Da il y T e x a n Vol.84, No. 180_____________________________________The student newspaper of The University of Texas at Austin Thursday, July 18,1985 25C Board to review promotion exams By MATTHEW GEIGER Daily Texan Staff A Texas college committee will study the potential administration of a basic skills competency test to be required before promoting uni­ versity students to juniors. The Texas College and University System Coordinating Board, which oversees Texas public colleges and universities, Wednesday appointed a 12-member committee on the test­ ing of college sophomores. The committee, which will hold its first meeting in August, will advise the board whether to recommend the test to the 1987 state Legislature. Members of the committee in­ clude six top university officers, one student and one faculty member, all from Texas colleges, and UT test de­ velopment expert Paul Kelley, di­ rector of the UT Measurement and Evaluation Center. Deborah Bay, public information director for the board, said the test could be used to evaluate the educa­ tional system, identify students needing remedial aid or set entrance competency requirements for jun­ iors. The committee first will exam­ ine the need for the test, then de­ cide its scope, Bay said. Students in public colleges in Florida, Georgia and New Jersey al­ ready face "rising junior" evalua­ tions. If committee members decide to develop a test, much of their time would be devoted to designing the test and ensuring that it would not discriminate on an ethnic basis, Bay said. Teacher competency tests, cur­ rently being evaluated by the Texas Board of Education, have stirred ethnic discrimination controversy. After the test was designed, the committee would examine its possi­ ble practical applications for stu­ dents, Bay said. But Ruth Shaw, president of Dal­ las' El Centro College and a member of the committee, said although she believed the test could be valuable, she was cautious about relying en­ tirely on the test scores to decide promotion or need for remedial classes. If the test is combined with other indicators, "then I think the test will be useful," Shaw said. "I am just wary of using test scores in isola­ tion." High school and college records should be combined with the test results to give a better picture of scholastic deficiencies, Shaw said. She also said the committee would give close attention to tailoring the test to avoid ethnic discrimination. As an added benefit, the test could simplify transference of com­ munity college students to universi­ ties, Shaw said. IH 35 collision Austinite Sandra Leos is transferred to Brackenridge Hospital after being involved in a four-car collision on South IH 35 Wednesday. The four-car accident occurred minutes after one lane was blocked by another two-car collision, police said. Leos was treated for minor injuries and discharged. Morris Goen/Daily Texan Staff Economists predict stronger growth after weak first half United Press International WASHINGTON — Housing starts re­ bounded slightly in June, increasing 1.9 percent after May's 13 percent decline, but "take home” pay showed the steepest per­ centage drop in 10 years, government econ­ omists said Wednesday. Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul Volcker told Congress his colleagues in the central bank believe economic growth will reach "4 percent plus" in the second half of the year, a significant improvement from the weak first half. Volcker also said the latest survey of con­ sumer confidence being released by the Conference Board showed an improvement in June, although it was still lower than at the beginning of the year. The new Census Bureau figures on hous­ ing contained no surprises. The annual rate of new house production was 1.705 million in May, 7 percent below May '84, but still fairly healthy, after a seasonal adjustment. The Bureau of Economic Analysis, which is preparing to make its first formal report Thursday on the April-June gross national product, said personal income went up 0.5 percent in June while after-tax disposable income plunged 2.2 percent, the biggest drop in a decade. The steep decline was blamed on several special factors, the main one being the way April and May income — up 1.8 percent — had been swollen by late tax refunds, exag­ gerating the change in June. Without the special factors, disposable income would have been up 0.4 percent in May and June. Volcker testified on Capitol Hill to ex­ pand on the semiannual report on the economy. The report is required by Con­ gress and was made public Tuesday. "It must anticipate implicitly a more rap­ id rate of growth in the second half than in the first half, more in the area of 4 percent plus," Volcker said. That would be about twice the growth that most forecasters believed occurred in the first half. Although indicating that what happened in the previous quarter is already history and of little use in deciding current mone­ tary policy, Volcker said it appeared growth in the second quarter — to be measured Thursday — was less than the 3.1 percent rate projected June 20 in the "flash" report. In making that earlier estimate, govern­ ment economists assumed better trade per­ formance and higher inventory investment than what appeared to have happened. South African riot leaves 8 wounded United Press International JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — Police fired shotguns and tear gas Wednesday into crowds of rampag­ ing blacks who hurled stones and set fire to shops and houses. At least eight people were wounded in the first major unrest this year in Soweto, South Africa's largest black ghetto. A bus carrying seven tourists, in­ cluding an unidentified American man, on a daily government-orga­ nized tour was attacked. Three win­ dows were smashed, but the tour­ ists were rescued by police before anyone was injured, and officers escorted the bus out of the town­ ship. A military helicopter hovered overhead as police in trucks, on horseback and with dogs, battled up to 1,500 youths in Soweto, about 10 miles southwest of Johannes­ burg. A spokesman for Soweto's Bar- agwanath Hospital said eight young blacks were admitted with shotgun wounds. Police said that while clashes con­ tinued throughout the day, the situ­ ation was "under control." The rioting in Soweto, the na­ tion's largest black township with 1.5 million people, erupted as black pupils in hundreds of schools across 26 towns and cities boycotted class­ es after their winter vacation. The students were protesting inferior fa­ cilities and authoritarian school pol­ icies. Police in Soweto briefly detained more than 400 youths who hijacked eight buses and ordered drivers to take them to the township's Protea ■ Members of the Steve Biko Committee protest House Speak­ er Gib Lewis’ trip to South Africa. Story, page 4. The rioting erupted as black pupils in hundreds of schools across 26 towns and cities boycot­ ted classes after their winter vacation. The stu­ dents were protesting in- ferior facilities.________ police station and court complex, where 105 youths were to be tried for holding an illegal public meeting outside the home of Soweto's black mayor, Edward Kunene. The youths were released when the bus company declined to press charges. The 105 blacks due to go on trial were sent home when charges were withdrawn "pending further investigation." About 1,500 people gathered at the court complex. Police fired shot­ guns, rubber bullets and tear gas cannisters to drive onlookers away. At the same time, gangs of young blacks rampaged through Soweto, clashing with police. Youths stoned and fire-bombed Kunene's home, destroying the building. A number of shops owned by former Mayor Ephrahim Tshabalala, a black mil­ lionaire, were also damaged. Soweto's police chief, Brig. Jan Coetzee, called the situation "se­ rious" in Soweto, scene of a 1976 black uprising in which 600 people were killed. South African pofice watch a delvery van bum in Sowe t, the ration's largest black ghetto, Wednesday. At least üght people wort hurt in the melee. United Press International today W O R L D * NATION U.S. to malnuin mMary pm—nee In Honduras — The United States plans to maintain a military presence in Honduras for three to five years and is drawing up agreements with the Honduran govern­ ment — part of the buildup, an Air Force memo released Wednesday said. Story, page 2. UNIVERSITY Cdu—Mon without dk—Hon — Too .many high-schooi and college students are being trained for “non-existent jobs” in overcrowded fields such — public rela­ tions, sal— and marketing, an advisory council said in a report Wednesday to President Reagan. Story, page 5. WEATHER Meet you at the lake — The forecast for Austin and vicinity Thursday calls for part­ ly cloudy ski— with the high in the mid- 90s and die low in the mid-70 There will be light winds and no chance of rain. De­ tails, page 13. INDEX Around Campus...................... 13 Classifieds.........................................10 Comics............................................... 13 Crossword..................................... .1 3 .................................0 Editorials v CniBvTAlfrrTvOnv. Soorts.................................................8 State Local....................................... 7 University............................................. 4 World A N ation.................................... 2 Bill proposed to correct U.S. trade imbalance Baker says administration will not support new legislation United Press International ence. But he also said that "the dike ence. But he also said that "the dike WASHINGTON — A bill placing against sheer protectionist legisla- [against sheer protectionist legisla-1 WASHINGTON — A bill placing tion is about to break unless some­ a 25 percent duty on goods import­ thing is done to combat America's ed horn nations with excessive massive trade imbalance." trade surpluses was introduced in Congress Wednesday and Treasury Secretary James Baker called it pro­ tectionism in its "rankest form." "This is a kind of last call from congressional moderates for a sensi­ ble, hard-hitting response to trading partners who have run up excess surpluses," Rostenkowski said. However, the bill's prime spon­ sors — House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rosten- kowski, D-Ill., Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D -T exas, and Rep. Richard Gephardt, D-Mo. — disputed Baker's claim and criticized the ad­ ministration's lack of a cohesive trade policy. "This is not a protectionist bill. This is not a quota bill," Rosten- kowski told a crowded press confer­ "This is tough legislation," said Sen. Donald Riegle, D-Mich., where the auto industry has been hard hit by Japanese car imports. "It needs to be. The administration is unwill­ ing to act forcefully. Congress must now lead the fight." Baker said earlier Wednesday on the NBC 'Today" program that the administration "would not favor" The bill is designed to get Ameri- the bill. "That's protectionism in its with the United States w | with the United States would be ex­ eluded from the 25 oerce ... rankest form," he said. cluded from the 25 percent duty, as would nations, such as Hong Kong, which have large trade surpluses but virtually no import restrictions keeping U.S. goods out. drop W | port restrictions against U.S. goods. If they don't, their actions could trigger a 25 percent import duty, be­ ginning in October 1986. Two situations could trigger the import duties: if a country's exports to the United States, other than oil, axe 165 percent more than their im­ ports, and therefore deemed exces­ sive; and if that country's world­ wide exports are greater than 150 percent of its imports, Small trading nations with less than $7 billion a year in total trade "We've taken a global approach to the problem," said Gephardt. "We don't target any country or product." Import duties required in the bill can be avoided if countries rechice their trade surplus by 5 percent in 1965 and 10 percent a year in subse­ quent years. That can be done either by restricting their exports to the United States or — preferably, hi the eyes of the sponsors — eliminat­ to American ing goods. trade barriers world & nation Page 2/The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18,1985 American military presence to remain in Honduras United Press International WASHINGTON — The United States plans to maintain a military presence in Honduras for three to five years and is drawing up agreements with the Honduran government as part of the buildup, according to an Air ik Force memo made public Wednesday. 'In sum m ary," the three-page document ige doc said with reference to the U.S. military pr military pres- ence in the Central American country, "H on­ duras is still growing and expected to be around for the next several years." The document is a letter dated May 29 from Air Force Lt. Col. Philip Stowell, the engi­ neering officer at Southern Command head­ quarters in Panama, to the headquarters of the 24th Combat Support Group at Langley Air Force Base, Va. The group is part of the Tactical Air Command, based at Langley. The unclassified letter made public by the Pentagon sets forth planning tor continued use of five Honduran airfields by U.S. forces that includes keeping a joint task force at Pal- merola Air Base "in place for the next three to five years." It said the 24th Civil Engineering Mission in Honduras "h as expanded" because of a re­ cent agreement with Honduras and that other agreements are being prepared for budgets and maintenance and repair of the five air­ fields. The letter also referred to "long-range mas­ ter planning for the five aerial ports" and said, "W e are now working the Palmerola 1990 plan." The five airfields are at Palmerola, Goloson, La Mesa, Toncontin and Trujillo, all of which have been built or improved by U.S. engineers. Composed of about 1,200 U.S. personnel, Joint Task Force Bravo is charged with main­ taining equipment and support facilities for U.S. troops between military exercises held in Honduras. It is based at Palmerola, near the central Honduran city of Comayagua, and was formed in February 1984. U.S. forces, most of them Army and Ma­ rine units, have been conducting maneuvers with Honduran troops regularly since early 1983 and some of the exercises have involved up to 6,600 Americans at one time. The maneuvers are intended to show U.S. support for Central American countries friendly to the United States and to thwart what the Reagan administration perceives as plans by neighboring Nicaragua to export its brand of Marxism to other states in the re- gion. The Pentagon denied a report in 7 he Wash ington Post, which is based on part of the Air Force letter, that the United States plans to maintain a permanent presence in Honduras. "The United States has had, and will con tinue to have, military exercises in Hondu ras," a Pentagon statement said. Nicaragua gives land to families United Press International MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Offi­ cials said W ednesday they gave land titles to more than 1,000 fami­ lies this week in a major effort to shift land to the poor on the eve of the sixth anniversary of the San- dinista revolution. Officials in the Agrarian Reform the govern­ Ministry announced ment, which gave 65,000 families ti­ tles in the first five years of the revo­ lution, will turn over land titles to an additional 25,000 peasant fami­ lies by the end of the year. Tuesday, officals turned over ti­ tles to 900 families in the Masaya province, 12 miles south of Mana­ gua, and to another 100 families in the Esteli province, 90 miles north of the capital. "O u r dreams have come tru e," said Profirió Gonzalez, upon receiv­ ing a land title in the Masaya cere­ mony. Gonzalez said he was a sea­ son al a subsistence plot "for years without coun t." lab o rer and farm ed A total of 46 percent of peasant families have received some form of title under the Agrarian Reform Law since the 1979 revolution, said Jaime Wheelock, minister of agrari­ an reform. Most of the titles have been given for individual plots, which under law cannot be sold. The Sandinistas Friday will cele­ brate the sixth anniversary of the day when dictator Anastasio Somo- za was ousted from the govern­ ment. The land for the reform most­ ly comes from large farms seized by the Sandinista government, which offers compensation to the owners. Middle-size farms have been virtu­ ally untouched by the reform be­ cause of the fear of disrupting pro­ duction. "There is a lot of pent-up pres­ sure from the peasantry, so the gov­ ernment is speeding up the distri­ b u tio n of Joh n l a n d ," Brohman, an American economist with the non-government Nicaragu­ an Institute for Social and Economic Investigation. said "In just a few years we have suc­ ceeded in significantly modifying the characteristics of land tenancy in N icaragua," Wheelock said, adding that the Agrarian Reform would continue until every Nicaraguan in the country has land. In an unrelated six Miskito Indians returning to their communities near the Honduran border were killed by an exploding land mine while cleaning an evacu­ ated village, witnesses said. incident, is helping "It appears to be a tragic acci­ d en t," said Rafael Dixon, a Miskito elder w ho several unarmed clean-up crews return to their evacuated villages on the Rio Coco, 210 miles northeast of the capital. Journalists returning from the area, 180 miles northeast of the capi­ tal, said the six men were cleaning a field with machetes in the town of Santa Fe when the mine exploded. It was not known if it was placed by the rebels or Sandinista troops. news in brief From Texan news services Mexican leftist party wants leader freed MEXICO CITY — Mexico's larg­ est leftist party Wednesday de­ manded that an ultra-radical guer­ rilla group release a kidnapped leader, claiming it had paid a $300,000 ransom for his freedom. Amoldo Martinez Verdugo, a cen­ tral committee member of the Unit­ ed Mexican Socialist Party, or PSUM, was abducted by five armed men July 2, five days before Mexi­ co's national elections. A group call­ ing itself the Party of the Poor claimed responsibility for seizing Martinez, a PSUM presidential can­ didate in 1982 and former Commu­ nist Party chief. The Party of the Poor said it abducted Martinez to press PSUM for the return of funds the guerrilla group garnered in a 1974 kidnapping. Recording indicates je t ‘disintegrated In m id-air’ BOMBAY, India — One of the two "black boxes" authorities recov­ ered from the Air-India jet that crashed off the coast of Ireland, kill­ ing all 329 people aboard, indicated the aircraft "disintegrated in mid­ air," an investigator who listened to the voice recorder said Wednesday. But investigators said more analysis and evidence is needed on the voice and flight data recorders before they can determine if a bomb caused the to vanish from radar jumbo jet screens at 31,000 feet and plummet into the Atlantic June 23. Extremist Indian groups have claimed respon­ sibility for planting a bomb aboard the Boeing 747, which crashed with­ out issuing a distress signal while on a flight from Montreal to Bombay via London. But officials have not ruled out the possibility that the world's third worst air disaster was caused by a sudden electrical cutoff or a major structural failure. First space-made product to be used as ‘yardsticks’ WASHINGTON — The govern­ ment Wednesday announced the sale of the first products made in space — plastic beads so small that 18,000 could fit on the head of a pin. Nearly 1 billion of the tiny spheres produced in the absence of gravity aboard the space shuttle Challenger have been sold to eight U.S. compa­ nies, the Food and Drug Adminis­ tration and the University of Utah for use as microscopic "yardsticks." A vial containing about 30 million of the microballs sells for $384 and 29 of 600 available vials have been sold so far for $11,136. The proceeds will be split by the space agency, which produced them, and the National Bureau of Standards, which mea­ sured and packaged them for use as reference standards. Spinal surgery scheduled for governor of Alabama MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Gov. George Wallace will undergo sur­ gery on his spine next week to ease "incapacitating" pain he has en­ dured since he was shot five times and paralyzed 13 years ago, his doc­ tor said Wednesday. Dr. Samuel Stover said the operation scheduled for next Wednesday at Craig Hospi­ tal in Inglewood, Col., could "give the governor dramatic relief of the pain" and eliminate much of the de­ pression that plagues him. The gov­ ernor's spokesman, Billy Joe Camp, said Wallace, 65, decided Tuesday night to have the surgery and he is optimistic about its chances for suc­ cess. "W e look at it as possibly new h op e," Camp said at a news confer­ ence. Wallace was paralyzed from the waist down May 15, 1972, when he was shot by Arthur Bremer while the Democratic campaigning presidential nomination at a shop­ ping center in Laurel, Md. Stock market opens high, advances throughout day for NEW YORK — The stock market broke decisively into uncharted ter­ ritory for the second consecutive session W ednesday as investors bet that the Federal Reserve will let in­ terest rates fall to counter weakness in the econom y. The market opened higher and advanced through the day. Though profit-taking briefly trimmed gains in the last hour of trading, a major brokerage house's buying program just before the clos­ ing bell pushed the market back to its highs. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 10.08 to a new high of 1,357.97. The Dow transportation average also set a new high, adding 2.46 to 702.60. Broader-based indi­ cators also broke records. The New York Stock Exchange index rose 0.44 to 113.49. Standard A Poor's 500-stock to 195.65. The price of an average share gained 14 cento. Advances outpaced declines 970-684 among the 2,042 issues trad d . index added 0.93 4 A mime of his own Reuters via United Press International Spanish mime artist Alberto Vidal will become one of the exhibitors at the London Zoo this weekend where he will portray the daily habits of an urban man en- closed with an elephant and a camel. Politics leak into U.N. conference; communist delegations blast U.S. United Press International NAIROBI, Kenya — The Soviet and other communist delegations to the U.N . W omen's Decade Confer­ ence blasted U.S. foreign policy Wednesday, bringing a sharp U.S. response to the charges one Ameri­ ch aracterized as can delegate "equating us with the evil em pire." U.S. delegation leader Maureen Reagan, daughter of the president, said the attacks "w en t above and beyond a difference of opinion" in which com m unist nations blamed the United States for "al­ most every conflict and every evil in the world today." the About 4,000 delegates have gath­ ered to mark the end of the U.N. Decade on Women and to chart a course for women's development through the end of the century. The Soviet Union blasted Presi­ dent Reagan's "star w ars" space de­ fense program, and Afghanistan said the United States was mount­ ing " a genocidal w ar" against its So­ viet-backed government. Vietnam accused Washington of aggression around the world. The attacks came despite pleas from U.S. delegates to keep the wom en's conference from turning into a political battleground. One American delegate said the communist attacks "am ounted to those countries equating us with the evil em pire," referring to a term once used by Reagan to describe the Soviet Union. Linda Chavez, the president's deputy assistant and a leading U.S. delegate, sharply rejected the Viet­ namese and Afghan allegations. She responded by blaming the Viet­ namese government for the deaths of many of its own people. "There are hundreds of thou­ sands of refugees in camps and relo­ cation centers around the world whose only wish is to escape Viet­ n am ," Chavez said. The leader of the Vietnamese del­ e g a tio n , E d u c a tio n M in iste r Nguyen Thi Binh, accused the Unit­ trouble ed States of fomenting worldwide during her speech to the plenary. She denounced "United States imperialism as in the case of Central America with the blockade and em­ bargo imposed on Cuba and Nicara­ gua or in the Middle East with the proxy war in Lebanon." "In Asia and the Pacific," she said, "th e United States persists in its policy of maintaining and broad­ ening their military bases, posing a permanent threat to the security and freedom of the people in the re­ gions." The Soviet Union then attacked the United States for its proposed "star w ars" missile defense pro­ gram, as well as its Central Ameri­ can and Middle East policies. "In our view one of the main ob­ stacles has been the course of impe­ rialist forces to heighten interna­ tional and provoke hotbeds of tensions in various parts of the w orld," Soviet delegation leader Valentina Tereshkova — a cosmonaut — said. ten sio n s Bethlehem mayor 'optimistic’ after meeting with Peres United Press International JERUSALEM — A Palestinian mayor said Wednesday his ultra-secret meeting with Prime Minister Shimon Peres Tuesday night marked "an important step" toward an Israeli-Palestini- an dialogue and he w as "m ore optimistic" about Middle East peace prospects. "W e demonstrated the best thing to get out of this terrible situation is through peace talks," said Bethlehem Mayor Elias Freij, who met with Peres at the prime minister's home for three hours. Peres spokesman Uri Savir, said the two lead­ ers "exchanged views on the peace process and the W est Bank" but did not discuss a proposed joint Jordanian-Palestinian delegation for peace talks. "T hat w asn't the p u rp o se/' Savir said. Jordan proposed m e creation o f such a delega­ tion as a w ay o f starting Middle East peace nego­ tiations between the Palestinians and Israel. W est Bank sources and Israel radio said Wednes­ day a list of names proposed for the delegation has been turned over to Israel and the State De­ partment, and they include no Arabs from the W est Bank. The meeting with Freij was the first time Peres held substantive talks with a Palestinian leader since he took office last September. Peres, in an unusual move, attended Freij's annual Christ­ mas reception last year and the two talked social­ ly, Savir said. The Palestinian mayor was accompanied by former Jordanian Parliament Speaker Hikmet el- Masri, who had just returned with Freij from Jordan, where they conferred with government officials. Tuesday night's meeting, which sources said was arranged by "m utual initiative," was so se­ cret that Freij went into the house through a side door and Masri arrived by cab instead of in his own car, Israel radio reported. Freij said he and Peres "had a general discus­ sion about the situation — the economic situa­ tion, the political situation, the prospect of be­ ginning a political dialogue that would find an end to this tragic situation, that would bring peace to all people in this country." Freij called the