r dr e Da iiy Texan Vol. 81, No. 107 (USPS 146-440) Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin Wednesday, March 3,1982 Twenty-Five Cents City Council kills Deuser’s bid for referendum on height limit By BRIAN SIPPLE Daily Texan Staff City Council member Larry Deuser failed Tuesday to break a steadfast council plurality against a proposal that would have let voters decide if the city should have a 200-foot building height limitation ordinance. Deuser presented two options during the spe­ cial council meeting on a height-limitation ordi­ nance he would like to see Austinites vote on in an April 3 referendum. Both options were turned down in a 4-3 vote that crossed tradition­ al council voting lines on downtown develop­ ment m atters. Council member Richard Goodman and May­ or Pro-Tem John Trevino Jr. helped vote down the proposal, along with Mayor Carole McClel­ lan and council m ember Ron Mullen. In recent votes concerning downtown develop­ ment, Goodman and Trevino have been part of an otherwise council drift away from business- developer interest. Deuser presented the proposal Feb. 25 sug­ gesting Austinites, in a non-binding referendum, vote on whether buildings should be limited to 120 feet, but under special circum stances be al­ lowed to go up to 200 feet. Goodman said he can't consider any decision by Austin voters ‘ non-binding." Therefore, he said, he would feel morally obligated to uphold any proposal approved by voters. "And I think a 120-foot limit is too rigid a proposal," he said. Besides, he said, Deuser has failed to elabo­ rate on what special circum stances would allow a building to exceed 120 feet. The council delayed action on Deuser’s Feb. 25 proposal until a full council could be present Tuesday. When the council voted down Deuser’s origi­ nal proposal, he offered a second, calling for a flat 200-foot limit on all buildings. That proposal also was voted down 4-3. Deuser produced a stack of petitions calling for a referendum he said was signed by 5,000 registered Austin voters. "I have no doubt there will be tens-of-thou- sands of signatures to follow these," he said, guaranteeing council m em bers that "unless the council moves toward meaningful height lim ita­ tions for buildings in Austin, during the next council election a council will be elected that will do the job. " Debbie Darden, secretary of Texans To Save The Capitol, a group pushing strict height lim ­ its, called the council’s action " a very transpar­ ent stalling tactic." She cited a 1981, $170,000 study on zoning com­ missioned by the city recommending a 120-foot limitation. Also, she said, the City Planning Commission has twice voted unanimously to recommend a height ordinance. empt a study under way by the city’s Downtown Revitalization Task Force. The all-volunteer task force was charged by the council in mid-Februrary with recommend­ ing a reasonable height limitation ordinance. Task Force Chairman Alan Taniguchi told the council Tuesday the 17-member group gathered 11 votes Feb. 23 for a motion stating any council action at this time would be out of line with the job charged to that task force. Some of those m em bers, Taniguchi said, do not want to see the issue go before voters, but supported the motion because they feel the council should hear the task force’s opinion. Phil Conard, a task force m em ber supporting the referendum, said after the vote Tuesday, "The council at this time doesn’t have the tech­ nical ability to come up with a fair and reason­ able height ordinance." However, he said, while the task force will give them that ability through professional ex­ pertise and a balance of interests, "T he council will not have the political ability to adopt (task force) recommendations — especially if they’re more restrictive than the current ordinance — unless they can point to voter support." Conard said it is possible the ultim ate task force recommendation will be more restrictive than the current ordinance. March 4 is the deadline for registering to vote McClellan said D euser’s proposal would pre­ in the April 3 election. Court hears alien tuition arguments From staff and wire reports The Supreme Court confronted a perplexing question Tuesday over the possible impact of its decision in a case challenging higher out- of-state tuition for foreigners. During an hour of oral argu­ ment, the justices heard two ver­ sions of what could happen to tax- su p p o rte d and universities if they uphold a lower court ruling blocking the Universi­ ty of Maryland from charging higher tuition to non-resident al­ iens who live in the state. c o lle g e s A lawyer for the university, backed by officials of the other 49 states, claimed a lower court deci­ sion could block all states from charging higher tuition to any non­ resident alien, even ones that pay no state income taxes. But the attorney for the stu­ dents, whose fathers work in the for United States international banks, told the court the ruling ap­ plies only to a limited class of a l­ iens, such as fam ilies of interna­ tional bankers, foreign journalists, traders and investors The c ase focuses on a 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision that struck down the University of M aryland's policy of charging non­ resident aliens more than three times the tuition it charges state residents or immigrants who set­ tle in the state. Maryland charges $700 a year for state residents. Its out-of-state tuition is $2.500 a year. alien stu d en ts At the University of Texas, non­ resid en t a r e charged the sam e tuition rate as out-of-state Jo e students, Neal, director of the UT Interna­ tional Office said R ob ert Zarnoch, a s s is ta n t Maryland attorney general, said the higher out-of-state fees are justified because the non-resident aliens pay no state income taxes even though they live in Maryland. The university is largely support­ ed by state income taxes. He disputed the appeals court’s finding that the policy unconstitu­ tionally against discrim inates those aliens, pointing out the state shows no discrimination in state scholarships or other university fees But Jam es Bieke, who is repre­ senting the foreign-born students, told the justices the state officials are reading too much into the low­ er court ruling He contended it affects only non-immigrants who hold certain types of visas that allow them to live in in the United States without live gaining citizenship. Most around Washington or New York, where m ost international organ­ izations are based, he said. Bieke claim ed the University of Maryland’s policy discrim inates against non-immigrants ju st be­ cause of their visa status. "T hese people have made the state said. their home,” he "They’re not going to return to some foreign country. They live here and they intend to stay here.” Non-resident alien students at the University are on exchange, on visitor or student visas, rather than on visas for fam ilies of diplo­ m ats and government officials held by some foreign students in Maryland. Neal said. The Supreme Court is expected to hand down a decision in the case by July. Reagan administration ready to ask for $135 million aid for El Salvador * 1982 The New York Times WASHINGTON — The Reagan adm inistra­ tion, believing that the "decisive battle for Cen­ tral Am erica” is being fought in El Salvador, is preparing to ask Congress for about $35 million in additional military aid and about $100 million in new economic assistance. Further requests may follow. The decision to pump more money into El Sal­ vador in support of the military-civilian junta led by Jo se Napoleon Duarte has raised ques­ tions in Congress about the wisdom of support­ ing what many believe is a sm all and shaky po­ litical center in a country where the extrem es of both left and right seem to be gaining strength. Increased aid is also becoming a public issue as human rights groups and church organiza­ tions contend that the Salvadoran security forces are uncontrolled and prone to violence. The groups also argue that human rights abuses against civilians are frequent. continued aid — particularly military aid — say that a settlement of the civil war must be nego­ tiated now or American aid will do little more than prolong the killing. quested for the president’s Caribbean Basin de­ velopment plan, would raise military aid to El Salvador in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 of this year to about $116 million from $81 million. The administration, opposing a negotiated po­ litical solution, is backing the election scheduled for March 28 to create a Constituent Assembly to write a constitution and select an interim president. The administration maintains that the guerrillas political organizations are free to demonstrate their strength at the polls, a course the rebels say is too dangerous. Supporters of the administration’s view say that to bring the guerrillas into the government through negotiations would be to turn over to them what they cannot win on the battlefield or through the ballot box. Citing the example of Nicaragua, the administration believes that the most extreme leftists in the guerrilla front would eventually gain control of a coalition gov­ ernment and turn the country into a totalitarian nation. Only $26 million has been allocated by Con­ gress, but last month the administration added $55 million in military m aterials under an em er­ gency order that did not require Congressional approval. The decision was made after guerril­ las made a series of attacks, including one on a Salvadoran air force base Jan. 27 that destroyed more than a dozen aircraft. If the administration is able to win the supple­ mental aid from Congress, economic assistance will increase to about $210 million from $110 million. Duarte has said that without more American economic support, his government can not survive. Further, the administration says much of the violence there is probably not political but the product of a lawless society with an inadequate system of justice. The debate over aid has also become a debate over El Salvador's political future. Opponents of The proposed aid increase, which the admin­ istration intends to draw from funds being re­ Celebrating Texas Independence Day Alpha Phi Omega members manage to hold down the banner of the Lone Star state despite Its size and heavy winds on the South Mall. The unfurling of the flag kicked off Tuesday’s celebration of Texas Independence Day. Susan Allen-Camp, Dally Texan Staff Draft registrations jump Deadline, threats spur action By ERIC BARTELS Daily Texan Staff Austin post offices took on increased workloads over the past week a s draft-age m ales scram bled to register for Selective Service on, or shortly after, Sunday’s federal deadline. "Y e s, it was quite h eavy," said Gail Sonnenberg, public information officer for all Austin-area postal stations. Sonnenberg said the main station at 300 E. Ninth St. handled 57 registrants Saturday and 35 by 4 p.m. Monday. "N orm ally, we turn in about 20 eve­ ry two weeks,” she said. "T h at’s not really a stam pede. That’s a lot of registrants, but not anything that crippled u s.” Other branches reported dram atic increases as well. "We estim ate that we’ve had approximately 150 since F riday ,” said a spokesman at the South Aus­ tin station, 1800 S. Fifth St. He said the office nor­ mally reported four or five registrations in each two-week period. " I t really has picked up ," said Raymond Drozd of the West Austin 3tation, 2418 Spring Lane. "E v e r since last Monday we’ve had three to four times as much a s norm al." Steve Eskridge, m anager of the University sta ­ tion in the West Mall Office Building, reported that 26 people had registered Monday and Tuesday. "T h at’s more than we normally get in two w eeks," he said. Eskridge said the figures might have been higher if his station had not been closed Saturday, a s usual, sending would-be registrants to other offices. The deadline for Selective Service registration, which was reinstated under President Carter in 1980, expired Sunday for all m ales born between 1960 and February 1964. The federal government in­ timated in recent weeks that those registering soon after the deadline would not be prosecuted. Nevertheless, some officials said, the deadline ef­ fectively sent many eligible registrants scurrying to local post offices. "It kind of spurred ’em a little bit,” said Drozd, "P ut the burr in the saddle, as they sa y .” Several draft-age University students supported the sign-up effort, having registered months earlier. " I really feel like registration is n ecessary ," said Victor G arcia, a 19-year-old physical education freshman. "I feel real good about having regis­ tered.” Twenty-year-old Richard Puccetti, a business freshman, said those who fail to register leave an obligation unfulfilled. " I think they should be prosecuted," he said. "I f this country were to have an emergency, it’s not fair for me to go and not others. " “ If that (registration) is what we’re supposed to do, then it should have been done," said Mike B ra­ dy, a business freshman " I t ’s the United States — if you live in it. you ought to protect it.” "You have to pay the price to be a citizen,” said Steve Ruhlen. a history junior. One electrical engineering freshman disagreed. The 18-year old, who asked to be unidentified, said patriotism did not require support of mandatory conscription. "The draft is slavery. It’s all part of a sham that the government perpetuates. I refuse to submit m yself." Love of country, the student said, does not mean that a citizen must support military endeavors that "obviously violate human rights. ” Sonnenberg expressed some dism ay in the Selec­ tive Service’s handling of the registration process. "Unfortunately, we (the postal service) are put in the position of accepting all the phone calls from people wanting inform ation," she said. " I t ’s notour program. We re not the attorney general’s office. We re just here to facilitate somebody e lse ’s pro­ g ram .” " T h e m o tiv e s were unclear, but Mexico said that the United States had vi­ olated the rights of land grant claim ants granted under the Guadalupe-H idalgo treaty, and began ac ­ tively soliciting in­ formation from the descendants Texan those claim ants of about lo st th e ir lands,” de la Garza said. By SAMMY JACOBO Daily Texan Staff The political and cultural im plica­ tions of a lawsuit filed against the Mexi­ can government by a group of Mexican- American land grant claim ants could bring radical changes in U.S.-Mexico relations, says Rodolfo de la Garza, a specialist in Mexican-American rela­ tions and associate professor of govern­ ment at the University. "The significance of this case is that a group of individuals have banded to­ gether within an organization of fam i­ lies, and are able, for the first, time, to present land grant claim s where a full and ju st hearing will be gran ted," said Roberto Salazar, attorney for the Asoci ación de Reclamantes, a group of Mexi­ can-American fam ilies that five years ago filed the suit. That group of fam ilies has been wag­ ing a legal struggle to obtain com pensa­ tion since the late 19th century for lands lost during the colonization of Texas by white settlers. That struggle is deeply rooted in T exas history and involves a land m ass encompassing m ore than 12 million acres — all of it south of the Nueces River, o these individuals "There are several thousand stories about how the land was lost. And people ask why no individual steps were taken to receive compensation. In the first place, are not wealthy, and did not possess the means to go to court. We’re also talking about the wild West here, which meant that the laws of the jungle, rather than con­ stitutional law, prevailed Manifest des­ tiny is not a pleasant history, and it was rather violent at tim es," Salazar said. De la Garza, director of the Universi­ ty’s Center for Mexican-American Stud­ ies and head of the team researching the case, said that after 1848, Mexican- Americans in Texas lost a great deal of land to newcomers. The abuses in the decade spanning 1860-1870 were particu­ larly devastating through the p assage of laws in which Texas invalidated previ­ ous land-grant claim s. The treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo, signed in 1848, how­ ever, recognized the validity of Spanish- Mexican claim s and also stated that Mexico had the right to protest abuses that the form er Mexican citizens had suffered Mexico took no action on behalf of the slighted individuals until after the revo­ lution of 1910. 