# 4 6 4 lies» 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos ’ 9 8 ) D A T S U N 7 8 0 Z X M e -i t o d k o r a n d is M o re d M as» s e l $ 6 2 ’30 o r ! * m i u h e 2 5 5 - 4 3 * 0 1 2 -1 * __________________ 8 2 V W Jexto 5 s p e e d a n te d wwhJo w s w d r v g h t b iu * g o o d Ctl f ld ttO r $ 2 5 0 0 n e g u tm b te X '. t 6 3 0 0 12 19 e o n cur V 6 A M f M AC 7V C A P * ’ 4 s p e e d $ ’ 5 9 5 R o G n 3 4 ) 0 5 5 ’ t * '2 1 * 8 4 T O Y O T A C E L IC A G T c o u p e L o o d e d 5 s p e e d »» x la n . cooxfceon 4 3 ,0 0 0 mdaw F ix # -e d u c e d 5 7 0 0 3 4 6 5 3 " 12 t * _ _ 1 985 D O O G E D A Y T O N A T u rb o Z 5un ro o t. 5 speed, lo a d e d s h a rp * x t * 4 * ' co n d to o n $ 7 0 0 0 b e lo w b o o k $ 4 Vi a . 3 4 3 1T60 12 IV 84 N IS S A N 3 0 0 / 7 T#e lo p s w h it# b ro w n lo o k e r 5 speed lo a d e d dígita- doxb o n ly 3 4 . 0 0 0 n O tte r 8 3 5 9 ’ 8 0 17 19 1 9 8 2 F A T 2 0 0 0 S p id e r e d c o rw e n ib to rm le o g e E xceden* $ 3 9 9 5 3 ? 8 0 3 6 5 1 h o m e ) 3 7 9 7 5 0 1 w o r k ) c o n d itio n l o w 12 9 1 9 8 5 M A / D A 6 7 6 1 * Tuurvsg S ed a n 4 0 4 . 5S PÜ A C . A M EM ossette, c rm te m o ro o n b e o u ttfu l $ 6 4 9 5 4 5 3 6 3 5 5 T2 19 _________ 1 9 8 6 RED M U S T A N G G I 5 .0 I K * o n g . lo o d e d . 3 6 , 0 0 0 mitos. »m n tx o w n e r, m a c u l a t e . I 2 9 5 3 7 2 4 $ 8 9 0 0 (B u d a ) 17 19 1 9 8 5 T O Y O T A C E LIC A G TS Litt ba ck s u n ro o l e x c e lle n t L o w m ile t, w o r ’ a n ty 4 6 V 0 8 6 3 n g h ts B e lo w B o o k $ 9 2 5 0 _______ 17 19 1 9 7 3 V W B O G N e w W o r r a n k e d $ 2 3 0 0 A tta r 5 p m a n d w e e k e n d s 4 7 3 8 3 0 3 r e b u k e n g in e g re o t 12 ) 9 __________________ ______ lo o k s Runs a n d 1 9 / 8 E A T SPIDER c o n v e rtib le D e e p bu r to p . P ire lli kres g a rtd y N e w p a in t jo b le a th e r esterto r A M f M cassette s te re o A rrc o n d to o r w ig R eb u ilt e rs g m * $ 3 2 0 0 4 4 4 7 2 9 6 11 18 TRANSPORTATION 10 — Misc. Auto*_______ W T . o i l A ( $ 2 7 v a lu e ) FR EE O IL » $ 2 7 H A N D H U I R C H A N O U $ 2 7 1 J * « S Q T S . V A IV O L IN E 3 0 W T . O IL A * A 9 ♦ A * 4 k ■ M g e n u i n e o i l f i l y e r W IT H a n y 1 5 K o r 3 0 K S E R V IC E EMM C a ll f o r d o t a lls ________ N O R T H S 7514 Rum wt Id . 4 5 3 -6 2 9 2 S o u t h 4930 South CongrM* 4 4 3 -4 1 2 2 OFtorexp. ♦ 4K 4k 4k A A A A A A A * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Page 14/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, November 18,1988 RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL RENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES SERVICES 360— Fum. Apts. 360 — Fum. Apis. 370 — Unff. Apts. 370 — Unf. Apts. 400— Condos 425 — Rooms 590 — Tutoring 750— Typing 750— Typing EFFICIENCY $205 N ow leasing for spring. Clean, quiet, w ell m aintained apartment. W a lk or shuttle to UT. FuMy carpeted and draped, queen size bed and wolk-m closet. W a ter paid 202 E. 32nd St. 478-7125, 451-6533 CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. 1-11K TWO BLOCKS LAW ocross Red River from St. David's Effi ciency, also 2-1 studio in small, quiet, quality complex - recently remodeled with pool, laundry, door stop shuttle Take over lease is until M a y 31 Fully furnished All bids paid C H A PA RO SA APARTM EN TS 3110 RED RIVER 474-1902 • $70Move-in Special* • low deposit • extra large apartm ents • prompt m aintenance/very clean • N R shuttle bus e swimming pool • new ly decorated • large 1 bedroom - 750 sq. ft • large 2-2 -1025 sq. ft. BROOKHOLLOW APARTMENTS 1 4 1 4 A r e n a D r. 445-5655 ________________________________ 12 8F $99 MOVE IN 12-19F La rg e 1-1's, an d 2-Vs Central, near UT Seton, and state hospitals W E S ? " C A M P U S 11$ fum itfied-$260- $ 2 9 5 A v a ila b le n o w Sm all, quiet complexes. 4 5 4 -7 9 0 0. S a n d lin & C o 11 18F unfurnished $210-$275 1-1'I S H O A L C R E E K apartments, 2 5 0 4 Leon Un iq u e 1 b edro om , quiet atm o sph ere G la s s woH front, stone fe n ce d p rivacy p atio A ffo rd a b le student ra te 480- 8 3 0 5 12 2H S 2 2 5 / M O 1-1's a v a ila b le n o w in clean, quiet com plexes close to UT. 2 8 0 0 Rio G r a n d e an d 2 3 0 4 Leon 331-4019 12 8F E F F IC IE N C Y A P A R T M E N T S n eor UT, $ 2 3 0 / m o n t h a v o i l a b l e im m ediately 4 8 0 -0 9 7 6 S o m e 11 2 8 F M U S T S U B L E T 2/1 apartm ent. N e a r Zilk- er, on UT shuttle no lease until M a rch C a ll 441 5 2 3 6 11-18B P R IV A 1 E C O N V E N IE N T efh cien cy, 38th at Clarkson, $ 2 20/mo, sh are utilities 4 7 4 4 3 9 2 11-18D E N F IE L D L A R G E , nice 1-1 n e a r p o rk M m on shuttle, utes to d o w n to w n & UT, $ 2 7 5 /m o 3 4 5 - 6 0 2 8 3 4 3 - 9 0 6 2 11 29F 453-4991 12-7K eff. C O M F O R T A B L E , C O N V E N IE N T , cien cy co n d o n eor d o w n to w rvYhuttfe $ 2 5 0 / mo C o ll Jim Baker 4 7 7 5 0 0 0 453-7100 11 7 5 A All Bills Paid West Campus $ 9 9 Deposit Eff, Vs, 2's Starting (a $250 A sh fo rd Apts. 4764915 2401 Loon ALL BILLS PAID F all Rates Eff. 1BR Sm. 2 BR $275 $360-$395 $395 W alk or shuffle fo campus, CA/CH, rem odeled, convenient to everything 2212 San Gabriel 474-7732 M 6 K SUCASA APARTMENTS We are pre-leasing now $295 1 Bedroom $415 2 Bedroom $575 3 Bedroom Furnished/Unfurnished A touch of the Orient, beautiful flowenng gardens, pool, grounds, fountain, gas grills, basic cable, cov­ ered parking, 2 laundry rooms, on UT shuttle 203 W. 39th 451-2268 ★ BEAUTIFUL CHEAPEST ★ 12-19 1802 W Avm Thu campéen is one of the rwcMf oportmenfs in W eil Compu» given it» inexpensive rent» Great afcnoephere woA to UT Surrounded by beootifui bou—8. Pool with fountain Free porting Laundry room. New K>miture Ful lote ben Fully carpeted Go* water and water beaten potd Now Píeteos mg. Summer /Pol rotes Few Left 1-1 S295/S365 3-2» $625/$765 3 3» $425/$565 OFHCE HRS Evening» only 5-8 p.m., M-F ot by app 478-7519 Pod orea fust like in Barton Spnngs VIEWPOINT APTS. Walk or shuttle to campusl Just 5 blocks west of Guadalupe at the end of 26th Street Then come home fo your attractive, affordable efficiency with a lovely wooded view. Attentive management en­ sures quality living. Pool, laundry facilities. Furnished or unfurnished. 476-8590. 12-2H BUDGET PLEASERS C o nven ien t location a t 41st a n d A v e A , 1 block east o f G u a d a lu p e 1 b edro om $195, 4100 A v e . A. S e e m a n ag e r a p a r t­ m ent # 1 0 3 o r coH 451-1084 If no a n ­ sw e r 4 7 8 - 7 3 5 5 1 BEDROOM $199 for spring. N ow pre-leasing in Secluded, quiet complex park-like setting. N icely fur­ nished, carpeted, and draped. G as/w ater paid. 609 E. 45th Street. 