meeting "an important step toward dialogue between Israel and the Pales­ tinians, many of whom live in the Israeli-occu­ pied W est Bank. Israel captured the territory in the 1967 Six-Day War. p eace," he said. "I'm more optimistic about the chances for Palestine Liberation Organization Chairman Yasser Arafat and Jordan's King Hussein pro­ posed last February that a joint Jordanian-Pales­ tinian delegation meet with Israeli officials in a new Middle East peace initiative. Israeli leaders have welcomed the idea of talks but refuse to negotiate with PLO members. The Foreign Ministry — headed by Yitzhak Shamir, Peres' chief adversary in the 10-month national unity government — reiterated that view in a statement released Wednesday. An Israeli official said Tuesday the United States is now reviewing a list of delegation par­ ticipants submitted by Jordan. Freij and Masri have been reported to be possible members of the joint delegation but West Bank sources said Freij's name was not on the list. An Israeli official said the Israeli government has not yet seen the list of names of possible Palestinian delegates, that is reported to have been drawn up by Arafat, given to Hussein and then relayed to the United States. f \ Reagan’s digestive system improving United Press International W ASH IN GTO N — President Reagan, his spints described "fly ing high" four days after intestinal cancer surgery, consumed broth and Popsicles Wednesday and his digestive system began returning to normal, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said. For the first time since he entered Bethesda Naval Hospital last Fri­ day, Reagan met with Vice Presi­ dent George Bush. "T h e president continues on a roll," Speakes said. He said first lady Nancy Reagan telephoned the president before she left for a visit to the aircraft carrier USS America off the cost of Virginia and reported, " H e ' s flying high "H is first words when he left tin room for his morning walk was 'Tennis, anyone?' " Speakes said. "H is vital signs are good they're solid, they're normal. The tempera­ ture is entirely normal and has been for a day or s o ," he said At the end of the day, Speakes said: "Physicians report he tolerated his liquid diet well For lunch the president had gelatin and tea and for dinner ... bouillon and tea The president was awake through the afternoon, walked around his suite and did routine paperwork and some reading. Speakes said after Reagan's sin geon, Dr. Dale Oiler, examined him in early afternoon. "T h e president's digestive system is beginning to re turn to normal function Dr. Ollei has placed the president on a clear- liquids diet, which customarily in eludes bouillon, Jello, Popsicles, ap­ ple juice and te a ." Return of normal bowel function expected within the next few days would be the signal doctors were waiting for to release Reagan from the hospital. After a morning exam, doctors re moved the nasogastric tube from his nose that removed liquid and gas from his digestive tract, and the president was quoted as exulting "This is Christmas in Ju ly." Speakes said Reagan is expected to be back at the White House bv next Monday in time to host a state visit and dinner for Chinese Presi dent Li Xiannen, 10 davs after he entered the hospital for what he thought would be routine removal of a benign polyp in the intestine. Bush, using oil-field jargon, told reporters after his meeting that Reagan is "runnin' high and lookin go o d." He had said Tuesday he had not yet visited Reagan because ot family wishes. Mrs. Reagan is the only member of the family to have spoken with the president since his surgery. the lack of contact Speakes grew testy at questions about trom Reagan's four children — Maureen, Michael, Patti and Ron — telling re porters, "I'm tired of you people." He also bristled at news reports based on interviews with doctors who questioned the prognosis bv Reagan oncologist Dr. Steven Rosenberg that the type of cancer gave the president better than a 50 percent chance of no recurrence within the next five years. Some of the doctors said that giv­ en the detailed description of the 2- inch tumor, the survival rate should have been given as much higher, perhaps 80 percent. at Railing "second-guessing," Speakes said that Rosenberg used one of several modifications of the "D ukes" scale of cancer severity and based his estimate on the fact that the cancer cells had penetrated to the fourth of five layers of the bowel wall. Asked repeatedly about advice Reagan had received from former personal physician Dr. Daniel Ruge 14 months ago not to have a full co­ lon examination when the noncan- cerous first of three intestinal po­ lyps was discovered, Speakes said, "Y ou have no right to ask who gave advice." Residents remember San Ysidro massacre United Press International SAN DIEGO — O ne year after an unem ployed w elder nam ed James Olivet H uberty slaughtered 21 peo­ ple at a fast-food restaurant, the com m unity of San Ysidro w here the massacre took place rem ains seared by pain and bitterness. San Ysidro residents will gather at O u r Lady of M ount Carm el Catholic Church T hursday night to pray for the people H uberty killed before he, in turn, w as slain by a police sniper. A private m ass will be followed by a candlelight vigil in m em ory of the victims of the July 18, 1984, m as­ sacre at a M cD onald's restaurant in the San Diego suburb near the Mex­ ican border. N ineteen people w ere w ounded in the 77-m inute orgy of terror — the w orst mass m u rd er by one indi­ vidual on a single day in U.S. histo- ry ‘„ "It's been a y ear,” Dr. Arlen Ver- steg, director of San Diego C ounty's m ental health departm ent, said. 'Time heals. There are very few people in the clinic. A bout a dozen come in on an as-needed basis for supportive th erap y .” But am id recrim inations and con­ the healing tinuing controversy, process is far from com plete. Police officers deployed against H uberty battled ru sh-hour traffic on their w ay to the scene an d say they initially w ere ordered to hoíd fire because it was not know n if hos­ tages w ere being held. By the time a m arksm an got the green light to shoot at H uberty, the one-tim e w elder and security guard w as gulping soft drinks and listen­ ing to rock music on a portable ra­ dio, having turned the restaurant into a slaughterhouse. Some survivors and com m unity leaders rem ain bitter about the d e­ lay, believing that police daw dled an d w ound up bungling the opera­ tion. "W e are not reconciled," said Ber­ tha G onzales, a com m unity leader. "W e have a lot of pain in ou r lives. We get angry and upset at the ques­ tions. We are not satisfied with w hat the police did and w ith the w ay they reacted.” Ironically, the policemen w ho in­ vestigated the m urders are am ong those bearing the psychological w ounds of post-traum atic stress, characterized by nightm ares, w ith­ draw al, difficulty sleeping, m em ory loss and guilt. Their accounts are contained in a yet-to-be published study com m is­ sioned by the National Institute of M ental H ealth an d conducted by Dr. Michael Mantell, chief psychol­ ogist for th e San Diego Police De­ partm ent. O ne officer is still plagued by m em ories of a dead toddler on the restaurant floor. "I lost it,” he said. ” 1 couldn't breathe. I w as shaking. I w ondered if I was going crazy. I started to cry." A m ong those w ho regard them ­ selves ''living victim s” of the car- nage is H uberty's w idow , w ho m oved from San Ysidro w ith her tw o daug hters and now lives in Spring Valley, som e 20 miles away. "Som e of the com m unity has act­ ed very rotten, but I can't say I w o u ld n 't have done same th in g ,” she said. "B ut all I can tell them is let them walk a mile in my m occasins.” the School authorities in San Ysidro did n o t perm it her d aug hters to re­ enroll. The girls attend ed a nearby school in C hula Vista for a year u n ­ der an assum ed nam e. She also claims som eone broke her cat's jaw and pulled the teeth from her dog. A nd it still u psets her that San Di­ ego police have not yet returned several of the guns th at belonged to her husb an d — that w e re n 't used in the m assacre. "A nd I w an t his tool chest back,” she said. "I got things to fix.” the ones H uberty, h er black hair heavily flecked w ith gray, calls herself "a living victim ” and feels targeted by com m unity revulsion for w hat hap­ pen ed that ugly hot afternoon. The day before the killings, she said, h er h usband to ld h er he need­ ed help and called a m ental health clinic in San Diego. No one called him back. The next day, driving hom e from 'Society the store, "H e told me, d o esn 't have a chance.' " Then, w hen he told her he was going off to h u n t hum ans, she dis­ missed the com m ent. "H e always said th ing s like th a t,” she recalled. The tragedy w ould not have oc­ curred, she believes, if the family had stayed in O hio. "H e w as w ork­ ing th e n ,” she said. "H e cou ldn 't adjust to having no job here. He got d e p re sse d .” H uberty believes there is nothing w rong w ith selling her life story — a pronou ncem ent that infuriated the people of San Ysidro. "I've seen the new spapers, and they've had a field day w ith it,” she said. 'T h e y m ade a lot of m oney from it. If you can, w hy can 't I?" She's m ade a few trip backs to O hio, w here she m arried H uberty 19 years ago, an d still clings to fond m em ories before the nighm are be­ gan — the autum n walks together, the books they read and the family outings they shared. The m assacre was to have been depicted in a television m iniseries, with segm ents shot in San Ysidro. W hen w ord of the series leaked, com m unity leaders protested and in d ep en d en t producer Larry Spivey agreed to drop the project. But th e m assacre did figure in a H om e Box Office docum entary called "A cts of Violence," although public protest prom pted Cox Cable, w hich serves San Ysidro, to black o u t the program last May. "The films th at were com ing out delayed or interfered w ith the heal­ ing process,” said Piedad Garcia, a m ental health w orker at the San Ysi­ dro Clinic. "It's a constant rem inder of that tragedy.” NEW AGE BOOKS SUMMER CLASSES BEGINNING AUGUST 1 The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18,1985/Page 3 T h e Daily Texan rerm anem Stan Editor Managing Editor Associate Managing Editors Associate News Editor News Assignments Editor Associate Editors Art Director Sports Editor Associate Sports Editor Entertainment Editor Entertainment Associate Editor Images Editor Associate Images Editors Photo Editor General Reporters Entertainment Reporter Around Campus Editor ........................ Russell Scott Liea Brown-Richeu Herb Benenson. Paul de la Garza. David Nathar ................................................................................... Libby Averyt ................................................................................... Drew Parma Andrew Chin, Sean S. Price ............................................................................................... Brian ¿abe* ......................................................................................Stan Roberts .................................................................................. Diane Burch .............................................................................. Tim McOougaB ......................................................................... Parry Getteiman Ed Comba ............................................................. ........................................................... Goun Bhat. Helen Moroney Robert Cohen ................................................................. Matthew Geiger. Donny Jackson. Rick Rutledge. Jim Warren David Mencom Helen Bramtett ................. ................. News Editor General Reporter Newswriters Sports Make-up Editor Sports Assistants Sportswnter Editorial Assistant Editonal Columnist Editorial Cartoonist Entertainment Writer Entertainment Assistant Entertainment Reviewer Make-up Editor Wire Editor Copy Editors Photographer Volunteers Rachel Wax man Kay Carpenter Denise Johnson Issue Staff Paula Biesener KeNye Norris Julie Daniels. Brian Adamcik. Debra Muller Keefe Borden, Brian Edwards. Ellen Williams. David Polly, John Wickson Gayton Knzak Clarence Hill. Make Sheer an Mike Hamilton Rachei Barchus Dan Heyman John Huey . Kim Baker Lavonne Carlson, Kim Adams Steven Fay Melinda Mercado Martha Ashe David Gadbots. Jim Loe filer Marytee McKnight Barry Cline, Peggy Hamilton Morris Goen Steve Bedikian . Display Advertising Tammy Hajovsky Benny Lawrence Lauri Hager Ken Butts Susie Snyder Lon Ruszkowski Linda Salsburg Alex Gelb Ken Grays Linda Cohen The Daily Texan (USPS 146-440), a student newspaper at The University of Texas at Austin, is published by Texas Student Publications. Drawer D. University Station Austin. TX 78713-7209 The Daily Texan is published Monday, Tuesday. Wednesday. Thursday and Friday except holiday and exam periods Second class postage paid at Austin, TX 78710 News contributions will be accepted by telephone (471-4591), at the editorial office (Texas Student Publications Building 2 122) or at the news laboratory (Communication Building A4 136) Inquiries concerning classified advertis­ ing should be made in TSP Building 3 200 (471 -5244) The national advertising representative oh The Daily Texan is Cass Communications. 1633 West Central Street. Evanston. Illinois 60201 CMPS. 1680 North Vine Suite 900 Hollywood CA 90028, Amencan Passage 500 Third Avenue West. 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J I I>Y 2 7 Longhorn Country • Main Level u n i v e r s i t y c o - o p M ajo rin g in S ervice Since 1896 2246 G u a d a l u p e ___________ Phone 476-7211 INTENSIVE ENGLISH ANGLAIS INTENSIF • NINE LEVEL COMPREHENSIVE COURSE • SMALL CLASSES, INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION • NEW LEVEL EVERY 4 WEEKS • AUTHORIZED UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO EN­ ROLL NON-IMMIGRANT ALIEN STUDENTS (1-20 FORM) DURHAM-NIXON-CLAY COLLEGE 119 W. 8th at Colorado 478-3446 ROCK ROD ROLL a /earth for GOD W— I pmmttMm W — » 8 » f W l w * towywwy mmD. to w Ml ■ * — I t w p N to a —INpRRaU m * M : b «Mr* MT« * M l *M « M I ma ««k ■« ««• h w m » h *w« • M F M * at M aaab, M mi, má M tow —w aaM i m af M aw l «pMbwi | i $1 M 10* THUKSBAV. JU LT I I T IN ! : 1 * 0 PN F K C AOHISSIOH TEXAS UNION BALLROOM INTERNATIONAL CHRISTIAN CLUB JOB OPPORTUNITIES *** *** *** *** *** This position is your introductoiy contact withj Austin Businessmen and Businesswomen. Texas Student Publications pays for eveiy suc­ cessful contact you make. You will be part of a highly profitable market and build your future I while you earn. We will hire only the most successful, energetic, positively motivated applicants. If you are a winner | call for an appointment. You will be fully trained. Applicants from all back­ grounds are encouraged to apply. Nearly 40,000 people read the Texan eveiy day. It | is recognized and respected nationally. We are committed to excellence. If you share our philoso- phy, call 471-1865. Ask for Usette Rankin, or I come to Texas Student Publications Advertising Department for an application. 471-1865 T h e Da il y T e x a n DRINIONG AND DRMNG CAN K ll A FRIENDSHIP POCKET MONEY: $108,626,000.00 Students at The University of Texas spend th at am ount each y e a r for non-essentials. SOURCE: UNIVERSITY O F TEXAS CO LLEG E NEW SPAPER STUDY, RELDEN ASSOCIATES, D ALIAS. APRIL 1«R4 Watch Weekly A." ■ M m m YOU’RE 25 BLOCKS FROM THE BEST STERLING SILVER PRICES IN TEXAS!! IX" 7 m m full sterling silver necklace $29.85 COmparc at S.OJJH) 8" I Omni full sterling si h er necklace $59.25 Catttparc aI $72.00 1" 7 m m sterling silver bracelet $12.65 ComjHire ai $16.00 7" 6 m m sterling silver bracelet $10.65 Compare tit S 13.00 IX" 9 m m full sterling silver necklace $39.75 Compare at $49.00 O r thake you r own gradu ated neeklttee at the best priee possible! PLUS silv er ball stud s university Page 4/The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18,1985 Committee blasts Lewis trip By DONNY JACKSON Daily Texan Staff Texas House Speaker Gib Lewis' \ isit to South Africa is a "slap in the i ice" to black Texans, a spokesman for a University anti-apartheid or­ ganization said Wednesday. Eddie Reeves, an advertising graduate and chairman of the Steve Biko Committee, said Lewis' trip is payment from the South African government for "politically prosti­ tuting himself" by killing divesti­ ture bills during the last legislative ession.' "We hereby call on speaker Gib Lewis to apologize for spitting on all Texans who espouse the American principles of freedom, justice and quality by his inexcusable behav­ ior, and to especially express his apology to that 13 percent of the state that is black," Reeves said. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram re­ t r i e d July 4 that Lewis, D-Fort Worth, and state Rep. Charles Ev­ ans, D-Hurst, were on a golfing va­ cation to South Africa paid for by the South African government. The ’epresentatives were accompanied by their wives on the trip. No one at Lewis' or Evans' offices at the Capitol or in their home dis­ tricts knew when they would re­ turn. No one on the staff of either representative was present for com­ ment, secretaries for both men said. South Africa is not good place for Lewis to go vacationing, Reeves said. "There are plenty of places to play golf between here and South Africa," he said. Reeves said he does not believe politicians should visit South Africa at this time, even for the purpose of a fact-finding mission. Visitors are not allowed to go the areas of South Africa where injustice takes place, therefore one cannot get a realistic picture of the problems of the coun­ try, he said. "The argument that divestment would hurt blacks is tantamount to saying that, in this country, ending slavery would hurt blacks because it would them leave so many of unem ployed," Reeves said. "It's to­ tally ridiculous and groundless." C onfrontations betw een the South African government and its black inhabitants are increasing dai­ ly, Reeves said. "I think what we see are the be­ ginnings of the revolution," Reeves said. Such a revolution would pro­ duce the same unrest that occurred during the Iranian revolution, when many companies lost their factories to nationalization, Reeves said. "I think the most prudent thing for us to do now would be to get the hell out of there right now," Reeves said. "Get our dollars out of there, get our factories out of there and let's save our money now." Steve Biko, for whom the commit­ tee was named, was a black South African college student who was killed in 1977 by the South African government for protesting the gov­ ernmental system, Reeves said. The purpose of the committee is to try to persuade the UT System to divest its holdings in South Africa. Eddie Reeves, left, and Ward White, members of the Steve Biko Com­ mittee, speak to the press Wednesday. Morris Goen/Daily Texan Staff Fired UT employee testifies before state district judge By RICK RUTLEDGE Daily Texan Staff A fired UT employee seeking a temporary injunction to reinstate himself immediately and guarantee a pre-termination hearing for non- probationary employees testified before a state district judge W ednes­ day. John Monahan, with the injunc­ tion, also is seeking the immediate reinstatement of all non-probation- ary UT employees fired without a pre-termination hearing. M onahan's attorney, James Harr­ ington, legal director of the Texas Chapter of the American Civil Lib­ erties Union, said he has "no idea" if state District Judge Joe Hart will grant the injunction. "It's the first time it (the pre-ter­ mination hearing) has been litigat­ ed," Harrington said. M onahan, a carpenter with the UT Department of Construction and Maintenance for four years, was fired March 27 after supervisor Gene Keller reported Monahan was drinking alcohol on the job and was absent from the work site for almost an hour without permission. M onahan and the University Em­ ployees' Union sued the University July 8. M onahan testified Wednesday he had been accused of harassing fel­ low employees three times, and had been counseled about being absent from the work site and returning late from breaks. W hen Assistant Attorney General Kevin O'H anlon asked Monahan how many times he had been coun­ seled for absence from the work site, M onahan replied, "I can't re­ member how many times." M onahan also said he had been counseled about absence from the work site five days before his firing. But he said, "1 don't drink alcohol on the job." Monahan also said he was pres­ ent at the work site when Keller re­ ported him absent. "He was there looking for us, to get us," Monahan said. Keller was named in a complaint filed with the U.S. Equal Employ­ m ent Opportunity Commission in 1983, Monahan said. University professor selected best in state By JULIE DANIELS Daily Texan Staff James Vick, a popular University professor of mathematics, was named the Texas professor of the year Monday by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Edu­ cation in Washington, D.C. There were 24 entries in the first Texas state competition sponsored by the council, a national non-profit college fund-raising and publicity group, said Liz Murphy, assistant director for special projects for the council. The council is composed of more than 2,500 institutions. Vick's selection was announced at the opening session of the council's national assembly in Washington, where he also was named one of 25 finalists for the council's national professor of the year award, M ur­ phy said. "After the pre-screening jury picked 25 finalists for the national competition, they decided Dr. Vick won hands down for the Texas pro­ fessor of the year aw ard," she said. "He clearly came out on top." Vick is an expert on algebraic and differential topology and has de­ grees from Louisiana State Universi­ ty and the University of Virginia. He has been a UT faculty member since 1970, after he left a two-year teaching post at Princeton Universi­ ty Vick has been recognized manv times for excellent teaching. He has won a student government tea :hing award, the Jean Holloway Teaching Excellence Award, an alumni teach­ ing award and the 1985 Amoco Foundation Outstanding Teaching Award. Vick is on vacation and could not be reached for comment. "Jim is a first-rate teacher. He's everybody's Mr. Perfect Professor," said Austin Gleeson, associate dean of natural sciences. "H e's clearly the class­ not condescending room, yet he's hard, firm and fair. Students appreciate quality when they see it." in Dale Walston, associate professor James Vick ... UT professor was named Texas professor of the year Wednesday in Washington. of mathematics, said Vick is a tough teacher, but popular with students. "When he teaches introductory cal­ culus there are always people trying to get in the class, even when it's full," he said. The criteria for judging in the competition were resumes, research and publication, a list of courses taught in the past year and six let­ ters of recommendation from for­ mer or current students and from colleagues or peers, Murphy said. "Jim was very involved with stu­ dents," said UT graduate Robin L. Scott in a letter written to John Dol- lard, chairman of the Department of Mathematics. "He hosted frequent student get-togethers, fostering an informality and cohesiveness diffi­ cult to achieve in classes of similar size." Vick has been an associate dean for student affairs in the College of Natural Sciences since 1983 and will become the associate dean for aca­ demic affairs in that college in Sep­ tember, Gleeson said. He also will be teaching introductory calculus during the fall semester. THE STUDENT TRAVEL CENTER AT THE EDGE OF CAMPUS ■ 1 MEXICO • EURAIl PASSES * STUDENT TOURS' AIR TICKETS 469-5656 DOBIE MALL <£> SIZZLCR WANT ADS 2 0 Words & day* S 00 Cflll T h e Daily Tex a n ClfiSSIFI€D HOT UN€ 471-5244 TO PLACE VOUfi AD. SAV "CHAAGC IT!"* Hero's on exciting classified advertising sell­ ing package for readers of THC DAIIV TCXAN mho would like to turn unwanted items into coshf For only $3— perhaps the most profita­ ble $] you ever spent— the Texan will run your 20-word ad for five days. AND THAT'S NOT AU! ; If your Hem doesn't sell, give us a call and we ll run your ad an ADDITIONAL HV€ DAVS facci T h e Da i l y T e x a n SUMA SUMMCA SIZZICR DCTAIIS 1. 'Advertisem ents m ay be billed to in d tvk M ils liste d In either the university directory or the Austin telephone directory Prepaym ent m ay be m ode by cash (in person), diedi. V ISA or M asterCard (Certain classifications alw ays requite advance paym ent) 2. These rates are not available to businesses, dealers or Institutions and are for private- party advertising only. Rotes apply to all classifications EXCEPT 110 through 180; 350 through 500; and 6 2 0 through 940. Value of item s advertised for sole must not exceed S5 0 0 and price MUST appear in the advertising copy. 3. Minim um ad is 2 0 w ords Additional w ords 3< per word per day. Although a d s may be cancelled short of M l run. no refunds can be m ade at this low rate. 4. V a n k e e effered fa r sate rem oins unsold after five days, an additional flue day run m ay be obtom ed free by calling 471-5244 w ithin tuio w orking d a ys of the ocfs expiration. N O C O W CHANGES can be perm itted (except in prices). 