1 Land compensation claim could affect U.S.-Mexico relations Numerous propos­ als and alternatives to cash repayment, including the cre­ ation of a Mexican- American develop­ ment corporation in South Texas funded by the Mexican gov­ ernment, were re­ jected. As a last al­ te r n a tiv e , the Asociación decided to sue the Mexican government, Salazar said. sive Washington-based firm — which includes former Attorney Gener­ al Elliot Richardson — to com bat the claim ants. law It will probably strain U.S.- Mexican re­ lationships, in the sense that an Ameri­ can court will be forcing the Mexican government to do its bidding, " he said. The prim ary issue before the court, Salazar said, is whether the American court has the right to hear the case. He also said that it was beneficial to the claim ants to wage the fight in the American courts, and expects a deci­ sion to be reached early this summer "We weren’t willing to go into the Mexican judiciary system and spend another thirty years try ing to win this case If Mexico loses, they have two appeals processes, and that would only take three to five years If the court rules that there is no jurisdiction, we may have to take it into the Mexican courts If we win this, then it's full steam ah ead ," Salazar said De la Garza said there will be several consequences if the court dec ides there is jurisdiction and the claim ants win the subsequent repayment case "F irst, clearly, if the Mexicans lose, it will place an extremely heavy burden on the already shaky Mexican economy "M ost importantly, it will affect the role of Chicanos in the Southwest. It will put money in the hands of a popula­ tion that has never had that type of re­ sources. "W hat’s going to happen to South Texas? There will be money to run po­ litical campaigns, a prerequisite to holding political office Sources of cheap labor will no longer be available, and these people will be able to form their own corporations and businesses. It will change the face of T exas," de la Garza said. He also said that there were a num­ ber of ways that payment would be in­ sured if the case was won, including is­ suing a writ of garnishment requiring a court order to make American corpora­ tions which owe money to Mexico to turn it over to the courts, which would m turn, pass the funds on to the claim ­ ants. Salazar said if the United S tates refuses, it would he substituted a s the defendant An a g r e e m e n t w as e v e n tu a lly reached with term s very favorable to the Mexican government monetarily, and as part of the agreement, Mexico agreed to back the land grant pay­ ments. In the 20 years since, however, the Mexican government has refused to pay the claim ants The Asociación de Re­ clam antes was formed by these fam i­ lies, who are mostly Mexican-American and include a number of Mexican na­ tionals, approximately five years ago to receive compensation for the lost lands ington Aided by a Wash­ f i rm law headed by Mitchell Ragovin — best known for fighting the battle that al­ lowed John Anderson to be placed on the 1980 presidential ballot and for his defense of William Colby in the Senate hearings of CIA abuses — the group has taken the c ase before U.S. District Court in Washington to decide whether the United States has jurisdiction to hear the case. De la Garza said the Mexican govern­ ment is now taking the case very seri­ ously, and has hired an equally im pres­ Student Margie Esquivel takes exam in M AI 228. ian Owen, Daily Texan Staff Privacy lost in new staff office By JIM HANKINS Daily Texan Staff Fran Lesicko is only an assistant instructor, but she’s got an office big enough to make UT President P eter Flawn’s look like a broom closet. 13.00 Unfortunately. Lesicko has to share her office with about 30 other teaching assistants and assistant instructors in the psy­ chology departm ent who moved to Room 228 in the Main Build­ ing over the Christmas break — just before Robert E. Lee Hall was demolished to make room for a $17.9 million teaching cen­ ter. Lesicko’s new office was once the periodicals room of the the old Main Library, with a seating capacity of 110 people. The room has been empty since 1977, when the Main Library moved to the Perry-Castaneda Library. The high ceiling of MAI 228 is decorated with paintings of heraldic crests and important dates and names from Texas history. If the room was a little wider, it probably could accom­ modate a basketball court. But even though her new office might be the largest on cam­ pus, Lesicko said she isn't very happy about it. “ I don’t like it as well as I liked (Robert E.) Lee,” she said. “ For one thing, it’s noisy. If you spoke loudly in here, it would echo all over. I wouldn’t feel right about typing in here if there was anybody else in the room.” Lee Hall, once a dormitory, housed the offices of teaching assistants and assistant instructors in the Departments of Psy­ chology, English, Economics, and Spanish and Portuguese. Al­ though Lee Hall was "pretty run down,” and Lesicko had to share her office with two other people, she said she had more privacy in the old building. The lack of privacy in the new room will make it hard to talk to students who are upset about grades, Lesicko said. whole assortment of problems,” she said. “Some of them are on the verge of tears. I don’t think they’ll be comfortable in here.” Lesicko said she is often the only person in MAI 228 because most TAs and AIs dislike the room so much they only go there for office hours. She said she has never seen more than seven or eight TAs in the room at one time. “A lot of people were officially relocated here, but they nev­ er unloaded their junk,” she said, pointing to a pile of card­ board boxes on the next desk. Lesicko said she does not think the University is being delib­ erately inconsiderate to the TAs and AIs because of their low position in the faculty hierarchy. “It doesn’t seem that they’re dumping on us,” she said, “but we re not particularly high priority.” Randy Diehl, assistant chairman of the psychology depart­ ment, agreed that the move has caused some morale problems among the TAs and AIs. “Anytime you have a move like that, there’s bound to be disruption,” he said, “but we’re trying to make the best of the situation.” And Nancy McAdams, UT associate director of planning ser­ vices, said the refugees from Lee Hall probably will have to move again at the end of summer. She said the architecture library will be housed in MAI 228 while Battle Hall is being renovated. McAdams, who helped the psychology department coordi­ nate the exodus from Lee Hall, said she isn’t sure where the next home will be for the TAs and AIs. She said some will move to a renovated building at 100 E. 26th St., which used to house the Architecture Annex. McAdams said she is optimistic the psychology departm ent will find space for the others. “I have to be optimistic or I wouldn’t come to work every "Toward the end of the semester, students come in with a day.” Ballot includes two documents By MARK STUTZ Daily Texan Staff Two groups pushing for passage of constitutional amendments to reinstate student government at the University began campaigning for support for their documents Tuesday despite some stu­ dents' complaints that adding one of the group’s proposals to the March 10 elec­ tion ballot was unfair. The University Election Commission voted late Monday to include Associat­ ed Students’ proposals on the ballot with the Group Effort proposals to amend the Students' Association consti­ tution — even though Associated Stu­ dents was found to be one vote short of the required 1,480 signatures in the commission s random survey, because that was within the allowed margin of error. “ Personally, I ’m glad they’re on the ballot because this gives the student body two documents to choose from ,” said John Denson, second-year law stu­ dent and supporter of the Group Effort document. “They made a good choice, if not necessarily a statistically sound one.” Denson said he felt the commission should have conducted another random survey, because a "statistically sound” verification of the Associated Student petition would have lent more credence to its document. “ I was a little surprised to be on the ballot, but we were obviously close enough within the margin of error to be on the ballot,” said Kerry McGrath, lib­ eral arts senior and spokesman for As­ sociated Students. McGrath said that his group would start working out a campaign this week, and said he hoped that Group Ef­ fort would be interested in debating the two documents. Group Effort will hold a news confer­ ence at 12:30 p.m. Thursday in the Tex­ as Union Building Governors Room. Members from Group Effort said they would like to meet with Associated Stu­ dents members and debate the two doc­ uments. On the March 10 ballot, students first will be asked if they favor reinstating student government at the University. If students answer yes, they will then be asked to decide between the Associ­ ated Students proposal and the Group Effort proposal. Page 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, March 3, 1982 ECUMENICAL LENTEN LUNCHEON SERIES “A S e lf Portrait o f Jesus" FRIDAY, MARCH 5: ”1 am Hie Vine" SPEAKER: FafHar BIN Dougherty, University Catholic Center 12:00-12:30 Meditation 12:30-1:00 Lunch/Discussion Ttxas Union Poorco Hod, Rm. 2.410 (off 40 Acres Rm.) THE UNIVERSITY FLYING CLUB M E E T IN G M A R C H 3, 8PM U N IO N 'S S IN C L A IR SU IT E E V E R Y O N E W E L C O M E Th e D u l y T e x a n PERMANENT STAFF E d it o r ..............................Jota Set wmrtx Mooogi** Editor . . . . Mark Dooley Aoaoctotc Mauglng Editor. . . . ReM Laym oce A tiiiun t Muagiag Editor* . . . . Jay Ham Ha, Gardaer SHby, David Teece A u i it u i to (he Editor................ William Newt E d it o r .................. Jen ifer BIN New* Aiaigameati E d ito r ............... Jodi Hooker . Ttaa Romero, . General Reporten. Jota EUinger, Doog McLeod, Mark Statz, David Woodraff . Frotares Editor Diana Moore Sports E d i to r ................ Roger Campbell Associate Sports E d ito r ................David McNabb Assistant News Editor News Assistants Newswriters Jim Hankins, Carmen Mike Barbee Meg Brooks, Eric Bartels Jenny Abdo, Hill. 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An excellent opportunity for engineers and technical persons to gam extensive knowledge of our equipment in the shortest time possible Wednesday, March 3, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN World & National Page 3 Decision to disband task force draws fire ATLANTA (U P I) — A black leader Tuesday criti­ cized the disbanding of A tlanta’s sp ecial police task force and said despite the conviction of Wayne Wil­ liams, the slayings of 28 young Atlanta blacks have not been fully resolved. “ I don’t think you will find anyone in the black comm unity who believes Wayne W illiam s com m it­ ted all those murders alon e,” said Joseph Lowery director of the Southern Christian Leadership Con­ ference. “ We feel there should be som e continuing, cooper­ ative effort with the federal a g en cies,” he said. W illiams, a 23-year-old black freelance photogra­ pher, was convicted and sentenced to two consecu­ tive life term s Saturday for the slayin gs of Nathaniel Cater, 27, and Jim m y Ray Payne, 21. He w as linked in testim ony to 10 other victim s. W illiam s has 30 days from the date of his convic­ tion to file an appeal and has started reshaping his defense team for that effort. He told Fulton County Sheriff LeRoy Stynchcom be he had fired attorney Mary W elcom e, the outspoken form er Atlanta city solicitor who had represented him since he first becam e a suspect in the case. W elcom e first disclosed Monday she had been fired, prompting the sheriff to ask one of his officers — Maj. E L. Brownley — to again check with Wil­ liam s at the Fulton County Jail. “ I said go upstairs and asked if she is still his attorn ey,” the sheriff said. “ He said, hell no, she is fired, and I don’t want her in this ja il, and I don’t want to se e h e r .” It w as not im m ediately clear what prompted Wil­ liam s’ action. The convicted killer reportedly has asked his par­ ents' attorney, Lynn Whatley, to fill the spot held by W elcome. Whatley w as not available for com m ent Tuesday. M ississippi attorney Alvin Binder was W illiam s’ lead defense attorney during the nine-week-long trial and is still on the case. Binder said after hearing the verdict that he be­ lieved the introduction of evidence from the 10 un­ charged slayings would serve as the basis for appeal O fficials announced Monday they w ere closing the books on 23 of the murders, saying W illiams was responsible for them. The 23 ca ses include the stab­ bing death of 28-year-old John Porter, whose name w as never added to the original list of 28 slayings. Public Safety C om m issioner Lee Brown said that the task force, which once numbered more than 100 officers, would be dism antled early next week. The A t l a n t a J o u r n a l reported Tuesday the jury panel of eight black and four white jurors that sat in the W illiams case joined hands and prayed after reaching a verdict. “ We w ere a religious group, and w hen we got back to the jury room, w e held hands and p rayed,” an unidentified juror told the newspaper. “ We had a real peace about the decision. Some people cried be­ cause they were relieved it w as over, and because it was a pity for Wavne. “ We hated the loss of freedom just living in the hotel for two m onths,” the juror added. “ We im ag­ ined how he'd feel living in jail for the rest of his life .” World in Brief From Texan news services Mitterand vigils Israel PARIS — Socialist P resident Francois Mitterrand begins the first visit by a French president to Israel Wednesday, hoping to end 15 years of frosty relations and soften Isra­ e l’s opposition to a P alestinian state. Mitterrand said recently be will not “pose as a mediator or arbi­ trator,’' but the three-day trip is view ed as a key component of the F ren ch governm ent’s effort to en ­ cou rag e M ideast peace. A strong supporter of Israel while head of F ra n c e 's Socialist Party, M itter­ rand is nevertheless convinced that to insure peace, the Israelis m ust accep t the inevitability of a P alesti- an ian state on the West Bank. Detailed cuts announced PEKING — Prem ier Zhao Ziyang Tuesday offered the first d etails of the exten sive cutbacks that be plans to m ak e this year in the sw ollen Chinese government bureaucracy as p a r t of a major cam paign to m ak e it m o re efficient and respon­ sive. Zhao told a session of the standing com m ittee of the National P eop le’s Congress, China’s nom inal parliam ent, that he was proposing that 98 existing governm ent m inis­ tries, com m issions and agen cies be m erged and cut back to 52 and that their adm inistrative staffs be re­ duced by one third. Saint to be canonized VATICAN CITY - The R ev. Mak* sym ilian Kolbe, a revered spiritual figure in Poland who gave h is life for a prisoner at the Auschwitz con­ centration cam p, will be m ade a sain t, church officials announced T uesday. The canonization of the P olish p rie st will be held Oct. 10 in R om e. Pope John Paul II, who holds special veneration for the m artyred Kolbe, granted a dispensation from n o rm al requirem ents for sainthood, said the R ev Vitale B om m arco, a priest of the Franciscan order to which Kolbe belonged. Habib meets with Syrians DAMASCUS, Syria — P residen­ tial envoy P hilip Habib m et Syrian officials Tuesday am id charges by th e state-run media that the United S ta te s favored Israel and had en­ cou raged uprisings by anti-govern­ ment M oslem extrem ists. Habib’s talks w ith Foreign M inister Abdel Halim Khaddam were expected to include discussion of the tense situ­ ation in south Lebanon and Israel’s the Syrian Golan annexation of Heights la st D ecem ber. Judge calls for probe NEW YORK - The Justice D e­ partm ent official who d ism issed the governm ent's antitrust suit against IBM w as as a consultant for the com puter giant but never disclosed this