452-1823, 451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. FREE RENT! IH-35 at Capital Plaza Shopping Center. 2 bedrooms, large, dean, storage, pool, free cable T.V. W alk to Shopping. IF Shut­ tle. Gas heat, hot water paid. $285/mc. 1008 Reinli. 453- 5764. 12-8D 1 BEDROOM $245 Now leasing for spnng. Quiet apart­ ment in Hyde Pork. Built-in desk with bookshelves. Lots of closets, carpeted, draped, gas/water paid. 4307 Ave. A 454-9945,451-6533 CENTRAL PRO PERTIES INC. tiNTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. ★ Two Bedroom a Fall Rate $440 Walk ro Campus, small qu»ef complex, ceiling fans, pool Cavalier Apts. 3 0 7 E 31st 4 7 6 - 6 2 2 5 4 7 4 - 7 7 3 2 473-2513 12-7K ★ 5 Blocks West UT ★ Large, quiet, immoculately clean semi- efficiency Kitchen, wolk-in closet, laundry, gas heat cooking, w ater/gas furnished O n site m anager $ 2 4 9 Red O a k Apartments, 2104 S a n Ga- bnel. ★ 476-7916 ★ 11-29F •FREE RENT!* HYDE PARK Spacious, quiet, clean, shuttle, c o v ­ ered parking, 2-1, $ 3 8 5 Ceiling fans, mim-biinds, built-m desks, all gas p aid ond m o re! P L E A S E L E A V E M E S S A G E 451-5825, 4 3 0 6 A V E A 1-12D • LOOK! • 1 bedroom , efficiency from $195 0 0 pool — patio — on-site m anager & m aintenance Fountain Terrace Apartments 610 W , 30th/Manager #134 1-17F • 4 7 7 - 8 8 5 8 * HEART OF CAMPUS! Rooms & efficiencies available $200-$250 All Bills Paid 482-0398 ______________________________________ 11-22H S2 2 0 / F A L L , A B P 2 blocks UT N e w ly re m od eled dorm ■ style efficiency - P a r k ­ ing, C A / C H laundry 2 5 0 2 N u eces 4 7 4 2 3 6 5 , 4 76-1957 12-8H V E R Y C L E A N 1 b edro om Small com p lex Ceiling fo n s —A/C--screen d oor M a tu re in dividuáis 35th St N o pets 5417 4 5 3 12-19F______________________________ 1 B L O C K C A M P U S- fre sh ly pointed 1-1, small q u iet com plex $ 2 85/m o 2711 Hem phill 478-1870 o r 479- 0 6 6 4 12-19K Park 11-30D Lam ar V illa g e Apartm ents R oom m ate P rob lem s? Efficiency a n d 1 B e d ro o m a v a ila b le starting a t $ 2 5 9 All Bills P aid by o w n e r 451-4514 11-23 E F F IC IE N C IE S $195 A B P neor cam pu T 482-0195 11-23C R E D U C E D H Y D E P A R K ! 1-1 4 0 7 B w c o m m u n it y , 4 5 th S m a ll q u ie t downstairs, mim-biinds, $195 * G an d E Coll 4 59-0017 1-10D___________________ 1-11K 4 B L O C K W E S T UT clea n qyiet officior cy W a te r / g a s furnished G a s h ea t & cooking $ 2 2 9 476-7916 1-10F 370 — Unf. Apts. F a ll R e n t S p e c ia l 185001! LARGE effkiena#s »n Hyde Pork oreo • AH appliances • P o d • Drape$ • Laundry • Gas & Wofe» pato H yde Park Ploce 4400 Av« B Monogmr #113 452-3590 11-22F S U N D E C K , C lea n north -central efficien cy a b o v e bouse Stove, refrigerato r G a s + w a te r paid 5315 A u ro ra 4 5 4 8 3 8 7 11 22 K W E S T C A M P U S S T E A L S ! O n e block to shuttle G r e a t 1-1's, 2-1's ond 2-2's From $195/mo Pool, laundry, small com p lex Call Step Sa vers 4 7 6 - 3 0 2 8 11 2 3 D 12-14K R e n t s s t a r t a t * 1 9 9 ! Any questions? • FREE utility hook-up • Close to UT shuttle. • EFF-2 Bdrs. available Pi f-lease now for Spring! U s e A t t i c 926-6664 12-1F Call Regency Properties 2 4 6 - 8 2 5 2 in ONE $225 UNFURNISHED town. location Secluded Larg e apartm ent, lots o f clo ­ sets, carpet, drapes, gas, and w a ter paid Located a t 5606 Roosevelt, call 451-4608 or 451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. _______________________________________ 12-14K ONE $249 UNFURNISHED Large apartment near North Cross Mall, large closets, car­ port, draperies, patio, balcony, pool, courtyard, and covered parking. Located at 2211 Rich Creek, call 451-3980 or 451-6533. CENTRAL PROPERTIES INC. landscaped 12 14K ★ WEST CAMPUS LUXURY ★ Affordable apartments with hot tub, large pool, tanning deck, ond barbecue areas Close to campus, popular restau­ rants, shopping and shuttle bus. CAMINO REAL APARTMENTS 472-3816 1-12 Far West Student Special 1/1,5 on shuttle route. Must see to appreciate. Priced to lease!!! S O U T H C E N T R A L S p o c io u i l i t near Zilker Small, q uiet com plex $ 2 2 5 * electncify $199 move-m ip e c io l Coll 4 5 4 7 9 0 0 oc 4 4 2 -6 9 6 4 So n dlin e 8. C o 11 18F O N UT ihuthe n e a r 45th on d R ed River La rg e 1 1 H a rd w o o d floors 9 0 6 E 46th 3 4 5 -7 2 3 2 11-29 ______________________ N O W P R E L E A S IN G for S p n n g Efficien tie», 1-1 J, 2-1'*, starling from $ 2 2 5 a / m o 4 5 8 2 9 9 0 or 4 5 2 1121 11-21K PR E L E A S IN G M O P A C /45th Close to UT 1-1 $2 75 r E. 2-1 $ 3 2 5 - E. pool 5001 Bull C reek , quiet com p lex 472 8 0 2 9 12-ID W E S T C A M P U S efh oenies O ld e r w o o d (N o plastic floors window s, different form ica), $ 2 0 0 ,2 6 5 most utilities paid Also, large, ca rp e te d units, $175 plus utilities Jock Jen n in gs 4 7 4 6 8 9 7 454- 4031 11-23 S T U D E N T S Q U IE T p ro perty A u s tin a ffo rd a b le m ore inform ation 4 4 ' 7 8 9 8 12 ID in South v e r y Starting at $179 Coll for b u s lin e , P o o l n eo r U N I Q U E E F F IC IE N C Y ! ScrtiHo Mes, ceiling Fan, Fireplace w in d ow s w alk in closet p ool, shuttle $ 2 5 0 $ 5 0 depo sit Step S a v e rs 4 7 6 3 0 2 8 12 >9D N O R T H C E N T R A L Fantastic apartm ent com munity Firep lace, ceiling fan mt c r o w a v e W / D connections, p o o l fOCuzri security system Storting $ 2 9 5 $ 7 5 de posit Step S a v e r . 47 6 -3 0 12 I9 D 3 0 2 8 E N F IE L D 2BR 1BA, quiet co u rtyard mod e m kitchen c a b le TV $ 3 2 5 4 5 9 -7 4 0 5 shuttle pool, 11 23 K IT C H E N S P A C E 1 Super efh cien cy cleon sp ooou s mmt-bltnds gas p a id Storting $ 1 8 0 'm o Ste p Savors 4 7 6 3 0 2 8 12 19D B E ST O F THE W E S T ' W a lk to UT ¡ 3 ^ co n d o Itke apartm ents! 11 $ 2 5 0 . 1-1 w left $ 3 0 0 N o w or pre lea se S te p Sovers 4 7 6 -3 0 2 8 M O D L O O K I N G F O R A D EAL R IG H T ? Almost n ew great 2 -2's W est Cam p us, on Rio G r a n d e $ 4 5 0 Step So vers 4 7 6 3 0 2 8 1-10D ★ * * * * ★ * * * * * ★ * * * * * * ★ * Hyde Park - IF Shuttle LAR G E e ffk ie ra w with walk-m d o ra h * LAUNDRY * VERY Qu.et * GREAT Rates! Coll M I K E 2-6 p m o r le a v e m e s s a g e ★ 323-6526 ★ S e q u o ia A p a r tm e n ts - 301 W 3 8 th St 1-12H 380 — Furn. D uplexes 2 B E D R O O M 12 blocks north of U T $ 3 5 0 (1 1 $ 3 6 8 (2 ) plus ele ctm ity N o p a h references 4 78 5 8 5 0 U -2 3 D N U E C E S s 7 r EET S o h d P b ñ c k T 'S e c o ñ d floor w o o d floo rs Two b e d ro o m s CA/ C H w in d ow s bright $430. G & W potd J a c k 4031 Je n n m g s 11-23 4 7 4 6 8 9 7 4 5 4 $199 1-1 upstairs comer with large windows, all appliances. 