5. All advertising ploced under th is offer m ust ran B C fO A i Septem ber 1 ,196S. Texas job market looks healthy . The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 1 8 ,1985/Page 5 From staff and wire reports Texas may be the last frontier for college students seeking to fulfill ca­ reer objectives. An advisory council report sent to President Reagan W ednesday said too many college students are being trained for “ non-existent jo b s" in overcrowded fields such as public relations, sales and marketing. “Mr. President, too many of our students are being educated for non-existent jobs at the expense of said paren ts and Jacqueline McGregor, executive di­ rector of the Intergovernmental Ad­ visory Council on Education, in a letter to Reagan. ta x p a y e r s ," But research by the Coordinating Board of the Texas College and Uni­ versity System indicates Texas is not characteristic of the national trend. John Cobb, coordinating board director of financial planning stud­ ies, said recent statistics show Texas has a more advantageous job mar­ ket than two years ago. “Overall, there's a little bit better for graduates," job opportunity Cobb said. A survey of college graduates, conducted by the board every two years, indicated a higher percentage of 1984 marketing graduates found jobs than 1982 graduates. In 1984, 64.2 percent of graduates found employment while still in school or immediately after gradua­ tion, up from 58.6 percent in 1982, Cobb said. As of mid-August, 25.6 percent of 1984 marketing graduates still were seeking employment, while 26.5 percent of graduates were continu­ ing the search in August 1982, Cobb said. O ther research the Coordinating Board did indicates supply and de­ mand in the Texas marketing field will remain balanced through 1986. Cobb said he expects to see a bal­ ance for the next five years. The Board projects 2,200 to 3,000 job openings will be available to the 2,189 students graduating in mar­ keting-related in 1985 and fields 1986, Cobb said. The Coordinating Board is unable to compile data on sales since no program directly trains students for the field, Cobb said. But he said the outlook is good. “We feel retail sales is one of the fastest-growing occu­ p ations," Cobb said. Although the occupation of pub­ lic relations specialists is included in the positive marketing statistics, overall public affairs data indicates a less favorable picture, Cobb said. “Overall, public affairs is in a competitive situation," Cobb said. “ People are going to have problems finding jo b s." To remedy the nationwide prob­ lem, the Intergovernmental Advi­ sory Council on Education urged the government to create a compu­ terized data system to track the job m arket's needs and to inform teach­ ers and students of the skills re­ quired to fill them. The report also recommended the government “collect and dissemi­ nate data on the kinds of skills needed to prepare our youth for job success in America's shift from an industrial to a high-tech and service econom y." M cGregor said the report was sent to the White House, but she was uncertain when it would be presented to Reagan, who is recov­ ering from cancer surgery. Morris Goen/Daily Texan Staff Bill may require snuff warning Pigeon feed Although he said he seldom eats outside, Kurt pigeons by the biology ponds Wednesday during a Duhamell, RTF sophomore, shares his lunch with the break between classes. Bell rate request may be costly for UT By BRIAN ADAMCIK Daily Texan Staff Southw estern Bell Telephone C o.'s rate increase request could raise the University phone bill more than $100,000 annually and result in reduced service, according to testi­ mony filed with the Public Utility Commission Monday. UT System components and state agencies could be forced to pay more for phone service than has been appropriated in their budgets, said the brief filed by the attorney general's office on behalf of state agencies. Bell is asking the utility commis­ sion for a $277 million rate increase and a 5 percent late penalty charge for commercial users who pay their phone bills more than 16 days after the bill is issued. O ther testimony filed by the at­ torney general's office estimated the cost of the hike to the state — the largest con­ sumer in Texas — at $10 million. telecommunications The UT testimony, compiled by Tom Morris, communications su­ perintendent the University, said if Bell were granted an 18.5 per­ cent increase the University could pay up to $124,655 more annually for phone service. for But B ell sp o k e sm a n L arry Schnieders said the increase is nec­ essary to assure quality phone ser­ vice for Texas. He also defended the late payment charge, saying that with a buffer period provided by Bell a company would have be­ tween 25 and 29 days to pay phone bills. “Poor telephone service is never a bargain at any p rice," Schnieders said. Morris said that an increase of a $1 per phone line would mean that a college with 124 lines would spend an additional $1,488 a year. He said such an increase would force a departm ent to either reduce phone service or cut other operating expenses. “If their individual budgets can­ not provide for continued telephone service at present levels, their only alternative is to reduce that service or find some other area in which to effect a reduction," he added. By ELLEN WILLIAMS Daily Texan Staff Texas' chief dentist said Wednes­ day the state has no immediate plans to require that a warning label be placed on cans of smokeless to­ bacco. But a bill introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives last week may require all states to place a label on snuff cans warning that its use can be addictive and can cause mouth cancer, gum disease and tooth loss. Carlos Lozano, chief of the Texas Bureau of Dental Health, said there has been som e interest in a label re­ quirement for Texas as a result of a .recent requirement announced in M assachusetts last week. Massa­ chusetts is the first state to require the warning labels. The require­ m ent will go into effect Dec. 1. Lozano said Texas has not had problems with snuff, unlike a case in Oklahoma reported on “60 Min­ u tes." An Oklahoma boy, who dipped snuff for six years, died after developing oral cancer in the area of his mouth in which he held snuff. The Oklahoma case and the fre­ quent use of snuff among youths spurred U.S. Rep. Mike Synar, D- O kla., to introduce legislation July 10 requiring the warning labels, said John Hollar, to Synar. legislative aide Hollar said the tobacco industry soon may get a sponsor to introduce a weaker bill requiring labels warn­ ing that “use may be hazardous to your health." Warning labels on cig­ arettes read: “Warning: The sur­ geon general has determined that cigarette smoking is dangerous to your health." Lozano said that to push for the labels on the state level, he would need data showing the cause and danger of snuff. “We don't plan anything other than to look at (the effects of smokeless tobacco), but we have no plans n o w ," he said. “W e are aware that children are using smokeless tobacco," Lozano said. " If children chew tobacco, and do so for long periods of time, it could develop into cancer. It de­ pends on how long young people use it." Dan Ingram, a spokesman for the American Cancer Society, said chil­ dren begin using snuff as young as 10. The American Cancer Society publishes educational material tar­ geted to children to teach them the dangers of it, he said. Ingram said there will be an esti­ mated 1,600 new cases of oral can­ cer in Texas in 1985, with 425 deaths from the 29,000 new cases nation­ wide. Hollar said youths are misled to believe dipping snuff is safe. “The slogan 'Take a pouch, not a puff' implies that it's safe," he said. Gail Balph, spokeswoman for the Sm okeless Tobacco Council, said the council presents educational programs to youths, and said it would be happy to work with Synar to scientifically determine if sm oke­ less tobacco causes cancer. BRITTONS FAMOUS Vi PRICE AND 2 FOR 1 SALE * SUITS * SPORTCOATS * SLACKS * DRESS SHIRTS * KNIT SHIRTS * TIES * JACKETS * SHOES MS. BRITTONS FAMOUS % PRICE AND 2 FOR 1 SALE * SWIMSUITS * SHIRTS * PANTS * SHORTS * SHOES * KNITS * BLOUSES * DRESSES * JUMPERS Regrets: All Sales Final Regrets: All Sales Final No Exchanges or Refunds On Sale Mdse. No Exchanges or Refunds On Sale Mdse. Alterations Extra vrsA Opinions expressed in The Daily Texan are those of the editor or the author of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees. Ads are shaping American Dream Economist Robert Heilbroner was probably the first person to call advertising "capitalist real­ ism ." With those two words, he wrote one of the most brilliant of satires on modem commercialism. that Such commercialism pervades Western culture, much as its cousin, "socialist realism," dominates the Eastern Bloc. Both capitalist realism and socialist realism are such common they forms of propaganda overwhelm dissent. For years the So­ viet Union has sanctioned only social­ ist realism as the school of art. Most people have seen it: pictures of clear­ skinned youths carrying banners or farm implements, facing the left (of course), with fists raised in revolution­ ary vigor. Red (of course) is a favorite color among socialist realists. Paintings done in this style are al­ ways the short on perspective; thoughts are as shallow as the draw­ ings. These posters and paintings are probably good at getting the average Russian superheated about ball-bear­ ing production or whatever. The im­ ages are simple and emotional enough to make even an illiterate see red. In­ deed, socialist realism is great propa­ ganda. As art, though, it stinks. Heilbroner has a flair for encapsu­ lating the complicated. He is perhaps best known for writing "The Worldly Philosophers," a readable introduc­ tion to economics. When he later turned to look at advertising, he could see how little difference there is be­ tween a clean-faced youth holding up a red banner, and a clean-faced youth holding up a tube of Clearasil. American advertisements have enough political content to make them a subtle form of propaganda. Most commercials are more economic than political, but overt political bias is ob­ vious in some. Miller beer used to run a television ad in which the first image on the screen was the upper left of the beer's label, with the camera focused on the words "Union Made." Now, a new Miller label is dominated by a large bald eagle. Miller's theme song used to be, "If you've got the time, we've got the beer." Now the company uses "Mil­ ler's made the American way, bom and brewed in the U .S.A ." Sloppy word usage is not the only thing in Miller's new ads. Chrysler now considers its cars "an American revolution," at least accord­ ing to the ads. The revolutionary slo­ gan is, ironically, printed in red. (By the way, red is supposedly Nancy Reagan's favorite color, and red domi­ nated many of the Republican election posters in 1984.) Advertisements As if to prove America is better, 7- Elevens sell "freedom of choice," and then say "America likes the freedom." Bud Light says "you can have it all," and Fortune magazine says it is "re­ quired reading for the business class." the American Dream may be caused by the reactionary feelings afloat in the country. Of course, this nationalist fervor may be in part due to the re­ selling of the American dream. Clear truth is a rare commodity in the me­ dia. resell that But more importantly, all ads, those supposedly free of political comment and even those supposedly critical of the current situation, are still propa- How can our rantings com­ pare to the taflored, pre-di- gested images of advertis­ ing? ganda for consumption, and so for capitalism. Apple Computer's advertisements offer to defend consumers from the depersonalization of the modem world. Federal Express sells an easy way out to man overwhelmed by his job. Honda convinced counterculture hero Lou Reed to sell scooters for them (alternative life style extra, alien­ ation free). These advertisements are appealing to people scared of a technological, depersonalized future, people scared of their jobs, and young people scared of the prospect of ending up where their parents are. But do these products offer any real alternative to these conditions, or are they using the conditions to sell prod­ ucts? In all of these ads, the solution is consumption, not discussion, let alone change. That these advertise­ ments were and are successful sug­ gests the depth of the problems, but these ads only offer an imitation of a solution at best. The mass media are paid for by mass consumption, and modem mass-market capitalism depends on the mass media to ensure continually- expanding consumption. In other words, the mass media are funded by corporate interests, and in return, the corporations get advertising. Adver­ tising is supposed to keep sales in­ creasing forever. And nobody likes to criticize what­ ever pays the bills. For example, when was the last time a major communist or fascist newspaper was published in the United States? Liberalism is ac­ ceptable, so long as it doesn't interfere with sales. The banality of the media also over­ powers what passes for free speech. Unlike our counterparts in the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, people here can say what they want. But how can our rantings compare to the tailored, pre-digested images of ad­ vertising, backed with the force of net­ works? As Marshall McLuhan, media pun­ dit, put it, "ads seem to work on the very advanced principle that a small pellet or pattern in a noisy, redundant barrage of repetition will gradually as­ sert itself. Ads push the principle of noise all the way to the plateau of per­ suasion. They are quite in accord with the procedures of brainwashing." Advertising has become "the rhe­ toric of democracy," according to his­ torian Daniel Boorstin. He claims it is "a centrally organized, mass-pro­ duced folk culture." In short, advertis­ ing has replaced our songs and our stories, our tallest tales and our small­ est creations, with something written by a few college graduates. H eyman is a journalism senior. tation advisers ("Thanks for the tours," Firing Line, Monday). They did a wonder­ ful job of introducing several thousand new students to the University! When I first came to the University, I thought of this school as "just another state college." From my first wing meeting, this percep­ tion began to change. This change was ini­ tiated by my OAs. There is one portion of his letter to which I take exception, however. When he stated, "they have subjected themselves to living in Jester and eating Jester food in order to spend their time with these new students," he implied that the OAs lived and ate in a less-than-acceptable manner. This statement disturbs me greatly. I have lived in Jester Center for two long sessions and one summer out o f choice, and I have enjoyed the experience. When a person of Hartman's authority wishes to make a criticism of a University division, he should do so in a more pro­ ductive manner. This ingenuous stab at Jester food and accommodations only per­ petuates the reputation, now mostly un­ derserved, of Jester Center. The Division of Housing and Food Ser­ vice and Jester staff have invested a great deal of energy into improving what I feel to be an already positive situation. This effort is negated when people of influence within the University community perpetu­ ate a myth that evolved long ago. Cam eron H um phrey Linguistics M fm S S editorials Page 6/The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18, 1985 viewpoint It’s open season at the Texan R umblings are somtimes heard in the Texan We run a Barminski cartoon. tunnel. The windows rattle a litte. We cover an ongoing issue concerning a gay stu­ dent group, the Round-Up parade, legalities and vio­ lence. It sounds like distant thunder. Within this context, a question arose which was worthy of consideration. Does the Texan consciously engage in exclusive sheltering of certain groups? The answer comes easily. It is the directive of our profession and one of the purest obligations of this newspaper not to show favoritism, or diffuse contro­ versy. W e'd be glad to print the elongated complaints of the dissatified if only they would get it in gear and send us some material. Up to this point there have only been advance teams hitting the Firing Line. W e're still waiting for the good stuff. I charge the dissatisfied factions to send us intelli­ gent social analysis and commentary in the form of prose (300 typed words or less) or line illustrations (camera ready). But remember, a few guidelines al­ ways apply to whatever we run. Criticism should be substantive. W e're not here for name-calling. The material should be within the bounds of reason­ ably good taste. The desks in the science library stacks are better for more nasty and inane scribblings. Because of space limitations and redundancy, we will not run everything we get. But we will select art exemplary cross-section. The flood gates are now open. We only hope the tide will swirl in. Go to it. — Russell Scott France preparing for constitutional crisis T here was a downpour in the middle of the tradition­ al military parade this Bas­ tille Day, a symbol perhaps of the Flora Lewis Wire Columnist own terms, which provide for dis­ mantling much of what the Social­ ists have done since 1981. muddle ahead for France's Fifth Republic. Before next year's national holi­ day, there is almost sure to be a constitutional crisis. The politi­ cians are doing all they can to fore­ close available solutions. They don't want to make things worse. But the maneuvering now going on for the spring 1986 parliamentary elec­ tions, with the 1988 presidential election in the background. the effect of that is Ironically, there is greater un­ derlying consensus in France on major policies than there has been in decades. But the leaders and the parties have developed such an in­ tricate pattern of rivalry that there is no figure in a position to em­ body the basic national view. The central problem is that the Constitution, which was hand- tailored for the outsized Charles de Gaulle, draws no clear line be­ tween, the powers of the Assembly and the president but gives them different terms, five years for the legislators and seven for the presi­ dent. Until now, the president's sup­ porters have always controlled the Assembly so the dilemma was never faced. No one doubts that President Mitterrand's Socialists will lose their absolute majority next year. They'll do well to win a quarter of the seats. Elsewhere, that would make a coalition gov­ ernment inevitable and the big question would be about how to cut the deal. There are people Mitterrand could choose as premier with whom he could probably work and who probably could have patched together enough blocs to hold the legislature. That has been made far more difficult by a reform re-introducing proportional repre­ sentation instead of the current two-round, single-member consti­ tuency system. As usual, PR en­ hances the power of the establish­ ed party apparatuses that draw up the lists, leaving less room for mavericks. Mitterrand has made clear that he does not intend to resign, as some in the opposition demand. But he has also come down on the side of the Socialist Party's tough- minded secretary, Lionel Jospin, in a recent quarrel with Premier Laurent Fabius about running the campaign. Fabius wanted a strategy of opening toward the center, which would make a future coalition eas­ ier. Jospin argued that this would weaken the inner structure of the party and that it would be better to be driven into opposition for a time. The Communists, who were the Socialists' initial partners but are now their all-out detractors, say that this is planning for defeat. For once they are right. It is hard to see how Mitterrand intends to govern with his own party in opposition to his minis­ ters. He could, in de Gaulle's con­ temptuous praise for a powerless chief of state, resign himself to "inaugurating chrysanthemums." But that isn't Mitterrand's style at all. issues He says now that trying to re­ move foreign policy from supreme presidential decisions would amount "to a coup d'etat." Since including eco­ most key nomic and military policy involve France's partners and allies, that amounts to insisting on about as much power as de Gaulle wielded. The French have devised the provocative term "cohabitation" for the prospect of power-sharing between a president and a premier from opposing parties. Two of the major leaders against Mitterrand, former President Valery Giscard d'Estaing and his former Premier Jacques Chirac, have said they would accept, but only on their leader, The third and most popular op­ former Premier position Raymond Barre, says he won't cohabit. All three are positioning themselves to run for president, so each is more concerned with highlighting his own profile as an effective leader than in making government work. There is lot of fervent talk about the ideal versus the menace of so­ cialism and the virtues versus the vices of capitalism. But that isn't what the fight is about. It's about the government's sorry economic record and personal ambitions, the first obvious and the second boring to the public, so there isn't an atmosphere of general tension. The electorate isn't worked up yet. Nonetheless, the crisis is com­ ing and it is going to make France even more than usually difficult to deal with in the period ahead. The Fifth Republic, founded by de Gaulle in 1958, seemed to have taken firm root and demonstrated stability when for the first time power was transferred smoothly to the opposition in 1981. But the hidden flaw was lurking. It's what comes of making a constitution to fit a man. '' 1985, The N ew York Times U.S. terrorizing Nicaragua Hale Cullom ("Sandinista's woes richly deserved," editorial column, Tuesday) states that the woes of Nicaragua and its leaders increase daily. You are right, Cul­ lom, but I am forced to disagree that these problems are only "partly" a result of the U.S.-sponsored war on the country. "Part­ ly" does not suffice to describe the effects of the war on the Nicaraguan economy and most importantly, the Nicaraguan people. Forty percent of the Nicaraguan economy goes towards defending the country against the "contras" who are at­ tacking it from both Honduras and Costa Rica, a sum of money which could instead be used to alleviate the food shortages and malnutrition you refer to in your article. As you may not know the "contras," whom Reagan considers the "moral equiv­ alent of our founding fathers," attack food production areas and cooperatives, terror­ ize field workers and thereby increase the shortages of food and levels of malnutri­ tion. If your concern is truly with these problems, Cullom, you would (or should) agree that the United States should not continue its support of these invaders. However, instead you have the audacity to claim that "Nicaraguan government presses ahead with its foolish policy of an­ tagonizing the United States." Who is an­ tagonizing whom?!! The United States be­ gan sponsoring the war on Nicaragua in 1981 without provocation and has since been funding the invading forces who rape, murder, pillage and destroy villages, terrorizing the Nicaraguan people. Nicaragua can not logically be consid­ ered a '$ovje* ally." They receive only 20 percent of their aid from and conduct only 20 percent of their trade with the Socialist- bloc countries and receive the majority of their support from Western Europe and other Latin American countries. True, Ni­ caragua must rely on the Soviets for mili­ tary equipment, but the United States twice refused to send military aid to Nicar­ agua and has frequently pressed its NATO allies to discontinue arms shipments to the Nicaraguan government. At the same time, the United States is sponsoring an invasion of the country, so if the Nicaragu­ ans are forced to defend themselves and cannot receive any military aid from the "W estern" countries, then who do they have left to turn to? I could go on to address each of your points about Nicaragua's "w rongs," how­ ever, the point I wish to make is that your claims against Nicaragua have no evidence to back them up. Most of your points have been made before by the Reagan adminis­ tration in its propaganda campaign to jus­ tify its support of the "contras" invading Nicaragua. And most of the administra­ tion's claims have no evidence to back them up either. If your source of informa­ tion (or disinformation) is the Reagan ad- ^^^ioM^gMfK^^^^SuJL^poor country with fewer Ifollli A wtffinn people who six years ago thip ftttdtay JW X w w one of the bloo­ diest «tutors in history in an attempt to feed, liQitpe, clothe and educate their poor — the majority «try They have .the no desire to intervene in the affairs of their neighbom o r "destabilize the region" since their most tirio consuming task is improv­ ing their society and, now, defending their country. Nicaraguans want an end to the bloodshed, destruction, terror and death that the United States is supporting. They want to Uve peaceful normal lives like any North American wants. They have done nothing to the United States to warrant this treatment. Live Aid deserves praise I am writing in response to the Live Aid review ("MTV drags Woodstock into the '80's," Arts & Entertainment) in Monday's paper. I find it very annoying to have the Texan staff degrading and making fun of such an incredible, historical and global event. Surprisingly the article mentioned the purpose of Live Aid in one small four- line paragraph. However, the rest of the half page article was spent cutting it down. World hunger is a tragic and horrifying thing. People in Ethiopia look forward to a day of a cup of rice (if they're lucky), pain felt from various diseases they may have, listening to their children's cry of hunger and watching tears constantly stream down their faces. They also see their chil­ dren, friends and other loved ones die on a daily basis. We as Americans are for­ tunate not to have to suffer and watch our children or relatives die in our arms. Our purpose as human beings is to help others and to love one another under any circumstances as God first did for us and expects us to in turn do for him and oth­ ers. I feel that instead of the Texan staff making jokes out of Live Aid and those who had the love, concern and thought­ fulness to help others they should praise those performers for their time, effort and, again, love put into this cause. I also feel that the Texan staff should write articles that encourage student readers as well as others who read the Texan to participate and do our part in saving the world from starvation instead of writing articles that give off a non-chalant, uncaring attitude. Sandy Williams RTF Jester Center enjoyable Veronica Frenkel Governm ent I heartily agree with the sentiments that Neal Hartman expressed about the orien­ state & loca The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18, 1985/Page 7 Texas farm bank to assist affiliate By BRIAN EDWARDS Daily Texan Staff said. The Texas branch of the nation's largest farm lending system will participate in a m ultimillion-dollar bailout of a struggling m em ber bank, a bank official said W ednes­ day. The O m aha district bank of the Farm C redit System has suffered heavy losses on its loans, said M ar­ sha M artin, a vice president of the Farm C redit Banks of Texas, located in Austin. includes Farm ers in the O m aha district — w hich Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota and W yoming — have been h urt seriously by falling grain an d land prices, she said. "Their land values have gone to hell in a handbasket," M artin said. "The bottom 's dropped o u t." Farm ers in the O m aha district d e­ pend heavily on grain, and falling prices and land values are crippling their ability to repay loans to the bank, M artin said. Land prices in the district have plum m eted by 50 percent in the last four years, she James Rogers, president of Farm C redit Banks of Texas, said recently th at the bank "will be asked to con­ tribute som e m oney to help our sis­ ter organizations." Farm Credit Banks have never d e ­ faulted and will not now , Rogers said. A similar bailout of $150 million w as approved last m onth for a n o th ­ er bank in the system , the Interm e­ in Spokane, diate Credit Bank W ash. If approved, the O m aha res­ cue should prove to be the largest in the system 's history. The Wall Street Journal h as stated the bailout w ould total $435 million, but