role publicly, the trial judge said Tuesday. U.S. D istrict Judge D avid Edelstein said the relation­ ship betw een IBM and W illiam F. B ax ter, chief of the Justice Depart­ m en t’s antitrust division, “crea tes the appearance of im propriety.” He called fo r a congressional investiga­ tion of B axter’s dual role. In his Washington office Tuesday, Baxter said his consulting work w as “ wild­ ly irrelevant and trivial” to the case. New inquiry sought WASHINGTON - Senate Repub­ lican and D em ocratic assistan t leaders said Tuesday they w ill seek a new investigation of abuses of ex ­ ecutive power of “ the m agnltute of W atergate” in the Abscam c a se s that im plicated seven m em b ers of Congress. Sens. Alan Cranston, D- CaliL, and Ted Stevens, R -Alaska, said they w ill introduce a resolution calling for the new investigation a s soon as the Senate decides w hether to expel Sen. Harrison W illiams, D- N .J., for his role in the scandal. Machinery suspected SEATTLE — The federal Food and Drug Administration said Tues­ day it is concentrating its investiga­ tion into a botulism case on a piece of salm on canning m achinery made the American Can Co. Two by w eeks ago, the FDA ordered a re­ call of all half-pound cans of salmon processed in 1980 and 1981 by the NEFCO-Fidalgo cannery in Ktechi- kan, Alaska, after the death of a Belgian man who had eaten a can of salmon packed by the cannery. Sev­ eral million cans w ere believed to be involved. Stocks fall NEW YORK — Blue-chip stocks fell in heavy trading Tuesday when a rally fizzled and oil issues took a pounding after a brokerage report­ edly gave up on the group and rec­ ommended selling, Paine Webber reportedly issued the oil j e ll signal that triggered the market dec fine and put a dent into hopes that a ma­ jor rally from a three-month stamp was under way. The Dow Jem» i n ­ dustrial average, 19 8 points at mid­ following Monday's 4-point day gain, dropped 2.57 points to 825.82. Polish leader gets support from Soviets MOSCOW (U P I) - Polish P rem ier Wojciech Jaruzelski said Tuesday his m ilitary regim e will m ove vigorously to block any resurgence of protest against the Communist Party, and he invited President Leonid Brezhnev to com e and see for h im self what m artial law has accomplished. The 75-year-old Soviet leader accep t­ ed the invitation with gratitude, official announcements said, and in turn he pledged the K rem lin’s increased eco ­ nomic support for Poland during the crackdown against the Solidarity union. A lengthy com m unique issued after Jaruzelski returned to Warsaw from a two-day Moscow visit said the Polish premier, who also is Communist Party leader and head of the m ilitary council running his country, “ expressed pro­ found gratitude” for Soviet help to P o­ land during its recent difficult days. stern Jaruzelski's norm ally face creased into a broad sm ile as he m et Brezhnev earlier in the day at the Kremlin to d iscuss sp ecifics of the food, fuel and financing that the Russians will deliver for at least the next year. He m et P rem ier Nikolai Tikhonov later before flying home. There w as no detailed list, however, of the sp ecific aid com m itm ents m ade by the Soviets. law, Neither did Jaruzelski indicate when m artial im posed across Poland Dec. 13, m ight be lifted. He said the situation in his homeland was “ gradual­ ly norm alizing.” The Polish general and his aides stressed in their talks with Brezhnev, the comm unique said, “ that any at­ tem pts to resum e actions aim ed at causing econom ic disarray, at resum p­ tion of anarchy, disturbances and at changing the social and political system will be cut short m ost resolutely in the future, too.” The comm unique said Poland w ill maintain its position as “ a firm link of the socialist com m unity” and expand its participation in the Warsaw P act or­ ganization and the Council of Mutual Economic A ssistance — the Communist bloc’s version of NATO and the Com­ mon Market. Tass said the two leaders “ paid spe­ cial attention to key problem s of d evel­ oping Soviet-Polish cooperation in the political, econom ic, scien tific, techni­ cal, and cultural sp h eres.” The focus of the talks w as clearly on rebuilding P oland’s shattered econom y, although KGB Chief Yuri Andropov and Defense M inister Dm itri Ustinov also attended the first session on Monday. An E ast bloc source said it w as likely Brezhnev offered to structure Soviet de­ liveries of food, oil and raw m aterials this year in such a way that Poland would be assured adequate supplies of basic n ecessities for the duration of the m artial law edict. In addition, the Kremlin w ill proba­ bly allow Poland’s trade deficit to accu ­ mulate at a rate higher than anticipated through 1982, a Western diplomat said. the Soviet Union an­ nounced that it w as rescheduling P o­ land’s $4 billion d eficit, an action W est­ said w as ern econom ic observers tantamount to writing it off. In January, For his part, Jaruzelski apparently convinced the Soviet leaders that he was in control of the situation in P o­ land, despite opposition to his crack­ down by the powerful Roman Catholic Church. Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev (I) meets with Polish Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski (r) during a meeting Tuesday in Moscow. Bre- zhnev pledged Increased economic crackdown against Solidarity. s u p p o r t for P o la n d d u rin g th e Court hears censorship case ' Offensive' books b an n ed from school * 1982 The New York Times WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court heard argum ents Tuesday on whether the Constitution allow s school board m em ­ bers to rem ove books they find offensive from school libraries. The case, which stem s from a seven-year-old dispute in a New York school district, has drawn national attention as a symbol of the increasing pressures on school libraries to tailor their contents to m eet the dem ands of various interest groups. In the Long Island case, the board m em bers of the Island T rees Union F ree School D istrict rem oved nine books, includ­ ing novels by Kurt Vonnegut and Bernard Malamud, that had been identified as objectionable by a p olitically conservative parents’ organization. People of New York United. There have been dozens of sim ilar incidents around the country in recent years, with the Island Trees case the first to reach the Su­ prem e Court. F ive students sued the school board on the ground that the board’s action violated various rights protected by the F irst Amendment. The U.S. D istrict Court dism issed the suit before trial on the ground that no First Amendment right w as at stake. The United States Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit ruled that the students w ere entitled to try to prove their ca se at trial. The question for the ju stices is whether to allow the trial to proceed or w hether, as the school board’s law yer argued Tues­ day, there is no constitutional basis to challenge a determ ina­ tion by an elected school board on what the school library should contain. A public school board's “ m ission ,” the law yer, George W. Lipp Jr., told the court, is to transm it the com m u n ity’s values to its youth. “ The m ere allegation that any school board fol­ lows its own social, moral and political values in making cur­ ricular decisions is not ju sticiab le,” he said. “ Did I hear you say political valu es?” A ssociate J u stice San­ dra Day O'Connor asked Lipp. “If a school board rem oved all books referring to Republicans because it was a good D em o­ cratic board, should that be unreview able?” Lipp said he w as referring to “ politics in its loose sen se — the study of governm ent.” Lipp said he did not believe a school board should be able to “ sanitize a whole body of thought” by rem oving every book on a particular subject. But, in answer to a question from A ssoci­ ate Justice John Paul Stevens, he said that if the board m em ­ bers disapproved of the word “ain’t ,” their decision to rem ove all books containing that word should withstand a constitutional challenge. Alan H. Levine, the law yer for the students, told the ju stices that while a school board “ m ay give special regard to local v a lu es,” they m ay not “ ignore their obligation to resp ect a diversity of v alu es.” Pressed by several ju stices to define the point at which the Constitution sets lim its on educational decision-m aking, Levine said: “ If they decide Silas M arner’ is a better book than ‘The F ixer,' there is no constitutional problem. But if they rem ove ‘The F ix er’ solely because it contains a passage that offends certain groups, then the Constitution is involved.” “ The F ix er” is the Bernard Malamud novel the school board took off the shelves. “ Are you saying the federal courts are better suited to de­ cide what is educationally suitable than a school board?” Asso­ ciate Justice Lewis F. Pow ell asked Levine. Powell, a form er chairm an of the Richmond, Va., board of education, added: “ I ’d like to think w e are, but I know w e’re not, and somebody has to m ake these d ecision s.” “ I don't think a school board can wrap its political concerns in the cloak of educational su itab ility,” Levine said. Meanwhile, the court took these other actions: • By an 8-to-l vote, the court d ism issed as moot a ca se that w as expected to produce a ruling on the constitutional right to bail. The case, Murphy vs. Hunt, No. 80-2165, involved a N e­ braska state constitutional provision forbidding the release on bail of persons accused of violent sex crim es. A federal appeals court declared the provision unconstitutional, and the Court heard the state's appeal in January. Tuesday's unsigned decision said the ca se was moot because the prisoner, Eugene L. Hunt, has already been convicted and is no longer eligible for pretrial bail. The decision suggested that the m ootness problem m ight be avoided in a future lawsuit by bringing the ca se as a class action. A ssociate Justice Byron R. White dissented, saying that the court should not have va ca t­ ed the appeals court’s decision without first giving that court a chance to reexam ine the m ootness question. • The court ruled 9-0 that a victorious plaintiff in a civil rights ca se does not lose his eligib ility to be reimbursed for attorneys fees by failing to m ake the request within 10 days of the conclusion of the case. P ow ell wrote the opinion. White vs. New Hampshire. No. 80-5887. which reversed a decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the 1st Circuit. The court ruled unanimously that Congress exceeded its con­ stitutional powers by enacting a special bill requiring the bank­ rupt Rock Island Railroad to pay its form er em ployees $75 million. ‘Hillside’ trial opens in LA LOS ANGELES (U P I) - The prosecution in the Hillside Strangler murder case surprised the court­ room during opening argum ents Tuesday, saying Angelo Buono Jr. admitted killing som e of the 10 v ic ­ tim s to a fellow prisoner. Deputy Attorney General R oger Boren told jurors at the close of his 47-year-old that statem ent upholsterer had admitted to a “hard-core crim inal” named Steve Barnes that he had killed som e of the wom en in 1977-78. the But defense attorney Gerald Chaleff im m ediately objected and outside court indicated that Barnes may have been trying to get a better deaJ for h im self and that Barnes has testified in several other ca ses in­ volving fellow prisoners. Chaleff said adm itting the killings was som ething Buono “ has never done and will never do.’’ As the prosecution wound up its lengthy statem ent by saying again that it w as the peculiar chem istry between Buono and his cousin. Ken­ neth Bianchi, that produced the 10 murders, it becam e clear that Bian­ chi, as w ell as Buono, w as on trial. Bianchi, 30, a form er security guard, con fessed to the murders in 1979 and told police he and Buono had killed for sexual gratification and because “ dead men tell no tales .” Bianchi is to testify against his cousin, part of a deal he struck to avoid the death penalty in Belling­ ham, Wash., where he admitted k ill­ ing two women. But his erratic b e­ havior and fa ct he h as th e alternately confessed and retracted his confessions has resulted in a case against Buono that both sides say virtually stands or falls on the jury’s ability to believe Bianchi. Chaleff characterized Bianchi a s a “cold blooded liar” and conman who, faced with “certain death" in Washington, threw out the name of his cousin and watched as police and prosecutors scram bled to link the Hillside Strangler Buono case. to Chaleff said the prosecution's a t­ tempts to link Buono to the killings that be­ by geography, longed to the victim s, fingerprints, hairs and other circum stantial evi­ dence, actually pointed to Bianchi and not to Buono jewelry “ We’ll sto w you that the only re­ ally strong connection is with Ken­ neth fitoncto,” Chaleff said. “ There were no murders before Bianchi got to Los Angeles or after t o left and to m i behold, the next s e t of mnr* dm Is where Kenneth Bianchi is — to Washington Mubarak’s refusal to visit Jerusalem upsets Begin • 1982 The New York Times JERUSALEM — P rim e M inister M enachem Begin was reported Tuesday to have said that he would not visit Egypt until President Hosni Mubarak cam e first to Israel and included Jerusalem in his itinerary Begin s rem arks, made to a closed m eeting Monday night of the Jew ish A gency’s board of governors and confirmed Tuesday by one of his aides, appeared to reflect a serious increase in the tensions between Egypt and Israel less than two months before the final Israeli withdrawal from Sinai is to take place. to visit Begin was understood to have told the Jew ish leaders at a gathering in the Knesset, Israel’s parliam ent, that Mubarak’s refusal the contested city of Jerusalem , which Israel regards as its capital, was unacceptable. “ We cannot accep t a gu est who will dem ­ onstrate against Jeru salem ,” the prim e m inister was quoted as saying. He added that Israeli-Egyptian ties would be stronger if President Anwar Sadat, who was assassinated lis t October, w ere still alive. Mubarak, wh^ is seen as anxious to repair Egypt’s relations in the Arab world and to forestall dom estic criticism of his regim e, has caused considerable anxie­ ty in Israel about his ultim ate intentions after Egypt gets the remaining third of Sinai back. Although Begin, D efense Minister Ariel Sharon and other Israeli leaders have said repeatedly that they fully intend to com plete the withdrawal on tim e, they are worried that Mu­ barak’s behavior on the Jerusalem issue indicates that his m ove back toward the Arab fold could jeopardize ties with Israel The apprehensions about the solidity of the peace pro­ cess have been acted out vehem ently in recent days in confrontations between the Israeli arm y and m ilitant Jewish dem onstrators who are resisting the pullout from Sinai. Sharon told the Knesset Tuesday that 500 hand gre­ nades had been smuggled into Sinai by Jew ish m ilitants in recent w eeks, and Begin said that there had been firm reports of settlers' planning violence against the army. As a result, he explained, he had ordered all roads into the Sinai closed last Friday night to prevent additional dem onstrators from entering the area. can that Noting that the protesters had planned to mobilize thousands of Yeshiva students and others from through­ out the country. Begin said, “ There is no army in the evacuate 10,000 people without world bloodshed. ” It was to avoid bloodshed that he closed the area, he said Religious politicians had accused him of breaking the Sabbath, but he insisted that since the m o­ tive was to save lives, the action did not constitute a desecration A motion of no confidence in the government, subm it­ ted by the extrem e right-wing Tehiya Party, which op­ poses the peace treaty and the Sinai withdrawal, was easily defeated by a vote of 58 to 4. with 43 abstentions. Begin said that he w as also disturbed by the need to withdraw, but he insisted that Israel would stand by its international com m itm ents “ No, we won’t surrender,” he declared “ We are fighting for the peace now Y es, there are problems with the peace Yes, there are sa c­ rifices for peace. This is a bitter hour for all of us. But there is no