1616 W . 6th #401, ALL BUS ROUTES at entrance. 327-11601-13D SPRING OAKS APARTMENTS 700 Hearn Ave. 1-1 Recently refurbished opts a v a il­ ab le Shuttle route else by Start at only $195 00/m o FR EE RENT N E A R CR 2-1 du plex hard w o o d floors c eiim g fons, mmiblmds wo ter paid Rent n egotiable 9 2 8 3 5 8 5 even in gs 12 1 K A V A IL A B L E J A N 1st 3 b e d ro o m C A /C H conporl mmiblmds c a rp eted 5 minute wolk to Low S c h o o l 3 3 0 5 H om p ton Rd 476-0317 3 4 6 -0100 12-2F B A R T O N H IL L S Ziiker 2-1"/ Carport, w a s h e r'd ry e r firep lo ce deck, w o o d e d secluded bus n on sm oke's $ 4 6 0 328 5100 12-6H 2 1, 6 blocks UT A v a ila b le n o w 474 0 6 3 5 if no a n sw e r II 21____________________________________ le a ve m essage L A R G E 2 4 unfurnished/furnished bed room s Sp a ciou s d o s e h big kite hens w a sh aten o pets O K From $ 2 6 5 462 3 3 0 0 12 7 1940 s 2-1 on quiet street Y a rd oak floors lots of w in d o w s 1509 Kirkw ood $ 3 6 0 / mo 4 7 2 2123 12 8F Ideal for students 495-9271 1012 E 15th Ex tra iorge 2 bedro om Kirk w o o d floors, high ceilings $ 2 7 5 sey 4 5 9 Levy R ealto rs 451 0 0 7 2 5 6 6 7 12 8H 12 8F $150 MOVE-IN C le a n 1-1 in small quiet com plex, 5 minute bus ride to UT campus, free baste cable, gas a n d w ater paid, oil appliances, $ 200/m o, first m onth free with years lease to qualified residents Kemp Management 459-8254 327-9635 m i d H U G E 2-4 B F D R O O M S S p a cio u s kitch ens, targ e closets, yard, pets O K O n shuttle From $ 2 8 5 4 6 2 3 3 0 0 12 7 $149 O O / M O N T H —Efficiency W a te r/ g a s 23 0 2 L eo n Step p aid N O deposit 12-8F O n e Properties 4 8 2 - 8 9 2 5 5 4 0 3 O V F R B R O O K (N o r t h e o s t ) lo rg e ) ca rp o rt $195 Kirhsey 451 0 0 7 2 12-8H Levy Realtors i O V E I Y O L D 6 3 house with plenty ot light Firep loce big kitchen in w est cam pus o re a $14 0 0 Ñ e g 4 8 0 0 9 7 6 1122 S T U D E N T S C U T E 2 1 N e w corp et and pain t 1 mite from U T $ 3 8 5 CaH Kon 4 5 8 3 9 9 0 11 3 0 H Y D E PA R K duplex, lo p floor 4 3 0 2 A v ­ e n u e G 11, $310 PcirhoRy furm shed if n e e d e d Q u iet tre ed N e o r p ark, restou ronts, shuttte A v a ila b le Ja n u a r y 1 E ve n mgs 3 4 5 -3 7 3 3 11-22C V E R Y L A R G E 3 b e d ro o m beautiful Hem phill Park n e a r UT C A 'C H , co v ered p a rk in g a p p lia n ces m any O a k Trees $ 8 9 5 479-6153 J-10H 400 — Condos- Townhouses Ivanhoe Village A p a rtm e n ts — In Travis Heights — Next To Park — Quiet Neighbor­ — Ideal For Grad Stu­ hood dent — Recreation Areas — PoolLaundry — Excellent Rate 1500 East Side Dr. 4414375 Town hom es *** THREE LEVELS OF LUXURY *** Spacious 3/2.5 Townhome with Study * N ew carpet and point * W asher/dryer in unit * Ceiling fans throughout * W alking distance to campus CALL REGENCY PROPERTIES FOR INFO. 346-8252 1-12H BEAUTIFUL 2-1 CONDO Hardw ood floors, ceiling fans, fireplace, W/D, security, cov­ ered parking, pool and hot tub. Four blocks north of UT on shut­ tle route. Kelly or Mitch 482-8525 11 188 PM T Is now leasing for Spring! Call 476-2673 _________________ 1 16D $ 5 0 D E P O S IT ! L U X U R IO U S attractive condos UT a r e a efficiencies fireploce focuizi ceiling Sh a ro n 9 2 6 -0 8 9 8 11 2 3 H fons, o n RR shutfle FIRST M O N T H free on beautiful 2 - lV í co n d o with oil a p p lian ces fireploce. in small, quiet com plex w/|OCuzzi G re a t stu dent plan, on RR shuttle C od S h a ro n 9 2 6 0 8 9 8 12 2H BEST P ^ a s r OUALITY & LOCATION W e s t cam pus Enfield, & H y d e Pork Condos/Houses C o t C ity 4 78 6 5 6 5 Properties 12 8F C O N D O F O R tease in Clarksville a r e a 2 2 $ 5 9 5 m o Ja n 1989 A v a ila b le 11 23F C all for appointm ent 8 3 2 1571 N IC E P LA C E N ic e pn ce 1 1 C o n d o with vaulted ceiling ceding Ions o n d b alco n y 3316 G u a d a lu p e $ 3 2 5 / m o C o l Pac/ 4 5 2 0 6 2 0 11 2 'D C E N T E N N IA L ^ 1 1 F fK fP U k C X . W / D , S f - C U R E D P A R K IN G P O O t H O T T U B W E S T C A M P U S $4 75 C A L L PM T 4 / 6 2 6 7 3 12 19D D E LPHI 2 2 S E C U R E D P A R K IN G W E S T C A M P U S ALL A M E N IT IE S CALL P M T 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 12 190 W E D G E W O O D 2 1 FU LL Y F U R N IS H E D H O T T U B W A S H E R D R Y E R SE C U R IT Y PM T 4 / 6 2 6 7 3 $ 6 5 0 C A LL 12 19D P O O L O R A N G f TREE 11 FU L LY F U R N IS H E D FO R 2 P E O P L E 8 0 0 S Q FT W ' D V I E W SE C U R IT Y 2 C O V E R E D P O O L P A R K IN G 4 76 2 6 7 3 $ 6 0 0 C A LL 12-190 PM T O R A N G E TR EE 2-2~ 2 0 0 S Q fT f ¡ ¿ F P L A C E W ' D 2 R E S E R V E D P A R K IN G P O O L W E S T C A M P U S $ 8 0 0 C A LL PM T 4 ? 6 2 6 7 3 12 19D S O M E R S E T 2 2 Q U iE T C O M P L E X O N w c SH U T T LE W D $ 6 9 5 CALL P M T 4 7 6 26 7 3 ’ 2 190 S A N P E D R O O A K S 2 2 N E W C A R P E T N E W P A IN T W I S T C A M P U S P O O L H O T TUB G A S PA ID $ 4 5 0 PMT 4 76 2 6 7 3 12 19D S U N C H A S E 2-2 S E C U R IT Y , C O W B K P P A R K IN G P O O L V IE W A U A M M E N i 12 T 'ES $ 6 5 0 C A LL PMT 4 7 6 2 6 7 3 19D U N IQ U E H O U S E S 3 1 5 Rock spirt level flra p to c* h a rd w o od s H yd e Pork $ 7 0 0 2 '! duplexed o ld er house furmshed $ 3 6 8 G o v W a te r Potd Huge house W ilsh r e W o o d s, m d oor utility C A C H Fire p lo ce dish w a sh er $ 8 5 0 Top notch Tuppie re d o security Jo o u z ii m creddxe m arble firep lo ce kitchen d u voí 1 2 5 0 3/1 house. 3 /lh a n d Jefferson. $ 3 5 0 lo u ro 4 6 9 9 8 0 0 9 2 9 9 0 2 5 M o r e ' v i a S Q U E A K Y C L E A N 7-1 n eor shuttle fe rn e d yond covered potto app lian ces R oom m ates w elcom ed terms 4 5 4 8 3 8 7 flexible 11-77K A V A i 4.BL E N O W 2 th ro ug h 5 bedroom houses fa r rent 452 5 9 79 i 24 Hours) 11 1 T W O B L O C K S F R O M C A M P U S N ice F I C A /C H W ' D $ 4 5 0 m o M o v e m 0 5 4 0 11 2 2 0 t a r p o n vpectoi A v a ila b le Bret 4 5 3 N E A R L A W Sc h o o l 2 B ' 1 B o C A / C H app lian ces $ 5 9 0 4 6 9 0 3 4 6 11 18 fe n c e d g a ra g e furniture 1010 E 15th 3 blocks east o f IH 35 O ld e r Levy 2 1 w o od floors $ 2 5 0 Realtors 4 5 1 0 0 7 2 , 4 5 9 - 5 6 6 7 12-8H Kirk sey 2 9 0 5 R lO G R A N D E re m o d e le d 2 with cerlmg fons hrepio ce h a rd w o o d floors stove and refrigerator $ 6 0 0 mo 3 2 9 4 2 0 3 377 5 7 6 7 12 17 Q U A f N i b u n g a l o w 3 i w / h a rd w o o d floors lorge p e ca n trees fe n c e d 4 ocre N e a r lom o r 1 8 3 IH 