M artin said that figure "is m ere­ ly an estim ate on the exact n u m ­ b er." "I can't tell you w hat the exact am ount is," M artin said. "But it's not because I d o n 't w ant to — no one know s w hat it is going to be y et." But the Texas district's share of the bailout will be "very sm all," she said. Rogers said, "W e will not give aw ay the com pany store," indicat­ ing the am o u n t the bank will con­ tribute will not injure its operation. M artin said the Texas Farm Credit Banks' contribution to the O m aha district will be d eterm ined in A ug­ ust and the "h elp program " will go into effect by October. O f the 37 districts in the Farm C redit System , M artin said three, including Texas, are sound finan­ cially. "The Texas district has never required any m o n ey," M artin said. Rogers said d u ring 1985 Texas banks will lose betw een $6 million to $7 million of their total $4 billion in ou tstan d in g loans. M artin said this loss is "very small w hen you look aro un d the country and see w hat is h a p p en in g " to other farm credit banks. The Farm C redit System was es­ tablished about 1914 to provide sea­ sonal and long-term loans to farm ­ ers, M artin said. The system holds about $80 billion of the nation's total $212 billion farm d ebt, she said. Council to vote on sign ordinance By JIM WARREN Daily Texan Staff Sign-com pany ow ners will keep a close eye on the A ustin City Council T hursday w hen it votes on a new sign-regulation ordinance the city staff drafted. Last week the council placed a 90- day m oratorium on sign perm its, which the city m ust grant before a sign can be installed. The proposed ordinance will con­ trol w hat signs can be placed in cer­ tain zoning districts and abolish changeable letter signs anyw here, except the central business district. The ordinance would reduce the maximum heigth of pole signs from 35 feet to 20 feet and make across- the-board reductions in the maxi­ m um size of signs. If the ordinance passes Thursday, sign applicants w ho m eet the guide­ lines of the new ordinance will be allowed a perm it. The ordinance is tem porary and will serve as a guideline during the 90-day m oratorium so sign busi­ nesses can continue to operate until a perm anent sign ordinance is a p ­ proved. City M anager Jorge Carrasco w rote a m em orandum to the m ayor and councilm em bers July 9 saying the city had received sw arm s of a p ­ plications for new signs to dodge the proposed ordinance. A m oratorium , along w ith a tem ­ porary ordinance, w ould keep a p ­ plicants from p uttin g up signs that w ould be sub-standard w hen a new ordinance is adopted, Carrasco said. Mike Heitz, assistant director of building inspection, said an ad hoc com m ittee w as form ed in 1983 to study the city's sign ordinance, an d the Planning Com m ission later asked the city staff to draw u p a proposed ordinance. "W e had an influx for requests w hen the w ord got o u t," Heitz said. Dick Sm ith, o w ner of Letter Signs, said the local sign industry has been left out of the process. "The businessm en w ho have been trying to help us have been am azed they (the city) h aven't let us in on the process," Smith said. Smith said the m oratorium was a knee-jerk reaction and is not help­ ing anybody. "The city, because they're so screw ed up now , said w e're just not going to allow any more signs," he said. "M y opinion is they 're going about it backw ards." But Silvester Rodriguez, ow ner of The Sign Factory, said he basically supports the ordinance, especially the abolition of changeable letter signs. "Everyw here you go you see those signs, so I can see w here they w ant an ordinance for th at." P E U G E O T The Peugeot Orient Express and Urban Express $50°° off. O ther offroad bikes from under $150°°. O ff* *x p 4r*s Ju n * 30, 1985 Available at Spoke Shop 607W.MLK Nueces 477-4117 CAPITOL SADDLERY EQUESTRIAN HEADQUARTERS FOR AUSTIN ENGUSH WESTERN Boot 8c Shoe Repeal ♦Handtooled Belts & Chaps* ♦Handmade Boots* ♦Sterling Silver Belt Buckles* — 1614 LAVACA 478-9369 Going Out Of Business (26th at Guadalupe Store Only) ENTIRE STOCK 25% OFF KMJa kfezy United Press International Sen. J.E. ‘Buster’ Brown, R-Lake Jackson, says he wW seek the Republican nomination for attorney general. Senator to seek attorney general job United Press International HOUSTON — The au tho r of law- and-order legislation and leader of a grass-roots anti-crim e group an ­ nounced W ednesday he will seek the Republican nom ination for Tex­ as attorney general. Sen. J.E. "B uster" Brown, R-Lake Jackson, said the people of Texas deserve an attorney general they can dep en d up o n and one w ho gets the job done. "W e need and deserve a new, conservative leadership in the office of attorney general," Brown said. "It's time we had a conservative at­ torney general w ho is tough on crime. "It's time that Texas got tough on crime. We m ust continue to im­ prove our criminal justice system until we send a m essage to crimi­ nals that arrest is a higher possibili­ ty, that conviction is a greater prob­ ability and that p u nishm ent is a sw ifter and surer reality." Brown, 44, has represented Sen­ ate District 17 since 1981. The dis­ trict includes portions of Brazoria, Fort Bend, Galveston and Harris counties. leg isla tiv e He is chairm an of Associated Tex­ ans A gainst Crime, a statew ide grass-roots organization. D uring the rec e n t he pushed through a bill that will allow juries to know in advance of se n ­ tencing w hat state parole statutes are and how they apply to the d e ­ fendant. se ssio n , H e also spearh eaded legislation m aking it a crime to possess child pornography and m aking it a felony for prisoners to possess a w eapon. Brown also authored a prop osed co n stitutional th a t w ould stop the use of technical d e­ fects in indictm ents as a basis for appeal. a m e n d m e n t Brown blasted A ttorney General Jim Mattox for failing to do his job. "Jim M attox represents th e past era of liberal special interest," he said. "H e has failed in th e fight against crime. He has also failed in his constitutional d u ty to defend the laws of the state of Texas on num er­ ous occasions." M S JIN ( r is is REGNANCY ENTER Free Pregnancy Test All Services Confidential Near Seton Hospital * NEED HELP • CALL US • WE CARE 3810 Medical Parkway. Suite 203 * 24 Hour Hotline 454 2622 TOOTHACHE? If you need the removal of: at least one impacted wisdom tooth OR 4 or more other teeth call BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH GROUP, INC about clinical surveys evaluating new products. Financial incentive provided for your cooperation. A 4 1 ■ f f \ A 1 1 Monday-Friday I “ I r f I I 8:30-4:30 « 3 « i t C.U I $104.00 Cash or Check Get a business calculator that has no equal. H R Get an HP-12C. So advanced it d o esn 't need an "equals" key. So extrem ely simple to use, you'll get financial solutions at the touch of a key! The HP-12C's innovative design eliminates a vast num ber of keystrokes. That saves you time, and gives you greater confidence your calculations are proceeding correctly With the HP-12C, you ^et more financial calculating pow er than with any other handheld! Get an HP-12C - from a dealer who has no equal. Accessories & Service WHo% HEWLETT mL'EM PACKARD authored dealer 2234 G u adalupe...476-3525 4930 Burnet Road...454-6731 13812 Research B lvd...331-5244 122 N . LBJ, San M arcos...396-1538 PUBUC NOTICE Aviso Público The City of Austin Renaissance Market Commission La Ciudad de Austin Comisió del Mercado Renacimiento (Renaissance Market Commission) Regarding Possible Revisions to the Will Hold a Public Hearing Vending Ordinance t Thursday, July 18,1985 6:00 p.m. at the Electric Building Auditorium 301 west Avenue I ? Conducirá Una Audiencia Pública Sobre Posibles Enmiendas a la Ordenanza Sobre Ventas (Vending Ordinance) El Jueves 18 de Julio 1985 6:00 p m En el Auditorio del EcHfício de Serricioí de Electricidad 301 West Avenue For more information, call 499-2220. 1 i sports P age 8/The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18, 1985 Strange among Americans to miss British Open United Press International SANDWICH, England — In this quaint com er on the southeast coast of England, there is deep concern about the unexpected absence of cherished friends. The defection of a number of Americans from the British Open has become a prime subject of conversation, with serious ques­ tions arising about the future of this major championship. When the 114th Open begins Thursday, 32 Americans are expected among the field of 153. Included are such favorites as Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson, Fuzzy Zoeller, Lee Trevino and Ben Crenshaw. But more noteworthy is the absence of 12 of the top 20 money winners on this year's PGA earnings list, headed by Curtis Strange, the runaway leader with $527,581. Also passing up the Open, which many consider to be the world's most prestigious golf championship, are Raymond Floyd, Calvin Peete, Hal Sutton, U.S. Open cham­ pion Andy North, former British and U.S. Open champion Johnny Miller, Fred Cou­ ples, Hale Irwin and Jerry Pate. "I don't see why some of the Americans didn't come over," Crenshaw said Wednes­ day. "H ere I am having the worst year ever and I wouldn't miss this for the world." Trevino, a two-time Open champion, was even more emotional when asked to rationalize the absence of so many of his compatriots. "I don't think there's any tournament in the world I enjoy playing more than this o n e ," he said. "I think the Open champion­ ship is the granddaddy of them all. This is the mecca. This is where we come and wor­ ship and I would play in it regardless of how I'm playing or how I feel. "I'm as surprised as everyone else they're not coming. 1 thought there were some players capable of winning, such as Curtis Strange." Although the consensus of opinion points to money as the overriding factor, Watson mentioned the extra time required to prepare for the Open as another factor. "I'm slightly disappointed, I feel we should be better represented," the five­ time Open titlist said. "B ut I know it takes me time to prepare over here, and that could be the reason many of them didn't com e." Both Trevino and Nicklaus estimated that their week in Britain could cost as much as $12,000. The total purse for the Open has been increased to $715,500, with first prize of $87,750. But by the time you get to sixth place, the value is only $27,000." Zoeller, the 1984 U.S. Open champion added, "It's damned expensive to come over but its like a pot of gold if you win it." T e x as to host 1986 regional tournam ent From staff reports The middle of July may seem like an unusual time for the turning point of a basketball season, but this week may indeed be a key to the upcoming Texas w om en's season. the Perhaps final obstacle has been removed for the Longhorns' long-awaited visit to the Final Four — a regional at home. The NCAA w om en's basketball committee has recommended that the University be host to the 1986 Midwest Region­ al March 22 and 24 at the Frank Erwin Center. The recommendation needs only to be approved by the NCAA at its meeting in late August. to teams playing on their home floors regional games Texas lost the last three years. But with all the key players plus former All-America Annette Smith returning from a team ranked No. 1 going into the tournament last year, a home re­ gional may be the final piece to Tex­ as' Final Four puzzle. The com m ittee's other regional recommendations were Pennsylva­ nia (East), Iowa (Mideast) and Long Beach State (West). The Final Four will be held March 28 and 30 at the University of Kentucky, which host­ ed the 1985 m en's Final Four. The Longhorns' main competition for the Midwest bid came from Tex­ as Tech, Louisiana Tech and North­ east Louisiana, which hosted the Midwest last year. Former cheerleader White adds speed to secondary By CLARENCE HILL Daily Texan Staff Longhorn trivia: What current Texas football play­ er runs the 40-yard dash in 4.29 sec­ onds and also won the weightlifting championships for defensive backs? (Hint: It is not Jerry Gray.) Let's add a tw'ist to the question. He was also a cheerleader, not a football player, his senior year in high school. Answer: Carlaton White. White, a red-shirt freshman, was a walk-on last fall and was put on scholarship midway the season pnmarily because of his speed and potential. through "H e showed us a lot of athletic ability last fall," defensive second­ ary coach Dean Campbell said. "W e did not think that we could go out and recruit a guv who had better speed or potential. He was behind everyone else because he did not play in his senior year, but he has a good attitude.” White played varsity football at Cypress Fairbanks High School in Houston his sophomore and junior years. After placing second in the long jum p at the state track meet as a sophomore and reaching the re­ gional finals in two events his junior year, he decided to quit football to concentrate on track. "I thought I was better in track," White said. "S o I decided to devote all of my time on it." This was the end of W hite's high school football career and the begin­ ning of his cheerleading career. "I did not tumble or do any flips, but I was a good yell leader and I had fun, although 1 did miss play­ ing football a lo t," White said. He graduated from high school in the top quarter of his class. "A fter coming to orientation and seeing the stadium, I decided to give football another try and see if I had what it tak es," White said. He trained all last summer by lift­ ing weights, running and pushing his pickup around his neighbor­ hood every morning. The workout seemed to have paid off as this football-player-tumed- cheerlead er-turned -football-player made the team and went on to win the team's weightlifting competition as a defensive back in the spring. Although White walked on as a running back, his first claim to fame was leading the team in rushing in a fall scrimmage. He turned some heads with his 91-vard performance and was even projected to see some action in the season opener against Auburn. However, White was eventually moved to cornerback since Akers, co n sid e re d a d e fen se -m in d ed coach, has often placed his better athletes on defense. "H e has a lot of ability and we had new people at the cornerback position, so we decided to try him th ere," Campbell said. White is an exceptional athlete by any standard. He has long-jumped more than 24 feet to go along with his 4.29-second clocking in the 40. White, who wants to be a body builder, is quite a package at 5-9,185 pounds. He should see some action as a reserve in the secondary in 1985 and is also vying for a regular spot on the special teams returning kicks. So if White runs back a kick for a touchdown, don't be surprised to see this ex-cheerleader leading his own cheers with a sis boom bah in the end zone. 2001-D West Anderson Lone §454-1128,467-9355,467-7532 Upgrades by: COMPUTER DOCTOR Austin's Oldest Independent Upgrader ^ 5 1 2K 90 Days Parts E ^ J IU O & Labor Warranty it 1 MEGABYTE it ★ UPGRADE it Caiifor price Hard Disks Bernoulli 5 Meg, Removable $1500*° Disks Verbatim 3V2" . $ 3 0 * ° I " I Call FOR AFREE CATALOG! B H E W I & S E L L M A C 5 0 F T W A UT Department Pricing Available on request C O M P /— The Best Place to Buy!! iiiminmiiMMMMimmiiiwMMUMmnMiwmnMM— mhwi miw mii— mu Monthly Specials illM IIIIIM IIIM IM M ItlllH H i UT STUDENTS HAVE CREDIT. 36,676 UT students have a major credit card. 25,244 have cards for automated teller machines. S O U K I: UNIVMSITY O f T1XAS COUKMNCWSMMB STUOY, MIOCM ASSOCIATU. DALLAS. AMU. 1 « *4 (eyecare) at MLK & Guadalupe in United Bank Mall Tinted Soft Leases.............................................*(65MI WLSofHens (Daily Weor)............................... »W4* ML Extended WeorCO" Series). . . . . . . *W 4"! Hard Oxygen Permeable............................. .»$6C °I * Per Lense Price. Exom 6 core kit not included, but ore available of Eyecore. P plocemeaf lenses at obove costs. SERVING THE UT COMMUNITY WITH I = COMP H m M A CS-N -M O M «TO M Yankees’ Rickey Henderson bails out as an inside fastball gets away from Nolan Ryan of Houston during Tuesday’s All-Star Game in Minneapolis. All-Star calm shattered by strike talks United Press International United Press International MINNEAPOLIS — Having es­ caped the terrors of the Metrodome, major-league baseball now enters a perilous three weeks that could re­ sult in a strike. The National League defeated the American League 6-1 Tuesday night in a relatively calm All-Star Game — much calmer, in fact, than the sec­ ond half of the season may prove. When the regular season resumes Thursday, players and management face a strike deadline of Aug. 6. Unless they reach an agreement by then, they risk the second mid­ season strike in the last four years and the possible fan wrath that goes with it. "I'll play every game as hard as I always d o ," Cincinnati outfielder Dave Parker said. "B u t on Aug. 6, we'll do what we have to do. "They (owners) have to sit down at the table and negotiate with u s." "I'm very optimistic about the Brew ers," Milwaukee third base­ man Paul Molitor said. "But if w e're not playing after Aug. 6, I'll go home early and forget about it." The sides held separate meetings during the All-Star break. Player representatives met on Monday in Chicago to set the strike deadline. Before the All-Star Game, manage­ ment negotiators gathered and dis­ cussed the strike deadline. The next significant meeting of the parties should take place Thurs­ day in New York, when owners' negotiator Lee MacPhail expects un­ ion econom ists to comment on fi­ nancial data provided by owners. Until the next meeting, however, fans can contem plate one of base­ ball's most perplexing questions — why the NL dominates the All-Star Game. "I know why they won tonight. It was the way they pitch ed ," said De­ troit manager Sparky Anderson, who missed becoming the first m an­ ager to win an All-Star Game in both leagues. "M aybe it's ju st that the National League is a little more relaxed than we are because they've had so much success in this g am e," said George Brett, w hose sacrifice flv produced the only AL run. "M aybe there's m ore pressure on our side. "I thought there was a lot of vim and vigor on our sid e." San Diego manager Dick Williams avoided the question on relative league strength. He stressed instead how much he appreicated notching his first All-Star victory. "I saw Sparky in the hallway and we both ju st said the players get you here either w ay," Williams said. "T h is is really a sw eet night for me. I didn't win any games as an American Leaguer and I got my maiden tonight. Som e of my players know how much I really wanted to w in ." LaMarr Hoyt, the G am e's MVP, said com plete athletes help the NL dominate. "T h e American League had big boppers out there, and they can be pitched to ," Hoyt said. "W e have great athletes who can hit for aver­ age, for hom e runs, and they can run and th row ." No home runs w ere hit in the austijnl m oniessori school 400 W E ST ALPINE R O AD / AUSTIN T E X A S 78704 / 512-442-3152 Supervised by Association Montessori Internationale Donna Bryant, Director • Founded in 1967 Pre-School & Elementary Levels explore-experiment-discover freedom with discipline planned learning experiences extensive materials • math • language • social studies • music « a r t • science North and South Locations 442-3152 _____ Foreigners by Theodore Apstein game, a surprising development considering the presence of so many power hitters and the stadi­ the "H om er- um 's reputation as d o m e." Nor were their any disastrous sequences involving fly balls being lost in the lights. If the game showed anything, it indicated perhaps why run produc­ tion has dropped so much this sea­ son. "T h ey've got a whole bunch of those guys (power pitchers)," An­ derson said. "Y es, that's the reason they're hitting low er." "W hen your bats d on't get going you have to look at their pitching," shortstop Cal Ripken said. "They threw the ball real well tonight. They have some great arms over there, but we have som e great arms in our league as w ell." Steve Garvey, who produced the game-winning run with a third-in­ ning single, said the contract negoti­ ations may prove more difficult to solve than Jack Morris did. In other baseball new s, Neil Allen was traded from the St. Louis Cardi­ nals the New York Yankees W ednesday for a minor league play­ er to be named later. to • F r ie n d ly S e r v ic e * • E x p e rt Staff • • O v e r n ig h t B/W & C o lo r P r o c e s s in g • • C u sto m E n la r g e m e n t s • • O n e H o u r E-6 S lid e P r o c e s s in g • Custom Photographic Labs At the corner of MLK & Nueces—474-11 77 Ju ly 1 1 -1 3 and 1 7 -2 0 , 8pm T h eatre Room Winship Drama Building 23rd and San Jacin to IT S COMING! KINKO'S ANNUAL SALE Adults $6; students, senior citizens, U T faculty and staff, $5. Tickets available at the door. Inform ation, 4 71-1444 0 College o f Fine Arts T h e University o f Texas at Austin COPIES July 22-31 8 ’/2 x 11 white 2 0 # auto-fed kinko's f.» Thursday Night Country Palace 500 Tricycle Races Two B it B eer Nite Contests and Prizes $1.75 Longnecks Music By: Texas Highriders Cover $4.00 16511 Bratton Lane 255-9622 / 22* if* 2*13 ttedkd Art» 47*4654 476-3242 476-1000 X R arts & entertainment The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18, 1985/Page 9 Mob not taking things seriously Photo by Alan McGill Stephen Ray highlghts Austin artists in an upcoming documentary. Austin art on Public A ccess A half-hour documentary by Stephen Ray on changes in the styles of Austin artists will be shown on Public Access Televi­ sion at 9:30 p.m. Sunday. The pro­ gram features an interview with Max Latin, an Austin artist who has received national recognition but has refused to be interviewed for the last five years. “It's been several years since a comprehensive documentary has been done about art in Austin," said Ray. "It is an updated look at the artists, collectors, and dealers that have put the Austin art scene on the map. "The most difficult aspect of the project was getting the artists to really open u p ," Ray says. "But when they did begin to describe their work and their ambitions, I was suprised at the scope of the art being done here. It was a thrill to be able to interview Max espe­ cially." — Tim McDougall Claudette Colbert deserts hus­ band joel McCrea for greener pas­ tures. McCrea pursues her, pos­ ing as her brother. Rockefeller- type billionaire Rudy Vallee secretly yearns to be Rudy Vallee. His sister, Mary Astor, is an overeager hunk hunter ("Is sex all you think about?" "Is there any­ thing else?"). Meanwhile, William Demarest and the Ale and Quail Club are shooting everything in sight. What plot could possibly c o n ta in th em all? P re sto n Sturges's screwball classic "The Palm Beach Story" shows 9 p.m. Friday under the stars in Laguna Gloria Art Museum's outdoor am­ phitheater. — Steven Fay Bresson distances viewers By STEVEN FAY Daily Texan Staff “V Argent" proves a difficult film to admire. It tries to be true to its own standards, and is willing to lose more than a few viewers along the way — and it succeeds at both. It violates many "rules" of film making that viewers raised on Hol­ lywood unquestioningly, which w ouldn't necessarily be bad, but it offers nothing to compensate for its brashness. accept The story is simple. Two school­ boys palm off a phony 100-franc note on a shop clerk. This inexor­ ably leads a naive, guiltless man to become a mass murderer. "L'Argent" translates as "m on­ ey," and money here is not so much the root of evil as the lubricant that lets it flow. People act out of frustra­ tion, not greed, doing what they m ust to survive. We observe Yvon's fall as we would watch an insect be­ come ensnared in tree sap, seeing him overwhelmed bv natural forces in which we would not dare in­ terfere. This godlike distancing is a trademark of French writer-director Robert Bresson, one of those people whom tony film-history books al­ ways praise, but whose films rarely get shown. Perhaps you caught "A Man Escapes," "Diary of a Country See ‘L’Argent’, page 13 PRESIDIO THEATRES V I L L A G E . ’0C ANPCPSON • 45<-8352 4 p«; iy V ;':/' .liTfVfU 12:30.3:20.6:45. 10:00 S C ) i m 148,4:30. 7:30.10.30 C3fl In your own backysrdl $ T h f f g ] 12*10.2:40.5:20 6:10.10:40 I O I I S B O O K \ 1 V \ s p i g , TkBm tíM i 11:50.2:30.540.7.30.10:20 P L A K E H I L L S 4 ^ 2 4 2 8 B Í N W ^ r r t 4 4 4 - 0 5 5 2 • P R IZ E S H O N O R ■ |K 4 :1 5 - 7 :0 0 - « * * H | nr CXXBV STERCO By DAVID MENCONI Daily Texan Staff "I hate pretentious bands," Steve Collier flatly state*. "There are so many bands that take themselves so seriously, when all they're doing is playing an instrum ent. Music is more like a leisure activity to me, I don't think it'll ever be a job." Collier is guitarist and lead singer for Doctors' Mob, one of Austin's up-and-coming Beach bands. His band may turn out to be more than just a hobby after making an ap­ pearance on the Austin taping of "The Cutting Edge" last weekend. The band's debut album "Headache Machine" is also set for release Fri­ day on Wrestler Records and it's al­ ready causing a stir. Given each m em ber's back­ ground, Doctors' Mob is one of the most unlikely assemblages you'll ever find. For instance, Collier (a Li­ bra) played drum s on the first Big Boys single and bass in an earlier prototype of Doctors' Mob and nev­ er even played guitar in a band until the latest Mob incarnation formed about a year and a half ago. Glen B enavides (Capricorn), whose breakneck drumming is one of the band's most distinctive in­ strumental trademarks, is a veteran of "countless heavy-metal bands" and also did a brief stint with a hard-core band called the Druids. "I was with them for about two gigs," he remembers, "then they beat me up one night because I had a gong, which really pissed all the hard cores off. I had about an 18-piece drum set with a gong, playing songs like 'Fuck God,' and they just couldn't understand the concept." Bassist Jimmy Delusio's past is no less sordid. "These other guys ha­ ven't played in as many really bad bands as I have," he claims with what may or may not be pride. "I know what it's like to be playing in a club for two people and one of them whispers to the other one and they leave. Then you're playing fusion to no one. I was in a band once called Jazz Fusion To No O ne." Guitarist Don Lamb (Pisces, as is Delusio) is the band's rookie, whose only prior musical experience came from school talent-show bands. "Did you go to Woodshock?" he inquires. "If you missed it, it was our best show ever, and if you were there, well, we're sorry about it." That pretty much sums up Doctors' n ] i. Á Z A ' C A f [ A N D B A A ! TONIGHT F ro n k e & D o v g Friday The Lovnge Lizards Saturday K Hot Bond Steve Collier, Glen Benavides, Don Lamb and Jimmy Delusio form Austin’s up-and-coming Doctors Mob. Photo by F a t Biashil! Mob's irreverent attitude. Appropri­ ately enough for a band named in honor of the first American riots (in 1728, against New York doctors who were allegedly digging up corpses for medical experiments), Doctors' Mob has a reputation for being sloppy, fiery, unpretentious and a whole lot of fun. Not that they go out of their way to make things messy, you understand. "I'd rather be in tune and tight," Delusio says, "but of course, that comes from having played in a jazz fusion band." Combining voluminous, seem­ ingly contradictory influences, this is a band that'll try anything at least once, from their own razor-sharp originals to country standards to TV themes to heavy-metal classics, tossed off with an appealingly smart-assed casualness. Not too surprisingly, audiences often don't quite know what to make of them. "One time, we were in Oklahoma, and they were just not into what we were doing," Collier recalls. "This FRIED OLE CATFIS I n t r o du c to r y P n ce - $ 4 . 