alternative Editorials THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, March 3, 1982 Viewpoint It’s not the same constitution At the bottom of this page is a proposed constitution for a new students’ association. "W ait!” we hear you say, "You already printed the proposed constitution.” That’s true, but now there are tw o pro­ posed constitutions: Group Effort proposed one (which we printed last month), and Associated Students m em bers have now submitted theirs. In one week the student body will vote on whether to resurrect student government. At the sam e tim e, the students who vote f o r a new government will be able to voice their preference for one of the two proposed constitutions. If a m ajority of students want to bring back student governm ent, the preferred constitution will be sent to the regents for approval. We thus urge you to read th is constitution carefully, and com pare it to the Group E ffort document. Ask yourself som e of the questions that were brought up in regard to the Group Effort constitution. Several differences are im m ediately apparent between the two doc­ uments, the m ost obvious being that A ssociated Students’ is less than half as long as Group E ffort’s. This is because the AS am endm ents call for a constitutional convention to com plete the structure of the constitution. This w ill take more tim e, but AS members hold that the convention will increase student participation; GE m em bers claim that the open m eetings which they held to amend their docum ent constituted a constitutional convention. The SA constitution is more confrontational than G E ’s; whether stronger language m eans more student power remains to be seen, however. Both docum ents accept the prem ise that their power ends where the regen ts’ and the sta te’s begins. At the sam e tim e, AS has included som e strong language that m ay affect its acceptability to the regents: this is the well-known "suicide clau se,” which states that if the regents change the document in a n y w a y , it "will render the proposal wholly null and void.” Proponents of the document feel such a strong stand is necessary to stand up to the regents; GE proponents have taken a m ore cooperative line. Anyway, read on, and continue to ask yourself the m ost important questions of a ll: will a student governm ent improve student life at the University? Do w e really need one? Trying to shoot down busing The Senate has done the incredible — it has voted 57-37 for a bill to forbid federal funds to be used for busing. If this passes the House, the bill will gut integration. So much for the people who fought — and died — for equal opportunity; so much for education. But not to worry, say som e m em bers of the Republican-controlled Senate — it w on’t pass the House. For them , it’s a free vote to appease busing opponents back home. To hell with the carefully designed bal­ ance of powers in the Constitution. It’s easy to vote tough when your vote probably w on’t m atter. But what if the bill d o e s pass? It w ill be a great victory for igno­ rance and racism , and a tragedy for the rest of us. J o h n S c h w a r tz Fee safety column erroneous Personal attack on Tindall unwarranted By KAREN SUE CANNON IRION I am very disappointed that the editors of the D aily T e x ­ an would allow a personal, vindictive article, full of outright lies, errors and insinuations, to appear on the editorial page of the T exa n . I am referring to the article by Don McDer- mett (T exa n , March 2), which lambasts the Senior Cabinet and especially Julie Tindall, current chairman of Senior Cabinet. First, Mr. McDermett objects to the use of student servi­ ces fees to hold a reception for "Who’s Who” recipients. The reception included faculty and ex-" Who’s Who” recipients, as well as current recipients and is the only reception Senior Cabinet holds during the year. This reception is a tradition, dating back several years. "Who’s Who” awards are open to all University students and are intended to honor students who have made a significant contribution to the University. The reception was originally perceived as an appreciation ceremony for the work these students have done, not as a private party. I personally feel that the reception should forego food and drink and be entirely public. In this sense I agree with McDermett, but on the other hand, I don’t feel that one reception qualifies Senior Cabinet as an “eating and drinking establishment.” Senior Cabinet has never spent mandatory fees on the "Cactus” picture. Excuse Mr. McDermett’s ignorance, but discretionary fees are monies raised by individual student organizations through fund-raising activities. The Senior Cabinet office is not a private office for Julie Tindall. It is for the Senior Cabinet, housing a typewriter, desks and files for their use — it is used as the base of all projects, to prepare Cabinet materials, and to carry on Cab­ inet business, by all members of the Senior Cabinet. It exist­ ed long before Julie became chairperson. The paid secretary position also existed long before Julie took office; in fact, Julie first raised the motion to abolish the secretary’s position. What was not mentioned in the arti­ cle (and what leads me to believe that Mr. McDermett has never attended a Senior Cabinet meeting, knows little about what the Cabinet is, and simply wrote the article as a means of venting personal hatreds against the person of Julie Tin­ dall) is that all of the above problems have been discussed at length, and voted on within Senior Cabinet itself. The problems are those of Senior Cabinet, not of Julie TindaU. If Mr. McDermett had written a thoughtful, critical article about these problems, he would have been commended by me. Instead, he chose to use Senior Cabinet and the Student Services Fee Committee as an excuse to slander Julie in print. His personal feelings about Julie Tindall should never have appeared in print. His motivations are unclear beyond a desire to hurt another person. I will never understand why people will go to such lengths to destroy others.___________ Irion is se c re ta ry o f t he S enior Cabinet. Associated Students seeks constitutional convention By ASSOCIATED STUDENTS This amendment is proposed as the first step in the institution of a new governing structure for the Students’ Association. This amendment would speci­ fy the powers, rights, and duties of the Students’ Association and provide for a Constitutional Conven­ tion, which would in turn propose specific organiza­ tional details of the governing structure. ARTICLE H. POWERS, RIGHTS, AND DUTIES 2.1 GENERAL The students of The University of Texas, as mem­ bers of the Students’ Association shall be represent­ ed in the development of the University policies af­ fecting academic and student affairs, including student fees 2.1 RIGHT TO REPRESENTATION Entities on which students have the right to be fully represented pursuant to Section 2.1 of this article shall include, but not be limited to, the following: 1) The Student Services Fee Committee; 2) The University Council; 3) The Intercollegiate Athletics Council; 4) The Parking and Traffic Policies Committee; 5) The Texas Union Board of Directors; 6) The Texas Student Publications Board of Oper­ ating Trustees; 7) Any University-wide standing or ad-hoc com­ mittee or the equivalent (except the Senior Cabinet and College Councils) to which students are appoint­ ed by the University Administration or by means other than those provided in this Constitution. 8) Any entity which is a successor to, or performs substantially the same function as, an entity listed in subsections 1 through 7 of this section. 2.3 WHO ARE REPRESENTATIVES Students shall be considered to be representatives of the Students’ Association for the purpose of sections 2.1 and 2.2 of this article if and only if: 1) They are appointed or elected to represent stu­ dents pursuant to any provision of this Constitution OR Z) They are members of a governing structure of this Students’ Association established in or pursuant to this Constitution. 2.4 RIGHT OF RECALL Provision for the recall and replacement of any elected representative of the Students’ Association may be established in this Constitution. Provisions for the recall andr replacement of any appointed representative of the Students’ Association may be established in this Constitution or by a governing structure of the Students’ Association established under this constitution. Nothing in this or any other section or Article shall be interpreted as granting to the Students’ Association any control over the mem­ bership of the Senior Cabinet or any College Council. 2.5 STUDENT SERVICES FEE COMMITTEE The Student Services Fee Committee shall be com­ posed of a majority of students, who shall be either elected at large or appointed by a Students’ Associa­ tion governing structure established by amendment of this Constitution. Such governing structure may decide that all Committee student members be elected, all appointed, or some elected and some ap­ pointed. This Fee Committee shall determine the al­ location of proceeds and amounts to be charged for all mandatory and optional student fees, except tui­ tion, building use fees, and charges for specific courses. In making such determinations the Fee Committee shall duly consider all proposals submit­ ted by the University or by the Students’ Associa­ tion. Decisions of the Fee Committee shall be sub­ ject to approval of the Board of Regents when such approval is required by the laws or Constitution of f h p C f q l p n f T p y q c 2.6 STUDENTS’ ASSOCIATION FUNDS The Students’ Association may receive funds from either mandatory or optional student fees, or both. It may also generate such additional revenue as it deems appropriate or necessary. Students’ Associa­ tion funds shall be unrestricted as to use or place of deposit except as required by the laws or Constitu­ tion of the State of Texas. 2.7 RIGHT OF INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUM Students shall have the right to initiate legislation, or referenda to rescind any legislation, appointment, or other action taken by the Students' Association, as provided under Article VI of this Constitution. In addition, the right of referendum with regard to ac­ tions taken by the Student Services Fee Committee may be provided by admendments to this Constitu­ tion. 2.8 RIGHT OF INDEPENDENCE The Students’ Association shall be independent, au­ tonomous, and directly responsible to the students of The University of Texas at Austin, to the fullest ex­ tent allowed by the Laws and Constitution of the State Of Texas. ARTICLE III CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION 3.1 WHEN CONVENTION SHALL OCCUR The Election Commission shall convene a Conven­ tion to formulate and propose a specific governing structure for the Students’ Association, if and only if 1) Articles II and III, and all Sections thereunder, are approved in whole and as submitted, by a major­ ity of students voting in an election held for that purpose in which all University students are eligible to vote, AND 2) Articles II and III, and all Sections thereunder, are approved in whole without addition or deletion by the Board of Regents. No Constitutional Conven­ tion shall be held if any of the conditions specified in subsections 1) or 2) of this Section fail to occur. 3.2 VOTE REQUIRED FOR APPROVAL Any proposal approved by the Convention delegates for submission to the student body shall become part of the Students’ Association Constitution if and only if the proposal is approved 1) by the votes of at least 5000 students, if this number is a majority of votes cast, in a 2-day ratifi­ cation referendum held for that purpose, AND 2) by the Board of Regents, in whole without addi­ tions or deletions Failure to achieve any of the 2 conditions above will render the proposal wholly null and void. as specified in this Section shall be entitled to vote. Each registered student organization may designate four alternate delegates, one of which may vote at each convention meeting. In addition, any student who attends at least two-thirds of all weekly meet­ ings shall be deemed a delegate, and thus be entitled to vote. Voting eligibility as specified in this Section is subject to the following limitations. 1) No delegate may have more than one vote. 2) All votes must be made in person, not by proxy. 3) Any delegate who subsequently misses three consecutive meetings, or who has missed more than one-third of all meetings previously held, shall lose his/her status as a voting delegate. 4) Any registered students organization not repre­ sented by a delegate at each of three consecutive meetings, or at more than one-third of all meetings, shall lose its delegate. 5) Any student entitled to vote as the designated delegate of a registered student organization loses that status if the organization designates another student as its delegate. 6) All matters voted on during the first two meet­ ings must re-approved at the third meeting to re­ main binding At such third meeting only delegates who have attended all three meetings and registered student organizations whose designates have attend­ ed all three meetings may vote. 7) No student may count attendence as an organi­ zational representative toward requirements for in­ dividual delegate status. 3.4 EXPIRATION OF THIS ARTICLE The provisions of this Article shall expire, and be without force or effect, at such time as a proposed governing structure is submitted to students pursu­ ant to Section 3.1, and if approved acted upon by the Board of Regents. 3.3 ATTENDENCE AND VOTING AT THE CON­ VENTION Any University student may attend and participate in the Constitutional Convention, but only delegates 3.5 CARRYING OUT THIS ARTICLE The Election Commission may formulate rules and procedures reasonably necessary to carry out the provisions of this Article. Byno f T > m you, mock BAILIFF S v THE MDCK \imoNh M BENCH v \ CCAJNSEL UAL PLEJtt --------- ---------- COURT U A L ^ ^ MOUCOMETD o r d e r . t w i c e V E R N O N P R W O N G H O N O R ? V NCNStNSE W u R HONOR mt «U FIB WO wmcuuft.'T Util' o n L O O K , P K T IV DOONESBURY Vi o r k w H m U t , OR SOME OR S O M E T H K i COULOIHAVE AUOVMTH m , UTTLE BROTHER? m s a free coumyMAN.'C * qpfmeoLV ITS ABOUT college, 9ENJY / COLLEGE IS A DRAG, MAH . AtV MY NAME ISN 'T B E m ANYMORE. IT ISN'T? HJHATISIT? 