35 R efrig era to r Bus route W / D A vaila b le $515 w / W / 0 Coll 8 3 5 9 3 5 8 M id Ja n u a ry 11-18 R E C E N T L Y R E D O N t long# 2 1 C A / C H ca rp et h o rd w o o d floors E fw o o d R ood 3 4 5 72 3 2 11 79 C O M P L E T E L Y G O R G E O U S W E S T C A M P U S H O U S E . R E M O D E L E D 3 2 F IR E P L A C t h a r d w o o d l A S I F E N C E D Y A R D $6 9 5 W O N 'T L O N G 4 / 6 C A L L N O W 2 6 7 3 12 190 f l O O R S P M T N IC E 2 1 in H y d e Pork a r e a H o rd w o o d fe n c e d yard w ith floors firep lace lorge trees G a ra g e /w o rk s h o p $ 4 9 5 4 8 0 7 A v e G 4 7 6 3 6 3 4 12 19F A V A I I A B I E N O W 3-1 fe n c e d yard 49 th at Duvof! $ 4 2 5 neg 5 0 5 E 49th Coil collect 713 3 7 6 1900 '2 5 W A L K TO U T 1 "3 block from campus, foe m g Eastw o od s Pork P riv a te entran ce W o o d floors washer d rye r 8 3 4 0 7 8 4 12 12 N E A R UT L a w Scho ol cm RR shuttle La rg e furnished room $ 1 5 0 A B P C A / C H 3 6 3 4 12-12F shore b ath s 3310 R e d Rivet 4 76 C A S T IL IA N R O O M in s p n n g M ales or fem ales to tak e over sp n n g semester lea se Cod M ic h e le C o ckn il 4 7 8 3 0 4 4 11 28 390 — Unf. D uplexes 420 — Unf. H o u ses 1-16F C * I T * Y ¿¿P R O P E K T B si 425 — Rooms Spring 478-65*5 2 7 1 7 M o P r u d e N o h m RENTAL 370— Unf.Apts. $200 Efficiencies • L a r g e e f f i c i e n c i e s o n U T S h u t t l e . • N e w l y r e d e c o r a t e d • Door to door trash s e r v i c e • E x e c u t i v e s u i t e s a v a i l a b l e Pre-lease now for Spring. Stonewood Village Apts. 454-8903 4558 Ave. A Rents start at $ 2 9 5 ! Brentw ood Terrace A pts. • 1 & 2 Bdrm floor plans • Close to UT shuttte • Ceiling fans • Microwaves Pre-leasing for the Spring. Call 454-7251 Everything You’d Expect...and Then Some • 4 month leases • Spacious Floor Plans (excellent for roommates) • $49 deposits • First stop on CR Shuttle • 2 Lighted Tennis Courts • On-site Tennis Pro 454-5638 T h e\U § s H YD E P A R K room fo r n o n smoking g ra d ­ u a l* student $159 A 8 . P , n eor shullt* 11- N *u m o n M o n o g *m # n t 4 5 3 - 4 5 0 0 18F______________ A B P + c a b ia l Fum tshod with C A / C H , $ 2 0 0 - $ 2 8 0 1902 -1904 N i m c m - W a lk to UT, A C C , & d o w n to w n . 4 7 2 -7 5 6 2, 12-13F________________________ 474 0 7 5 0 430 — Room-Board A T T E N T IO N F E M A L E S I $ 3 007mo, AM Ends potd, 19 macth/week. hom a k— p mg 5 doys/w k, 3 blocks from cam pus M odi son H ou s* 7 0 9 W 22nd. 4 8 0 11-18C_____________________________ 0571 THE C A S T IL L IA N 3 spacious a v a d o b i* for f*m o l* r*sid*nts fo r spnng ra ms i tor 4 7 8 4 0 4 7 3 2 8 -4 7 6 4 11 2 8 C ____________ 435 — Co-ops E C L E C T IC /C R EA T IV E , fun. 3 blocks form UTI D*kcious m g g i* cuitm a, pool, great housemates Double» from $ 2 8 5 . «mato» from $ 3 5 7 All fo o d o n d b ill mckxsod Hous* of Commons, 2610 Rio G r a n d * . 476 7 9 0 5 12 8H B E A U T IFU L historic h orn * 2 blocks UT Q uwt, studious r«io x *d D oubles $ 2 9 3 $300. singles $ 3 2 5 - $ 3 5 4 Includes ALL food, biHs Cod soonl Hebous Co-op. 478 -6 7 6 3, 1909 N u e c e s , or cad IC C C o ops 476-1957 5K3 W 2 3 r d 12-8H 440 — Roommates FE M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d for g reo l 2 bdr 2 bath W e s t C am p us a p i g rea t location C all lis a 4 7 6 4 6 2 ? 11-4 SH O R T W A L K UT You r ow n spnng room Q u ie t n on sm oking, p e fie t ! Shored kitchen C ad 4 7 4 - 2 4 0 8 for pn- ra t* both, A B P $ 2 5 0 - $ 2 7 5 Cad 472 5646 10 share bdts bath $12 0 $180 12 5F N O N S M O K I N G R O O M M A T E ” wanted, student p referred shore 2 B D / 2 B A C o n do 7 c a r g a ra g e Sr shuffle $ 2 0 0 t 'l btdv 4 4 7 4 7 6 2 7 p m 12 8 R O O M A T E B R O K E R S F IN D S C O M P A T I BLE R O O M M A T E S C A N H A V E O R N E E D S P A C E 477 5 5 6 9 fe e 12 13F TARR YTOW k^ H O M E roommates want ed 2 dory house 1 mile from campus G reat neighborhood! $175 $250 320 8858. leave mestoge 11 72F HOUSEAAATE N EA R Law” s7hool M o tur» permanent, nonsmoker vegeto n o r 2 1 CA/CH faxis, fuRy furmshed $240 469 0346 11 23 _ _ _ _ _ FEM ALE STUDENT to hctv* own tied room 3/7 furmshed apartm ent Red River shsflfle at door $270 all bids pato 7500134 11 21 N EED ED H O U SEM A TES Fo. two room , m north campus house $140 AJI Bids Pcwd on shutfle 450-0870 11 21 C A STILIA N R O O M Tm moving ami need to find person to replace me 4 7 7 6534 leave message 11 73 CUTE APA RTM EN T pooiiKke mew l* m a le roo m m o te wonted FW ihuflte. no drugt alcohol 346 7764 11 71 non tm akm g H I F O R tw o story p riva te b ed ro o m bath C H / G A . color TV ,n room, ste r e o VCR. h r e p io t* gord en $ 2 5 0 A B P 4 4 ' 2249 12 5 460 — Business Rentals M A T H T U T O R O ffice 477 7889 304 W . I4 th 8 i O v e r 10 y e a r* o f p r ofoeeto n e l • e n rice h e lp in g a tu d e n ta e u tk e S tr u g e lin g ? ? H f f l H i w l M t o T T C e ll o r come by for M p o h t o M l MATH M301/M2 M303F M403K/V M31 e tci M30SO M407 MSOSAB M M K A * M31IK M427K1 M31! PHVSIC8 PMV301 PMY30RKA PH YJ03KI PH Y3Zm 0ATA PRO 0PA310 Df»A333H 800 ECCW» ECO303 Eco aaw it FCQ324 Oon ‘1 pul I ¡eS&fpgaEMm EM306S CS304PE CSJ06 CS315 V>- fjEM Jt» CS410 CS410 HBHHHEE4n C S 3 » met 3i« CS33* CS345 CS3S? :S3T2 I — EE3R3 , . E N 0 U S H fE ?1 ? CH6M301-3MENQ307 CHEMfliOAV ENG JO* C M E W lM E N Q y O M N H A fr flO N ACC3H31? AST301 A C C 3 »(K7 XSTJO? AST303 ■ 4( 03*4 ST4T30* A8T307 ■ p s v j t t tfl* off seflE the rflgM I Sí.X'3’ - I • •n. R 'fl to e M e Oten. .. . Lómeteme UT R jR to M M M * - - / a/ rUm eu s TUTORING m & io h rm jo c k SERVICE 610 — Misc. Instruction § Í1 Ü l 8 | f l > c < * h O Q . T J a ) o o - c g - ® O ) w— o sz • E ^ E " O o = 2 co 0 ) C D C C = 8 CO n SS to co CD CO CO J 5 = T 5 co -C= o e n c o o O v _ CO CO co _ c o o O f FIC.E S P A C E a v a ila b le m com fortable offics bufldtng o tew block» north o f UT to m p u t 0 9 7 6 $ 1 4 0 $ 3 0 0 12 13f f ' O * 4 8 0 --> T O C 03 CAREER CENTERS OFTEXAS 450-0101 SERVICES 650 — Moving- Hauling ABC Apt Moving 1 0 % D i s c o u n t to al UT paopie • Local 4 kx>g-distance • M o v i n g s u p p l i e s • Free Delivery MOVING BOXES 339-MO V f 339-6693 ob s o tutob pr h o u se h o lds h ou seh old s f»ono m o * m g olfcces. aportm enfs Sp ecia l to O a la s . Hou*ton etc 479 9301 11 72H 660 — Cleaning Sarvicas 1978 focuby a FREE ESTIMATES a 10 X off ftr%l vrut 442-5222 720 — Starao-TV Rapair T V Akgnamant and circuit o na iyra $25 cad i 452 4949 11-22_________________ 750 — Typing P a p o a M ILLIE'S W O R D Procaeong the ses dtssortoflons, mgdouty tronscnp non proofreading 15 yao n experience South Auehn 280 6304 11 180 TYPE-RITE typmg ram ee AJt college po­ pan $1 50/p g resumes $10 00 Second copy free 24 hour service! 