9 5 S e r v e d N o o n - 10 M F 7 - 1 0 S A T U n c le S tie -S tie ’s ¿51 1 San Antonio 4 ¿4 5392 “Throat 12 Years Later" i M u c h l o o S o o n ja m 2 22M C uadalm n M70 M30M Opnn 11 SULKA’S DAUGHTER ________ MTEP X » IN COLOR_______ DIu«-Hoomoi»« T o u c h V ■•d*c*d Pricaa 0*73 0 pm - $4 ' Sunday' : ipen Noon N' ~'nf. 1 p club had a drink and drown night insurance guys these with all screaming, 'SKYNYRD!,' and we were moonwalking onstage, stop­ ping in the middle of 'Stairway To Heaven' to tell jokes. They got real pissed off." Doctors' Mob first started attract­ ing serious attention last year, after recording a demo tape with pro­ ducer Patrick Keel. "W hen we start­ ed out, we were real loud and fast," Delusio says, 'T h e n we did that tape and it came out real pretty For some reason, we decided we should try to play like that." The result was an awkward tran­ sitional period, according to Collier. "The concept w asn't that bad, real­ ly. It came out something like Rain Parade or Violent Femmes, with acoustic guitars all over it. Patrick did a really good job, but he didn't really capture us. He didn't produce the band, he made us into a differ­ ent one." Although the tape attracted some label interest, no offers were forth­ coming. By the time the band was ready to record "Headache Ma­ chine," they had enlisted Big Boys/ Poison 13 bassist Chris Gates as pro­ ducer. By all accounts, G !> ' pro­ duction philosophy w as tar b e tte r suited to the band than Kt t I "P a ­ trick said, 'Turn your am ps d o w n and we'll fix it in the m ix /" Lamb says. "C hris said, 'O kay, tu rn ev­ the point erything way u p ,' w here it w as all feedbaeking. We never, get to plav that loud. Blew out my am p ." to Benavides was particularly im­ pressed w ith G ates's attention to details. "Everybody says he d o e sn 't know w hat h e's doing, but he sp en t three hours tuning the drum s; I d id n 't think h e 'd care that m uch about production. He got the best guitar sound I've ever heard, too." The resulting album captures the band at its torrid best, particularly "Tim e's U p ," "Som ew here Hlse" and "W hy Should You C are." A nd while it probably w on't put them into M adison Square G arden any­ tim e soon, it should at least insure that their hobby will be in dem and for quite a while. Doctors' Mob will plav at the band's record-release party 7 p.m . Friday at Waterloo Records, and also Saturday night at the Iexas Tavern with the True Believers. D0BIE THEATHEX ( 477. 1324 F R E E P A M O N G IN D O M E O A R A G E BEVEl HILLS 5 0 0 - 7 1 5 - 9 3 0 BREAKFAST CLUB 14:45 7 :0 0 9 :1 5 21ST A GUADALUPE S I 9* 5S § SILVERADO f g -1 3 Ü m 11:45, 2: 15, 4:45, 7: 15, 9:55 it E R E T S D M 70M O || N £ MA» MAX BETON» TOTOTEUOMF ■12:15.2:30,4:45,7:00,9:15 (0 0 -1 3 ) ■ WOim m m n o Ma s s e s & O O Y L B EXPLORERS m 12:45, 3:00, 5: 15, 7:30, 9:45 901 SILVERADO -13 12:00, 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 S S 9A O N S I * EXPLORERS [PG] 5: 15, 7:30, 9:45 12:45,3 K M S S S 9A O N I , TONIGHT S o u l N ig h t Friday P r e s s u r e Saturday T ru e B e lie v e r s opening: Doctor's Mob ¡S í í S f s s b b MONDA V-TUI SPA Ya TWILITf SHOWS*MATINHS MON SAT AIL SHI vS 6**09$ b RM SUNDAY A M0U0AYS - 1ST SHU* ONLY UCl SPtCMi fNGAUfMf NTS N O R T H C R O S S 64575147 NOH'HCSOiiU».. *NOEHSCN V BJ»nCT BREWSnrS MILLION S P G ) (1130-145-S:1S.« PJ0)-7:3C-9;4S f IIZZI'S HONOR (R) (1:15-4:1&<.$2J0)-7:15-9:35 KAMBO(R) (12:45-3:00-5:15 $2.50) RED SONIA (FO-13) (12:30-2:45-5.-00 $2.50) 9 S O U T H W O O D w w m m m xm m l i f f l Star’s Inn Coffee Shop ¡ j O pen 2 4 Hours | IH -3 5 and 3 2 n d S tre e t Flome B r o i l e d Ham burger * j $2.99 - w Fnef 5 Dnnk Off or ox piros J u Iy 31 1985 ■ A Ü A I B E Y iN l T1 UU OEEM RE' ■ 12:30,2:45.5:00,7:15.9:30 * 0 - 1 3 ■ 1 N O PASSES I 9:15 SCMIN2: (1:15-3:36-5^5*. $1501-8:00-10:15 SHOWING ON 2 SCREENS! R e s t a u r a n t 6 C o f f e e S h o p I # I. ‘Smithereens’I ...a most engaging movie:’ -Vincent Canty. Maw t o t Times classified advertising P a ge 10/The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18, 1985 Vteq/Mqit®rtord A tc s p fd For Word ads call 471 -5244/For Display ads call 471-1865/8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Momtay-Frklay/TSP Building 3.200/2500 Whitts Av®. 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AH claims for adjustments should be mode not later than 30 days after publication. Are-paid kills receive credit slip H requested at time of cancellation, and if amount exceeds $3.00. Slip must be presented for a reorder within 00 days to be valid. CLASSIFICATIONS TRANSPORTATION 1 0 -M isc . 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Call KeNy, 9 2 6 - 7 9 1 4 .7 -2 2 __________ __________________ '7 8 P O N T IA C Phoenix G old 2 d oo r h o t c h b o c k - z i p p y N e w Leaving for E u r o p e m o k e upholstery me an ofhsr. 478-41 95 . 7-19 e n g in e . D O D G E C O L T '7 9 Runs great, cold AC! G o o d g o * mileage 4 8 2 -8 8 3 1 or 3 4 5 - 4138. Leave messoge. 7-19 19 7 5 P O N T IA C Astre. 4-speed, super de­ pendable, A M / F M stereo, AC, $ 9 00 . M oving, must set. 3 4 6 - 0 0 0 9 .7 -1 9 19 73 T O Y O T A Corolla, runs great, g o o d tires, extra parts, $3 00 . 477-41 28 . 7 -2 3 19 8 4 M O N T E Carlo, $ 8 0 0 0 , V-8, 2 2 0 0 miles, excellent condition, 3 4 5 -2 7 9 7 , 3 4 3 -6 2 3 1 work. 7 31 S E N IO R S G R A D U A T E S ready for a b rand new c a r? N e e d credit in y our ow n n am e ? A n y new cor-abemate financ- ing,no d ow n payment, no payments for 3 C a t 442-72 14 . 7 -2 2 '7 8 O P E L white. 7 8 K mostly highw ay miles. 5-speed m anual shift. N o problem cor $1 29 5 or B O C o t 4 5 3 5 4 2 4 7 2 4 20 — Sports-Foreign Autos 7 6 V W RABBIT 4-speed, A M / F M stereo. Michelins, W e b e r carburetor. $ 1 7 5 0 negotiable. 4 7 4 - 9 6 4 7 . 7 - 2 4 ____________ FIAT 5- '7 8 SP ID E R C O N V E R T IB L E speed, runs excellent, A M / F M cassette. M utt see N egotiable 9 2 6 -7 3 0 1 7-19 19 82 B M W 3 2 0 i Alpino S package, mint condition, alarm system, sunroof, CB, low mileage. 2 5 8 - 8 4 0 9 7-19___________ '8 4 V W GPI, $ 7 5 0 0 , 4 5 4 - 0 2 0 5 7-2 2 _______________ loaded, 3 4 ,0 0 0 miles, '8 4 T R A N S A m Firebird, red, loaded plus alarm, must sell, $10,800. 4 4 8 - 4 9 2 7 7- 2 3____________________________________ 7 8 D A T S U N hatchback G o o d mechani­ cal and b od y condition. Very reliable. Asking $ 1 75 0 Coll Charlotte 4 7 8 -9 8 9 1 7-19 19 84 Porsche 944. 5-speed, totally load­ ed. C ham pagne paint with tobacco leather. Eurosport Imports, 452-1824. 7- 19 Autos 7 6 T O Y O T A C o ro n o S R -5 A C PB, A M / F M stereo cassette, excellent condition. $1700. negotiable, 4 4 4 - 5 4 4 9 7-2 3 7 6 T O Y O T A Corolla. 4-speed. 7 3 0 0 0 miles. Dependable! 453-1958. 7-2 2 '8 2 B M W 320i, 5-speed, A/C, sunroof, A M / F M stereo cassette, $10,800 n ego ­ tiable C a t 4 7 2 -2 1 5 3 evenings 8-13 1969 M E R C E D E S 2 2 0 SE. gasoline, dual carbs, 4-speed, beige, brow n interior. O n e owner. $ 4 2 0 0 , negotiable. 4 4 7 2 0 0 3 8 14 '6 7 V W Bug. 12K miles on rebuilt engine. M a n y new parts. Aesthetically pleasing. $8 00 . 4 7 4 - 8 6 6 0 after 5pm 7-2 4 1976 FIAT 131 s/wogon. 8 0 ,0 0 0 miles, 2 3 M P G , A M / F M , roofrock. Ckmatized with g o o d engine, new tires, shocks, bat­ tery. $ 1 4 5 0 negotiable. 4 7 6 -7 0 9 4 . 7- 19 1978 D A T S U N B-210 hatchback. 5- speed, 6 9 ,0 0 0 miles, 4 3 M P G highway. M ost dependable $ 1 7 0 0 4 6 7 -9 1 9 4 7- 19_____________________________________ 70 — Motorcycles 1982 H O N D A U rban Express moped. Wefl maintained. Kept under cover. $ 2 2 5 includes half-helmet and basket. CoRTeri at 4 4 3 - 6 3 9 6 . 7-18 8 0 K A W A S A K I 175 street/dirt, runs well, ' $ 4 50 , needs new seat cover. Otherwise great shape, 4 7 9 -8 3 8 9 . 7-18 Y A M A H A C V 8 0 mo torse ooter, $475. Pnce includes helmet, foce-shieid, secur­ ity cobb. C all evenings 4 43-8571. 7-18 1983 H O N D A E XP R E SS N e w battery, rebuilt engine, runs great, low miteoge, blue with basket. A sking $300. 44 4 - 5901, ask for Loura o r leave messoge. 7- 2 3 ____________________________________ 1981 Y A M A H A 2 5 0 Exciter, excellent condition, 6 0 0 0 miles, windshield, re- moveobfe trunk, $ 8 0 0 4 4 7 -3 0 1 7 7-18 19 80 H O N D A C M 4 0 0 T , rock, backrest, helmet, cable lock, immaculate. $9 75 . 4 7 7 -4 1 2 8 7-19________________________ 1982 H O N D A C B 4 5 0 T Howk, perfect condition, 12 00 miles, free helmet and cover, Kerker headers, $995. Call D a ­ vid, 4 7 7 -7 7 4 7 . 7-2 3 '7 8 SU Z U K I 4 0 0 G S $ 4 00 , includes hel- met. G o o d bike, g o o d price. 3 2 7 -2 3 0 8 , o r 4 7 6 -8 4 4 2 , evenings. 7-2 4 O N E YE A R old H o n d a A e ro 80. $ 5 0 0 plus helmet and lock. 4 7 5 - 2 7 3 6 ext 1403. 4 7 2 -5 9 7 8 , Sh oron 7-2 4 U N IV E G A V IV A Sport, 2 7 fes, new condi­ tion, extras, kept indoors, super buy, $ 2 3 5 or negotiable. 4 7 4 -9 1 5 0 7-19 '8 5 U N IV E G A N u o v o Sport AH olfoy components. C ro-m o frame. Toe dips, frame pump. $ 2 5 0 Tom, 47 9-6651. 7-19 M O U N T A IN BIKE, Arayo. All Japanese. C ro-m o frame, fully sealed bearings. G reat shape $ 2 8 5 479-6651. 7-19 N E W S C H W IN N 23-inch frame W orld Sport 10 speed. First $150. Call Layne at 4 7 8 - 7 8 9 7 CoH after 6 on weekdays. 7- 19 P U C H P A T H F IN D ER 12-speed, mens 25 inch, m any new parts. Two years old $75. 4 7 4 -8 6 6 0 , after 5. 7-2 4 _________ C O L N A G O R A C IN G bike: 59cm /23V?in crankset, frame. shifters. bottom ir g brocket, detainers, 14-speed, C am p y Call 4 7 2 - 4 8 0 3 . 7 - 2 4 C A N N O N D A L E A L U M IN U M tounng bike: 21'froma, 18speed, $3 50 . Also D iom ond Back mountain bike: ISspeed, $ 2 5 0 negotiable Both like new. 4 7 2 - 4 8 0 3 anytime. 7-2 4 100 — Vehicles Wanted S T U D E N T O N L Y , male, furnished b ed ­ room, kitchen privileges, bills paid. $125 a month. Christian home. Interview 47 8 - 8 9 0 9 7-18 REAL ESTATE SALES 120 — Houses BY O W N E R 3 -2 in Jamestown. Fire­ place, fenced yard, $80,000. Pnncipals only, please. 9 2 6 -3 8 8 4 . 7 -2 9 L O O K IN G FO R C o - O p fraternity house o r apartment condo site existing six bedroom two blocks from University W o n 't last, $189,000. A S H properties 346-1541 o r 458-1911. 7-2 2____________ N E W LISTING. O n e block to UT shuttle, super sharp two bedroom one bath, Hyde P ork -H an cock area. CA/CH, two car garage, microwave, $1 08 ,5 00 Ash Properties, 386-1541 o r 458-1911. 7-2 2 CALL 471-5244 TO PLACEA CLASSIFIED REAL ESTATE SALES 130 — Condos-Townhouses r STONELEIGH 2409 Leon New Condos for Sale or Lease Pre-Leasing for Summer & Fall The Stoneleigh is a newly constructed condominium project consisting ot 26 spa cious units These 1-1. 2-2. and 3-3 floorplans will be available for June 1 occupan­ cy Besides being less than a half block from the W C Shuttle stop, the Stoneleigh provides m any outstanding amenities which include a pool, roof sundeck. elevator, security system, covered parking, decks, wonderful views of Austin and a full appli­ ance package 451-8249 Project o pe n 8 -5 w e e k d a y s a n ytim e b y appointm ent. F o r info rm atio n c a ll— COOK CONSTRUCTION 327-4980 130 — Condos- Townhouses lenqxT 915 W. 23rd at San Gabriel L arg e 1 * 2 Bedroom s All appliances • Pool • Spa • Sauna • Weight room. From $86,000 OPEN HOUSE Mon-Fri 1-5:30, Sat-Sun 11-5 469-0851 CLARKSVILLE EFFICIENCY. Etched glass, private balco n y, close to d ow nto w n . Perfect fo r y o u n g p rofe s­ sio na l o r student. $ 2 9 , 9 5 0 . Coll Lau ­ ren 3 2 7 - 9 7 9 0 4 4 5 - 7 4 8 1 . 7 -2 4 fREWHOHBITATIO Vi/U I....____ ~ C —Hi rkxri n.it WiM itv# in #i® dorm ftxs Fa#! Ch#ck out itm 2 b®droom Grohoro Ploc® Form®? Mod®! only 2 ' 2 blocks to campus com- ptete wi#i wa*H®r/dry®r security system Sot tub o n d assigned parking Ca# for personal sho w in g f e r n ” 7-’™ ' Beat high prices! 15 mins. b us ride UT. 3 - 2 Vri - 2 living, fan, pool, patio. Pnce fireplace, $ 6 9 , 5 0 0 . C all M a r y , 3 4 5 - 8 4 7 1 or 8 3 5 - 5 0 7 2 Deanie Owens Co. BHG _________________ 7 0 6 Students H u rry S u p e r efficiency with w /d a n d all oth er amenities, right by the p o o l a n d tennis courts. N ic e n e ig h b o r h o o d a n d o nly minutes from the UT Shuttle. O n ly $ 5 2 , 0 0 0 . C oll Pi­ n a r at 4 5 4 - 4 8 4 1 o r 3 3 1 -0 1 2 7 . C en tu ­ ry 21— S h e p h e rd Realtors. 7-19 THE PO IN TE. Twelve spacious one and two bedroom condominiums near cam­ pus. O n shuttle. Secunty. Pool Jacuzzi. M icrow ave, closets W a lkin g distance to Law School. Outstanding value. $ 5 5 ,0 0 0 -8 9 ,0 0 0 . Evelyn, agent, 258-9125, 2 5 0 - 0 0 7 6 .7 -1 9 ___________ huge 2 C O N D O S R E N T or buy 2-2 AH amen, ties. 3 blocks from campus. Coll 46 9 - 0 3 2 8 . 7-19____________________________ C O N D O F O R sale. 2 4 0 4 Longview D e­ room. luxe, all appliances, pool, near tennis courts and pork. Agents daughter finishing school. $ 4 9 ,5 0 0 3 4 5 - 6 9 3 6 7 18_____________ 14 Longv laundry laundry O N E B E D R O O M condo with blocks W est o f campus. W a lk to doss, $ 5 0 ,0 0 0 7 1 3 -4 6 8 -5 8 2 7 8-2 loft. 2 Town houses O R A N G E TREE — Skylights, hardw ood floors and o fireploce a d d charm to this cozy ef­ ficiency priced at $49,900. — The price has been reduced to $ 6 3 ,5 0 0 for this freshly painted con do inside the security system which accomodates two. — O n e of the largest o ne bedroom units in west campus for $86,500. — Two bedroom, two bath and owner wiR recarpet at $127,500. Assume loan with $ 2 0 ,0 0 0 down. This con­ d o easily accomodates four. furnishings — N E W LISTING : First offering of this contemporary decorated condo with to convey at $ 12 9,500 For show ing call W ilson & Gokfrick 3 2 8 -0 0 2 2 and ask for Jeane Franklin (327-1165 nights) _____________________________ 7-19 RENT TO BUY N O R T H W E S T HILLS. Large 1-1 condo ot 691 0 Hart Lone near Far W est Blvd. $1,040 move in a nd $520/mo, which includes down payment for purchase. Coll 3 4 5 -5 8 2 7 . 3cu.ft REFRIG ER ATO R G reat for dorm or smaH apt. Three ft. high, works great, 4 7 9 - 8 3 8 9 $ 5 0 7 18__________________ 200 — Fumitur®- Household Y E L L O W FLO RAL sleeper sofa Q ueen sized sleeper. $ 8 0 M indy, 495-9134, 92 8 -2 5 3 7 . 7-19_______________________ D IN IN G TABLE $ 3 5 0 Dresser $ 6 0 Book shelves $15. Reaever $235. Turntable $150. Tope-deck $185 Clock radio $ 2 5 Deddom p $15. 345-86 51 7- 19____________________________________ S O N Y T E LE V ISIO N $ 3 5 0 Microwave, $ 2 0 0 King-size bed $ 2 5 0 Couch $300. Se w ing machine, $90. Encyclo­ pedias. $ 5 0 Wicker tables $15. 3 4 5 - 8651 7-19___________________________ D O U BLE B E D frame boxsp nng mattress. Completely new. $95. Rocking chair, desk, choir, lampshade; each $15. Tel: 4 6 2 -1 5 4 4 evenings. 7-19 Q U E E N SIZE sofa bed, rich orange/ brown tones, high bock, T length, $ 2 5 0 Rocking chair, high back, dark walnut slain, $50. 4 4 7 - 7 9 8 3 evenings. 7 -2 3__________________________________ CARPET: 2 2 0 sq.yds., very go o d condi­ tion, $1.50 per yard, 2 4 4 - 7 8 7 4 even­ ings 7-2 3 7-19 F U T O N M A T T R E SS with sheets, comfort­ er, pillows, folds into couch, $100 4 7 6 - 2792, Mike. 7-19______________________ BY O W N E R . Croix 2-2/West Com pus lo ­ cation in newest phase, call for details 445-2118. 7 - 2 6 _______________________ BY O W N E R , 2BR 2B A condo on Town Lake. Call after 6pm for details. 441- 0 7 4 3 . 7-19___________________________ A T T E N T IO N FACULTY ond graduate stu­ dents. Don't miss this 2 -2 condo with large loft. Skylight. Fireploce Huge stor- oge. N ice view. Two blocks UT $111,000. Small complex William L. Young, Jr; Realtor, 4 6 7 -9 2 5 2 . 8-16 1 BR, 2 blocks from campus. Washer/ dryer, microwove. A s su moble 9 '/ 2 % loan O p e n house. July 21, 12-4pm 114 E. 31, # 2 0 8 .3 4 3 -2 1 1 8 . 7-19____________ B U E N A VISTA, a most attractive court­ yard, security covered parking, low maintenance extenor ond o spocious one bedroom in West campus AH for $ 7 4 ,5 0 0 W ilson ond Goldnck, 32 8 - 0 0 22 , Jeane Franklin (327-1165 nights) 7-19 FURNITURE. SO FA. $100; dresser. $50, kitchen table, $70; desk chair. $30; mtsc. notebooks, engineering supplies, textbooks, office supplies. 4 7 4-71 09 7- 2 4 ____________________________________ W ATERBED. K IN G size, bookcase head­ board, base with six drawers, tnple dresser, mght stand $5 0 0 . 4 7 2 - 3 8 0 6 7- 2 4 ____________________________________ G O L D C O U C H ond chair, average con­ dition. $75. Green plaid sleeper sofa, average condition, $ 3 5 CaN Craig or D i­ ane, after 6 P M 8 3 6 -8 3 0 3 . 7-24 LIKE N E W —less than half priced: Ken- more vacuum, $35, S o n y o onswenng machine, $95, 20-m fon, $ 7 0 CoH 4 5 3 - 5 4 2 4 7-2 4 210 — St®r®o-TV S O N Y TRIN ITRON , color, 13' TV one yeor old, $180. CoH A rup 4 4 7-71 24 or 8 3 5 - 6 4 9 6 7-2 3 BUY, SELL, RENT, TRADE.~WANT ADS...471 -5244 RENTAL 360 — Furn. Apts. GARDEN GATE APARTMENTS COED NOW ACCEPTING LEASE A PPLIC A TIONS FOR FALL ¡ f - j y A * ■v> & / d o V0U N K D AN APARTM6NT FOR EITHER OR BOTH SUMMER SESSIONS? Ul€ HflVC THEM! DALLAS, BRRNDVIUINE, HOUSTON, UlllSHIRC APTS. ★ $275 month for summer leases ★ 1 b®droom opartm«Ats fumish®d and unfurnished. Coll Phil 480-9358 2803 HEMPHILL PARK # 1 05 KEEP TRYING REAL ESTATE SALES 130 — Condos-Townhouses L u xu ry 1BR Furnished 2222 Rio Grande 476-4992 like these IB M P C Jr. with filing oMMtont, a lm o # now, b p # offer. R ob ot 45 9 -2 2 6 8 . 7-19 A T T E N T IO N M A C u a n . C om plot* 512 K upgrade, only $2 00 . CaR after 6 P M 4 7 6 -3 0 8 1 .7 -2 4 _______________________ O S B O R N E 1 computer like new. 6 4 K Ram 3 7 0 K disk software including Pascol M T + $ 4 9 5 o r b e # o f­ fer 4 5 3 - 5 4 2 4 7-2 4 ___________________ Lota of 230 — Phofo- Cam®ras SLR/PENT A X M G , 50mm, 2 0 lent, $1 30 4 5 8 - 4 9 2 0 7-2 4 _______________________ FULLY E Q U IP P E D dorkroom. Excellent condition. O m e g a 8 - 2 2 enlarger, safeiight, easel, 2 roll developing tank, limar, trays, etc. $95. Cafl M ary, 4 5 9 - 1005. 7 -2 4 240 — Boats H IG H P E R F O R M A N C E sailboard equip­ ment, complete board, 9 6', full Batton soil, odjustobl* booms, $450. Also, mac. sails, boards, etc. 4 7 6 -4 3 0 9 , 4 9 9 5314 7-19__________________________________ H O B IE CAT, 16-foot with trailer and a c­ cessories. V ery g o o d condition, $2 0 0 0 , 4 7 4 - 8 6 6 0 after 5pm 7 -2 4 250 — Musical Instruments SP R IN G ST E E N , BEATLES bootlegs! AJwn Nation Records, 38 1 8 N. Lamar 45 4 - 9098. G reat selection of rare rock, psy­ chedelic records. 7-18 V A N T A G E A V E N G E R 1 electric guitar ond Peavey Studio Pro amp, both two years old; excellent condition, sounds great! $ 4 5 0 Tom, 495-3231, will seH separately 7-18 O L D S ' T R O M B O N E i condition, with case < $ 4 0 4 5 8 - 4 9 2 0 . 7 - 2 4 playing mouthpiece $ 3 5 0 .0 0 Cash Commission. Find the buyer for; "Baldwin Orgon, 2 keyboard, 17 rhythm sections etc. $ 14 3 0 0 0 Cash 9 2 6 -0 2 4 0 280— Sporting- Camping Equip. S L A L O M SKI, bossett design, Medalist 600, kehrar, 168cm, g o o d rough water tournament dn $125 0 8 0 4 7 6 -4 3 0 9 . 4 9 9 -5 3 1 4 .7 -1 9 _______________________ H A G L ID E R - R A I N B O W c o lo r e d SeoguB delta wmg. G o o d training glider G o o d included condition. Helmet $ 3 00 . Chip, 3 28-04 31 7-17 300 — G arage- G IA N T M UlTI-fom ily ga rage sole Bar­ gains 25<-$100. Saturday Sunday, July 20-21 9 0 5 W 2 9 , 9am til 7pm 7-2 4 330 — Pats iVj-YEAR-oid Columbran boa. Beautiful markings, very gentle. N e w 29-gallon aquarium, reptile equipped CaH Steve, 8 3 6 -0 3 9 0 , ‘ “ 0, after 5 7-19 THE P RO TEC TO R Ime Registered p4 bu* pups. The best protection d o g you've ever owned, or your money back. $150 ond up 2 5 9 - 0 7 3 0 7-2 3_______________ THE PRO TEC TO R line Registered pit bull pups The mast affectionate d o g you've ever owned, or your money bock $150 ond up. 2 5 9 - 0 7 3 0 7-23_______________ WANT ADS...471 -5244 RENTAL 360-F u rn .A p ts. R E M O D E L IN G SALE: The Bazaar, aN vm- toge ciothipg, jewelry, furs, shoes, hots. 2 5 % off 2 4 0 4 G uadalupe 7 2 9 8 -F O O T B R U N S W IC K P O O L TABLE, fine condition, a l accessories, very including stained glass hanging lamp. $1000. W 1 negotiate. 2 5 5 -0 6 3 2 , after 5, 7-18 7-19 E XPERIEN C E FREEFALL. Skydive with an expert o n a square porochut* buRt for two Co» 396-JU M P . 7-2 5 ______________ C O C A C O L A antique ice 'c h e # $50; neon Bud beer sign, $ 1 0 0 M ile r Beer stan. $20; various beer pitchers, $ 5 eoch Prices negotiable 834-1072, c o l after 1 3 0 .7 -1 9 _____________________ __ V IS A / M A S T E R C A R D You con a # them fr e e information: Diversified Services, P O Box 15406, Goinetvifi*, FL 3 2 6 0 4 7-2 2__________________________________ 1967 E N C Y C L O P E D IA Americana, very go o d condition, $65. Refrigerator, $ 6 0 4 7 4 -7 9 2 4 . 7-2 2 RENTAL f r e e LOCATING A P A R T M EN T S AND CONDOMINIUMS FOR L E A S E — SPRING S E ­ M ESTER. WEST AND C A M P U S N O R TH AREAS. 476-2673 Rummag® Sates 350 — R®ntal S®rvte®s Score Big With A Campus Area Apartment This Fall You can score big by preleasing today your apartm ent for the fall sem ester We have four excellent com plexes to ch oose from in presti­ gious Hyde Park ju st north o f cam pus They are equipped with the am enities you ve com e to expect & m ore Ceiling fans, g asw ater paid, laundry facilities on site, on site m anagem ent m aintenance, easy access to IH -35 & Mopac and m ost important only m inutes away from cam pus You'll win everyday with great deals El Campo 305 W. 39th Street Furnished l b d - l b a 2 b d 1 ba $ 3 9 0 1 bd 1 ba $ 5 1 5 2 bd 1 ba U nfurnished $ 3 6 0 $ 4 8 5 1 bd 1 ba 2bd 1 ba El Dorado 3501 Speedw ay Furnished U nfurnished $380 1 bd 1 ba w#<«*>$350 1 bd 1 ba 1 bd-1 ba icACHi $390 1 bd 1 ba icacmi $360 1 bd 1 ba 2bd 1 ba La Paz 401 W 39th St. Furnished $390 1 bd I ba $515 2 bd ! ba El Qd 3704 Speedw ay Furnished $380 1 bd 1 ba $505 2 bd S ba Unfurnished $360 $465 Unfurnished $350 $475 Professionally m anaged by Johnston Properties, Inc. RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. £ & íf t C 4 € ó ' W est C am pus Luxury L easin g NOW for Sum m er & Fall • Spacious Floorplans • All New Appliances • Barbeque Areas • Extra Large Pool and Sundeck • Hot Tub • Convenient to Campus C a m in o Real: C o n d o style at a pnce you can afford M a k e an appoint ment to see C a m in o Real soon and find out about ou r special S u m m e r Fall rates. 2 8 1 0 S alad o 4 7 2 - 3 8 1 6 H O U R S M for Summer 1907 San G abriel 345-5442 8-1_______________________________ Condos- Towwhou— RENT TO BUY N O R T H W EST H U LS C ond o a l 6910 H art Lone neor For W est Btvd $1,040 m ove m ond $520/m o Mffwch includes dow n p a y ­ ment for purchase C o ll 345-5827 __________________________________ 7 19 EFFICIENCY CONDO O ld Casfle H ill a re a Convenient to UT/dow ntow n AN applionces, etched glass, summer $275/m o 346-9220 and 453-7100 7-25 Not a Condo But Batter Our apartmenh are condo quality w4h amento s smce our rgmodelinq. New carpet, floor Me. imm-bkndv hot tub, large pool, se­ curity system, covered poking and soociout floorpkms n the heart of Hyde Pork. Now preleasing for Fal DUVAL V R LA APTS. Professionaiy Managed By Hutkm Development Co 4305DuvdSt 451-2343 Beat high prices! 15 mins. bus ride UT 3-2'^ 2 living, firep lo ce, Pnce $ 6 9 ,5 0 0 CaN M ory, 345-8471 or fon, pool, patio Deanie Owens Co. B.H.G. SUNCHASE CONDOS NOW LEASING 1 & 2 BR all applionces, pool, security, 2 bflcs north of compus. N ow -M oy C oll Ron 476-2673 O ffice open e ve ­ ry afternoon 7-19 LUXURIO US EN FIELD Rood condo avott- abto for FaN. Pool, hot tub, sauna and weight room, lelevideo entry system, and secured covered porking 2 BR 2 BA $900, 2 BR 1 BA $690 Investor's Realty 472-3686, or 450-1014. 7-30__________ SETO N C O N D O S faHy famished torge 1 bdrm Modem kitchen, private w/d, pool. 2 btks to campus A vailable Aug 15 CaN 713-497-7361 7-19____________ LUXURY C O N D O S 2-2, fireploce, aN ap p liances, including m icrow aves, washer/ dryer Hat tub Pnvote Proper- ttev 467-7182 7-19____________________ W EST CAM PUS luxury condo, 2 BR 1 BA, micro wove, ceding Ians, W /D, portioHy famished, fenced polio, (ocuzzi, $850/ mo., 472-3332 7-30___________________ 1-1 C O N D O FOR lease Campus view W /D, pets ok. $450/mo, $150 deposit 474-9647 8-6_________________________ M O V IN G ! MUST lease or sell now! Effi­ cient efficiency condo-Central Austin W /D and microwave N eor shutde Come seel 250-3655, work, 453-3132, home 7-19___________________________________ Tow nhoviM LUXURY C A M PU S condo far rent Fvffy w ash e r/d rye r. fu rn ish ed w ith Rent $550 Summer, $700 F a l. G Elaine for informalion. 476-4221. Ava4- abfa now. 7-26 O N E BR condo 32nd and Red River W / D, aR appliances, fireplace, pool, wood phis ubfifles. $35-6179, floors $750 pfa Brett 8 5 AVAILABLE N O W . W K liA located a t Treehoute Condominiums, 2612 San Pedro. Apptonces. microwaue, asfate garage, fireplace $600/mo plus deposit and b ils C o l Bab at Cress Realtors. 346 2193 7-19________________________ 2 BR 2 BA condo near Enfield ond Expo­ sito r separate living ond dining rooms fireplace, m icrowave, pool, hot tub Avail now $800/month Call Crotg at 478- 9881, 453-6453 7 25__________________ SETO N C O N D O S, I BR 1 B A unfor isnhed, 2 blocks to campus. Avaflabte now CaN 476-1701 7-26______________ 420— Unff. H bu bbi W EST CAM PUS Throe blocks to UT, beautsfal restoration on historic street. Very fa tt* 3BR. W ood floors and cod­ ings N ew appliances, fireploce, CA/CH, ctehng fan 908 W 23, $fl00/Summor, SKXXVEaN Avaflabte now 477-4425 alter 5 30 7 30________________ _ RO O M M ATES DELIGHT Pro loose/Aug. 1 1 houses available, 3 2, $ 7 9 V $ 8 9 5 Prívale Properties 467-7182. 7-19 HYDE PARK area. 2-1, A C apptonces, ceding fan, hardwood floors. $560 a month 451-8122, W est W orld R e al E» tote. 8-8_____________________ W A N TED dose UT 266-9266 9 to 4 PM . 