5AL PUTRID. I LINE IT? Page 4 I can’t live on junk food sex through By LISA BLACK I was only 12 years old when the sexu­ al revolution paraded the streets of my South Texas town. Most of my friends’ mothers told them to look the other way. My mom just said, “If she sees it and doesn’t understand it, we have nothing to worry about; if she al­ ready understands it, we’re too late.” My mother had nothing to worry about — I still don’t really understand. Maybe that’s because I can’t comprehend the sentiments of those who were sexually repressed for centuries or maybe that’s because I just don’t understand the term "liberated.” I always figured "liberated” meant freed from bondage, but now I’m told bondage is okay if you’re liberated. Maybe liberation means anything is okay as long as you do it freely. That would mean prostitutes couldn’t charge but could take donations. But does sexu­ ally free necessarily imply free sex? I hope not. One of the most interesting phrases popularized during the^evolution^Js love.” Those "free are two of the most contradictory terms I’ve ever heard. Love is never free. I guess "free love” refers to free sex, and herein lies the root of much of my confusion. Sex and love are not the same thing. But that seems to be the myth less honest sexual revolutionaries have perpetrated on us. Their motives can be conjectured; the results of their actions can be witnessed in the present confu­ sion of sex roles and expectations. Although I find it hard to believe that people at one time bought the old double standard — "good girls don’t, bad girls do” versus "boys will be boys” — I find it equally disturbing to think that people believe everybody should do it "just be­ cause it feels good.” If we are now li­ berated, that means that we are free to choose our own sexual standards. That freedom is still sending resounding shock waves 10 years after the original revolt. The main problem is the sexual revolution shifted more of the responsi­ bility for decision and action to the indi­ vidual. And many individuals are confused by the contradictory values floating in the midst of those Sixties shock waves. These days we are taught that intellect is to be honored above emotion. The romantics are just people we study in literature classes. People who use their minds to rule their hearts are treated with respect and called intellectuals. People who let their hearts rule their minds are called dreamers at best and fools at worst. All of this can be very confusing when it comes to determining sexual values and behavior. Sometimes our minds tell us to be revolutionaries but our hearts quite often tell us some­ thing different. This is the root of much of the pain and self-doubt residing within folks like me who came along in time to experi­ ence the shock waves of the sexual rev­ olution but too late to witness the fren­ zied circumstances in which the revolt arose. We want to follow the intellect and be sexually free, but we still have to contend with the heart, which knows that free sex — and free love — can’t satisfy its needs. Free sex is like a junk food diet; we can live on it for a while but sooner or later our bodies — and hearts — start demanding some nutrients. Many of us just can’t get all the emotional vitamins and iron we need from fast-food sex. Some of the revolutionaries have played a dirty trick on us. They taught us that the intellect should determine our val­ ues and behavior and they taught us to think that sex and love are the same thing. But our hearts know better. They know we need something more. We’ve got to put an end to the myth that "sexually free” means indulging in free sex and realize that "free” means free to choose. That means we’re free to choose what best pleases our minds and our hearts. I guess to be liberated means you don’t have to but you can if you want to. B lack is a T exa n colum nist. by Garry Trudeau UM.. I UNE THE SAL PART OKAY THANKS. ITS SHORT Wednesday, March 3, 1982 □ THE DAILY T EX A N □ Page 5 Higher interest rates forecast for students By SCOTT W ILLIAM S Daily Texan Staff If Congress adopts the Reagan adm inistra­ tion’s 1983 student financial aid proposals, Uni­ versity graduate students borrowing money will face higher interest rates and paym ents before graduation, a U niversity financial aid spokeswoman said Tuesday. M artha Richbourg, assistant director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, said graduate students, who under the Reagan plan would become ineligible for the G uaranteed Student Loan P rogram , would have to borrow money under a program called the Alas Loan P ro­ gram. Both higher interest rates — 14 percent com pared to the GSL ra te of 9 percent — and paym ents before graduation characterize the Alas program . Under current GSL guidelines, paym ents are deferred until after graduation. Alas program principal paym ents could be deferred, Richbourg said, but paym ents on in­ terest would become payable 60 days after the loan is issued. The loans, which could amount to as much as $5,000 a year to graduate students, would require a m inim um paym ent of $50 per month, she said. Under this paym ent method, gradu­ ate students still would have to pay the princi­ ple plus interest upon graduation. If students choose not to defer payment. Richbourg said, monthly paym ents would ap­ ply to both principal and interest making it cheaper to the student over the term of the loan. An estim ated one-third of the 8,600 1981-82 GSL applicants w ere graduate students. Adoption of the Reagan proposals are “ still up for grabs. They’re just proposals brought up before Congress,” she said. Reagan's 1983 budget calls for a 50 percent cut in student aid, which besides making grad­ uate students ineligible for the GSL program, would cut Pell Grants for the needy by 40 per-, cent. Funds would be eliminated for Supplemen­ tal Educational Opportunity Grants, National Direct Student Loans and State Student Incen- * tive Grants. College work-study also would be cut by 27 percent under the proposed Reagan budget. * , These cuts would be in addition to cuts in * Social Security benefits already adopted. As of - May 1, benefits will be cut 25 percent annually ; and will be phased out entirely by fall 1984. No benefits will be available for summer ses­ sions. Richbourg said Congress m ust decide on the * GSL program before cu rren t GSL regulations end June 30. * “ Some students would be unwilling to bor- - row at these higher interest ra te s,” Richbourg said. “ Some would just do with less money.” But Richbourg said m ost graduate students would take the loans anyway. “ Some will real- ' ize that this is the best deal available,” she * said. “ Some will think in term s of getting an * education and a degree and think they will * have the funds available to pay back the loan • after graduation.” i Because students could get less expensive t loans through the GSL program , the Alas pro- t gram was unavailable in Texas before now. * Richbourg said the Coordinating Board, Texas College and University System , makes the * loans. A howling success G len d a Huff, Dally T exan Staff ‘Bandit and the Critters’ join In harmony as they offer entertainment for anyone who will listen on the Drag Tuesday. Around Campus Minority rights programs set The Texas Union Human Issues Com m ittee will sponsor pro­ gram s on affirm ative action Wednesday and Thursday in the Eastwoods Room of the Texas Union Building. Leonard Valverde, associate professor of educational adm in­ istration, and Lino Graglia, professor of law, will discuss af­ firm ative action in education, especially concerning graduate school admission, a t 2:30 p.m. Wednesday. Thursday’s program features B ert H urlbut of the National Federation of Independent Business and Joe Feagin, professor of sociology. H urlbut and Feagin will speak a t 3 p.m. Marcia Harelik, public relations m anager for the Union, said a poll conducted by program sponsors indicated that m ore than 40 percent of students surveyed did not understand w hat af­ firm ative action m eans. “ The program will increase aw are­ ness of this subject,” she said. Russian composer to speak David Finko, a Russian defector and com poser-in-residence a t UT El Paso, will speak a t 3:30 p.m. Wednesday on “ The Music of David Finko” and at 8 p.m. Thursday on “ Contempo­ rary Music in the T otalitarian U.S.S.R.” Both lectures will be in Music Building 2.608. Finko recently told The E l Paso T i m e s that he w as not a political person but that his pessim istic, tragic m usic endan­ gered his life in Russia. He cam e to the United States in 1979. Finko has taught a sem inar in Russian m usic a t the Universi- ty of Pennsylvania, and one of his trios has perform ed a t Car­ negie Hall. He has received grants from H arvard, the Pennsyl­ vania Arts Com mission and the Geneva M emorial Foundation for Jewish Culture. The UT m usic departm ent and Meet the Composer-Texas, an organization prom oting music of Texas com posers, are spon­ soring both speeches. Talk on Afghanistan planned Nazif Shahrani, anthropologist, film m aker and a visiting pro­ fessor at the U niversity of California, Los Angeles, will discuss “ The Crisis in Afghanistan: Russian Policies and the Afghan Resistance” a t 4 p.m. Wednesday in Burdine Hall 602. Shahrani w as ethnographic consultant for a film based on his field work with the Kirzhig nomads of Afghanistan, which was shown in the PBS series “ Odyssey.” He also has worked among Afghan refugees in P akistan for a research project on the Islam ic resistance m ovem ent in Afghanistan. The Center for Middle E astern Studies and the D epartm ent of Anthropology are sponsoring the event. Acclaimed poet to read work David Wagoner, author of the “ Escape A rtist,” will give a free public reading a t 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Academic Cen­ ter Auditorium. A film version of the novel soon will be released. Wagoner, chancellor of the Academy of A m erican Poets, has received aw ards from the National Institute of Arts and Let­ ters and the N ational Council on the Arts. Sweetheart nominations due The deadline for 1982 Round-Up Sw eetheart nominations is 5 p.m. Thursday. Any campus organization may nom inate a sweetheart. Rep­ resentatives of select campus organizations will interview the applicants and choose four finalists on the basis of academics, campus involvement and poise, said Chris Bell, Interfratemity Council president. The sw eetheart will be chosen in a campus- wide election M arch 29 and 30. The sw eetheart will reign during Round-Up Week in April and will represent the University at receptions and athletic events, including next y ear's Cotton Bowl. Organizations m ust pay a $15 fee to nom inate a candidate. Applications are available at the IFC office, 2222 Rio Grande St., Suite D-104, and a t the Student Activities Office in the Tex­ as Union Building. Applications m ust be returned to the IFC office. Red-tape contest scheduled Are you a red-tape cutter? Find out from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday on the West Mall w here the Universi­ ty Ombudsman O utreach Committee will sponsor a “Red-Tape Cutting C ontest.” The UT ombudsman counsels students who have grievances against the University. Those who participate in the contest will be asked several questions that students regularly bring to the ombudsman in­ cluding questions about University policies and grievance pro­ cedures. For exam ple. “ How should you appeal a grade you feel vou do not d eserve?” Poison drops Austin pigeons “A ll the world s e e m s in line, on a sp rin g a fte rn o o n , w h e n w e 'r e poisoning p ig e o n s in the p ark. S o m e d a y y o u ’ll see, m y s w e e t h e a r t and m e , as w e p o is ­ on pigeons in the pa rk . W hen th e y see us c o m in g , the birdies all tr y and hide, but th e y still go f o r those p e a n u ts c o v e r e d w i th c y a ­ n i d e . ” —“ An Evening Wasted with Tom L ehrer” By MARK STUTZ Daily Texan Staff Pigeons in Austin apparently are being poisoned with lethal birdseed, near F irst Street, east of Congress Avenue. Barney York, Austin and Travis County Environm ental Health D epartm ent supervisor, said the toxic feed probably was corn coated with a chem ical called Abatrol, which is used to control bird populations outside the city. “ We've had a couple incidences of this before,” York said. “ The chem ical isn't supposed to seriously harm the birds, but the pigeons just keep eating so much that it eventually kills them .” York said the bird slayer probably didn’t know he was break­ ing the law. “ Austin is a bird sanctuary, so the use of this chem ical is illegal inside city lim its,” York said. “ It can and is used out­ side the city, and whoever put it there could get it a t a seed company or agricultural supply store. “ Usually, we just put a stop to whomever is using the chem i­ cal, but there can be a fine. We’ll certainly check into this incident,” he said. An official a t the Austin Municipal Court said the penalty for injuring or killing birds in the city could be as high as $200, although no one has ever been fined for poisoning birds before. Council to study water runoff plan By MARK M AGUIRE Special to The Texan A U.S. Geological Survey proposal to study the effec­ tiveness of storm w ater runoff filters in the Alta Vista subdi­ vision and Barton Creek Mall will go before the City Council Wednesday. Raymond Slade, USGS di­ rector of the Edw ards Aquifer w atershed studies in the Aus­ tin area, said flow gauges and sam plers autom atic w ater will be installed im m ediately upstream and dow nstream of the runoff control structures to m easure the volume and quality of the runoff a t both sites. Slade said the gauges and sam plers could be collect­ ing data as soon as April 1. (o bservations) “ There is no data as far as taking upstream and down­ stre a m of these things to determ ine how effective they are. W hatever the engineers presented to the Planning Commission is pure­ ly theoretical,” Slade said. The contract for w atershed studies this year costs Austin and USGS $156,430 each, for a total of $312, 860. In a m em o­ to City M anager randum Nicholas Meiszer, John G er­ m an, d irec to r of P ublic Works and Engineering, said adding the new p ro ject would cost the city $51,030 more. Austin D irector of Finance Philip Scheps said Monday, “ We like to keep a five per­ cent ending-fund balance’’ in the estim ated $125-million fis­ cal business of running the city. Already that $6-million percentage is “ softly” pro­ jected to come out around $4 million, he said, so the council will be closely eyeing the pro­ posed expenditure. toward Austin Slade said, “ There are a lot of municipal a re as th at are looking that say, 'Hey, look w hat they’re doing. Is this som e sort of revolutionary thing, building these control stru c­ tu res?’ new “ So there is a national in­ terest to see how effective they a re .” kinko's copies | / f t H U 1 p c ; • High Q uality • Quick Service j n • No Minimum* / O W # L a rg e O rd e r* iT / JSd • Legal Size 5V2< 2200 Guadalupe 476-4654 2913 Medical Arts 476-3242 SCUBA DIVERS! FREE FILM: "UNDERSEA OASIS' March 4th 7:30 p.m. RLM4.102 The University Underwater Society March General Meeting For m o r e info call Kirk Gray 4 7 2 - 1 0 8 1 15%off FICTION 1. North and South, John Jakes. R eg. $14.95................................................................... COOP >12.70. 2. M arco Polo, If You Can, W illiam F. Buckley Jr Reg. $13.95................................................................... COOP $11.85. 3. An Indecent O bsession, Colleen McCullough R eg. $13.50................................................................... COOP $11.45. 4 Spring Moon, B ette Bao Lord Reg $ 1 4 . 9 5 ................................................................. COOP $12.70. 5. The Clean’s D ecem b er, Saul Bellow Reg. $13 95 ......................................................................COOP $11.85. 6. A Green D esire. Anton Myrer Reg. $14.95................................................................. COOP $12.70. 7. The Hotel N ew H am pshire, John Irving Reg $15 5 0 ....................................................................COOP $13.50. 8. No Tim e for Tears, Cynthia Freem an Reg $14.95.............................................................. t. R em em brance, D anielle Steel Reg $14 95.............................................................. 10. Rabbit is Rich, John Updike Reg $13 95.................. ............................................ 11. Noble House, Jam es Clavell Reg $19.95 ................................................ 12 A Mother and Two D aughters, Gail Godwin Reg $15 95 13. F ever, Robin Cook COOP $12.70. COOP $12.70. COOP $11.85. COOP $16.45 COOP $13.55. Reg $13 95 ................................................ COOP $11.85. 14 Red Dragon, Thom as Harris Reg $13.95 ................................................COOP $11.85. Announcing the form ation o f THE UNIVERSITY SKEET & TRAP TEAM Thursday, March 4, 1982 RAS 211,7 p.m. For more information call 476 - 363 1 Publisher’s Prices all listed hardback B e s t NON-FICTION 1. A Light in the A ttic, Shel Silverstein Reg $10 9 5 ....................................................................... COOP $9.30. 2. A F ew M inutes with Andv Rooney, Andrew A Rooney Reg $12 95 COOP $11.00. 3. Jane F onda’s Workout Book, Jane Fonda. Reg $15.95...................................................................... COOP $13.55. 4. W itness to P ow er, John Ehrlichm an Reg $17 50 COOP $14.85. 5. At Dawn We Slept. Gordon W Prange Reg $22 95 ...................................................................... COOP $19.50. 6. The Lord God Made Them All, J am es Herriot Reg $13.95...................................................................... COOP $11.85. 7. P athfinders. G ail Sheehy. Reg $15.95 8. The Walk West: A Walk Across A m erica 2, P eter and Barbara Jenkins. Reg $14.95 9. How to Make L ove to a Man, Alexandra P enney Reg $10 0 0 ....................................................................... COOP $8.50. COOP $13.55. COOP $12.70. 10. Cosm os, Carl Sagan Reg $22 9 5 ...................................................................... COOP $19.50. 