443-4229, leov* memoge 11-22 RENTAL 435 — Co-ops * 1 0 0 OFF your first month’s rent ANNOUNCEMENTS 510 — Entertainment- Tickets FO R S A L E 2 tickets to Texas vs Texas A 4 M ’o o fb o ? gom e U T wde k rw ei deck C o « 451 84 5 9 5 !0 p rn 11 2 3 2 5 am R O U N D TRIP kcket So El Pose deports N o v 28 pm $ 9 0 neg C a * Steve at 477 3 7 3 8 o« 343 9 3 5 4 1) 22 return s N o v FO R S A L E 2 'Ound trip hckafi so Los V eg o t .e a v e s Au*lm afternoon reh jm t M o n d a y N o * around n oon Please t o * 3 7 0 -0 3 8 9 '1 18 tor $150 eoch ¡8 FO R SA L f round snp ticket A u t*n to D e n ver Dec 2 5th a s x * J a r 1 $ 1 ?8 7 8 ? 6 3 2 2 11 22_____________ ___________________ R O U N D TRIP ticket to N Y N Y .e a v e s 77 returns 11 78 G o a d p r x t C o * .tone! le a v e m estoge 4 7 ? 545 7 11 ? ? C C O W B O Y O IL E R hekets seats Thantsgrvmg doy Joe 4 9 5 5 0 4 8 11 23 Four p o o d $15 e a c h C o l 520 — P«rsonals A M W A Y D i s t r i b u t o r M o v e d 7 Cal Me At 472-4075 Greet G in Id e m Far TheHaddeye! H w m a M a a a a a m a a M ^ ^ 530 — Travel Transportation r SPRING BREAK ’$9—i Trips AvBribts Now S o u t h P a d « bkJUC TX S t e a m b o a t C O D a y to m a B e a c h F I M u s t a n g feiA N O TX H k t o n H e a d fecAND SC Don't waumirs Too Ult! Cap Suncfiase Beacf & Ski Breaks 1-800-321-5911 SK I' N A U S T IN Jo n u o ry trip stu Srec k en ndge lod gin g $ 2 0 9 / person W o lk to lifts night Me h a m con- Ja n 3 8 Lifts * d a s Cod 4 5 ? 6 6 6 2 . 4 6 7 -0 6 1 0 12 5 IN T E R N A T IO N A L stu d e nt Low rales on scheduled flight w o rld w id e ST A Travel 1512)474-151/ travel 512 12- -19 R O U N D T R IP TICKET le a vin g D ec 71 to Son Fran cisco return to Austin Jo n 12 $ 2 0 0 n eg o tia b le P a m 4 6 2 0100. wk 3 7 0 1183 11 28__________________________ 540 — Lost A Found LO ST G O L D a rro w brocket m U G L a r e a $100 re w o rd H found cad 4 7 6 - 9 4 4 4 11 22________________________________________ 560 — Public Notice ESTATE JE W E L R Y L IQ U ID A T O R S premt um pnces potd 1 p ie ce o r entire cod ec Aon 4 54-3133 II by a p p oin tm en t 11-30 EDUCATIONAL 5B0 — Musical Instruction P I A N O F O R cM d ren /o d u fh . P n vo te les­ sons B egin n ers w e lc o m e R eadin g, e a r trommg, tfseroy H y d e P o rk 4 5 2 -8 4 7 7 11 22 G U IT A R L E S S O N S rone ye a rs leochtng e x p erien ce m conservatories-’ a l Myles to oges 6 a n d up 4 7 9 - 0 2 5 2 11-18 590— Tutoring lU C C E E l Í t u t o r i n g ! •Persons! sad Groui •All subjects lA f I t d w o n k J i T l i ' t i l M i n u u l PATIENT TUTOR for excedente *s math, physics h doesn't have to b e hord Kedy 474-7801 12-1 MATH TUTOR. M A tn aratkaawka 3 yri TA rapertonm. Col lirail. 477-1259. 11- 2 K r l l l I I I l I I I I I I l i ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL TYPING SERVICE PRINTING APPLICATIONS Sure, W# Type FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Mart Out wMiOoodOradMf Law Briefs R 1 S U J M IS 2707HEMPHIU PAIK Af 27th A Guoddkfpt PUnty of Forking 472-3210 472-7677 ACADEM IC TYPING SERVICE 504W .24H i S t . 1 477-614 T*m •open, (m u PWffili knob. Draw»1*r wm nsM m 81/ ee- w / ie h r* . M t o k ■ M M **t 4aor to n o # n*e Opee R mum to to ta Jfo a 4 fje e e r j A « • r a t i bototo taranto LONGHORN COPIES • R e i u m f l t • T h e se s • Term P a p e r s • W o rd P ro « * stin g • B in d in g • L a m in a h n g • L a s e r P rin tin g • K o d a k ■ C o p ie s 2 5 1 8 G u a d a lu p e 476-4498 Am erica * OkJm tf Lorgm d n o n m o M A L RfSUMI SfffVTCf JOB W MMI RESUMES $9 w f»Z>atf Demore S o n g eemsg mhi e rou * w * wr- » s»#*ms t.e e e i» 4sx)eogenn« « M t o t t e p w m m t * * r t r n e l WOODS TYPING * W 0 K D P K O C B S S I N O L a e e rW M te r I I P t m t t r a M a c in to s h / M S D O S 472-6302 2200 Guadal x [l4 » t * e t H 3 - T k tH Mi A TTTDKSim a Guemreeed Canecí to *d d Dtarma* flew For «7 1 I M - T M • ! P L E A S E ! # A lo w me to P ftS O N A L lY tond to yout typeig need* on my 4AA W otR Pracemor Fad and ac curato to Hue you tuna and money McCALL Of RCE SERVIOS # 346-6150 • 12-80 TY PIN G SERVICE term pamen. «— MS enerv etc an dfo* wflk H P La**r Pnwtor 443-9043 » -28___________ TO P Q UALITY T y p m p W d > n r a e g free tpefcng check, tnmmn pick un/de kvgry $1 Sopapa 474 1674 11-73 WORO PROCESStotG «taras, draarto hont i* e is o ' paper» teorw enph 20 seen m tm aramamf barbara Tufa* 453 5124 12-5 reports WORD H O C IS S N O X > n g r a a S tararaes «tara». page and up He* up and dakvary arad- ohto Chan* 135 7040 11188 *in*.*uto«> $' W WORD PROCESSING and raramra S I 59A TM< ST Ih tO PAD $1 5 0 page w 9 T a ra n * 45« 7710 er 837 3 7 u 1? »9C_____________________________ U M N t it t iT Y T Y P IN G Doy Sanees wdruph» >»mng $5 OCVpg Perantotoad h e ie ra a n a $a U T 473 2948 12 50 i J O O t a t o m M OBS CLASSIFIEDS PAGE 16 r jC ittb fiJ d ~ J lo u ie PhO C O L L E G E E N G L IS H tc w ith processing ] bfcxk» pnneng $7 page ( a d V s p r o o f r e a d ng wo RENTAL 400 — Condot-Tow nhouta* Lotalrd in the preatlgto«M Wm I Cawpmi iwkghborhood. thee# luxury condomknluma ara unfqtraiy kirrtoahad and éaco- rated to (Trate a crtenáonabfo aryritoh amirnnmanc n y w d y kx etuómt living Our rrputatktn to built on a thoughtful, eating ettttwde to­ ward* our rn id rn ti and «vary maerdmanea detail Featu re* C * >niputer controUcd budding entrance eyatem Separate alarm eyetrm tor each unit C ovared parking w good fighting Separate locking storage area lot each unit Smoke detector* and heat amaotr* in each unit Personalized management only a phone call away (24 hr*) Good fighting in outatde hallway* Landscaped courtyard with spa Cozy fireplace* with ceramic tile hearth* Fashionable, practical mini-blind* and aparkiing braaa ta ­ DENISE'S CLEANING SERVICE a Perso n al H ouse Ctoarung Sane* ture* throughout French doors opening onto balconies Decorative ceiling molding • Ex p erien ced w ith student ond Ceiling fans in living room and badroom* High ceiling*, cathedral ceiling* in SrtMktor units Hidden G E waaheradryer* Fully equipped G E idtchen include* host-free refrigerator, dishwasher, microwave, *eM cleaning oven and diagonal Spacious, organized pantry and sleek European «t$4e cabi­ 11-18D netry Prr-wtred lor telephone and cable TV FOR MORS INFORMATION, CALL/ (512) 451-3220 2 6 0 6 Rio G rand* 1V* biles, from UT 474-6905 2612 Guadalupe T A O S Comt expert no i co-operative Rving: student- run housing that is dose to campus, próvidas 17 nutritious m»ats a week A it a groat opportunity to moot a variety of interesting, matura A fun people. 