8-16 $400 $450/month house 3BR 2BA North of law school, wafc to campus AC. Year lease Avaflabte Aug. 1, $925 per month 474-1785. 7-22 N IC E, SU N N Y 3BR 2 BA W ood floors, washer/dryer, big londtcaped yard. $700 467-2420 8-13 HYDE PARK/North UT area Spooous 2 1, high codings, hardwood floors and large porches, nice yard $595. 836- 7429, after 6 PM and weekends O w ner -Broker. N o dogs. 7-T9_________ 4608 AVE. D 2 BR, aw conditioned, with appliances $550, w ater paid, yard kept 451-1380 7-24____________________ LA W SCH O O L oreo Aug. tease 38R 2BA house with gorogekoundry/dark­ b flk 476 room/work orea $800 8677 7-24 425 — Room s RO O M AVAILABLE for Eafll W indtree Condominiums 30 and Speedw ay. 2BR 2BA, W /D, tocuzzi, pool, $250/mon CoN Brian offer 5 480-8874. 7-23 R O O M FOR renh John, 282-7366 or 385-9740 ext. 2902.7-22 PRIVATE SIN G LE dorm rooms. Wom en/ men. N ear UT. Furnished, bifls paid. $210- $250. Kitchen pnvteges. 477- 1529 7-22_____________________________ R O O M S FOR boys with adjoining baths. 3 blocks campus. $230-$240/month, ABP. HoweN Properties. 477-9925.8-9 RUSTIC CO UNTRY abode. Spacious, qui­ et, private. South Austin $150 a month includes utilities. Thane, 282-2771. 7-18 1 BR, 2 blocks from campus. W asher/ dryer, m icrowave, fireploce $550 O pen house, July 21, 12-4pm 114 E. 31, #208 343-2118. 7-19 ________________ DESPERATELY SEEK IN G roommate from now through Aug. 31 Furnished, SR shuttle, $350 negotiable, Rabin, 440- 0839 7-19_____________________________ BEAUTIFUL CRO IX 1 BR 1BA, with fire­ place, next to pool. Summer $550/ month, EoN ond Spnng semesters. $67 5/ month CaN Mike at Linda Ingram ond Associates, 476-2673 7-23 N W HILLS condo, 3-2, shuttle service a l­ ter Summer Semester, aN biHs paid, $775/mo 474-6521 ask for Rod 7-19 C O N D O FOR rent, smaN, quiet complex, pool, microwave, walk to compus 2 BR IV } both, 454-5477, 346-1590 (Leslie) 7-26_______________ ____________________ O RA N G E TREE condo, famished $800 monthly 1 large bedroom with study. Beginning FaN Session. 345-3599 7-19 N EARLY N EW 2-2Vj Applionces. fire- ploce. CA/CH, $795 10 $850 706-A W est Lynn. 472-7362 7-19 FURN ISH ED one BR condo $385 on 12- month or $400 on 6 month Ceding Ion, mini blinds, microwove, pool and spo CoN Jone at 443-5451 8-9 room GRADUATE NON-smoker. Your own huge in com fortable house. Unbelievably dose. N ine people. N o pels 472-5646, 474-2002 8-13 430 — Room - Board 2800 W hite $200-5260 472 4205, 476-6924 7 24________________________ lady, lim e off to be determined. Reply FREE TO serious, tomate, non wnokmg graduate student in exchange lor pre­ paring breakfast and supper lor elderly la Doily Texon, Box D-1, Austin, Tx 78713 7-26____________________________ room GRADUATE NON-smoker. Your own huge in com fortable house Unbelievably dose N ine people, no pets 472 5646, 474-2002 8-13 435 — Co-ops LU XU R Y C RO IX-1BR1BA 8 06 W . 24, furnished, fireploce, ce il­ fans, oil ap p liances C overed ing Porking. Security. Robert, 345-8741, 343-0428. D eAne O w en s C o B .H .N .G 7-23 Small friendly co-ed co-op has rooms open now. AH meals & biHs paid. 4 blocks from UT. Renovated, nice old, house. Rents start at $264 for Sum­ mer, & for Fafl Sound good? Call or come by ARRAKIS Co-op. 2212 PeoH. 472-2292 7-19 V i B IK . off 26,1-1,2-1 + E Pool, covered porking large closets. N o pets. La Cosi­ ta Apartments, 2900 Cole 482-9154 7 31_____________________________________ W EST CA M PUS smaN attra ctively de­ signed and famished complex, laundry facilities 11, $305 $315 + E 451 8127 W est W odd Root Estate 8-1_____________ W ALK TO campus. Furnished efficiencies and 1 bedroom. Apptonces, carpet $275 to $295 451-812? W est W odd Real Estate. 8-1 SPA C IO U S 1-1‘S available immediately Pre-leasing lor FaN Summer, $295, Fat $365 415 W est 39th 458-2990 8 2 370 — Unf. Apts. The Attic Apts. Large efficiency m 1BR units available All appliances, laundry room , pool Near Cameron Rd . shuttle, and businesses tftuien- (ies from $285, 1BRs (rom $109 Professionally managed by Mar- tine Properties, Inc 926-6664 Lease now fo r FaN. Extra large, a t­ tractive 2 8R 2 B A apartm ents only 2 y e a n old. Firep lace, ceiling fans, all electnc ap p liances on-site. W ash er & dryer. The best com bination of size & p rice in Austin 4 blocks north o f In tra­ m ural fields. $600/m onth. 8-5, call 458-1122, o r after 5 & w eekends CoN 892 1606 FIRST MONTH FREE H yd a Park 2-1 stodios. AN appliances except dishwasher. C arpet, gas ond w ater paid, pool, laundry and m ono g er Rent now of $42 5 for summer, sign FaN lease ot $49 5 and receive first m onth's rent free. D avid M cN e il C om pany 478-3533 o r 458-1634 CUTE, G A RA G E efficiency $375 Refog. erotor, stove. A val. Aug. 1. 5402 I W oodrow . 472 7362 7-19_____________ 1 LARGE BR plus study room and living room Hardwood Bod s, parking CA/ CH. W est Campus. $500 plus uM HoweN Properties 477 9925 8 9_____________ a O S E IN -H yd e Park 407 B W 45 1BR, downstairs, garage apartment O ne person occupancy N o pels. $360 plus M h 459 4550 7 26______________ 7-18 The Waterford 2401 Leon A va ila b le fo r FaN Lease 8/1/85— 7/31/86 lu xu ry 2-2 A pprox 970 sq. ft 2 people, $ 36 5 each 3 people, $275 each 477-3143 ___________________________________7-22 FREE RENT H yd e Park efficiencies AN appliances, corpet, pool, m anager ond loundry Rent now a t $295, sign FaN le ave for $335 and receive First m onth's rent free D avid M cN e il Com pany 478- 3533 o r 458-8893. 7-18 EFFICIENCY & 1 BR—$295 N ice, quiet location across the street from pork & Lake Austin. 700 H earn 499-0207, 451-6533. C entral Pro p ­ erties, Inc. 7-22 7-24 W A LK TO UT, efficiency ond one bed­ re­ room available Aug 1 BeauhfaRy stored 65-year-old quamt 8-umt apart ment house Brass ceding fans, to l ceilings, new pfambmg and electnc, new heating and cooling Big kitchens with stained cabinets and woodwork. Earth tone decor $325 395 459 9095 7 31 N EAR UT Low School, on shuttle larg e 1 BR, $325 plus E SmaN complex m quiet neighborhood Pool 474-1240, 442 4076 AvoN Sept 1 7-29___________ N EW LY REM OD ELED efficiencies, 1 ond 2 BR, some with fireplaces and skylights Convenient North Central location near IE shuttle. 2 pooh. $295 to $450 plus E 451-4561, 442-4076 7-29_____________ B R O W N S TO NE PARK apartments now leasing efficiencies, 1 and 2 BR's. $335 to $445 plus E 1st stop on IF shut de G as and water paid 2 pooh. Ask about our $100 off first month's rent 454 3496, 442-4076 7 29 is 380 — Fum. Duplexes N EAR H IG H LAN D Mad ond DPS, 2-1, $425 + utilities, no pets. 454-444) 8-1 N O RTH O F UT, large 1-1, $330 + utdi ties, quiet, mature, no pets. 454-4441 8- 5_________________ 390 — Unff. Duplexes 835-5072, h a b i t e * h c i n f e u s i ■ A M I 7 LOCATING SERVICE 6 A Y ▼ C o nd os . A p o rtm en ts H o w to s • O uptoxes Leave the Hunting To U t! 482-8651 » ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ « i ‘— Font. Apts. A RREYTO W N EFFICIEN CY $300 per A ll bÜts paid. Two diort biodu UT shuttle. Call 474-0139 Tfa» w i fad 7-24___________________________ I aportment. central air, pool, walking ;nce to UT, ACC and downtown. $295/«ummer, $375/faN 477-2781 7 Summer Rates— Esquire Apts. Just north ot campus. A C appliances, suite mate efficiencies $220 plus E 451 8122 W ed W orld Real Estate 8-2 CASA DESALADO APTS 1BR furnished. Gas and water paid. No pets. Swimming pool. West of Campus near shuttle. $375 to $395. Summer rates available. Lease required. Phone 477- 2534.2610, and 2612 Salado Street. 8-6 l — Fum. Apts. 1: . .... ¿ u A U BILLS paid. N ear campus, on dtultlo- EfRuenuet isi small, quiet complex. tlO A >325 451 8532.442 407 67-29 CAM BRID GE T O W It- Fu m n h efficiency m elegant hnh nee odjoming UT 24 hour security, healed pool, indde garage $495 Ulitlies paid 1801 Lavaca 282 6275 or 443-8792 8-14_______________ 1 BR famished, the bedroom is air condi­ tioned. Bath Hfl> and shower, kitchen, Nv- ing room with ceftng fan. Prívale en­ trance. 472-1091, students profaned $275. 7 24__________________ la w W A LK TO C A M PU S RIO NUECES 600 W. 26 474-0971 Swnm or Ratos 0 * 1 Id ( i» 2 8 d 1 » o , t 2 N » A m t 3*5 57J®* 438“ Furnished, Balconies. Security, i | 2 Shuttle Stops, Hus electric. ^ | Preleasing tor FoW < 474-0971 454-4621 1 MONTH FREE RENT W est Cam pus furnished efficiencies AN appliances, corpet. p oo l ond laun­ dry M o ve in now at Sum m er rate of $290, sign FaN lease ond receive first month's rent free. CoN now D avid M cN e il Com pany, 478-3533 or 476-7205 7-18 W A LK TO C A M PU S DOS RIOS 2818 GUADALUPE NEW! ceilin g ^ 1 BR 1 BA — C o vered porking, m icrow ave, individual washer/ fans, CA/CH, ' ‘ dryer, ( t prefaasing fo t fall $475-550 « 478-4271 474-0971 4 i w • RENTAL 370 — Unf. Apts. I t f f l B b T V fg A fa a M S M i j á B E t $295-$315 Plus E W e o r* looking fa r quiet, conscien­ tious non-sox udents interested in a torge efficien cy o r on e bedro o m . O ne-yeor lease. 2 locations. H yd e Pork/near cam pus. CA /CH , laundry, deadbolt. N o pets, 458-2488 ________________ Salado Apt. 2704 Salado CONDO LIVING FOR A PT PRICES Large 2 bed/2 bath and o few one bedroom. Ceiling fans, microwave, some with fireplaces. AN beautifully furnished. Prestige location Walking distance to U.T. $325->495. 477-4622, 474-6683, 444-2750 __________________________ 7-25 302 W. 38 FaN Leasing. Efficiency, 16R, conven­ iently located. Furnished/unfurnished. AN appliances, pool, Vi bik to shuffle. Gas ond water paid. 453-4002 5 BLOCKS WEST UT Attention Students: Quiet freshly painted large efficiency, kitchen with stove (gas), refrigerator, pa netted liv­ ing room, loundry, no pets. $250- $280 + electricity. Red Oak Apart­ ments, 2104 San Gabriel. ___________________________ 8-9 EFFIC IEN C IES $255-280 1BR $280 300 2BRs $350-365 603 Elmwood 3104 Duval. 5012 Duval. 4717 Depew 3812 Speedway. 5505 Je ff Davis Office. Benehro. 477-2214, 453-8812, 3101 452-4516 7-23________________________ $475 ABP. SPA C IO U S 2-2, one block to Low School, 2910 M edical Arts. CoN now, 476-5631, The Elliott System. 7-24 W ALK TO University. O ne bedroom fur­ nished. W ater and gas paid. $270/mo 2108 San G abriel. 345-1552 after 6. 7- 25_____________________________________ LARGE W EST Austin famished efficiency. N eor shutfa. $310 plus E See manager, 1115 W est KM i. #204, or c o l 477-3461 til lorn 7-31____________________________ W ALK TO campus. Large 2-1 S $425 + E/E $525 + E, also 1-1. Sparkling pool, loundry, covered parking. CaN 480-0201 or come by 1801 Rio G rande Penthouse .7-18 EFFICIEN CY IN smoN complex neor UT fc * ^ 1 » _____ r t - i - L L - J - M o v o k k w now. l/OUDN o ta, on appM onces, 477-4005 (10-2). 7-24__________ A Vi A U G 1, 2-1, $430 plus E 1-1, $350 plus E, Frost-free refrigerator, dishwasher, dishwasher, pool, laundry, quiet, on UT shuttle. Ankle s Apartments 2202 2204 Enfield Road 477 1303, 258 5065 7 31________________________ FOR RENT: dose to UT, efficiency partly famished, $235 A BP Contact Max 477-1516 or leave message. A vailable .7-19 N EAR LA W school, room, CA/CH, share baths. $225, ABP 476-3634 7-26_______________________ large, famished W ALK TO campus. Leasing for Eol. Mau no Kai. Shuttle bus, pool. Large efficien­ cy, 2 8R 2 BA efficiency. Fum AJnf. 472- 2147.8-9______________________________ LARGE EFFICIEN CY 38th and Ave B $290 plus E. HoweN Properties. 477- 9925 8-9 LARGE 2 BR 2 BA. Split-level condo-kke apmtmeiX 3 blocks compus. A l ameni­ ties. $850 for 2, $1000 for four, plus E. HovreN Properties. 477 9925 8-9 9-13 CENTRAL LO CATIO N O ne bedroom apartment in old house. Abo, smoi effi­ ciency m duplex. 1705 Nueces, 477- 2755 7-18_____________________________ PLEASANT, FURN ISH ED efficiency, shut­ tle. Q uiet selling in Hyde Park. $275, water poid. 327-5020. 7-29____________ FANTASTIC LO CATIO N O ne block Law School. Spacious 2-2. Sundeck. pool, laundry. Q uiet complex. $625 plus E. G reat O ak, 2900 Swisher 478-5739 or 479-0414. 8-12 _________________ 1BR—$270 SUMMER SPECIAL Close to Cam pus & shuttle, larg e b ed ­ room w ith queen-size b ed & wolk-in closet 2 02 E 32nd 474-8638, 451 653 3 C entral Properties, IN c. CLOSE IN 1-1, reserved parking, near shuttle. A ppliances. $340. 1111 W est 10th 441-2446. 7-19 7-24 Sandpiper Apt. 2810 Rio Grande Luxury Units, 28R— 2 Bath, tastefully furnished, ceiling fan, intercom , m i­ cro w ave, landscaped, pool, Bar-B-Q pits Eleg an t Must see to ap p reciate AN b4h except Ele $ 4 9 9 477-4622, 444-2750, 474-6683 7-25 Comanche Apartments Located on 26th and Red R iver is leasing for foil one bedroom 300 310 + E efficiencies: 240 + E. CaN 479-0928 8-9 CANYON PASS APARTMENTS EFFICIENCIES $275 Larg e floo r plans, walk-in closets, p ri­ vate p atio ond balcony, pool, club­ house, w eight room , sauna ond new loundry room Beautiful grounds on shuffle Short term leases availab le. 454-2157 7-19 FUN IN THE SUN! Luxury W est Compus 2-2, com plete with designer carpet, floo r tile new appliances & mini-blinds, plus a great pool with tanning deck & hot tub! Com ino R e d , 472-3816. HYDE PARK area. Remodeled 1-1, A/C, appliances, new carpet, $420 451- 8122 W est W orld Real Estate 8-2 HYDE PARK area 1-1, appltances, carpet, AC $445 451-8122 W est W odd Real Estate. 8-5 N EA R UT, mature professional to lease luxury duplex on shuttle Secluded, new corpet, $450 805-258-6160 7 22 N EAR UN IVERSITY O ne bedroom du­ plex See at 612A W est 3lVe Street, Vi block off Guodafape N ew ly renovated N ew carpeting, stove, refrigerator, blinds and oc/neating O ff street park­ ing $410/mo W ater paid N ine month Lease required. $410 deposit Available immediately Contact Laura or Debbie, M-F, days only 1-224-1871 8-2 N W HILLS3-2'/J-1 plus study, fireplace, free rent until 7 20 $775. 495-6522, 441-5574 8-2_________________________ 7-19 N ICE, OLDER 3-2 on W est 37th near Guodalupe W ood floors, large rooms $750 480-9191.7-19_________________ BRAN D N E W 2-2 on W aller Creek near 45th, Duval. Fireplace, washer/dryer, lots of windows. Very nice $750 480- 9191 7-19______________________________ W A LK IN G DISTANCE to UT M odem duplex, 4 BR, 3 BA, avail immediately W /D 477-5022 7-31__________________ O N UT campus, approximately 2800 square foot, 2-story bock duplex, ideal for off-campus offices, studios, etc 1450 fee tovoif A u g ) 453-5900 7-19 LARGE 2-1 duplex, $400/mo , W /D con­ nections, near CR shuttle, Highland Moll. CoN Pouio, 451-2373. 7-19_____________ $495. lorge 1-1. Refngerator, stove, walking distance to campus Avail Aug. 1 1913 Robbins Ploce, 2nd floor. 472- 7362 7-19_____________________________ EN FIELD AREA-2-1. Quiet, cute, on shut­ tle $400/mo Summer-$450/mo FaN Hurry! Habitat Hunters, 482-8651. 7-25 W ALK TO UT 2 room basement efficien­ cy. Excellent area, stove, refngerator air, all bills paid $325 478-8811 7-23 $225, large efficiency, fenced yard, near Berkman ond Rogge tone 476-7283 7-26___________________________________ N ICE, Q UAIN T 2-1 near Duval, 45th Pretty setting on Creek, neor shuttle Pets O K $575 480-9)91 7-26_____________ Pre-lease for September Extremely large 2 BA 1 BA, nearly 1000 sq. ft. with 3 ceiling fans, taH ceilings, stained wood­ work. lots of closets and storage space, tresh paint, corpet ond wallpaper. Frost- free refrigerator, laundry hook-ups $650 459-9095 7-3)_________________ 2-1 H ARD W O O O floors, Enfield area, overlooking Pease Park. Available Aug. 1. $550. 477-5395. 7-19 W /4 2 BR carpeted CA/CH 2 blocks UT shut­ tle 4705-A 4707-B 4709-A CasweN $425 282-4644 8-30 400 — Condos- Townhouses 2BR 2BA luxury condo with loft ond fire­ place, S850/mo + utilities Six month lease minimum Preservation Square 474-0806 ask for Stacey. 8-16 PORTO ESPAÑOL APARTMENTS 5820 Berkman • Unfurnished • Quiet atmosphere • Near CR shuttle and shopping • 2 bedrooms, $395.00 + electricity • 1 bedrooms, $315.00 + electricity • Gas cooking, hearing anc hot water Call: 453-2652 DelTwood Area Starr Property M anagem ent V z o f f Security Deposit If move In by 8-15-85 A f t a v x a r f f a a f c . t a r i f a 4505 DUVAL 454-4799 NOW PRELEASING FOR SUMMER AND FALL • Reduced Summer Rates • Newly Remodeled • Pool • Gym • Recreation Room • On CR/IF Shuttles • EfT.. One. Two Bedrooms and Townhouse Units Call or Come By Today! N O W LEASING K3R SUMMER & Fa l l * \ RENTAL 400 — Condos-Tow nhouses W O O D L A N D S D ---------- C O N D O M I N I U M S $200 OFF FIRST MONTHS RENT! From $375.00 1 Bedrooms • M ini-Blinds • M icrowave • U .T . Shuttle 2 Bedrooms (Lofts) « C e ilin g Fans • W/D Connections • Large Pool Immediate Occupancy 443-5451 Cad, Á tt €4 Eco/ 2500 Burleson Road $100 D e p o sit N e w ly Renovated 1,2,3,&4 B ed ­ room s with Fireplaces, Front D oor Porking. G as Utilities Paid Just A F E W LEFT! CaN N o w 4 5 4 -2 6 3 6 N O HASSLE. 1-1, on shuttle, near shop­ ping $295 Summer. CoN 467-9497, or 451-8964 The Eliott System. 7-24 N EW LY REM O D ELED efficiencies, 1 ond 2 BR's, some with fireplaces and skylights. Convenient North Central loca­ tion, neor IF shtgtle. 2 pooh $295- $450 plus E 451-4561, 442-4076 7-29 UT W ALK. 2-1, 1920s 4-pfax, wood Boars, large kitchen, lots of windows, 904 W 22, $580 472-2123 7-31 443-5451 400 — Condos- Townhouses How to turn your living quarters into dollars. f irm* was when going off to college meant highest resale area around campus. Merida offers a host of superb amenities Because in addition to being located in the saving goodb\ to four years of rent checks for student housing or an apartment But times have changed Now there s Merida Eight two-bedroom, two-bath condominium homes located just west of the IT campus That's right. Condominiums So you receive the same tax-saving, equity-building advantages that go along with home ownership And when you leave your longhorn Comer fireplaces with tiled hearths Micro­ wave ovens Washer dryer combinations Ceil­ ing fans in living and bedroom areas A private whirlpool spa in a landscaped courtyard Plus a sophisticated security system So wfide there may be other student condo­ miniums. none tops Merida for location, amenities, and investment potential years, you don l come out on the short end either Because you can sell your condo­ minium and reap the benefits of real estate s traditional appreciation But that's just the beginning. For full informa­ tion, call (512) ^ 9-8110 And let us show you how to turn student housing into a sound investment. < O N I ) O M I N I I M S * Must B e L e a a rd T h ru P a rk e C o . _________________________________ 2515 San Gabriel A development of The Parke Company RENTAL 430 — Room-Boord DUVAL VILLA hHydePork e Spooous Eloorplans • Large Pool • Hoi tubs and Redwood Decks • Security Gates e Convenient to Shuttle • 1 and 2 Bedrooms Special Summer Rates Available Also Pie-Leasing For FaN O pen Sat. 11*2 4305 Duval Street 451-2343 STUDENT SPEC IAL Efficiency ond 2BR, $255 to $350 Convenient to IF shuttle ond on creek. Recently remodeled cov­ ered parking no pets. 225 W . North Loop. 451-6533, Control Properties Inc. 7-24___________________________________ HYDE PARK efficiencies $270 * elector ity Close UT Quiet complex, pool Available now Pre-leosmg CoN 452- 3590 7-31_____________________________ THE HERITAGE is now leasing for Sum­ mer ond FaN Luxury condos offer ceil­ ing fans, microwaves, W/Ds, plus much more Lease/purchase plan oho ova li­ able CaN now 479-8174 or 476-5631, 3111 Tom Greene 8-16 N EW , SPA C IO U S 1 Bit's High efficiency appliances N eor shuttle ond UT base­ b o l stadium $350-$380 Pnvote Proper­ ties, 467-7182 7-19 LO W RATES 1BR $315 2BR $365 Short or long lease SmoN complex neor CR shuttle Capítol Plazo 1200 E 52 (1 block east of Cameron Rd.) 480-9191, 453-6063. 719______________ _________ 2505 EN FIELD , 1 BR on shuttle (available now) Pod, loundry CaN BrN 478-2775 (after 4 PM). 7-24 I RENTAL I ¡ HOTLINE § 3 i S Condos • Apartments Houses • Duplexes Free Finders Service To S 3 3 E Campus Areas Best Listings. 3 i i 477-5312 || i Call I m i i i i i i i i i i i i H i i m i i i i i i i H i m i EFFICIEN CY $300 monlh/$100 security deposit Now ovoilabto. Rwerwdk on Town Lake 400 East Riverside CoS John, 473-8390. 7-18________________________ BEAUTIFUL I BR, 4 and one halt blocks from UT Hardwood floors, full kitchen skylight, hcepioce, yard. $450. Avail. 8-1. CoN 476-5678 between 2 ond 6 PM . 7- 19_____________________________________ FOR RENT. 1BR apt close to UT Avail­ able immediately, $350 ABP Contact Max, 477-1516 or leave messoge. 7-19 SUM M ER RATE: W est campus, smoN complex, loundry, pod. W ater and gas p ad $220-320. B & G Properties, 459- 6042, 345-1460.8-9___________________ W EST CAM PUS neighborhood 1 and 2 bedroom, ovoiL now 6 blocks from compus. CA/CH, carpet, appliances, gas, water, basic cable paid. Summer rates thru Aug., or one year lease, $365 and $485 plus E 1010 W 23 472-2273, 7-19 RENTAL 430 — Room -Boord Large 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments For Fall & Spring Semester • Fam ished • AU Utilities Paid • Starting at $ 3 7 0 per person, per month Call M adison House 478-9891 717 W. 22nd RENTAL 430 — Room -Boord Welcome to Madison House ★ Great Food ★ Full Maid Service ★ Full Security ★ Individualized Service i t í í í We giv e yo u M O RE inner & outer space • Recreational facilities (pool, sauna, game room) \ • Lots of G O O D M EA LS 19 meals a week • Across the street from campus • Housekeeping services • O ff street parking available • Call or write for IN FO R M A T IO N (512) 472-8411 Second Session— 19 meals/wk $180.00 Special 1985— 14 meals/wk $135 Punch Cards— $90 $2 MEAL ALL YOU CAN EAT! DOBIE DINING COMMONS 472-8411 A Fgw Spaces Leftfor Fall & Spring Rates Starting at $375 for 6 wks. including meals Fall A Spring Combined Startipgat$3300 W ell Make You Feel Like One o f The Family! MADISON HOUSE 708W.22nd A ist t, Texas 78705 (512) 478-9891 "TO U RS DiAILY" A Few Spaces Left For Fall & Spring Rates Stortina at $460 for 6 wks, mean inclu ded F a ll & S p r in g Zt b in o d R a la s S t a r t a t $ 3 6 6 0 in c . a t o á is "TO U RS D A ILY "noBix C E N T E R Auain^ IO m h -TOPOS. 2091 G uadalupe CALL US A BO U T OUR 12 M O N T H LEASE! M o r . - F r ; 8 - 6 a Pape 12/The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 18,1985 RSMTAL RENTAL EDUCATIONAL SERVICES SSRVICKS EMPLOYMENT B M H O Y M B H T imOYIMNT IM E L O Y M fH T 9 9 0 -T M o H n g 750—Typing 7 5 0 — Typing 7 9 0 — Port Time 8 0 0 — G eneral Help § 8 0 Professional w v v w m UVE-tNhou HouMhoeper noeda^^H Quiet, re- 2 Positions thru Dec 15 AvaRobfo for non-smokers with R. Johns Limitad, South Austin manufac­ turing firm. Data Entry. (Hours ffoxibfo) 6 0 wpm. 35/hr. Phone Answering (10 am -3 pm) 34/hr. If in- Must have own transportation torustod . Pfoas* apply of 3 0 0 Industri­ al Blvd. bufara Thurs. July 25. EOE. __________________________ 7-24 NEAR CAMPUS. Flexible, 20 plus hours/ week TYPIST 60 plus WPM, WP experi­ ence preferred. BOOKKEEPER Account­ ing hours and/or expenence. RUNNER. insured, rekobie Part-time occasional, cor S3 50-S5.50/hr. 474 2002 7-29 ARBOR CINEMA 4 at the comer of Loop 360 and Hwy 183 is now Funng for floor staff. Must be dependable and hard Please apply m person Mon- 7-19 fIT^eS e ATTENTION STUDENTS Work on cam­ pus. 34.50/hr. plus bonuses paid daily, Telemoriefing. Day ond evening shifts available Col 892-4798 or 282-8866 7-19 RESPONSIBLE, EXPERIENCED sitters needed, Aug 10 to Sept 2, mommas and/or evenings. Call Elizabeth 462- 9763 or Rebecca 467-7802 for inter­ view. 7-29 EXPERIENCED TEACHER needed. Small classes, insurance benefits, Hyde Pork area. 458-1891 8 9_________________ ERRAND RUNNER for afternoons. 10-15 hours/week Hourly wage plus gas. Car is needed. Hyde Park area. 458-1891. 8- 9_______________________________ PERMANENT part time help wonted sort­ ing mail, mimimum 2 years left in school required. 20-30 hours/week. Cad 467- 2577. 7-19________________________ NEED PART time offset printer for Aug. through Sept AB Dick expenence prafered. Paradigm Books, 472-7986. 7- 19_______________________________ I MENTAL HEALTH WORKERS A re you inforesfod in working wilh o team of h*ohh cor* professionals performing twhtl* and chal­ lenging tporkf Austin Skate Hospi- | tal is currently recruiting for MHMR Aid* positions, ■ ■ ■ ■ $ to won with emo- tior liv disturb* ^ S S d is tu rb e d persons in a resi- dentiai salting. ■ r v -l sailing. Starling saiory is I $893/month with advancement to $1008/month after 6 months. The State of Texas offers an excellent fringe benefit padcoae including liberal holiday schedule and state- paid social security contributions. Positions are available on adult, child, and adolescent psychiatric units as well as in specialty areas such as the Deaf Unit and me Sub­ stance Abuse Unit. We con abo accomodate student's schedules, with 3 shifts available (7om-3pm, 3pm-11pm, and llpm-7om). These direct care positions provide an excellent opportunity for individu­ als with course work specialties in the behavioral sciences or allied health services to learn* about human services delivery systems. Positions require H.S. aploma or GED and successful completion of the B.O.LT. test administered at any TEC Office. Applicants with an official transcript showing 15 or more semester hours of college credit ore not required to go to TEC, but instead may apply directly with the Personnel Office, Austin State Hospital, 4110 Guadalupe St, Austin, Texas 78751. An EEO/AA Employer. 7-19 NEEDED: YOUNG, aggressive students who would like to earn up to 3100 a day. Cash paid weekly. Some sales expe­ nence helpful. Must have own transpor­ tation. Co# Mark 892 4798. 7-19 BORED, BROKE ond blue? Show toys/ gifts, now 'til December Home party plan. No investment. $300 toy kit provid­ ed. CoU 345-1314 evenings. 7-19 APARTMENT MANAGER needed for 32-unit University community. Some expenence prafered. Free rent, utilities ond phone service. Pleose call 345- 5088, for appointment. 7-19 EXPERIENCED PART time janitor needed for smoM private school. Afternoon ond evening hours. $5/hour. 442-3152 7-31 INSTRUCTOR POSITION, teaching re- view courses for the GRE and GÍMAT exams Requirements scores of 90th per centile or better on both exams and teaching expenence Send letter detailing qualifications to Ms Boker, 1801 Lavaca, Austin. Tx 78701 7-26______________ SURE FIRE phone work Need 5 people $5/hour plus bonuses 442-3163 7-18 NEED ONE dependable, flexible person to help with two children, ages 9 and 10, ond assist with light housekeeping Must hove transportation 327-0241 7-18 CLEANING COMPANY needs expen- enced help, with transportation and phone For interview caK 458-5625, leave message 7-23 ENGLISH MAJOR-techmcal wntmg skills. Prefer word processing or Wordstar expenence Editing ond typing for course David, 477-5848 Walk from compus. 7-19 THE SOUTHPARK Cnemo is now hiring floorstaff for summer We are looking for dependable, hard workers, especial­ ly For weekend shifts Please apply in person at 1921 E Ben White EOE 7-31 LOOKING FOR qualified teachers to teach Childrens Movement classes, with background in elementary education or creative dramatics or donee or gymnas­ tics. Coll 478-0047 8-6 PART TIME delivery person wanted, flexi­ ble morning ond aftemopn shift Som lifting required Honesty and dependobii ity a must Delivery vehicle available Peoples Pharmacy, 3811 Medical Park way For interview call 459-9090 7-22 FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY $5.00 plus bonuses & incentives. 