11. Weight W atchers 365-I)av Menu Cookbook. Reg $14 95 COOP $12.70. 12. When Bad Things Happen to Good P eople, Harold S Kushner. Reg $10 95 ................................................... COOP $ 9.30. 13. Laid Back in W ashington, Art Buehwald 14. E lvis, Albert Goldman Reg $12 95 Reg $14 95 Reg $17 95 COOP $11.00. COOP $12.70. COOP $15.25. 15. Cujo, Stephen King Reg $13.95 COOP $11.85. 15. Every Secret Thing, P atricia Cam pbell H earst fre e 1 hr. parking w /$ 3 .0 0 purchqM books M cond l«v*l LIBERAL ARTS DOCTORAL STUDENTS announcing a special program cosponsored by the Graduate School and the Graduate School of Business “CAREERS IN BUSINESS” For advanced graduate students in the liberal arts who are in­ terested in making their careers in business, there will be a spe­ cial twelve week program this summer, sponsored by the Gradu­ ate School and the Graduate School of Business Administration. There will be organized classes in accounting, economics, finance, management, and marketing, specially planned to take account of graduate preparation in the liberal arts. There will also be career counseling, visits and consultation with nearby businesses and industries, and discussions about interviews and placement. P rio rity for admission to the program will be given to doctoral candidates in the Departments and Programs of Liberal Arts; then to recent UT Ph.D's in the liberal arts, and then to second and third year students in liberal arts doctoral programs. Fellow­ ships will be available to some of the students. You can get further information and an application in the Graduate Studies Office in 101 Main Building, GSB 2.114. Applications are due on April 9th. Interviews will be conducted April 19-23 and acceptances w ill be an­ nounced on Monday, M ay 3rd. There will be a general information meeting for the Careers in Business Program on Friday, March 11, 1982, in the Graduate School of Business (GSB) 1.216, from 3 :00 -4 :3 0 p.m. Representatives of the Graduate School and Graduate School of Business and Business Placement Office will be in attendance to make short presentations and answer questions. Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, March 3, 1982 IMMIGRATION & NATURALIZATION CITIZENSHIP RELATIVE VISAS PROFESSIONAL VISAS STUDENT VISAS TOURIST VISAS REFU G EE MATTERS ORPHAN PETITIONS LABOR CERTIFICATIONS JIM B. CLOUDT A T T O R N E Y A T L A W 3810 MEDICAL PARKWAY NO. 231 AUSTIN, TEX A S 454-1438 SE HABLA ESPAÑOL UT FASHION GROUP PRESENTS “ We've Come a Long Way 9 9 Annual Spring Fashion Show Thursday, March 4, 1982 8:00pm AC Auditorium Tickets $2.50 at door Everyone Invited! PRUDENTIAL On campus recruiting for the Southwestern Home Office/Houston, Texas March 5, 1982 Contact: Career Center Jester A115 Equal O pportunity Em ployer H I V m Prudential i i , . Mi I irch rese lst-5 nts ;h i . BUS IIId IS! I i I m tt j p — O i olI J s 1 A f / Á P 4 X sS Senate approves anti-busing bill WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Sen­ ate Tuesday passed highly restric­ tive anti-busing legislation by a vote of 57-37 and dispatched it to a ques­ tionable future in the House. Sen. Lowell Weicker Jr ., R-Conn., had filibustered against the propos­ al, an amendment to the Justice De­ partm ent’s $2.45 billion 1982 budget authorization, since late la st su m ­ mer. “The fight is not over,” he said in the final moments of debate, warn­ ing of possible future stalling ta c­ tics. tough anti-busing language The would: • P rohibit fed eral courts from o r­ dering busing of m o re than 5 m iles or 15 m inutes each way daily for de­ segregation purposes — sponsored by Sen. J . B en n ett Johnston, D-La. • P rohibit the Ju s tic e D epartm ent this year from initiating suits de­ signed to seek busing as a m eans of desegregation — sponsored by Sen. Je s s e H elm s. R-N .C . • Allow the J u s tic e D epartm ent to seek reduction or repeal of existing court-ordered busing, intended pri­ m arily for the South where busing has been in p lace for years — spon­ sored by Sen. Howell H eflin, D-Ala. The bill now retu rn s to the House, sim ila r which e a rlie r approved it with an am endm ent by Rep. Ja m e s Collins, D -T exas, the one by H elm s. Sin ce the House version has n either the Johnston nor Heflin lan­ guage, those d ifferen ces will have to be worked out. to Several cou rses a re open to House opponents. Sp eaker Thom as O 'N eill could sim ply fail to take any action on it, sin ce it would go first to his desk. Or, if requ ested by Ju d iciary C om m ittee ch airm an P e te r Rodino, D -N .J., O ’N eill could return the bill liberal-dom inated panel, to which could shelve it or strip it of anti-busing rid ers and send it to the that House. If the bill is never enacted, the Ju s tic e D epartm ent program s that need authorization could be dealt with by rid ers in the appropriations bill or by continuing resolutions. Johnston, how ever, said he is opti­ m istic the legislation will pass the House. He said he had conferred with House D em o cratic lead er Jim W right, but acknowledged he got no assu rances. Johnston said any attem p t by O ’Neill to hold the bill at his desk would be “ a raw arrog ation of pow­ e r .’’ Campus News in Brief THE DEADLINE FOR S U B M ITTIN G ITEMS TO C AM PU S NEWS IN BRIEF IS 1 P.M. THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATIO N. NO EXCEP­ TIO NS W ILL BE MADE. EACH ITEM MAY AP­ PEAR ONLY ONCE. ANNOUNCEM ENTS CAREER CENTER Joskes will recruit students for its executive training program from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in Jester Center A 115. Exxon will recruit students for marketing representative positions from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday in Jester Center A115. Foley’s will recruit students for store management and buy­ ing management executive training program from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday in Jester Center A 1 15. The Gap will recruit home economics, interior design and textile & clothing students for man­ agement trainee positions from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday in Jester Center A 1 15. ASTRONOMY DEPARTMENT is sponsoring the films "Sun-Weather Connection,” "Day of the Dark Sun" and “ Wind and Water Energy” at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. TEXAS UNION is sponsoring an information meet­ ing for student clubs about fall program planning at 4 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday in Texas Un­ ion Building Sinclair Suite. BIOLO GICAL SCIENCES D IV IS IO N Undergrad­ uate scholarship applications are available in Painter Hall 1.22. LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE and Plan II Program is sponsoring a poetry reading by David Wagoner, chancellor of the Academy of American Poets, at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Academic Center 21. CANTERBURY ASSOCIATION is sponsoring a folk mass, dinner and program at 6 p.m. Wednesday at the Episcopal Student Center. HONORS ENGLISH PROGRAM is sponsoring a colloquium about archetypes in southern litera­ ture by Charles Siegel at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Calhoun Hall 200. UT MEDIEVAL SOCIETY is sponsoring Revel Mi­ nor at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Union Build­ ing Eastwoods Room. UT DART ASSOCIATION Austin Dart Association vs. UT dart teams will be at 8 p.m. Wednesday in T p y q e T a v p r n ENDOWED PRESIDENTIAL SCHOLARSHIP SELECTION COM M ITTEE Deadline for $1,500 presidential undergraduate scholarships applica­ tions is March 10. SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a tertulia at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Batts Hall 201. MEETINGS NATIONAL SOCIETY OF BLACK ENGINEERS will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Jester A215. SURF CLUB will meet at 10 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Union Building Governors Room. UT JUDO CLUB will meet at 5:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday in Bellmont Hall 966. UNIVERSITY NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Union Building Board of Directors Room. UT RETAIL AND ENTREPRENEURAL A SS O C I­ ATION will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Union Building 3.208. SPOOKS will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday at 2711 Rio Grande St. UNIVERSITY PRE-LAW A SSO C IA TIO N will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Welch Hall 2.246. UNIVERSITY MOBILIZATIO N FOR SURVIVAL will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Calhoun Hall 200. C H R ISTIA NS W ITHOUT CREDENTIALS will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Union Build­ ing 4.402. UT SAILING CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Welch Hall 2.312. PI SIG M A PI N.S.B.E. Committee will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Jester A21 .A. ANGEL FLIGHT will meet at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday in Russell A. Steindam Hall. UNIVERSITY SPELEOLOGICAL SOCIETY will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Painter Hall 2 .4 8 . FELLOW SHIP OF CHRISTIAN ATHLETES will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Bellmont Hall 240. LECTURES ART DEPARTMENT is sponsoring a lecture "John Baldassari, A Retrospective” by John Baldassari at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Art Building 1.120. EDUCATION COUNCIL is sponsoring a lecture “ Classroom Teachers and the Administration” by J.J. Rains, educator and communications con­ sultant, at 7 p.m. Wednesday in Education Build­ ing 324. HUNTINGTON ART GALLERY is sponsoring a lecture “ 17th Century and 19th Century Ameri­ can Landscape Drawings” by Judith Keller at noon Wednesday in Harry Ransom Center sec­ ond floor gallery. HUMAN ISSUES COMM ITTEE is sponsoring a debate on affirmative action in education, espe­ cially as it applies to graduate school entrance at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Union Building Eastwoods Room. SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE is sponsoring a lecture "Solar Collectors — The Art and the Sci­ ence” by Hal Wilkening of AAI Corp./Manager Energy Systems at 2 p.m. Wednesday in Goldsmith Hall 105. CENTER FOR MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES is sponsoring a lecture "The Crisis in Afghanistan: Russian Policies and the Afghan Resistance" by Nazif Shahrani of the University of California at Los Angeles at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Burdine Hall 602. LIN G U ISTIC S DEPARTMENT and Center for Cognitive Science are sponsoring a seminar on vowel harmony by Jonathan Kaye of the Univer- site du Quebec a Montreal at 11 a.m. Wednes­ day in Business-Economics Building 262. UNDERGRADUATE PHILOSOPHY ASSOCIA­ TION is sponsoring a debate on original sin at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Waggener Hall 316. CBA STUDENT COUNCIL is sponsoring a lecture "The Future Trends of Banking Institutions” at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Business-Economics Build­ ing 166. UNDERGRADUATE ART HISTORY A SSOCIA­ TION is sponsoring a lecture "Next to Nature: Landscape Paintings for the American Academy of Design” at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in Harry Ransom Center art gallery. Happy Hour in the Moonlight Wednesday night only from 9-10 p.m. 2 2 0 0 G uad alup e, Suite 2 1 6 4 7 7 -7 : Y7 Free initial consultation for UT students a n d faculty IMMIGRATION LABOR CERTIFICATIONS Based Upon a Profession or Skill in Demand For Issuance of Permanent Resident Visas PAUL PARSONS Attorney at Law MONOGRAM SPECIAL! 2 weeks only M arch 3-17 Shirt m onogram s NO W with coupon R eg . $3.50 $2.50 “JT get no kick from heavy metal. Mere off-the-wall doesn’t thrill me at all. But I get a kick out of Nick. 44 W f 9I ve never been to a disco. I have no need for no Broadway show, and punk rock just makes me sick. But I get a kick out of Nick. The Knife’.’ GOTA FIST FULL OF Or just a handful of change? Well, for a "few dollars less" you'll find more at Callahan's General Store. We've got things you need, along with some things you may not even know you need...yet. Plus, with a valid U.T. I D., we'll give you a 10 p ercen t discount (excluding sale items) when you com e out and meet up with us. We have stuff to help you build shelves, hang pictures and get your place in shape. Lots of western gear, too. Jeans, jackets, boots, hats, belts and more. For students living in and around the Riverside area, we're just a short trip as the crow flies. So bring out your I D. and see what a "few dollars less" will buy at Callahan's. HWY 183 SOUTH 385-3452 Texas’ drug ‘war’ attacked By TINA ROMERO D aily T exan S taff Gov. Bill C lem en ts’ statew id e c o m m itte e on d ru g abuse a d ­ vocates legislation th a t infringes on the rig h ts of innocent c iti­ zens, T exas Civil L ib erties Union d ire c to r John D uncan said Tuesday. The T ex an s’ W ar On D rugs C o m m ittee su ccess has inspired nationw ide effo rts to stiffen drug law s, D uncan said. Follow ing T ex as’ exam p le. C ongress is consid erin g se v e ra l anti-drug bills But D uncan said sta te anti-drug leg islatio n passed during the L eg isla tu re ’s la s t session — including th e c o n tro v ersial w ire­ tapping bill th a t allow s law e n fo rcem en t ag en cies to m onitor the phones of suspected drug d e a le rs — h as not slowed drug abuse. He said the anti-drug law s a r e ju s t a n o th e r blow in “ a fifteen y e a r a ssa u lt on civil lib e rtie s .” Dan Sheridan, a P l a y b o y m ag azin e spokesm an, also a t­ tacked the g o v ern o r's co m m ittee. Speaking a t a C apitol new s co n ference, he said the April issue of P l a y b o y fe a tu re s an in- depth a rtic le on how “ cynical p o litician s, d ru g b u re a u c ra ts and frightened p a re n ts ” a re pushing for “ p o lic e -sta te la w s” u n d er the b an n er of a m isguided “ W ar On D ru g s.” C lem en ts cre a te d the T e x a n s’ W ar On D rugs C o m m ittee and appointed D allas b illionaire H. R oss P e ro t c h a irm a n sh o rtly a fte r taking office in 1979. T he c o m m itte e receiv ed $584,000 from the now -defunct fed eral L aw E n fo rc e m e n t A ssistan ce Ad­ m in istra tio n to co m b at d rug ab u se in T exas. “ A n ti-m ariju an a h y ste ria , p a re n t p re s s u re on le g isla to rs and the re su ltin g T exas drug-law p a c k a g e a r e c re d ite d m o stly to the w ork of Gov Bill C lem ents, a fo rm e r Nixon a d m in is tra tio n official, and rad ical right-w ing b illio n aire H. R oss P e r o t,” said S heridan. R ick Salw en, a co o rd in ato r fo r th e T ex an s’ W ar On D rugs C o m m ittee, ap p eared a t the new s co n feren ce to defen d the an ti-d ru g law s and the w ork ot th e c o m m ittee. He said the anti-drug law s w ent thro ug h an e x ten siv e rev iew b efore being introduced to the L e g isla tu re . He also em phasized th a t th e co m m itte e does not in frin g e on th e th e civil lib e rtie s of th e citizen s of T exas. UT students capture suspect By HECTOR CANTU D aily Texan Staff U n iv ersity stu d en ts chased down a m an who allegedly a s ­ saulted a UT w om an th ree blocks w est of cam pus and held him until A ustin police a rre s te d him a rriv ed and said Monday night, police Tuesday. Austin p olice a rre s te d K ev­ in P aul Sw eeney, 31, of 7910 B urrell D rive, a t 10 p.m . Mon­ day and ch arg ed him in Mu­ nicipal C ourt w ith sim ple a s ­ sault, a class C m isdem eanor. “ The v ictim scre a m e d and yelled and fought th e guy (a f­ te r he g rabbed h e r ) ,” APD Sgt. John R ussell said T ues­ day But the m an released the w om an before h arm in g her, he said. The 22-year-old victim , a student in the C ollege of Com ­ m u nication, told police she and h er boyfriend, Doug Wil­ son, 24, of A ustin, had been g ro cery shopping and parked south of 24th S tre e t by her a p a rtm e n t a t about 9:15 p.m ., police said. “ We had com e back from buying g ro c e rie s and we had p arked down the s tre e t from h er a p a rtm e n t h o u se,” Wilson said. “ She w as w'alking down a p ath to h er a p a rtm e n t door to open it so 1 could bring in the g ro c e rie s ,” said Wilson The w om an, who w as w alk­ ing about 20 y ard s ahead of W ilson, w alked into a dark a re a of th e path, com ing face to face w ith a m an standing in the shadow s, police said. The m an, w ielding a m etal rod, g rabbed h e r and said he would not h u rt h er if she did not sc re a m , she told police. But the v ictim scre a m e d and broke aw ay from the m a n ’s g rasp , police said. Wilson, standing nearby, who w as h eard ran to w ard her. th e sc re a m and “ I had gotten a bag of g ro ­ in m y hands, and I c e rie s h eard h e r yell ‘Help! H e lp !’ re a l lo u d ,” said Wilson. “ I Wilson said he saw so m e­ one running aw ay from the sta rte d chasing v ictim . him and he slipped on a patch of m ud. T h ere w ere a couple of re sid e n ts (of the a p a rtm e n t com plex) who c a m e to help and 1 told them to hold the guy w hile we called the po­ lic e ,” he said. T he stu d en ts who helped catc h the m an w ere not iden­ tified by police P o lice a rre s te d Sw eeney and placed him in City J a il a t 10:25 p.m . M onday. fa c e s sim p le a ss a u lt ch a rg e s w hich upon convic­ tion could re s u lt in a fine of up to $200. He “ If th e a tta c k e r had done a p p r o p r i a t e m o r e , m o r e c h a rg e s would h ave been file d ,” said R ussell. “I think she (th e v ictim ) is happy to have g o tten out of th e situ a ­ tion a s she d id .” The w om an w as not h u rt in the a tta c k . “ I ju s t thank God 1 w as th e r e ,” said Wilson. “ W e’re still sh a k in g .” Sw eeney w as rele a se d on recognizance bond perso n al T uesday m orning. The tria l d a te h as not been set, a M u­ nicipal C ourt clerk said T u es­ day. House panel raps education aid cuts WASHINGTON (U P I) - House R e­ publicans joined D em o crats T uesday in telling E ducation S e c re ta ry T e rre l Bell they will re je c t the R eagan a d m in is tra ­ tio n's deep c u ts in p ro g ram s for the poor, handicapped, unskilled and col­ lege students. Bell defended the budget in the E d u ­ cation and L abor C o m m ittee, a s stu d en t th e high-ceil- d e m o n stra to rs packed inged h earin g room and m illed around in the hallw ay. The a d m in istra tio n proposes cu ts from 1982’s $13 billion to $10 billion for 1983. The cu ts would entail the e lim in a ­ tion of 23 p ro g ra m s, tra n s fe r of 28 m o re and putting the re s t in a sub-C abinet foundation. “ T hese proposals a r e a serio u s m is­ ta k e ,” said c h airm an C arl P e rk in s, D- Ky. “ The p re sid e n t's fu rth e r reductio ns will cu t d irectly into th e bone. " The a d m in is tra tio n 's pro p o sals would cut g ra n ts for needy college stu d en ts by 33 p ercen t, handicapped aid by 29 p e r­ cent, and m erg e vocational and adu lt education into a block g ra n t w ith a 32 p e rc e n t cut. P erk in s said. Rep. Gus H aw kins. D -C alif., quoted Bell his own testim o n y from la s t y e a r in w hich he said he could not g u a ra n te e a 25 p ercen t cut in funding for needy stu d en ts would not h a rm quality. Will q u ality be m a in tain ed u n d er the a d m in is tra tio n ’s proposed 33 p e rc e n t cut from $2.9 billion to $1.9 billion? he asked. “ I c a n ’t m ak e the c la im th a t it will b e ,” Bell replied. “ F o r m e to sit b efo re this c o m m itte e and say th a t w on’t in­ volve som e sa c rific e is not fo rth rig h t.” The proposal would slice funding p er child from $525 to $400. “ E v e ry th in g co n sid ered , this w as the best allo catio n of lim ited re so u rc e s we h a d ,” Bell said, voicing the th e m e he re p eated th roughout the h earing. STATUS SYMBOLS Wednesday, March 3, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 Donnie Lopez (r) peddles mixed-breed puppies from the bed of his pickup truck. These students fondled his young stock and hugged his live wares on the Drag Tuesday at noon. Pampered pups Steve Qoodson, Dally Texan Staff Coalition decries plan to fund growth without voter approval By DOUGLAS McLEOD D aily T e xa n S ta ff “ The City of A ustin is about to b or­ row and spend $50 m illion w ithout the v o te rs ’ p e rm is s io n ,” m oney th a t “ can double th e size of A u stin ,” claim s the A ustin N eighborhoods Council. And the group is a tte m p tin g to do som ething about it. D uring a new s co n feren ce T uesday a t City Council C h am b ers, the ANC an ­ nounced it w ill ask the council to refu se to con sider a pro po sal th a t would have th e city b orrow up to $60 m illion for fi­ nancing w a te r an d w a ste w a te r exp an­ sion in a special develo pm ent d is tric t is until “ re a l and public p lanning ” done. The m oney w ould provide for the w a­ te r and w a ste w a te r sy ste m in a pro ­ posed M unicipal U tility D istric t ju s t north of the city lim its betw een L a m a r B oulevard and F M 1325 (B u rn et R oad). N ash Phillips-C opus Co., a re a l e s ta te and d ev elo p m en t firm th a t owns 694 a c re s ju s t ou tsid e the c ity ’s n o rth w est lim it, w an ts to c re a te the MUD so it can begin developing this section of A ustin’s n o rth -cen tral grow th corrid o r. ANC, a coalition of about 40 neighbor­ hood groups, w an ts the City Council to p rev en t the dev elopm ent of new w a te r taps to p ro te c t th e existing w a te r sys­ tem . “ To allow d am ag e and d e te rio ra ­ tion of th e p re se n t w a te r se rv ice is to cau se a sig nifican t d e c re a se in the qual­ ity of life in A ustin,” a group sta te m e n t says. “ The huge expansion of the pipe sys­ tem will en co u rag e unplanned grow th in the e n tire W alnut C reek d rain ag e basin. When the pipes a r e full, it will becom e evident th a t w e h av e to build tre a tm e n t th a t financ­ plan ts. Who will c re a te in g ?” the s ta te m e n t asks. The group also w an ts the City Council to recognize the m e ssag e from v o ters in p ast bond electio ns, w hich ANC sta te s as follows: “ We do not intend to subsi­ dize grow th and d evelopm ent in this city and we do w ant a city planned by and for the people, not by and for the re a l e s ta te in d u stry .” Sm oot C arl-M itchell, p re s id e n t of ANC and a sy stem s an aly st a t th e UT C om putation C enter, said, “ I see it a s a w ay of g ettin g around vo ter ap p ro v al. “ W e’re questioning the fin an cial a r ­ r a n g e m e n t,” he said. Funding fo r d e ­ v elo p m en t p roposed as NPC has “ should be put into the C ap ital Im ­ p ro v e m e n ts P ro g ra m ,” (to be voted on) he said. “ I feel if the city is going into debt, the c ity should issue the bonds w ith vo­ te r a p p ro v a l,” C arl-M itchell said. The c ity will go $50 m illion in d eb t from th is MUD when th a t d eb t w ould n o rm ally be th e dev elo per’s re sp o n sib il­ ity, said ANC m em b er Ja c k ie Jaco b so n . F re d E b n er, also rep re se n tin g ANC, said he w as n eith er pro- nor a n ti-g ro w th but th a t th e city is alread y m o re th an $2 billion in debt. Increasing th e in d e b te d ­ ness is “ unconscionable.' he said. “ P riv a te develo pers should be w el­ com ed bu t they a re never e n title d to finance any p a rt of th eir d ev elo p m en t a t ta x p a y e r expense, " he said. ~ : ' -I T:*. p 1 .'T V ’ <» , f : ^ , The roon^ ooRdortota Somalknes a few words, even lettets or ^ are enough to si^r it e l. QuiMy, vakie, fun, preetge, comfoit. (>oix CoiKtoRiMMne is toe newest, in e^ auooeae ad­ dress in toe neighborhood west of campus. Just a few blocks from UT, you’ll be located in the midst of fialBrnly and sorodty houses, great shopping tsid all the acttvities that make college C O M X M IIN IU M S W 26TH W 25TM - > 0 W 24TH 1 ‘S S w iW D ' £ < o z < 'W22 iHD X Z < S 0 W 7 2 N O 5 1 ' 9 s z o 5 z < W 2 1 S T ^ 5 s 1 H > beKeve It. So come fay iKm and see the Meet alBlus symbot on campus. A n c ie n p G reek Meets Mo d er n G reek At THe A E P i OLVMPiAa Lhi.s T h u r s d a y , Friday a nd Satur­ day, A EP i is t h r o w in g an O iy nqiiad hash with all t h e trim m ings. In gr a n d e st C.reek tradition. the r eJ l l>e d a n c i n g a n d d r in k in g and of c o u r s e there'll Ik* athletic events. Lots o f ’e m , starting I hursd.iv at 4 : 0 0 with a b o w lin g c o n q n 'tilio n m the T e xas U n io n . .And that e v e n in g at 6 : 3 0 t h e r e ’ll b e a tennis to u r n a m e n t held o n the intr am u r al courts. Friday t h in g s reallv g e l g o in g with a street party at th e AEPi h o u se frotn 2 to 6 in the a tt e r n o o n . 1 he music will l)e bv Rabbit, so t h in g s sh o u ld reallv Ix* h o p p i n g . .At the partv, th ere II (>e a sororitv tug-oi-vvar. a c h u g g i n g t o n - te^t, and a m a r a th o n relav starting at 4 :00. G o m |) e ti tio n r e s u m e s Saturdav m o r n i n g at 9..30 with a swim medlev at ( .r e g o r v t>ool. 1 hen e vervthing m o v e s to Zilket Park w h ere at n oo n you can e n t e r ,i h o m e run hitting c o n ­ test .At 1:00 there'll l>e a (ootbali throw, a n d at 2, a lOO-vard dash. 1 he legend arv Iraternitv tu g - o l- w a i starts at 3. f o llo w e d bv t h e a w a i d s p i e s e n t a - tion at 4, Now th a t ’s a sc heduU* of e v e n t s that w o u ld })ut th e anc ien t t . r e e k s to sh am e. .So Ih^ a part of a classic ( . r e e k t r a d i­ tion Pick u p v o u i tic kets at Nfiho's P i/ / a Pub o r th e AEPi h o u s e 1 h e v ’i e onlv $ 1 . 5 0 a n d all p r c n e e d s g o to the M uscular D v s tr o p h v A s s c k lation. TTl 2600SANTYI3RO SponMirt-a b» p u t n o -, I itlm m rti C,.»()Hol B rv rr^ K f I h r K a iiiite r Vl|itw t psiloii l*i Kh hard h .lu ii'C v VJihos h i/ a |>ub Vlpha 1 - Ph, V ln sioii | r » r lr r \ |< irm u h \ M a in u t!iii({ and V iia rlr t v r r r n H aiclw atr l.in lr Si>iriM>t Viplia 1 pMloii IS 1 b r In i r i l i a t r t n m C.ouiuil CROIX CONDOMINIUMS at aos w. 24th R y furttier informatkw (51^ 470-77^ 1---------------------------------------- ■•'i- - k - — T t THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, March 3,1982 Frogs hold on, nip Horns, 5-4 By MICHELLE ROBBERSON Daily Texan Staff Even though it was a cool, windy afternoon, there was a lot of heated competition at the Penick-Allison courts Tuesday. The score inched upward — one for Texas, then one for Tex­ as Christian. But when the Texas women’s tennis team gave TCU an inch, the Horned Frogs took a mile. TCU didn’t win by a mile. But it won. The Horned Frogs slipped past the eighth-ranked Longhorns 5-4, giving Texas its first TAIAW defeat this spring. The Long­ horns are now 1-1 in dual match play. “Somehow we couldn’t get back into the Texas groove,” Coach Dave Woods said. “We’d hit a few good shots and then miss. We’d start to lose confidence and then it would snowball to where it was hard to get our confidence back.” Texas and TCU were tied at three matches apiece after sin­ gles competition. Texas freshman Gen Greiwe scored a key singles win, 7-6, 6-1, over TCU’s top player, Lori Nelson, who played with an injured foot. Texas’ No. 2 player, Vicki Ellis, lost to Cynthia Hill, 6-4, 6-4 and TCU’s Lila Hirsch downed All-America Kirsten McKeen by an identical score. “I was not really thinking about my game when I was on the court,” Ellis said. “She (Hill) likes to play hard, and I was just standing there hitting the hard shots back instead of playing my game.” Texas All-America Jane Johansen rebounded from a 5-2 sec­ ond-set deficit to put away Lynn Davis, 6-7, 7-5, 6-3. Longhorn senior Beth Ruman, however, was not so lucky. She came back from 4-1 in the third set to tie TCU’s Angie Olmedo at 4-4, but eventually lost the set and the match, 7-5, 3-6, 64. “The problem was not my strokes,” Ruman said, “it was my mind. I wasn’t there for the important points and you just can’t win if you don’t get the important points. “Players like that (Olmeda) are usually fun to compete against, but today the wind and my being just a little off cost me the match,” Ruman said. Texas’ No. 6 singles player, Tenley Stewart, captured an easy win over Marilyn Morrell, 6-3, 6-0. “I just played my game,” Stewart said. “I didn’t have to do anything different to beat her.” With the dual match score tied at 3-3, the Longhorns looked to their doubles teams for the win. It seemed to be a good sign when a revitalized Ruman and Cindy Sampson, playing No. 3 doubles, drubbed TCU’s Davis and Morrell, 6-3, 6-0. “Cindy and I didn’t compete last semester, so it may take a while to get our game back together,” Ruman said. “But I think we have already started playing better, including today’s match.” But the good signs soon turned bad as Texas’ No. 2 doubles team, Greiwe and Chris Harrison, lost a hair-raising match to Hirsch and Olmeda after two tiebreakers, 7-6 (9-7), 7-6 (7-5). “I really tried to get Gen and Chris to hit mostly to Olmeda, who was the weaker player,” Woods said. “Hirsch was getting just about everything back, and that was not good for us.” With the dual match tied again, this time at 44, the Long­ horns’ top doubles team of McKeen and Johansen won their first set over Nelson and Hill after bouncing back from a 3-0 deficit. Texas, however, split sets with TCU and the Horned Frogs eventually took the match, 5-7, 6-2, 6-3. "They (McKeen and Johansen) have a lot of pride since they are one of the better doubles teams in the region,” Woods said. “They really wanted to win. They started to come back in the third set, but they just didn’t get hot there at the end.” Sports North Carolina regains No. 1 ra g ee NEW YORK (UPI) — An electrical failure m erely delayed D uke’s execution Saturday as powerful North Carolina used an 84-66 demolition to spring back to the No. 1 slot in this w eek’s college basketball ratings. The T ar Heels (24-2) received 19 first-place votes and 595 points from U P I’s 42-member Board of Coaches after winning two gam es last week to displace Virginia (27-2) as the nation’s top ranked school. D ePaul (26-1) moved into second place with 577 points and 14 first-place votes, while Virginia, following a 47-46 upset by M aryland, fell to third place afte r receiving 563 votes and eight first-place ballots. North Carolina was only 90 seconds into its gam e with Duke when a power outage halted play a t Chapel Hill, N.C. It took about an hour to fix, a fact that in no way dimm ed the zealous onslaught of the T ar Heels. The victory, paced by Jam es W orthy’s 20 points, enabled N orth Carolina to share first place with Virginia in the A tlantic Coast Conference race. Pac-10 champion Oregon State (22-3) retained fourth place in the rankings, while form erly top-ranked M issouri (24-3) kept its No. 5 rating despite losing to K ansas S tate for its third defeat of the season. Idaho (24-2) took two strides forw ard to the No. 6 spot; Min­ nesota (20-5) jumped from 14th to seventh place after beating Iowa in triple overtim e, the Hawkeyes (20-5) dropping from seventh to 10th; Georgetown (23-6) gained three rungs to No. 8 afte r beating Providence and Connecticut, while Fresno State (24-2) entered the elite circle by being voted No. 10, two steps b etter than last week. Maryland held Ralph Sampson to eight points, prim arily ac­ counting for V irginia’s defeat and ruining the C avaliers’ bid for sole possession of the ACC lead. M aryland freshm an Adrian Branch upstaged V irginia’s superstar as he scored 29 points, including the winning basket on a 12-foot jum per in the final second of the game. Memphis State (214) was voted into 11th place in the weekly ratings, Kentucky (20-6) was No. 12, while West Virginia (24-2) dropped out of the top 10 to No. 13 a fte r an upset loss to Rutgers. Tulsa (21-5) occupied the No. 14 slot, followed by 16th place A rkansas (21-5) and No. 17 Wyoming (20-6). Wake F orest (19-7) and Louisville (18-8) tied for No. 18, while Pepperdine (20-6) and Tennessee (18-8) w ere deadlocked for No. 20. Tigers win, 72-60, advance in Big-8 COLUMBIA, Mo. (UPI) — Ricky F ra zie r scored 24 points, including 15 in the second half, to lead fifth-ranked Missouri to a 72-60 victory over Colorado Tuesday night in the first round of the Big E ight Conference tournam ent. The Tigers will move to the conference sem ifinals F riday night in Kansas City, w here they will m eet Nebraska, a 60-45 winner Tuesday over Oklahoma State. In his final hom ecourt appearance, F razier also pulled down 12 rebounds and scored an electrifying dunk at the sta rt of the gam e that quickly ignited M issouri. The Tigers