1 I I I I B I I I I I I I I I J Around Campus is a daily column listing University-related activities sponsored by academic departments, student services and registered stu­ dent organizations. To appear in Around Campus, organizations must be registered with the Office of Stu­ dent Activities. Announcements must be submitted on the correct form, available in The Daily Texan office, by 11 a.m. the day before publica­ tion. The Daily Texan reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to style rules, although no significant changes will be made. MEEHNGS Students Older Than Average will meet from 5 to 7 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Building Battle Oaks Room. We will plan our Thanksgiving Day meal for those of us staying in Austin Thursday. Of course, we won't let this planning interfere with our social hour. All students 23 years old and older are welcome. ECHO I will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Texas Union Building Chicano Culture Room. New Jewish Agenda w ill meet at 6 p.m . Sunday at the Mi Amigo apart­ m ent complex (45th and Duval sheets), Apt. 133. We will discuss a progressive Jewish position concern­ ing the Palestinian-lsraeli conflict and other issues. Please call 453-7919 Chi Alpha Christian Fellowship will hold a prayer m eeting at 8 a m Friday in Parlin Hall 5. Join us today or Monday at noon. The Black Pre-Law Association will hold a regular organizational meeting at 7 p.m. M onday in University Teaching Center 1.116 The Spanish Club Tertulia will meet at 3:30 p.m . Fnday in the Texas Union Building Texas Tavern. We will not m eet d u rin g the w eek of Thanksgiving Also, the club will sell coffee and doughnuts outside Batts Hall d u n n g the week after Thanksgiv­ ing vacation. We re even planning a delivery service if vou have class in Batts, Calhoun, Parlin, Mezes, or Ben­ edict halls or in the old Music Build- ing A1 Nadi A1 Arabi will sponsor a brown bag lunch m eeting from noon to 1 p m Fnday in the Texas Union Building Stahrles Room The Mexican American Student 'Suc­ lead ership Council will have a cess '89' conference meeting at 5 p m Mondav the Texas Union in Building Chicano Culture Room All Mexican-Amencan and Híspame or ganizations are invited to attend Chinese Bible Study will meet at h K ) p m Fndav in t ollege of Educa tion Building 371) Fd Lee from Dallas will be the guest speaker Everyone is welcome SHORT COURSES_______ Ihe Student Health Center will spons OyLRUCktl)lUf Ot CAMAl ? K ) U L T E R I O R M A R K S BLOOM COUNTY I M N G T o T o o k ttT »s SU>wt9 8E*X» APA*T, Aftjb «CTOHA8 B voC HAVC hÜCOMflitoCb mm o o a ■ vefef 1 §§ re*. UkCKi. . . ! . C W T MA » 5 A ( f A N 9 A 'f /' ^ v * . , y jo u W N 'r i.,V t h L iW W J X'M J A tí^ É iü tá i THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, November 18,1988/Page 15 ACROSS mVKM M PUZZLS SOLVIO 1 Card game 6 Traes 10 Containers 14 Chicago airport 15 Straight 16 Danish length unit 17 Lass 18 Foolish 19 Alaska city 20 Medley 22 Extant 23 Fish 24 Singer 26 Mag execs 29 Church part 31 Ratite 32 Streaked 34 Evil spirits 38 Turning: pref. 39 Dull 41 Of a time 42 Divas’ vehicles 45 Set free 48 Three: pref. 49 Deviates 50 — Brunswick 51 Bewailers 55 “Bother!” 57 Rooks’ cousins 58 Message 63 Hard to find 64 Prevaricator 65 A Ford 66 Shoshoneans 67 Jackpot 68 Ray 69 Superlative 70 Wild plant 71 Precipitancy 0 0 □ 0 0 0 Q 0 □ 0 0 B 0 Q B 0 0 B [T □ □ n o a □ □ ra 0 D 0 □ □ □ □ ■ s 0 0 D a 0 Q B O □ □ □ a □ □B0G K I0 SJHCSfJ □ 0 0 0 QE9QCDD □ □ a0120000 PO Q E A L E □ 0 □ □ □ B O O S 0 □□00 □ DOWN 1 Splendor 2 State 3 German philosopher 4 Burst forth 5 Re-echo 6 Etched 7 “King — ” 8 Voodoo 9 Depot: abbr. 10 Pacific port 11 Crazy a s ------ 12 Arizona city 13 Scoff 21 Single 22 A few, maybe 25 Rosy 26 Spanish river 27 Discard 28 Scene 30 Roman official 33 Pacific — 35 Persian land 36 Dead 37 Large number 40 Reflected 43 Eris’s kin 44 Knight's title 46 Cereal 47 Values 51 Runt 52 Incensed 53 Pierces 54 Courage 56 Junk 59 Odium 60 Girl's name 61 Mineral: suff. 62 Guide 64 Canon 11- 18-88 © 1988 United Feature Syndicate HERE'S MY CONCEPT, Z IN TIGHT CLOSE-UP, A E SEE VARIOUS ALUMNI TALKING ABOUT THEIR EXPERIENCES AT s AALPEN... II . IV ASK A BROAV RANGE OF GRADUATES - FOOTBALL PLATERS, ARTISTS, s c ie n ­ tists, CONSERVATIVES, ..z ~ = RAVICALS, MEN ANP OUOMEN! C s . IV LIKE you 10 V0 ONE, 700, Z ! yOU'VEOOTA LOT OF GOOD MEMORIES FROM TOUR COLLEGE YEARS, VON'T YOU7 DO I ? THEY ¡AERE THE BEST NINE YEARS OF MY LIFE1 SEE, THAT'S GREAT1 THAT SAYS IT'S NOTA HI6H- PRESSUREV PLACE1 3 < UJ Q 3 GC h- > oc cc < CD > CD U 3 Aft V C 0 0 Q by B erke B reathed m c o o e 'p e fe m p iw m í c io s e T - U B e tftc s u rn M e JU S T PO N 'T B £ U £ V £ m A R E OF IT. LEM M CHECK MY ACL U CARR. IN msi K l i J 1 ¿ s a i l£F<*E LONG, How vpe, 1ÍCY PtSCcWEm> VJtLL, ONM* I GUE^l YTX! just eefjtcr _ ,"r*£i ]pY KHHJl I&UT GwrrHE* I UN ^ip NJTWWG, SMFtf LEFT I TD 3CT 15 '“MCH- MEfpep MaescF| SLEEP ^ cYjA djc JÍJL 9 * 7 . \ P a g e 16/THE DAILY TEXAN/Friday, November 18,1988 s u c h n Deni! ■ k 5DAVS Pr 20 WORDS FOR 1 ORH(A d d itio n a l O n ly 1 ‘P r iv a te P a rty ONLY CALL $500* 4 7 1 -5 2 4 4 DETAILS T £ Y f l IM C lñ S S IF K D RD Í A d d i t i A d * O n l y S o n ^ e C lo ss*f»cat.o n % E x c l u d e d ■ HOTLINE! i m BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE...WANT ADS...471 -5244 SERVICES EM PLO Y M EN T EM PLO Y M EN T Horns try to dig deep for big kick By RAY D ISE Daily T e x a n Staff Intensity. It can determ ine how far a team its tow ard accom plishing goes goals. The UT w om en's volleyball team has high goals, but right now it doesn't have high intensity. it "We need to get our intensity up," senior Dawn Davenport said. "We need to carry into [the] Thanksgiving (tournament) and car­ ry it into the [NCAA] tournam ent." The Lady Longhorns will be look­ ing to pick up the level of their plav to San travel w hen lu is the Volleyball tor Obispo, Calif., they Monthly Invitational Tournament, hosted by N o. 19 Cal Poly-SLO. Texas (25-5), ranked sixth in the latest American Volleyball Coaches Association poll, op en s the tourna­ ment with 20th-ranked N ew Mexico (25-2) at 7:30 p.m . Friday. The 19th- ranked M ustangs (19-12) take on unranked Iowa (22-8) at 9:30 p.m . The losers play Saturday at 7:30 