18 hours/ week. 442-5942. 7-18 Students needed to serve meals, bus fables & wash dishes in girls dorm on W Campus, in exchange for meals. Neat appearance required & flexible schedule available Contact Pam, or Lewis, at 472-6717 7-19 DAYBRIDGE LEARNING CENTER South Congress location, is seeking a full time cook/busdnver and a part time af­ ternoon asustan! teacher For more info coll 443-7765 EOE 7-19 800 — G eneral Help Wanted Easy money make salary plus commi- sion work is in coordination with THE STUDENT GUIDE TO AUSTIN For in­ formation call 499 -0 6 2 8 . Ask for Gal Shweiki. 7-22 •AUSTIN'S FLOWER PEOPLE. Sommer fresh flower vendors. Full/port time Cash daily 440-8777. 7-24 SSTUDENTS 18 ond over, $9 10/hr Coll 447-8160 Monday-Thursday 10-1 ONLY 7-19 RESIDENT APARTMENT managers need­ ed for 20 unit and six unit UT area com­ plexes. Graduate or low students prafered. Coll 478-7355. 7-31________ WAITPERSON NEEDED, lunchtime only, charming restaurant in Capitol area, good tips, come by 204 W. 13 before 11 or after 2 30pm. 478-8773.7-25 INSURANCE COMPANY needs hard­ working telephone solicitors, salary plus commission plus bonus Jim Kipcak, 472- 8235.8-9________________________ FULL TIME porter needed for all-day jan­ itorial duties, must be dependable and ready to work, pre-employment poly­ graph required. Apply in person to store manager, Yartng's UT, 2246 Guadalupe. 7-19 INSTANT CASH ANDBONUS H y o u n e e d caeh t o h e lp y o u ¡ O U T W n H w B I M n O B l i ^ w h y n o t tfo n o to M o o d p lo t* m a r Y o u con d ó n e te tw ic e in a 7 d a y p o rte d — f o r th e 1st d o n a tio n re sol v e $ 1 0 , fo r th e 2 n d d o n a tio n th e som e w e e k re c e iv e $12* Ftws w ith th is a d y o u 'll resa lv o a $ 2 b o n u s o n y o u r llr s t visit. A lso a s k a b o u t b o n u s p ro * it ---A- —- ■ ■ ■■ ■iC xx n ofi s In ilp lip B yoursoM . M u s t hsnro I H l D a n d som e p r o o f o f A u stin resldonso . D ra w in g h o ld once o m o n th fo r tw o $ 2 5 bo n u ses. C a « 4 7 1 *7 0 4 1 . A u stin Pfosm o C enter PHOTOLAB needs receptionist/coun­ ter person for full-time position. Some knowledge of photography neces­ sary. Great working conditions & good chance to learn Must be neat, dependable & organized. Must like to work with people. Call 474-1358, be­ tween 10 & noon, M-F. 7-24 Exciting porttime evening work. Train now as an Arthur Murray donee teacher. It's fun ond w e from you free. Must be personable, enjoy dancing, dean cut. Apply in person Arthur Murray Dance Studio, Village Shop­ ping Center 6-7 :3 0 pm M-F 7-29 Childcare/housekeeper needed Full­ time, M-F, 8 to 5 3 0 in my West Loke orea home, storting Mid-August Will core for 18-month old & kindergar­ tener after school, and perform light housekeeping duties. Needed loving individual with transportation Call 32 8 -3 7 9 6 7-19 450-0151 450-0151 Public relations positions, p art- tim e eve n in g hours. $ 5 /h r . M r. A rch er. Id e a l fo r students. 7-19 Creative person needed to take on custom picture framing Ability to coordinate colors & different styles of molding. Must work well with public Dependability important Permanent position Hours 9-5, M-F, 8 3 0 to 1 Sot. Moil brief resume to Gallery, Box 1243, Austin. Tx 7 87 67. _____________________________ 7-19 SECOND SESSION summer internship* in advertising Gam field expenence sales working with established ad agency for local publisher Cat for appointment. 479-1600. 7-18____________________ QUALITY INN South needs fui-tuna front office personnel, daytime or evening shift. Salary negotiable 2200 South IH 35 and Oltorf. 444-0561. Contact De­ siree 7-19 COUNSELOR POSITION avcxlobie at psyctwatnc treatment center at Oak HR. M-F, 7am to 3pm, ful benefits included. Call M-F, 10am to 4pm, 288-2687. 7- 26_______________________________ 810 — O ffice- Clerical NEAR CAMPUS Momings/Aftomoons/ Evenings ond/or Weekends. Flexible, 2 0 + hours per week. PRODUCTION and mailing of incorporation materials— lower divrton Uudent with good hand- eye coordination preferred, no prior ex­ perience required; TYPIST 60 phs \k^M, WP expenence preferred, training avail­ able, BOOKKEEPER Accounting hours and/or experience. RUNNER Part-time occasional, insured reliable car. $3 50- $5.50/hr 474-2002 8-13 850 — Retail PART TIME position available at Kmda Crazy. Expenence a must. O il Pam 472-0928. 7-23___________________ FULL TIME cadtien, M-F, no nights, fash­ ion conscious, ability to meet people See Store Manager, Yonngs UT, 2406 Guodolupe. 7-19___________________ T-SHIRTS Plus of Barton Crook M ol it ac­ cepting applications for satas. Qegoing personality; hard worker nasdid i .4/hr. to start. 327-4331, a d far BA 7-23 SALES PEOPLE, lodtet opporei toiery and good opportunity for commission. Discount on purchases, good medical plan available Apply in person to Store Manager, Yonngs UT, 2406 Guodolupe. EMPLOYMENT 860 — Engin— ring-T o din ko l CPR or sonto nutting eapononco. IS and board phis $ 3 & ntonWy. N W .477-0702.7-19 RESIDENT APARTMENT agon need­ ed for 20 unit and six unit UT oreo com piano». Graduóte or law students prefared. Col 478-7355. 7-31 EXPERENCED ANIMAL technician. Fu« ten# portion. Col 454-5201. or coma by 3^01 Guodoiupe 7-19____________ COUNSELOR POSITION avoHobie at peyehiehric treatment cantor at Ooh HA M-F, 7am to 3pm, M benefit» included. Col M-F. lOom to 4pm, 288-2687. 7- 26 8 9 0 — Clubs- Restaurants LOS TRES Bobos it inviting you to fill out an aapficalion. Full and port Apply be­ and but potitiofii ovoilooii. < tween 2 and 4pm M-F, 1206 W. 38. 7- 18_______________________________ Utility dish and potw ashers needed $ 4.50/h r to start 7:40om -2:40 pm 2 pm-8 30 pm FuN Benefits/Free Mool Full paid, Ufa, health and dental insurances 6 paid holidays 2 weeks paid vacation after first yoor Sick day buy back IRA and annuity pian available Credit Union Call 4 5 4 -3 6 7 3 7-22 8 9 0 — Ctubs- t«stawronts HEAOUNOS EAST: for fid ffmo and port time cooks. Mutt how soma OMpanaaca. Doy ond "tnM I mats avow s*. A n y si parson do* tween 2 and 4pm. 406 E. 6 St. 7-23 BANANA'S RESTAURANT and Bar and The Rod Tomato Restaurant now hiring I port* tune positions. No oxporionco nec- estory Ap SSS-W Apply it parson between 4:30 and 530 , 1601 Guodoiuoe 7-24 I CLEAN CUT oxporioncod counter térm­ ica and prop. Lunches, afternoons, evenings and Saturdays. 40 hour»/ week. 33.75 to $4 /hour. Apply Salads and Such 1408 Guodoiupo.6-9 900 — Domestic- Household BABYSITTER/ HOUSEKEEPER part lime for two yoar aid boy near Mopoc and 2222. Non-smoker. Own transportation and references required. 345-4433. 7-23___________________ BABYSITTER NEEDED evenings in NW area, off of Stock Ave. References prefored 454-6854 7-19 for ocossionof WARM LOVING coregiver wonted for 2-month infant in N W home. 8-5 week schedule. Uve-m arrangement pos- 346-8582 far interview. 7-19 GOVERNESS NEEDED to care for 6- week-old infant, 20 hours/week, prefer graduate student. Flexible to student hours. CaK 443-3673, if no answer leave name and number an recorder. 7- 19_______________________________ LIVE-IN nanny/housekeeper for infont and charming coupie, needed to join our family. Non-smoker, morning or Tue- Thurr dosses only 472-3805 7-22 BABYSITTER NEEDED for one-year-old. Thursday am (possibly other days if available) beginning August and continu­ ing in Fail. Must hove own transporta­ tion, non-smoker, one mde tram campus. Please caf Franc», 474-8360.7-19 We’d like to teach you how to tie someone up, douse him with water and pound him on the back. it could save a life. And severe bleeding, chemical bums and choking are just three of the emergencies we can prepare you for. Our courses can famil­ iarize you with almost every phase of safety, from simple accident prevention to first aid and CPR. We’re the American Red Cross. We’re working hard to keep everyone wbrking hard. W ell hdp.W ill you? A HjWc aemtoe ol The Neeooapar • Tffe Adtarttong Cowtol W W t t M ! MON-mabar. Your otan h g ^ f W M m cemfartobta I « m U tSdfoiiéhi date Neta pioalo. No gafe 4 7 2 -5 6 4 4 ,4 7 4 -3 0 0 2 .7 3 0 IA M A JOHN'S B n iffrtaeMMBMI ^ • 4 «terttea HordwooJeRlS|§J| faffA window* W /D, ovorage S| ¡§ 1 Ua, 447-2299 7-19 Ve’ Inter Cooperative CouncÜ 7 co-opt in appoafing N m o f the con- fory howto» and 2 co-op apt. com- pfonto 2 -4 M odo from UT A» M b Lfllil e p o ta 4 poom. jefT-^ovemfnQ. n u LANDLORDS W o hawo a house to w it your #yfa. From $ 245/m o. C o lo r como by at 510 W 23rd. 474-1957 for moro esfor. f - t f --------- ¿--- K|A L- OCSRERATELY SEEKING OudanM French fomota appficonlL comput, pop affowod, lota rato» 710 W. 2 1 * 478 -4584.7-24 __________ LEAVE YOUR old brain bohind. Nota Gu4d Co-Op ha» «poco for Fat. 8dt in- .dudod 3248 double. Ono block from . 472-0352 7 1 9 -POWDERMMX BBCUTT fMÉg CiutM 3 AB n w t e ñ a n imwiiRVijr. pnarv *3 dk homo wilh 2 itudonto CA/CH, hard­ wood Roorv garage, fop of windows Near EaPwoodi Park and Law School. 3206.33 plus ukMes. Col David at 477-7144.8-1_____________________ NON-SMOKING female new M y fur- ntshed River Crowing condo. 2-2V5, 2 poop. W /D, F/Pt, microwave, ceiling fora, Mcurity system, dote to shuffle. 3225 + /4 ukkket. Wendy 385-4391 7- 25_______________________________ GIRL TO «hare condo (ocrass street ■North Compui) with 3 others. 3300/mo pfot «hare of utifoet. No smoking. No poto 320/mo parking (713)424-8824 7-19 FEMALE HOUSEMATE wanted to «hare home. No drugt, dog nog Smoker O K Col Amy, 453-7502,354-5727. 7-19 NON-SMOKING female roommate to share 3 BR house, North Central 3250 ph» half U to Deposit. Avail. 8-1. Col Jon 454-8327 or 474-5544 7-25 FEMALE HOUSEMATE, dean, brick home. Enfitld area. Good neighbor­ hood. Was Washer, AC, Shuffle 3240 phnVttbdto 472-2430. 7-19__________ NONSMOKING HOUSEMATE for 2-3 near Zdker, 3225 + V* utilities. City bus to UT. Mint like peto Lauren, 448-3148. 7-19_____________________________ - house ROOMMATE NEEDED for qutet 3BR central Austin S144/P6, 451-9571 in nice neighborhood, days. 7-19 .LIGHT SMOKER welcome to shore 2-1 apartment. Sept. 1. 3225 plus bdto Pre­ fer liberal, neat person Cathy, 458- 3048 7-19 WANTED: RESPONSIBLE, female to share 2-2. W/D, fireplace, En­ field shuffle. 3322.50, VjE, Sonta, 477- 3535.7-19________________________ OLDER NONSMOKING female house­ mate wonted to share nice house with 2 graduate students. Prefer graduate stu­ dent in the Biological Sciences. Share cooking. Pep negotiable. 3230/mo., , SlOOdop, Vi U. 472-3407 7-23 ‘ SPECIAL FOURTH person sought, Travis Heighte household Graduate student non-smoker prefored. Houes has all amendiei, great folks. Near SR and city bus route. 448-1890, 441-0140. 7-23 ROOMMATE NEEDED our room share w bolh 3175 + VS oloc. 445-4847. 7-19 GRAD STUDENT to share 3BR house, W M Cannon oreo. 3250 + Vi bills. 280-1153.7-23____________________ LIBERAL MALE, nonsmoker, upperdass- 'mon/graduate prefored. 2-lVi apt. Riv- tenido area. Leave messoge, 442-0141. * 7-24_____________________________ «NEED N O smoking mole or femóle . professional or graduate to share 2BR «house North University neighborhood. . 3237.50 plus Vi utilities. 477-4544. 7-22 •THREE HOUSEMATES W ANTED i iTo Share 9-room home in north Aus- 'fin. 15-25 minutes from Acc/UT. City Bus. Walk to stores. Prefer responsible tidy female students. N O DRUGS. $198 * V» utilities. Available Aug. 15. 8 3 7 -0 8 6 9 . Keep trying. 7-19 'TOO— Part Time W ANTED- M A LE roammnte for fame hed 2W apt on t i i i l A Smok qué» con»- I Ada, p o o l loundry, Into rvn- pian on nata hoalffi food. S220/mo. VJ ufftkoL 477-4414. 7-19 ROOMMATE WANTED TKo Lennox and bal», a l omemtio» Col Kant, 1-314- 520-5414 8-13____________________ GRADUATE NON-smoker Your own huge in comfortabio howto. room tol~ -1---- toa:------------1- aa-t-i'- -Li w v w w o D v y ooee. n m e p e o p n p*o poto 4 72-5444,474-2002 8-13 MATURE FEMALE to dwro roomy 24R duplo» noor campus. 3320/mo + uafom Col Joni at 482 8845 aha, 4pm. 7-25 room GRADUATE NON-imokor. Your own u t t w v n ic n t. in Hugo comfortabio house Unbekevobly d dote. Nino people. No poto 472-5444, - ,474-2002.8-13 7-19 NON-SMOKING roommate, 3-1 homo, W/D, coding fora 3210/ukfiiias. Grad/ lota stodont preferred. Not on shuffle I 35/183.837-8590. 7-31 ROOMMATES NORTH Austm, 4BR house, 3250/month, all M b paid, no lease, no deposit. CM 250-5435 after 7. 7-19 LIBERAL RESPONSIBLE, dean person to dwre 2-2 duple» with couple. Private entrance-available Aug. 1, $250. 304 W 45, 451-5835.7-24______________ ROOMMATE WANTED: nonsmoker. M / F to thare 3BR/2BA house. $225/month plus Vi utilities. North. CM 244-7184,6- 10. 7-24__________________________ NONSMOKING CONSERVATIVE male. Serious student needed to share 2-2 furnished apt. near Town Lake. NR route. Move in mid-late Aug. 3235/mo. t- Vi E. CM Robot441-3055.7-24 450— Mobile Homes- Lots MOBILE HOME lop for lease in Frontier VMey MoMo Home Park. 385-5883 or 385-4410. Abo moMo homes for sale. 7-5. Vs___________________________ 460 — Business Rentals SMALL 3 room office for compatible business. West UT compus. HowM Prop­ erties. 477-9925, 452-4212 7-23 ANNOUNCEMENTS 520 — Personals friend YOUNG PROFESSIONAL male seeks male for workouts, movies, occassional camping, (potential room­ mate?). Send letter describing your inter­ ests and self to Box 49816 Austin 78765 indude phone or address for re- Pb 7-17__________________________ 530 — Travel- Transportation MATH TUTOR 5 0 4 W . 2 4 t h S t. O f f i c e 4 7 7 -7 0 0 3 O ve* 9 years o f profes stooai service hetpuxi s tu d e n ts m afce T h ^ S tru g g lin g "’ '’ G R A D E F rustrated on te s ts7'’ Ce« or com e t>y for a p ­ pointm ent i r MATH M301 30? EM 306 CS304PF EM3I1 M303Í CS?06 M403K L EM306S EM314 CS3t5 M 316* I CS410 f M319 M306G CS410 M407 EE316 CS328 M 808AB EE4H CS336 M608t AB EE.318 CS34Í, M31S* EE?1? CS3W M4?7K L E E 3?3 _____ CS372 ENGLISH M 311 PHYSICS CMBMSTPV ENG603 CHEM301 302ENG307 PHY301 PHV302KL CHEM610AB ENGJOff PHV303KL CHEM618AB ENG310 PHY327K L auaott s i ASTttON 04TAPN0 ACC311 312 AST301 ACC326 327 ASI30? DPA3I0 AST303 0PA333» ACC 364 AST 30 7 STAT309 ECO PSY317 ECO302 «BSNCH EC0303 SOC317 E C O 3 ?0 ff t EC0324 Den t put M e off unW ate mgM before wieiwn ffstooPWawn oUT • I •FtooPotamg • U t n t p p w » •Pelmguap» you car wwptai. 4Po Ngh adtaot courses to aw above t ubf t t o ondSATi OWE ffbwew Next door to Mad Dog & Beans [XJ UT c o m p u * 9 I » * ' TUTORING SERVICE MATHEMATICS TUTORING by gradual. slud.nl wilh 7 y . a r i t.aching y.ars •xpwfonc*. 452-7404 7-19 TUTORING SPANISH or English as a sec­ ond language. $15/hr. Individuals or smoH groups 834-9354. 7-19_________ FRENCH LADY gives private French les­ sons at her home or yours. All levels. 447-9652 or 250-8767 7-19________ 610 — Misc. Instruction INTERESTED IN SCUBA DIVING? Class- es taught at Logo Vista. Student discount. Jim Moore, 267-2258. 7-26 EXPERIENCE FREEFALL. Skydive with on expert on a square parachute built for two. Call 396-JUMP 7-31 lecving July 21st for Albany NY then Boston. Departing Boston July 31 or Aug. 1st back to Austin. Third person needed to share driving and ex­ penses to Boston or to and from. For Info coll Caesar 4 40 -87 04. SERVICES 630 — Computar Si ndcas 7-19 STATISTICAL CONSULTANT will provide help with SPSS, EDIT, quontitotive meth­ ods, statistical analysis, and research methodology. Tobey Koop, Ph.D., 451- 8152. M-TH. 8-7____________________ 540 — Lost A Found FOUND: EYEGLASSES on 20th St TSO case. Claim at Ed Bldg 216. LOST AT Lake Travis, Sun. July 14, small block and brown tiger-stnped kitten. Please coll collect 409-846-0213. Please return, he's on medication. 7-23 650 — M oving- Hauling TWO BROTHERS Moving. Homes, apart­ ments, offices, antiques, pianos Insured. Open 7 days/wk. 450-0530.8-2 580 — Musical Instruction GUITAR LESSONS: R & B, rock, jazz, country, your choice o f material. Seven years teaching expenence, reasonable rates A nd y Bullington, 452-6181. 8-5 C A L L 4 7 1 - 5 2 4 4 TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED A D CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE JOBS! FOR THE 1985-86 SCHOOL YEAR Earn high commissions and bonuses promoting and selling winter and spring break ski and beach trips to Steamboat Springs, Vail, Ft. Lauderdale, South Padre Island, Daytona Beach, Ft Walton/Destin and Corpus Christi Call for a complete information packet and applica­ tion today toll free! U . S . a n d H a w a i i . C o l o r a d o ................... 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 2 I - 1 9 I 1 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 2 1 - 3 9 1 2 or RIM 12.132. RESUMES 2707 Hemphill Park Just N o rth of 27th at Guadalupe 472-3210 472-7677 ZIVLEY’S THE COMPLETE PROFESSIONAL FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE PRINTING, BINDING Z I V L K Y > 8 # □ 1 / O fUl HOUSI 2707 HEMPHILL PARK At 27th A Guadalupe Plenty of Parking 472-3210 472-7677 24 HOUR typing and word proceuing. Ruth work only. In and out; keep trying. 477-6678. 7-8____________________ then», PATTY’S MICROPROCESSING; dissertations, PRs, legal, resumes, pick­ up and delivery available until 11pm. 345-4269. 8-T6____________________ TYPING AND word processing $1.50/ pg. Monthly accounts $8.0Q/hr Rushes welcome Call Candace 451-4885. 8-13 PROFESSIONAL WORD Processing Typing Service. Specialize in rush orders. Will deliver Letter quality printer Eng­ lish and spelling assitance available. $1.50/page plus 10% discount. Call Mary at 836-7474 7-31 S u re, w e ty p e FRESHMAN THEMES Why Not Start Out With Good Grades? 472-3210 472-7677 INTELLIGENT PROFESSIONAL compu- l . x t p ro c e s s in g . E nglish t . r i z . d assistance (spelling, punctuation, gram ­ mar). Beautiful results get higher grades. Creative Services, 2 4 2 0 Guadalupe, 4 7 8 -3 6 3 3 . 8-16______________________ PERSUASIVE RESUMES with flo irl Invest in your career with confidence. Project yo ur achervements- -effectively Profes­ sional resume consultancy: Creative Ser­ vices, 2 4 2 0 Guadalupe, 4 78 -3 6 3 3 . 8-16 QUALITY TYPING. Dissertations, theses, reports. From $1.10 (pica), $1.35 (elite) Campus d rop-off/pickup. UT BBA. Ask for Kothenne. 4 6 7 -7 2 3 3 . 7 -2 6____________ PROFESSIONAL TYPING, w ord process­ in g , o ffe rs reo sonable ratas, fast turnaround, N orth Austin, N ancy 2 5 5 -7 4 2 0 . 8-8 e x p e rie n c e d ty p is t W O R D S PRO FESSIONALLY'-Typm g p ro c e s s in g --re s u m e s , a n d w o r d reports. school thesis, dissertations, Competitive pnces. Free pickup and delivery 3 3 1 -5 7 6 2 .8 -2 ______________ FROM $1.15 PAGE, professional quality IBM, theme to thesis. RUSH SERVICE: overnight, same day o r while you wait. Located South 9 -9 every day. Donna, 4 4 3 -5 6 1 3 .8 -9 VERA TEE’S Word Processing Public N otan 2 0 Y e a rs L e g a l E x p e rie n c e • Term Papers • Law Briefs • Theses • Dissertations • Cover Letters • Resumes 5 1 2 ‘/ j E . 3 8 ‘/> S t. (.,« Duval» 454-1532 • " days a wick SOUTH UICST SCftVICCS "S’ W O R D P R O C E S S IN G 413-0823 F«et fli Ucctcwla K dw , / D» i n t , INFOPROS UUOftD PROCESSING FflST ACCUflflTf AND OfPfNOflflli STARTING RT $1 PS/PAGE UJITH VOLUME DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE 288-1930 X RESUMES VV •writing VjUx consulting • processing «copies 8 free disc storage YOU DESERVE THE BEST! W O R O M A S T E I^ 1900 E OHorf, # 1 1 0 447 9257 JOB W INNING RESUMES W e D o It AJI! Exp#fl Services included la y o u t • Typing Printing W hile You W ait • Job Resum es/letters/Application* • M ailing Campaigns • SF Forms 17Vs • M ilitary Conversions • Business Proposals & Reports • Free Interview/Lifetim e Updating Since 1958— N a tionw ide 1300 G uadalupe # 1 0 3 2219 W Ben W h ite # F 4 9 9 8 8 6 2 443 6 3 4 4 Untv South N orth 95 13 Burnet # 2 0 3 i 8 3 6 9 4 7 7 „ r " ' •n7 /S r W 4 72 2684 2 4 0 4 R i o G r a n d e q g S O B Z E J E # V ER A T E E ’S 5 1 2 1/* E a s t 3 8 ‘ a St. % • R E S l MES • C O V ER L E T T E R S • FREE «STORAGE 4 5 4 - 1 5 3 2 • 7 days a week SPEND MORE TIME! ; AT THE POOL! ! let ! W O R D M A S T E R . do your typing! 1900 E Oltorf. #11 0 447 9257 ; ; - SPEEDWAY TYPING 3701 Speedway } (( O ’Nighf/SuperRush IF Shunte Parking 472-4089 f <» (> j; WOODS TYPING WORD PROCESSING 472-6302 2200 (íuadalupe **idt* ent ram r Wht»n Y*»u W.fut It Ihn(*• Kitfht ♦Word Processing $l-50/pg | * IBM Campat Die * 15 vears Ezpere^ce I * Oissertatiors Thesis Technica Terrr Resunes «etters Etc I * Free Spelling C->f? • * Transcript n - * free PiCfc-uC Denvei y | ARusnWork A eptej I \ W ,H . . 2 8 8 -4 6 7 8 South A ustin Area 760 — Misc. Services GETTING MARRIED? Bndol sewing Rea­ sonable Silk flo ra l arrangements. Also, alterations and all kinds o f sewing 462- 1746 7-19___________________________ PHOTOGRAPHER AVAILABLE for wedd- Ings, parties, modeling portfolios, adult photography. Etc Professional, discrete and reasonable 4 5 2 -0 5 7 7 7-19 PHOTOS ♦or PASSPORTS A P P LIC A TIO N S RESUMES 3 m inute service MON-FRI 9-6 S A T 1 0 - 2 477-5555 TH IR D EYE 2532 Guadalupe EMPLOYMENT 780 — Employment Services A r Z’ \ N e e d S ? S TANDeBY TEMPORARIES 472-6751 n . v sc, ,E f y y Full Service • T u to rin g • T ypin q • W ord P r o c e s sin g • R e s u m e s • C o p y in g H I 3 U 2 4 t h 1KI K )LU R s L H l f H A R K I N C , SERVICES 7 6 0 -M isc.S ervic es . — . — S F F f ) \ ( ) 1 R Ri St Mí F \ S T f i . i I . K 4 i l l ' \ 1 1 1 1 f i I . 1 1 1 1 . i r g in n y s IHIMs DIsMk’l \ M O \ s \ p.R s JOB OPPORTUNITIES * * + * * * This position is your introductory contact with Austin Businessmen and Businesswomen. EDUCATIONAL 5 9 0 — Tutoring SERVICES 750 — Typing Texas Student Publications pays for eveiy suc­ cessful contact you make. You will be part of a highly profitable market and build your future while you earn. We have everything you need to help you *** We will hire only the most successful* energetic, positively motivated applicants. If you are a winner call for an appointment *** You wfli be fully trained. Applicants from all back­ grounds are encouraged to apply. *** Nearly 40,000 people read the Texan every day. It is recognized and respected nationally. We are committed to excellence. If you share our philoso­ phy, call 471-1865. Ask for Usette Rankin, or come to Texas Student Publications Advertising Department for an application. 471-1865 T h e Dju ly Texan r CALL 471-5244 TO PLACIA CLASSIFIED AD PEANUTS I Every Day I ARCHITECT The nations largest privately owned hofir builder is seeking an architect for their San Antonio division. Applicants must have two years experience in n dentiai construction or be a recent college graduate with a degree in architecture. Strong leadership, orgariizotionpl a^d office manage­ ment abilities are a must. W e are a strong stable com­ pany offering competitive salaries, outstanding benefits and excellent growth potential. Qualified applicants and/or resumes accepted at: g in n y s Nash Phillips/Copus Inc 13441 Blanco Rd. San Antonio, Texas 78216 Attn: Personnel The Daily Texan/Thursday, July 1 8 ,1985/Page 13 D o o n e sb u r y DOC, I'M PLANNING A REUEF FUND RAISER WHEN Z GET HOME. WHAT CAN I SAY IS YOUR GREAT' I BST NEED HERE IN THEM ACTUALLY, JIMMY, MOST OF WHAT WE NEED IS ALREADY IN ETHIOPIA. FOOD,M0*CJNE, VEHICLES-THEYlRE ALL ON THE DOCKS, BUT HELD UP BY SOMETIMES IT GETS SO BAP, 1 WE JUST GO IN AT NIGHT AND I STAGE A RAID ON OUR OWN 1 SUPPLIES. OF COURSE, IT MEANS PAYING OFF A LOT OF CUSTOMS j I AND WAREHOUSE WSSSSBi 'THAfe RIGHT. FOLKS, yourhoo contri- BUI ip US BRIBE FOUR ETHIOPIAN OFFICIALS!* A Continued from page 9 Priest" or “ Lancelot of the Lake" when they whizzed through cam ­ pus theaters in recent months. If so, you know that Bresson's style is spare. Rather than draw you into the action, he keeps you a de­ tached observer. In "L A rg e n t," no one acts, at least not in the highly emotive way we're used to. It's like watching cinema venté, except the camera doesn't shake. N o musical score soothes you or pulls you into the screen world. Bresson uses cam ­ era composition to distance you as well, using medium shots when any American would go in for close-ups, focusing on body parts instead of faces when he does shoot close-ups, and turning the camera discreetly away during high points that d e­ mand to be on camera. This is all very well for show ing what film is capable of doing, which is why Bresson is admired by those film books, but it leaves the viewer saying, "S o what? Why should we take any interest in this m an's trage­ dy when it has all the emotional oom ph of a don't-litter commer­ cial?" And Bresson doesn't even break new ground by his own standards, merely repeating old riffs. Bresson fans and those curious style film non-Hollywood about could profitably spend time on "L 'A rg en t." Casual viewers should take their money elsewhere. "VA rgent"; Friday and Saturday in Burdine Auditorium . TEXAN CLASSIFIED ADS WORK — FOR YOURS CALL 471 -5244 Peanuts © by Charles M. Shultz I WISH WE HAD A POOL OR LIVED NEAR A LAKE.. WELL, THERE'5 ONLY ONE THING TO DO... 6 0 DOWN TO THE 0 L ‘ SWIMMING BUCKET! BLOOM COUNTY by Berke Breathed 50/ A (SLUM GETS A MODERATE INHERITANCE AND HIS VALUES GO OUT THE WHAT'S WINDOW, E H " WRONG ? LOOK WHAT 1 FOUND IN H U 'S ROOM /.. A WALL STREET JOURNAL f A CENTERFOLD OF BOB DOLE FROM FORTUNE MAGAZINE / ANDA BROCHURE FOR A NEW CHRYSLER \CEBARONr FIRST COCAINE THEN CULTS -NOW REPUBLICANISM / JUST A FOOL FOP THE LATEST PASSING FAD, ARENT YOU P/F oh binkley... hey.. cmon.. HE'S SLIPPHG WE'U- BUY HNI AN OLD AWAY FROM *YW"VAN... US AGAIN... 7- IB Ballet preserves Mexican heritage ‘L’Argent’ By KIM BAKER Daily Texan Staff The Ballet Folklórico Aztlan de Tejas, based in Austin, has toured extensively all over the world. The troupe has visited Hong Kong, Italy and London, and w as selected to represent the United States and Mexican American youth at the In­ ternational Festival of Youth Orchestras and the Performing Arts of Great Britain. Saturday the ballet will perform for local audiences. Fiesta Folklórica Tonantzin '85 at the Paramount Theatre is part of the non-profit or­ ganization's effort to preserve Mexi­ can culture and tradition through dance. The ballet's founder and execu­ tive director Maria Salinas says “ The traditions that we have are dif­ ferent in every region and each tribe has its own symbolisms, but we as Mexicans have all of it inside of us. It's the feeling we have within us, it's la Mexicanidad.” "The cultural depression during the Mexican American War saw a little of that tradition lost," Salinas says. “ Because of this we want to tell the younger generation where they come from, and to teach them about their heritage. By opening their eyes and cultivating their minds to both their American and Mexican cultures it makes them richer." The ballet not only develops and delivers multiple workshops for the community, but also has members who serve as consultants. The danc­ e rs have received extensive training in Mexico City from professors with the Academia Nacionale de Danzas and have studied with native Mexi­ can Indians They have become ac­ quainted with the Matlanchines, a prehispanic dance performed as a ritual ceremonv at religious celebra­ tions in Mexico and also the Con- cheros, another prehispanic dance Around Cam pus is a daily col­ umn listing University-related ac­ tivities sponsored by academic de­ partments, student services and registered student organizations. To appear in the Around Cam pus column, organizations must be reg­ istered with the O ffice of Student Activities. Announcements must be subm itted on the correct form by 11 a.m. the day before publication to I he Daily Texan office. No excep­ tions will be made. Christian Science Organization will meet at 6:3U p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Eastwoods Room. Everyone is welcome. Please call Glen Cope at 471 -4962 for more in­ formation. T he College of Liberal Arts and the Department of English will sponsor a 'T h e Vietnam lecture, the American Literary War and Erudition," by Professor Gordon 1 avlor of the University of Tulsa at 3 p.m. ihursday in the Humanities Research Center, Room 4.252. CSA RD A S UT International Folk Dancers will sponsor free folk danc­ ing classes every from 8 to 10 p.m. every I hursdav during summer on the West Mall. Everyone is invited. The College Council of Social Work will show a free film, The Golden Voyage of Sin bad," at 8:30 p.m . 1 hursdav in the courtyard of the Social Work Building. Everyone is invited. Free popcorn will be pro­ vided, but please bring your own lawn chairs. The Iranian Student Association will sponsor a free film, “ Control­ ling Interests," in honor of Nicara­ gua Day ai 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Texas Union Ballroom. The Japanese Conversation Club will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thursday in the Texas Union Build­ ing, Room 4.108. The topic will be periods in Japanese history. From 3 p.m. Tuesday to 3 p.m . W ednesday, the University Police Department reported inci­ dents: these A ssist outside agency: A non-stu­ dent was stopped at 8:52 p.m . Tues­ day in the 1900 block of San Jacinto Boulevard for a traffic violation. When a check showed an outstand­ ing warrant for failure to carry in­ surance, she w as arrested and turned over to Austin police. from their purses Burglary of auto: Two non-stu­ dents reported at 7:15 a.m. the theft of their cars parked in the 2100 block of San Ja­ cinto Boulevard. The value of both purses and their contents was placed at $625. There are no su s­ pects. PAUL PARSONS pc. ATTORNEY AT LAW Board Certified Immigration * Nationality Law Tesas Board of Legal Specialisation is pleased to announce the opening of his offices at 704 RIO GRANDE Austin, T«x. 78701 (512)477-7887 I Members of Balet FoNdorico Aztlan exhibit their tradftionai costumes. with its roots in the Aztec culture. through “ Fiesta," a two-hour program, traces Mexican history from the Spanish Conquest the 1940s, from Cortez's overthrow of the Aztec empire and the appear­ ance of Our Lady of G uadalupe, the patron saint of Mexico, through the peasants' revolt led by Father Hidal­ go. The dancers, in original cos­ tumes, will perform dances from six different regions. From Michoacan comes an interpretation of a Taras­ can Indian w edding and the lives of the people of Veracruz. From Sono­ ra comes an interpretation of the Deer Dance. Roen Salinas, choreographer and organizer of this year's event, says “ We're dedicating the performance to Our Lady of Guadalupe. It is more of an educating package than an entertaining package." Salinas, a University business junior, says “ My m essage is that Mexico has a history and everyone needs to recognize it." The ballet “ is just something we like to do and m ost of us have been doing it all of our lives. The ballet is different from m ost dance troupes because it is more a preservation of heritage than a creative thing. It changes in the sense that each year we show as many regions as we can possibly expose to the audience. It is more like pride." The Ballet Folklórico Aztlan de T ejas will perform Fiesta Folklórica Tonantzin '85 on at 8 p.m . Saturday at the Paramount Theatre, 713 Con­ gress Ave. Tickets are $7 at the box office. 80 90 UPI W EA TH ER FO TO C A S T SNOW [ ^ SHOW ERS** FLOW NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 6 P.M. THURSDAY The forecast for Austin and vicinity Thursday calls for partly cloudy skies with the high in the mid-90s and the low in the mid-70s. There will be light winds and no chance of rain. Nationally, showers are forecast for portions of the central Plains, upper and middle M ississippi Valley, upper Great Lakes, West and East Gulf Coast and the South Atlantic Coast regions. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVED 1 Old clothes 5 Equine 9 Strange 14 Much 15 Gel agent 16 Appellation 17 Rich cake 18 Roquefort 20 US cit. 21 Sun. talk 22 Wakened 23 Transports 2 5 In surgent 27 Legal paper 29 Modernistic 30 Tormentor 34 Iglu makings 36 Prayer 38 Battle cry 39 Cowardice symbol 42 Sugar plants 43 Domineering 44 Flat: abbr. 45 School subj. 46 French prom 47 Mangled 4 9 ------- , day out 51 Jewish teacher 54 Urger 58 Animal doc 60 Brothers 61 Calumet 63 Time of year 64 Incense 65 Unfeigned 66 Arrow poison 67 Tithe 68 Heraldic bearing 69 Annexes S M U g ! S O F A u R G E D L O R N E T w I G C O L 0 A D I T s A N N O Y A N C E R E T R E A T E d b E N T E R ■ E R R ,E D W A D E R S s E D A T E U N I T S I s A i N T L U K E 1 R L A C E D N O V P H E N O s W E E T E N El R E R O D E S N E E D p I S ah L A K E SB lC A R T E R P A LLE S T 1 N E A D Ü R N L O T U S L A N D | S 1 R E N E L A N D O N C E E R A S D E N E S B E E R B E. L T DOWN 1 Morocco city 2 Texas shrine 3 Mediators 4 Long looker 5 Hacks 6 Fond looker 7 English actor 8 Three: It. 9 Massachusetts town 10 Stead 11 Disciples 12 Additional 13 Privation 19 Water sport 24 Bridge of — 26 Complaints 28 Numerical prefix 30 Kitty 31 Hawthorne hero 32 Ambulate 33 Wrongdoing 34 Hankering 35 Gypsy girl 37 ‘‘S tag 38 City VIP 40 Drenched 41 Id —: i.e. 46 — dance 48 Kind of palm ” fiber 49 Expiration 50 Asian land 52 Bundled 53 Land bodies 54 Main point 55 Bygone 56 Gulf of — 57 Strength 59 Distant: pref. 62 In favor of by Miles Mathis wmtSyw \¡4* spec'hules - I í W4 cut O-Pf Vuc X*ate Ve pni*"V l»We P»C4SS0. ©1945 United Fasten Syndicate I » IM S H E B FOODS ■ DRUGS > Summer Sizzler Sale! PUCES GOOD THURSDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY, JULY 18-24 IN: AUSTIN UMIT RIGHTS K S iR V ID AdymrrtMlng Supplmmant to Thm Baity Tmxan Summer 85 General Info rm ation ,•!»» no double features on this schedule admission is * h film All mfotmation is subject to change without totice F'loase tef I 1 ,11 y Tt * in ft it changes m u l ndciitioc . Ifie Ioxas Union Theatte is located on the second level of th Show at Hotm Auditorium and Burdine Auditorium are so noted fii knts an on sale tpjw* aimately 30 minutes I refute showtime fot .tudents, faculty and staff, $2 f>0 for others and $1 (X) for t hi! a*ie Fust run, very long ot very expensive filsm ate $2.50 ft $3.00 Ilf ID is required for each ticket to be purchased at the UT admi i hrn k**d at the time of pun tase eat h fe«r?t ii.u ad in I i ilrn Special Summer M ovie Pass Any 12 movies for $20.(Ml G o o d a t a il t h e a t r e s . P leas* p u rc hase o n ly a t l e s a s U n io n H o i O ffic e . THURSDAY, JULY 18 Scarface (1983) D. Brian De Palma with A1 Pacino. A Cuban refugee becomes a kingpin of the cocaine trade. Action packed and violent. 170 min. 6pm. Stardust Memories (1980) D. Woody Allen with Allen and Charlotte Rampling. Allen’s controversial look at his role as a filmmaker and those who examine his work. 88 min. 9:15pm. The Hunger (1983) D. Tony Scott with Catherine Deneuve and David Bowie A m odem day vampire tale done in a strikingly contem porary visual style 98 min 11pm Les V biteurs Du Solr (1942) D. Marcel Came with Arletty and Jules Berry Two emissaries of the devil wreak havoc on mortals in this tale of love. 120 min French with subtitles. Hogg Auditorium. 7pm. Smithereens (1982) D. Susan Seidlman with Richard Hell and Susan Berman An ex­ cellent small film about the punk scene in New York. Form the director of "Desperately Seeking Susan.’’ 90 min. Hogg Auditorium. 9:15pm. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JULY 19 & 20 A Soldier’s Story (19841 D. Norman Jewison with Howard E. Rollins. Jr. and Adolph Caesar. An intense and highly acclaimed movie about a murder investigation on a Southern military post during World War II. 102 min. 2 & TdOpm. The Year Of Living Dangerously (1982) D. Peter Weir with Mel Gibson. A love story unfolds against a background of revolution and political intrigue in 60 s Indonesia. 119 min. 4:30 & 9:30pm. The Hnnger see July 18 description. 11:40pm. Vengeance Is Mine (19791 D. Shohei Imanmvra with Ken Ogata. A harrowing, uprelen ting probe into the soul of a forlorn, unregenerate criminal mind. Highly acclaimed. Japanese with subtitles. 35mm. Austin Premier. Hogg Auditorium ~ 30pm. Koyaanbqatsi (1982) D. Godfrey Reggio. A breathtaking non-narrative film that in­ vites us to reexamine our notions of progress and technology in today’s world Music by Philip Glass. 87 min. Hogg Auditorium. 9:30pm. Smithereens see Julv 18 description Hogg Auditorium. 11:15pm. A film I Robert ‘“ SMITHEREENS’ DELIGHTS M E’. - V i n c e n t C a n b y N e w York T im e s F R ONE A . \t \S '.'A R ® L’Argent (1983) D. Robert Bresson with Christian Patey and Caroline Lang. Freely claimed 14th film from the austerely uncompromising French director. 90 min. French with subtitles. Burdine Auditorium. TdOpm. ¡adapted from a Tolstoy story about the consequences of counterfeiting. This is the ac­ Gregory's Glri (1982) D. Bill Forsyth with Gordon John Sinclair and Dee Hepburn. A very funny comedy about a young man's first encounter with love and sex. From the director of “Lx>ca! H ero” and “Comfort And Joy ” 95 min. Burdine Auditorium. Wizards Ralph Bakshi’s animated action film about the distant future. 81 min. Bur­ dine Auditorium. 11pm. SUNDAY, JULY 21 The Lion In W inter (1968) D. Anthony Harvey with Peter O’Toole and Katharine Hep­ burn. W inner of three Academy Awards. Political and family intrigue in Henry II s England. 134 min. 2 & 7pm. Shognn Assassin (1980) D. Kenji Misumi. A samurai warrior and his very young son slice their way to vengance in this bloody action movie. 83 min. English language ver­ sion. 83 min. 4:30 & 9:15pm. Vengeance Is Mine see July 20 description. Hogg Auditorium. 3 & 7:30pm. Koyaanbqatsi see July 20 description. Hogg Auditorium. 5 & 9:35pm. „ L’Argent Burdine Auditorium. 7:30pm. Gregory’s Girl see July 20 description. Burdine Auditorium. 9:15pm. i( *pm '.6Spnr. 91 mu* the Western Movie 107 m in H ogg A u d ito riu m MONDAY, H I 3 22 Carnal Knowledge (1971) D Mik* Ni* hols with Ja* k N«n holxon Three episodes ^pan V penetrating reflection on lives of «».. friends Bing >ver Iwo dee.ides in tit* A m era,in sexual mores 9t> nun Under I lt« |I**M> I» Roger Spoltixwoode with Ni*k Nolle A riveting dram a that takes viewers on an emotional journey into he heart of tin- Nu aragtian revolution 100 n u n 6 A 9 fOpm Kin• ini; Saddles l> M< I Brooks with fien e Wilder An outrageous ***** uproarnms comedy spoofing that great A m e ric a n tradition I i Double tndemniiv 11944) D Billy Wilder with I red MatrMurrav \ chilling ***d u n u su a l tale o f m u r d e r, a s B a rb a ra S tan w y ck an d F re d Ma* M u rrav c o n n iv e fo I 'l l ft*! h u sb a n d a n d c o lle c t h is in s u ra n c e m o n ey D as B*m»i D W olfgang P« lets* n w ith Ju rg e n Pro* htiow A m a s te rfu l a d v e n tu r e **pi« il lust ra tin g (he h a u ls h tp s * Je m ia n I 1 boat sail«*t t iirulei went d m m g fAW II G e rm á n w ith su b title s H ogg A u d ito riu m 9pm Brotherhood *d Satan D Bernard Mel veety with Ahita Capri A northern Cahlornia t o w n is I* »ror i/e d hy a laslt o f murdeis and t to at*-!*.. tn*n **l thirteen • luhlr* n. 92 mtn I R| )- al *bi s k hi the I binm Patio. TUESDAY, 1UI Y 23 I be I trng Riders (198tl) Í). Walt* r Hill w ith Slacy 8 e a t ft ( >n« o f th e h« a we a< rros iri re* * ttl y e a rs a b o u t th e le g e n d *»( Jesse Jam es a n d hts a lh a tn e w ith th e Y o u n g er b r o th e rs ('M iren K an e (19l|) D < trso n W elles with Jo sep h G o tte n . C o n s id e re d bv m any to •**• th e best \ r n e t ican lilm **t .*11 tu n e , * iii/e n K a n e is (tie e m o ti •** tun k ed siory of ( h a rle s I K an e, g o lia th <>f th* p u b lish in g w o ild |ta e d **n th e life ot W illiam R a n d o lp h Ifearst Notorious (1946) I» Allied I lit * h* < o k with Ingrid Bergman A dedicated American a g e n t m a rrie s an - I h >lv spy u o r d e r to u n c o v e r Ins * ta n d e s tin e * tivitie a n d finds he* eff m grave ilanget 98 nun Khun Biasing Saddles see f tils 22 iexcription I - i**• Bi!«m See Inly 12. description Double Indemnity see July 22 d e v o p tio n H ogg A u d ito riu m . 9 T*pm li e* Yinfitoriunt 7rim I ju mm 7 5Cpin. mm <*pm )l 1 pm I < t nun jn t i will “ ‘THE GIFT’ IS A DELIGHTFUL FRENCH it’s one o f those rare SEX C O M ED Y movies that is exactly what it wants to be., full o f good fun!’ G E N E S IS K E l A T T H E M O V IE S An Amusing. Sophisticated French Comedy Romp. That’s Naughty SUNDAY, JULY 28 West 'side Ntorv Rob* *t Wise’s lit**- movie version I th* Broad*av must* at ) s mm .v pm Walkabout II97|) |>. Nu holas Roeg. An out .landing Australian film about two children lost m the Out buck 95 min 5 A 9:46pm, G iant (1956) | ) G eorge Siev*n s with E lizabeth ' avh*r, R ock H udson »l»d )arn**s D* an I he classic movie about Itf< *n I" -O x 1 xas \ pm t asuM awa see July 26 description Bur*iiue Audibrriuni The INweeeger see July 2b description. Burdine Auditorium 9 '6pm. In J6 » m , Hogg Audit**rium 2 |9M mm VtjMit. MONDAY, JULY 29 King Of Marvin Gardens (1972) D. Bob Rafelson with Jack Nicholson. A rich and haunting film that illustrates the trials and sorrows inherent in winning the American Dream. 102 min. 6 & 10:15pm. Outlaw losey Wales D. Clint Eastwood with Chief Dan George. Set in the post Civil War West, this is a story of a man who seeks vengeance for his wife and children who suffered terribly at the hands of war crazed renegades. 135 min. 7:55pm. Giant (1956) D. George Stevens with James Dean This is an epic story of a wealthy Texas rancher and a violent young ranchhand who is relentless in his drive for success. 198 min. Hogg Auditorium. 7pm. Mothra A Japanese creature feature about a giant moth’s search for some beautiful women who are only two feet high. 100 min. FREE at dusk on the Union Patio. TUESDAY, JULY 30 Tell Me A Riddle D. Lee Grant with Melvyn Douglas. A sparkling and sensitive film about a married couple whose love has become so bitter their marriage is almost destroyed. 90 min. 6pm. King Of Marvin Gardens see July 29 description. 7:45pm. A Shot In The Dark (1964) D. Blake Edwards with Peter Sellers. Sellers recreates the celebrated Inspector Clouseau back to prove the innocence of a French maid accused of murdering her lover. 102 min. 9:45pm. Investigation Of A Citizen (1971) D. Elio Petri with Florinda Bolkan. An extraor­ dinarily powerful and outwardly unsuspicious man becomes schizophrenic with frightening results. Halian with subtitles. 114 min. Hogg Auditorium . 7pm. The Wild Bunch (1969) D. Sam Peckinpah with William Holden. A group of outlaws knock off one last bank in order to live like kings across the Mexican border. Uncut version. 143 min. Hogg Auditorium. 9:15pm. WEDNESDAY, JULY 31 A Shot In The Dark see July 30 description. 6 & 11:50pm. For A Few Dollars More (1967) D. Sergio Leone with Clint Eastwood. The second of Eastwood’s classic Italian westerns. 130 min. 7:50pm. The Seventh Seal (1956) D. Ingmor Bergman. The acclaimed m asterpiece that pits man against death. 96 min. Swedish with subtitles. 10:05pm. Ingmar. Man Of Flowers (1983) D. Paul Cox with Norman Kaye. A perverse black comedy about an eccentric bachelor and those around him. Critically acclaimed and highly recom mended. From Australia. 91 min. Hogg Auditorium. 7pm. The Wild Bunch see July 30 description. Hogg Auditorium. 9pm. —Hotly WFDNf M1AY 11 1 V 24 ih . * ,lt« (1982! I» Michel 1 ig withClio Goldsmith A ** *rmr*rmantu comedy ab ling change from a tab marriage tml a dull job gets •me is Barbara 106 min 6pm turn. 8pm ription 0pnt ■s* ription, 11 ultimate *etiretnent gib hei Nuinrhtu» see Jut , 2 I descr i (tiren Kane ,*•< July 1 * tie Blaring Saddles see July 22 Queen K e ll* (1 9 1 8 1 f ) I ri* h \ .»n Stroheim *»tb Gloria Nw anst >n One of I It* *ii**m in i- r>, >i tan I md menu *t able films of the silent ji* 11< «I concerning a prim * * lo* e F >r a love jy vonveiit girl 96 mm Hogg Auditorium Musi* lar vers (19711 I) h n Russell with Richtud Chamberlain a wild ami tragic shu v »bo tit the twisted life of 1* haikovsky 122 min Hogg Auditorium 'pm pm pm is . It I \ with William Hurt The sweet sharp melancholy ted at the inn* t.rl of one <•! then friends 104 nun ! Ill RSD Ih* Big Chill I) I a w re nee K; drama finds scv* n old friends bptn- lb* (.III se* July 2 i discription 8pm Hal»* It’s Y o u t|**8lt |) John Say lev with Rosanna Arquette romane* belweeu :wo high school opposites. 1 US nun. 9;SSpm. Ih . Ila unilng (I9 6 0 I* F bert W¡se with Inin Harris A team of jrsychie researchers att* mpi io fearn <)>*- s* * ■*! a haunted house and a ban age *4 strange and terrifying oc* unences ensue I h* Mush Lovers see Julv ’ I description Hogg Auditorium Qneen htflv see lulv 24 description H«*gg Auditorium. 9 ISpm flu steiv of an ut¡hG-¡v I I >0pm, 112 mm pm I KID AY AND S A I! HDAY, IULY 26 A 2 Romancing the Stone Douglas A tout.un e novelist travels to South America to rescue hei sister B*l mm l'>84l I) Robert /cm * • kis wiifi Kathleen Itirnri and Mu hael 2 6* 9 65pm lb* Big Chill see July 25 description 4 (k 8pm. I b* Haunting *< e July 26 description, b A it 16pm In tfo whit* < ti* tl98»f (> Alain Tanner with Bruno Gan?.. An engineer aboard an to understand himself by leading a ran »*d tanker jumps ship *** I obon and attempt d nu life An arresting piece **t woiK that has the logit of a dr< am l\*t tugúese and French with subtitles. Austin Premier ! t.ai la p (1984) I* Simon Wnicer with font Burlinson A nu-'tng and amazing ttu* story of a m ignifu enl hampton t at * h >i s* tit depftt.ssn •<« era Australia II-*gg Auditorium 9 ’40pm ( «saldan* a Bogart and Bergman star in this * lassie World War H love stor y KM min Burdine Auditorium 7:30pm Ih* Passenger (1975) D Nli In Gngelo Antonium w i t h Jack Nicholson A reporter ex changes identities with a stranger in utdet it* est ajre his conventional (de * I'* min Burtliue Auditorium 9:J5otti ( rime* Ot Passion (1984) D Ken Russell with Kathleen I urner and Anthony Perkins A sexual and eroti- film «btrul a woman so terrified **f intimacy slu creates an « x**tk I f *gg Auditorium ~ u- q * * - » In '5mrn If 17 nun alter ego. 102 min. Burdine Auditorium. 11:35pm. “HAUNTING .. . immaculately realized.” — J. Hoberman, Village Voice WHITE u r nGray City Release C 1984 August THURSDAY, AUGUST 1 Desperately Seeking Susan (1985) see August 2 description. 7pm. Tunes Of Glory (1960) D. Ronald Neame with Alec Guiness and John Mills. Brilliant performances about in this powerful study of the British military system. 106 min. 9pm. Manhatten see August 2 description. 11pm. Man Of Flowers see July 31 description. Hogg Auditorium. 7pm. Liquid Sky see August 2 description. Hogg Auditorium. 9pm. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, AUGUST 2 & 3 Desperately Seeking Susan (1985) D. Susan Seidlman with M adonna and Rosanna Ar­ quette. A suburban housewife seeks a more interesting life by taking on a New Wave identity of another woman. Exciting and unusual. 105 min. Dumbo (1941) Walt Disney’s animated story of a baby elephant with oversized ears who learns to Ify. Heartwarming. 8pm. Manhatten Woody Allen’s valentine to the city of New York. Stars Diane K eaton. 94 min. 11:40pm. Cruel Story Of Youth (1960) D. Nagiza Oshima. The directors first hit that also raised a storm of controversy. A teenage couple performs sexual shakedowns of middle aged men. An interesting look at life in modern Japan made virtually simulatanously with the beginnings of the French New Wave. % min. Japanese with subtitles. Austin Premier. Hogg Auditorium. 7.30pm. 6, & 9:50pm. AMERICAN PKfcMltRt from the maker of MtRRY CHRISTMAS. MR LAWRtNC\ & IN THE Rf AIM OF THf SINS1S i film about disilluuonrtient, rxuol obu'SMon A tb*.' e rversion of uoditional values tot ihhisna iruphvs look hold in postw ar Japan _ Ei I .ixjIixJi < rpm 0 Lucky Man (19731 D Lindsay Anderson with Malcolm McDowell. The second of the Mick Travis movies that examine life in modern Britian. Enchanting and often ab­ surdly funny 170 min. Hogg Auditorium 7pm. Fhe Blue Angel 11930) D. losef von Sternberg with Marlene Dietrich. A professor falls for a nightclub entertainer with tragic results. Hogg Auditorium. 10pm TUESDAY, AUGUST 6 Ihe KNI Blows see August 5 description 7pm. Fellini Satyricon (19691 D. Federico Fellini, An imaginative recreation of life in an ­ cient Rome. 129 min. Italian with subtitles. 9pm. 1 he k eep see August 5 description. 11:25pm, Preiiv Bab» (19781 D Louis Malle with Keith Carradine and B rtvk Shields A 1 old girl grows up in a brothel in New Orleans. O l ucky Man see August 5 description. Hogg Auditorium. 9:15pm. Id9 min Hogg Auditorium. -year- pm. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7 ielllnl Satvrk'on see August 6 description. 7pm. Five Easy Piec ex,119701 D. Bob Rafelson with Jack Nicholson and Karen Black. A middle class man searches for some meaning in his life in this tightly directed modem anii-diama. 98 nun. 9:25pm. The Keep see August 5 description. 11:15pm. Fquus (1977) D. Sidney Lumet with Richard Burton and Peter Firth. A chilling film based on the Peter Shaffer play about a tormented youth. 138 min. Hogg Auditorium 7pm. Th* Last W*»e AND SATURDAY, AUGUST 30 6 iaroid And Maude see August 29 description 11:50 ¿aider* Of Ihe Lost Ark 8pm >»e From Ihe Heart see Augusi 29 description. Hoc V Love In Germany see August 29 description. H«>g* ipinai ¡ ap (1984! D k.>b Reiner with Micheál McKe iseudo rockum entary on a w alked out heavy metal 1 (5mm & Dolby Stereo. Hogg Auditorium 11:35pm. Ihe King Of C omedy 1 1 D . Martin -córvese with Rt k revealing, original satire about the extent of influent run. Burdine Auditorium 7 30pm. America, 108 Rear Window Alfred H itchcocks brilliant thriller featuring James stewuti and positively radiant G race Kelly. Burdine Auditorium. 9 !5pm. Monty Python’s Life D! Brvan Burdine Auditorium. 11:35pm, p t e m b e r SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 The Magic Flute (1975) D Ingmar Bergman with Bibi Anderson Mozart’s opc brought to the screen 134 min 2 & 7pni. W itn ess see August 30 description. 4 .«) & 9:25pm O n e F ro m T h e H e a rt see August 20 description. Hogg Auditorium. 3 & A lo v e In Germany see August 29 description. Hogg Auditorium. 5pm. Spinal Tap see August 30 description. Hogg Auditoruro. 9:30pm. The King Of Comedy Rear Window see August 30 description. Burdine Auditorium. 9,30pm. see August 30 description. Burdine Auditorium. 7 :30pm. 30pm. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 It Happened One Night 7pm. Days Of Heaven 9pm. Fritz The Cat I lpm . ( armen (1983) D Carlos Savra with Laura Del Sol and Antonio Gades. Brilliant flamenco up-date of oft-told tale. 95 min. Spanish with subtitles. Hogg Auditorium. 7pm. Nosferatw The Vampyre (1979) D. W erner Herzog Beautifully filmed adaptation of the Dracula story. 107 min. German with subtitle.». Hogg Auditorium. 9pm. i TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 Frit» The Cat 7pm, Alfred Hitchcock’s Spellbound 8:50pttt. Animal House 11:05pm. ( armen see Septem ber 2 description. Hogg Auditorium Nosferaiu I he Vampyre see Septem ber 2 description. Hogg Auditorium. 9pm. pm. A Man And A Wo m b (1966* D. Claude Leiouch with Anouk Aimee and Jean-Louts Trintignant. A beautifully made French New Wave love story between two adults. 103 nun. French with subtitles. Burdine Auditorium, 7:30pm. Sleeper ¡1973) D. Woody Allen with Allen and Dianne Keaton. A very tunny comedy about a man who awakens in the future. 87 nun. Burdine A uditorium . 9:35pm. SUNDAY, AUGUST II The Seven Samurai (1954) D. A kina Kurosawa with Toshiro Mifune. Fhe widely ac­ claimed film about seven warriors defending a farming village against a bandit army 208 min Femme Fatale see August 9 description. Hogg Auditorium. 3 & 7:30pm. Net-rei Honor see August 9 description. Hogg Auditorium. 5& 9:I5pm . A Man And v Woman see August 9 description. Burdine A uditorium - 7:30pm. Sleeper see August 9 description. Burdine Auditorium. 9:35pm. Japanese with subtitles. 2 & 7pm. MONDAY, AUGUST 12 Lolita (1962) D. Stanley Kubrick with James Mason and Sue Lyon. Vladimir Nabokov’s novel about a sexually precocious young nymphet. 152 min. 7pm. Frenxy D. Alfred H itchcock with Jon Finch and Billie Whitelaw. H itchcock’s last great m asterpiece of suspense and fear. Highly recom mended. 116 min. 9:45pm. Local Hero (1983) D. Bill Forsyth with Burt Lancaster and Peter Riegert. An eccen­ tric, off-beat comedy about Texas oilmen trying to do business in Scotland. 111 min. Hogg A uditorium . 7pm. Wild Strawberries (1957) D. Ingmar Bergman. An aged doctor confronts his life through a series of flashbacks. Widely acclaimed. 90 min. Swedish with subtitles. Hogg A uditorium . 9:15pm. TUESDAY, AUGUST 13 liillti see August 12 description. 7pm. The Big Sleeper (1946) D. Howard Hawks with Humphrey Bogart and Laureen Bacall. Bogart portrays Raymond C handler’s tough detective in this classic mystery. 114 min. 9:45pm. A Night At The Opera (1935) D. Sam Wood starring: The Marx Brothers. The boys destroy opera as we know it. A great comedy! 93 min. 11:45pm. Picnic At Hanging Rock (1975) D. Peter Weir with Rachel Roberts and Anne Lambert. An enigmatic puzzle set in Victorian Australia. Visually stunning. 110 min. Hogg Auditorium. 7pm. The Tin Dnun (1979) D. V olker Schlondorff. Based on G unther Grass’ novel about a boy who refuses to grow up. 142 min. Hogg Auditorium. 9:15pm. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14 The Big Sleeper see August 13th description. 7pm. A Night At The Opera see August 13 description. 9:15pm. Plan 9 From Onter Space (1956) D. Edward Wood, Jr. with Bela Lugosi. Considered so bad that it is very funny. 79 min. 11pm. Two Dangkter (1961) D. Satyajit Ray. Based on two short stories by Nobel Prize- winning author Rabindranath Tagone. 114 min. Subtitles. Hogg Auditorium. 7pm. Picnic At Rock see August 13 description. Hogg Auditorium. 9:15pm. Texas Union Film Program closed August 19-25 for sem ester break. lexds L K m « A /