p .m ., and the w inners follow at 9:30 p.m. "New Mexico should be tough," Longhorns Coach Mick Haley said. "We expect SLO to beat Iowa. They are tough at hom e. We have to have an upbeat approach to the tournament because if w e don't, w e could have som e dow n m om ents." Like Texas, the Lobos w o n their conference cham pionship. Unlike the Longhorns, how ever, N ew M exico did it for the first time, fin­ ishing 10-2 in the High Country Athletic Conference ahead of teams such as BYU and Colorado State. The Lobos are led by setter Karen Saavedra-W amock and outside at­ tacker N ao Ikeda-Nagatom o, w ho in addition to making the all-hy­ phen team were nam ed to the sec­ ond team all-HCAC last season. "It's a real important tournament for us," said Laurel Kessel, co-head coach w ith Blase C zem iakow ski. "We're looking forward to it. I ha­ ven't seen Texas in a few years but they are usually a big team." UT faces uphill task despite district win By RON LU BKE Daily Texan Staff After com in g off an upset victory over A rkansas in the District 6 cross country meet last week in D enton, them selves l ady L o n g h o rn s the sixth ranked again in the familiar role of the u n derd og. find All season, the Lady I o n g h o m s have been trying to catch the SWC cham pion Razorbacks, and after defeat­ ing A rkansas in the district meet th e\ find them selves r u n n in g .in uphill battle against the likes of highly ranked K entui kv O regon a n d North Carolina State "1 was really pleased with o u r effort at the district m e e t,'’ Coach Ferry C raw tord said "W e felt all along w e could run with them | A r k a n s a s ] We had a bad race at conference. (At district] 1 think they were very' deter m ined a n d fix used C raw ford said for the 1 o n g h o m s to run well at the NCAA m eet against th< higher ranked teams Monday in Des Moines, Iowa they m ust run their o w n race regardless of w hat the o ther team s do. "W e h a v e to p ut to gether ou r ow n race plan, she said. "That could be a problem at a,national meet be cause you get caught r u n n in g o th e r p e o p le 's races "W e have to have a strong race from everybody eve ry week," Crawford said Even though Crawford considers the team to be in an underdog role, she does not disagree with the team's high national ranking going into the m eet at the Jester Park Golf Course. "We're definitely a top 10 team," she said. "On a good dav we could be a top six team I think a lot of those [top 10 teams] will be closely matched." fX'spite its vouth and inexperience, UT should feel som ewhat at hom e w hen they run the course M onday. The Longhorns ran on the Jester Park course earlier in the vear at the Iowa Invitational and placed third "I think it is gixxJ to have faced the course before," Crawford said "There is a comfort level know ing how the course runs C ravv ford suggested youth and inexperience cannot be considered a hindrance to Texas anym ore because of the strong show ing of lina Hall, one of the tw o fresh­ men on the team At the district meet, Hall finished seventh overall C rawford said the practices this week have been lei­ surely to avoid injuries and have the team well rested tor the NCAA meet She said the five w ho ran at the conference and district m e e t s will run at the N C A A meet 800 — G en eral Help Wanted WANTED: TWO ENGLISH CONVERSATION TEACHERS (Full Time) Immediately avail oble 15K Round tnp air ticket and apartment provide d in Pusan K ore a Bring your resume with p hoto m person M o n d a y a n d W e d n e s­ d a y 12-1 pm UT Bellmont Hall 516 N o p ho n e calls Deadline N ove m b er 2 2 11-21C ★ HIRING IMMEDIATELY ★ Full time customer service position imme­ diately available M o n d a y a n d Fn d ay 10- 6 p m Saturday o nd Su nd a y 3 11 p m (32 hours/week) M ust be dependable, able to work independently greet clients, answ er phones a n d hove neat appear once C ashie nn g o nd dispatching expen • ence helpful Starting salary $ 5 00/hr plus benefits Coll 4 7 9 - 6 6 6 6 for inter­ view appointment 11-18A A IR L IN E S N O W H IR IN G Flight Attend ants, Travel Agents, M echanics. Custom ­ er Service Listings Salaries to $I05K _ En try level positions Call (1) 8 0 5 6 8 7 6 0 0 0 Ext A -9 4 1 3 1 3 0 O V E R S E A S J o ^ s T ^ o o T o o c T m o T J i / mer year round. All countries, all fields Free mfo Write IJC, P O B ox 52 -M I0 1 C o ro n a Del M ar. C A 9 2 6 2 5 12 15 JO B S Also Cruiseships O V E R S E A S $10,000 * Listings! 0 ) 8 0 5 - 6 8 7 6 0 0 0 Ext 3 2 0 OJ-9413____________________________ $105 000/yri N o w Hiring! P ART TIME, tem porary fem óle personal care aftendont for disabled UT student (off campus, non-live-m,(Dec 14- Jan 7) A p p ly with M a r y O 'D onnell, Student Health Center 4 7 1-21 66 12-1C 810 — Office- Clerical N E A R CAMPUS-Futt/port tune TYPIST (45 + wpm) B O O K E E P E R (W e train) R U N N E R (your car) O D D J O B S Appk- 12- cations 9om- 4pm. 408 W 17th 1F 820 — Accounting- B o o kkitapin g N E A R C A M P U S FU ll/po rt time G am TYPIST (45 bookkeeping expenence O D D + w p m ) R U N N E R ( y o u r J O B S Applications 9om -4pm 408 W 17th St 12-13F car) 8 4 0 - Sale s E N T H U SIA ST IC PEOPLE needed to set! W estw ood High School gift certificate books. G o o d pay, poid daily If you ore outgoing & need extra m oney for Christmas call 250-1311 11-22C 8 9 0 - C l u b s - ™ “— Restaurants BARTENDING LEARN HOW IN 2 WEEKS Morning, afternoon ond eve­ ning classes available. Job placement assistance. Texas School of Bartenders. 440- 0791. Approved by Texas Edu­ cation Agency. _______________________________ 1-16F PART TIME evening and weekend help needed Apply in person after 2 or on weekends at Dobte Center 2021 Gua- dolupe 11-18A_______________________ V O C A L IST N E E D S piano player C o l Tim C u r r y le a v e m essage 11-21H 8 3 6 - 2 8 5 6 , at N O W H IR IN G part-time workers Apply m person at M o d D o g & Beans, 512 W 24th. 11-18F 900 — Domestic- H o useh old RELIABLE BABYSITTER who emoys cbil- N eeded summer Westlake A re a Call transportation O w n through su 327-8013 11-28 R E SP O N SIB L E P E R S O N to bobysit 1 child port time in N W Austin Flexible hours 343-6079 11-28______________ 910 — Positions W anted Wanted OiMÜsd Dsbflli Jsdpss tur m p n « a io g i i w n i y e p i Pay available Contort BIN TeHord at (512) 553-3920ext. 147 760 — Misc. Services 790 — Part Time COLLEGE M O NEY for Freshmen and S o p h o ­ mores. M illions go un­ claimed yearly. Write: Stu­ dent Guidance Services, Ó 22-L Fifth Avenue,N ew Kensington, M oney-Back Guarantee. __________________________________12-6H 1 5 0 6 8 P A D A N C E D I M E N S IO N S Sound a nd light­ ing for your parties 3 8 9 - 1 4 0 3 12 IF PRIV ATE M A IL B O X E S N o waiting - keys m ode too 1 47 7 -1 9 1 5 5 0 4 W 24th V -F 10 3 0 a m -5 3 0 p m Sat 10 3 0 3 00pm . 12-7 available io w l P O R T R A IT S ARTISTS” ^ r X o lio s . Studio Photo Christmas lighting on c a rd s collect Sh e rry O K . 11-18H location 1 5 9 8 5 9 4 7 EM PLO YM EN T 790 — Part Time CASH..... PAID NIGHTLY PIZZA CLASSICS IS N O W DELIVERING TO THE UT AREA. W e need 20 part-time an d 5 full-time drivers. W e have the highest paid drivers in town. E x­ perienced inside help needed also. A pply in person at 6 0 4 W. 29th or call 3 2 0 -8 0 8 0 . 12 19F H o m e Steam Laundry & C le a n ers is taking a p p lic a ­ tions for part-time counter attendant/car hops. A fte r­ a v a ila b le . n o o n Starting p ay $ 3 .90/hr. A p ­ ply in person on ly at 2 3 0 1 M a n o r Rd. h o u rs 11-22F ★ NEEDED ★ Child Care Part-t'me child care needed for childien ages 1 and 4 in W est- ake Hills Room, board and sti­ pend offered N e e d own car. Call 3 2 8 U3G4 6 - 9 p.m. 12-19K $5.00 Hr. $5.00 Hr. STUDENT JOBS CONCERT TICKET SALES A U S T IN C IV IC EVEN TS Evening Positions 4 8 3 - 5 5 0 0 4 8 3 - 5 5 0 0 5 5 5 5 N Lamar Bldg. C -107 12-13H ___________ S A L E S A S S IS T A N T Articulate e n t h u ­ siastic, student intelligent g r a d u a t e needed for te lem a rke ting p o sitio n Com puter w o r d -p r o c e s s in g a n d d a ta b a s e expenence p re fe rre d S c h e d u le regular w eekend a n d w e e k d a y s hours Salary c o m m e n s u ra te with sales a n d adm inistrative e x p e ie n c e Send resume/letter d e ta ilin g skills a n d oxp e 'ie n c e to M s C . A B a k e r a l 1 9 0 4 G uadalupe, Suite F 11-23A MARKETING TEST PRODUCT IN AUSTIN N e e d marketing or business person with car to deliver Eroduct. N o sales. Flexible ours. PCC 476-2332 Leave name and number 11-18C WANTED! Highly motivated people wanted for interest­ ing and challenging work in book, periodical, and calendar distribution business. Cheerful, positive attitude and problem solving ability ore necessory for tasks which include dekv ery, bookkeeping, ond general office wort Spanish ana other language abilities wtN be on asset 2 7 6 -7 9 6 2 _________________________________ tf-2 2K A lso O V E R S E A S $ 1 0 ,0 0 0 3 2 0 * O J -9 4 1 3 J O B S cruiseships $105,0001 N o w hinngl Listings!1 (1) 8 0 5 - 6 8 7 - 6 0 0 0 Ext 12-18_______________________ N E A R C AM PU S-full/part time TYPIST tram) (4 5 - wpm ) B O O K E E P E R R U N N E R (your car) O D D J O B S A p p li­ cations 9om -4pm 4 0 8 w 17th 12-5F (we W A N T E D M O T H E R 'S Helper 12-20 hours/week N W Austin Transportation required N on -sm oke r 3 3 1 0 2 1 o . 11-18 HELP N E E D E D n o w thru Chnstm os holi­ days, n o expenence necessary Flexible hours Fill out application at Chick-Fil-A of Norltscross M o ll 11-21D p rogra m m er N E E D C O L L E G E fully kn ow ledgeable in D- base o nd Fox - lor part-time w ork and tutonng 48 0- 122 5 _________ _ 11-21 PART TIM E ltve-in sitter M ust hove refer enees and ow n transportation 48 2- 0 7 4 4 o r 3 4 3 - 6 0 0 5 11-22C_____________ R E S P O N S IB L E S T U D E N T w/reTerences & dep e nd ab le car to chauffeur 2 students, 10 a n d 12 from W ells Branch Scho o ls to W estiake A reo 8 3 7 - 1 5 0 9 3 5 6 3 8 5 2 Thursday afternoons 11-23__________ A T T E N T IO N S T U D E N T S ! M a k e up to $ 1 0 0 a doy part-time selling to youi friends and classmates Start making m one y nowi 4 7 9 - 8 2 5 1 11-23 S P O R T S W E A R C O M P A N Y needs help half-days Some h ea vy lifting required Leave m essage at 4 7 8 1126 11-23 The Lincoln Theatre IV is now hiring for the position of floor staff M ust be able to w o rk weekends a nd holidays Mini mum w a g e A pply in person 11 18F G R O U N D S M A IN T E N A N C E com pany needs som eone to w e ed beds 2 -4 hours/ week, 11-18 flexible G o o d pay 4 5 4 9 7 2 9 B A K E R 'S A S S IS T A N T / cleonerjs) 6-16 hrs/wk, including w eekends F o o d prep skills helpful A p p ly in person 3 -5pm M- Sat Q u a ck e n b u sh ’s 21 20 G uo d alup e 11-23C TELLERS PART T IM E M -F 2 -7 o nd Satur­ d ays Expenence required First Inter state Bank o pening at 1 0 4 0 0 Research Blvd Applications accepted at 2 0 2 8 E 11-21A Ben W hite E O E C A N Y O U teoch French, G erm a n o r Ital­ ian? Earn $ll/hr for classroom instruc­ tion Call 4 7 1 -0 2 7 0 for more information 11-23C_______________________________ PART T IM E Sales H e lp needed A p p ly in person to Whitfield's Barton C ree k M oll outside Foley's, N o v 18 19 9 to 5 11- 18 800 G eneral Help Wanted ★ STUDENTS * Earn extra $ tot the holidays! Part-time temporary assign ments available Must be able to work 8-12 or 1-5 weekdays and/ or weekends AUSTIN TEMPORARY SERVICES, INC. 454-5555 WHATABURGER INC. Crew help position now avail­ able at our Guadalupe location for evening and late night shifts. Benefits include meals and uni­ forms furnished, ment increases, opportunity for advancement. Please apply in person. BE O N TV M a n y needed for com m tr cials. Costing info , (1) 805 6 87-6000, ext TV-9413 11-28 N E A R CAM PUS-full/part time TYPIST (45 + w p m ).B O O ICE E P E R train). R U N N E R (your car) O D D J O B S Appli­ cations 9am -4pm 4 0 8 w 17th. 12-5F (we C O U N S E L O R P O S IT IO N S ovaiiobie m residential w ilderness cam ps near Dallas. Tx B A/BS required Live-In posi­ tion $13,500 starting salary, excellent benefits, career ladder. Get's C a m p 214- 549-2381, Boys C o m p 2 14 -769-2500 11-23A EM PL O Y M EN T 830 — Adm inistrative R E C M M T I M M T Attention Llb< ral Arts Students graduating in Docombmr Lincoln Notional Corporation will bo on Campus M onday, Novem ber 21 from 8:30 to 5:00 p.m. recruiting for Employee Benefits Manager positions Sign-up at the Career Center for I simple as one, two, three, Three-Way Calling lets you carry on a three-way conversation. It also lets you put one person on hold while you call another in private. And that’s like having two phones in one. It’s a breeze to use. And it’s only a few dollars a month, plus a small, one-time installation fee. So call, call, call your Southwestern Bell Telephone Business office today and ask for Three-Way Calling. It’s an easy way to do more with your phone. To order, call: 1-800-325-2686, extension 219. The One ÍD Call OlT Southwestern BeN Availably m most areas KS Telephone