shot 65 percent to take a 28-18 lead midway through the first half. M arvin M cCrary held Colorado’s leading scorer, Jacques Tuz, to ju st four free throws in the first half before the Tiger player caught an elbow in the nose going up for a rebound and had to leave the gam e with 1:04 left in the period. McCrary returned to the Missouri bench the second half, but did not play. Colorado was also hot from the field and closed the lead to 37-35 a t half. In the second half, the Tiger defense took control, holding the Buffaloes scoreless for nearly seven m inutes. F ra ­ zier combined with Jon Sundvold, who scored 15 points, and Mark D ressier, who added 13, to enable the Tigers, 24-3, to breeze to the victory. Mike Trent beats the throw to second base, sliding past Cowboy Byron Roberts. Peter Robertson, Dally Texan Staff Texas posts 12th straight By SUSIE WOODHAMS Daily Texan Staff Hardin-Simmons caught the Texas baseball team in a daze in the first inning of a double-header a t Disch- Falk Field Tuesday. The Longhorns w ere w hat you’d call out of it. Gone. Just plain not there. The result: two runs, two hits, two Texas erro rs and a not-so-happy Coach Cliff G ustafson afte r the top of the first, when the Cowboys owned the only lead they would have of the day. T h at’s because Texas returned to reality by the bottom of the first and yet again sw ept a non-conference twin-bill by the scores of 114 and 9-1 to post its 11th and 12th wins of the season. “I think we w ere p retty keyed up to play Wichita S tate yesterday (Mon­ day’s double-header win) because that w as the biggest challenge we have had so fa r this y e a r,” Gustafson said a fte r w atching his team knock 22 hits, including three home runs and six doubles, off four Cowboy pitchers. “ I really don’t think we were ready m entally. I think we w ere a little flat to sta rt out and I think that was just the general tone of the te am .” H ardin-Sim m ons ow ned a 6-2 their startin g pitcher record, and Mike Richard had given up no runs in 14 innings pitched, to go with a 2-0 m ark this season, the sam e record of their second-game s ta rte r Joe Simi- neau. R ichard's team lost no tim e in giv­ ing him a cushion when T exas’ open­ ing-game pitcher Mike Konderla couldn’t get uncorked. Cowboy Bobby Doe led off with a single up the middle, and afte r Mark Reedy dropped a bunt down the third baseline, Konderla picked up the ball and threw wildly, scoring Doe and ad­ vancing Reedy to third Byron Rob­ erts knocked in Reedy an out later with a grounder to shortstop Spike Owen, but when Steve Tietze dribbled a hit to the mound, Konderla m ishan­ dled the ball tw ice and couldn’t make the routine put-out a t first. Bobby Mize finally ended the wacky sta rt by flying to center, but still, it looked like it would be one of those days. “ It was my fault, no one e lse ’s ,” said Konderla. who settled down, struck out two and yielded ju st one hit and one base-on-balls in his next three innings to pick up the win. “ Be­ fore the gam e, he (Gustafson) told m e I w as only going to pitch four or five innings, so I wanted those last few to be good.” Meanwhile, the Longhorn b atters pulled the gam e back to an even score in their half of the first a fte r two outs when Richard lost his con­ trol and walked four b atters in the inning, including a bases-loaded pass to designated hitter Kirk Killings- worth to score courtesy runner John­ ny Sutton. Randy Day had knocked in the first Texas run with a single up the middle to s ta rt his three-for-three p erfo rm ­ ance which included four RBI. But the Cowboy pitching w as no b etter in the second inning than it was in the first, as Texas pounded out seven runs off of seven hits and one Hardin-Sim mons erro r to pull ahead 9-2. The 33-minute Longhorn stand at the p late included 11 a t bats and two two-run hom ers that cleared both fences in left field by Day and Mike Simon. R ichard left the gam e a fte r pitch­ ing Vs inning and was charged with the loss, but reliever Eddie Jacquess was to give up both hom ers, with the aid of a strong wind. the pitcher ENTER THE RED-TAPE CUTTING CONTEST W IN PRIZES! March 3 & 4 West Mall Sponsored by: The O m budsm an's Office flo a t to re la x 4501 Guadalupe, Austin, Texas 78751 458-8435 See our coupon in the Campus Guide SAVE MONEY WITH COUPONS T e x a n M any advertisers in the D a i l y r u n coupons that can save you m oney on m any products and services. C lip these regularly and s a v e y o u r s e l f s o me money. 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SHOES:* New Balance 420 Etonic TransAm m en * o m e n LIGHT/NYLON: Dolfin Shorts Nike Shorts *459s 2995 12,s 1 3 ° o •S h o e s sh ou ld l> e purchased n o * to a lio * proper break-in tim e Sports Stop secon d level free I hr. parking ■ w /S3 purchase Use your VISA or MU Wednesday, March 3, 1982 □ T H E DAILY T E X A N Doug Adams: Interview at the end of the universe B y M I C H A E L G O D W I N Daily Texan Staff Douglas Adams is the widely acclaimed author of “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” and “The Restaurant at the End of the Universe.” A Cambridge alumnus who spent his undergraduate years writing and performing for the “Cambridge Footlights” comedy revue, Adams origi­ nally wrote the two satirical science novels in serialized script form for British radio; he was later persuaded to rewrite the stories in novel form. The two books have been selling briskly on both sides of the Atlantic. Adams was in town recently to promote “Restaurant.” While here, he spoke to UT’s Science Fiction and Fantasy club and talked with T exan writer Michael Godwin. The following are ex­ cerpts from that taped interview. Texan: How do you feel about the science fiction and fantasy fans treating you as if you were a science fiction writer? A d a m s : I’m not a science fiction writer — I’m a come­ dy writer, as I have to keep on going around loudly explain­ ing. Except when I’m actually addressing a science fiction club, in which case I just keep quiet about that so as not to offend anybody. But I’m not a science fiction writer. T e x a n : Are you surprised your books have done so well in the U.S.? A d a m s: Yes, but the first book didn’t really move very much until the radio show came out. There didn’t seem to be any particularly good reason why it shouldn’t do as well as it did in England. There didn’t seem to be any great reason why it shouldn’t travel. Whenever anyone says, “well, there’s a great gap between English and American humor,” I don’t think there is. If the comedy is about the way people behave, then I don’t see why it shouldn’t work equally well on both sides, really. Texan: Do you set out to satirize things like religion and mores? For example, you have a sort of two-bit messi- ah showing up during the final moments of the universe because he knows he’s about due. A d a m s: Well, most of the satirical stuff there is not actually set out to be satirical. I think if you set out to make a point about something, then you almost inevitably end up doing something that isn’t funny. If, on the other hand, you set out to do something that makes you laugh, then you can more or less rely on the fact that whatever makes you laugh is an expression of what you think about things. People tend to think that serious work and comedy pre­ clude each other, but I don’t think they do at all. The trouble is that as soon as you start talking seriously about comedy it’s very easy to become pretentious and lose all sight of what comedy is about. I sometimes find that com­ edy is the clearest way of expressing an idea. If you get a complicated idea and you actually get to the point where it becomes funny, then it probably means that you’ve actual­ ly gotten to the point where it can be perceived as being very simple — comedy can be the best expression of an idea. T e x a n : You once said that Vonnegut is one of your fa­ vorite authors. Do you think your work is similar to his? A d a m s : I think there’s a certain obvious comparison in that we’re both doing science fiction and being funny. I say “we both” rather presumptuously because I would not put myself in the same category as Vonnegut at all. I’d like to think anybody who likes Vonnegut would like me if they ran out of good Vonnegut. I suppose we both have the same slightly detached use of the conventions of science fiction to hit whatever targets we want to hit. He’s obviously a much deeper, sadder writer. I suppose his greatest book is “Slaughterhouse Five,” which is again using the conven­ tions of science fiction to understand the firebombing of Dresden through this very, very detached viewpoint. Most of my targets just tend to be things that irritate me: bu­ reaucracy, self-defeating technology, all these sorts of things. They’re really more trivial targets than the ones Vonnegut aims at, though I’m flattered by the comparison, of course. Texan: What is your next project? Everybody would love it of course if you did another “Hitchhiker” book. A d a m s : Well I am about halfway through the third and last “Hitchhiker” book, but I keep on feeling so trapped — like Frankenstein and his monster. If you look at the last page or two of “The Restaurant at the End of the Uni­ verse,” it’s quite clear that I intended not to write any more in the series. But eventually I was won ’round to the idea that I should do another story. Texan: It must be pretty hard to top “ the End of the Universe.” A d a m s : Yes. This one sort of goes back and delves into the very far past. Actually it’s a more constructed story. I’m writing this third book as a novel, rather than as Entertainment Page 9 the sequel to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy ‘I’m not a science fiction writer — I’m a comedy writer, as I have to keep on going around loudly explaining.’ — Douglas Adams Adams (I) and the second installment in the ‘Hitchhiker’ series reworked radioplays, because I wanted to find out what problems I was going to encounter writing a book straight off. The first two, although they’re very heavily reworked from the scripts, nevertheless have a background to go on — the dialogue. When I got three-fourths of the way through the new book, I suddenly found myself dragging to a halt and I know when I drag to a halt that there is something fundamentally wrong somewhere. It was quite simple: there wasn’t enough dialogue! When you’re doing radio, obviously you have to do the whole story in the dialogue, which means you constantly have to disguise the fact that your characters are saying very unnatural things. Texan: “Look at that big green octopus over there!” A da in s : That’s it, or “I am now crossing the room. ” On radio you actually have to have the guy say something which indicates that he is crossing the room while appear­ ing to say something totally different; that is a constant problem. But nevertheless the discipline of that does mean that the dialogue actually becomes very alive in a way. Texan: So you have to put all of your energy into the dialogue ... Adams: Right. And that forms a very strong, lively basis for the prose in the story. I wasn’t doing enough of that in this third book so now I have to go back and rewrite it as if I were working from scripts. I then began to think that when I write my next book (which will be a comedy and not science fiction), maybe it would be a good disci­ pline to start that on radio again just to get the dialogue right. The University of Texas at Austin C. William Harwood, conducting Gregory Allen, piano College of Fine Arts Performing Arts Center • Sunday, March 7 • 8pm • Performing Arts Center Concert Hall Houston Symphony Orchestra Public $12, $10, $8, $5 CEC/PAC, senior citizens $9, $7.50, $6, $3.75 Sergiu Commisiona, Artistic Advisor Gideon Toeplitz, Executive Director Russell P. Allen, Orchestra Manager Public sales begin February 15 CEC/PAC sales begin February 12 P lenty of free parking e a st of the L B J Lib ra ry and M em orial Stadium # Rossini, Overture to "La Cenerentola" # Brahms, Concerto No. 1 in d minor # Beethoven, Symphony No 4 in B flat Major NICKEL BEER NIGHT featuring PEOPLE'S CHOICE $3.00 Men/$2.00 Ladies FRI. BERT RIVERA SAT. TEXAS HIGHRIDERS 5337 Hwy. 290W (Oak Hill) 892-3452 Tickets 10-6, Monday-Friday at PAC, Texas Union, Erwin Center; also 9 3 Saturday at Erwin Center; Charge a Ticket: Austin, 477-6060; Texas toll-free. 800-252 9909 60c charge per ticket for all phone orders Further information: 471-1444 No cameras No recorders DINNER THEATRE a musical by UT's own Tom Jonas A Hervey Schmidt March 5-6 featuring memorable songs such as 'T ry To Rem em ber" , - Tickets available at all UTTM outlets (PAC, Texas Union, Erwin Center). Deeeert Theetre tickets available at door. Dinnar serve! until 8:15. D enert until 8:30. $8.00 Dinner & Show . $10.00 Dinner & Show $4.50 Dessert & Show $6.50 Dessert 8t Show Sunday, March 7 BACK B Y POPULAR DEMAND! 8 p.m. TEXAS UNION BALLROOM $3.50 UT ID, $5.00 public Tickets available at all U TTM outlets 24th k Guadalupe (in the Texas Union). 471-6681. Free parking after 6 p.m. THE TEXAS SB Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, March 3, 1982 The University of Texas at Austin College of Fine Arts Department of Drama Emlyn Williams as Charles Dickens Two Solo Performances of Scenes from the Famous Novels and Stories ‘As fresh as if it were being done for the first time!”—The New York Times By ROBERT MEAD Daily Texan Staff Of all the dire and terrifying “ predictions” m ad e in G eorge Orwell’s w artim e political classic “ 1984,” none w as m ore ghastly than the sp ecter of a com m unications network run by and for “ Big B ro th er” — the social, cultural and com m ercial deity which dom inates the world of hero Winston Smith. While Orwell’s paranoid sketch of utopia gone m ad angered som e and amused others, it ultim ately gave many people a reason to fear the future. With the y e a r 1984 ju st around the c o m e r, it seem s that Orwell’s true purpose w as to c re a te a fictional world with a them atic intent, rath er than a harsh prophecy. Our world is not yet divided up into a few broken pieces on a ch arred globe, nor is civilization controlled by a single large corporation. We live in a suprisingly free society, which, though im p erfect, shows no real signs of collapse. But Orwell’s concept of a com m un ica­ tions network which reach es and com m ands every m em b er of society is no longer so outlandish. Dig this: E a rlie r this year, one of the world’s larg est and most influential corporations, Coca-Cola, burst into the com ­ munications industry in a very big w ay: it paid an estim ated $750 million for the last m ajo r independent m ovie studio in existence, Columbia. Jo k es about expensive Columbian coke aside, the venture is very serious indeed. Columbia is one of the most successful studios around, with such recen t hits as “ Close “ O rdinary P eo p le,” E n co u n ters,” “ K ram er vs. K ra m e r,” “ Strip es” and “ Stir C razy .” But the people a t Coke have m o re in mind than box office hits; they paid an exorbitant amount of money for what is essentially a “ The Blue Lagoon,” Cable television is one of the m ost a ttra c tiv e investm ent areas to em erg e in the last 30 y ears, but success in the cable industry requires a substantial initial investm ent. There are satellites to purchase, studios to build, and royalties to pay — but those who can afford such expenses have a good chan ce to grab the b rass ring. The average film corporation breaks even with box-office revenues nowadays. The eight largest com p a­ nies averaged $270 million in revenues last year, and — taking into account production, m arketing and distribution costs — they spent nearly the sam e. So w here does all the money com e from ? What m akes a huge corporation like Coca-Cola so inter­ ested in a movie studio that breaks even? understandable. Those sam e studios that broke even a t the box office last y ear also m ade average additional revenues of $125 million: $40 million from pay television, a figure expected to double this y e a r; $30 million from the three big netw orks; $30 million from the sale of video c assettes and discs, which is also expected to in crease d ram atically ; and $25 million from for­ eign syndication. N otice th at these a re all low -cost m eans of attaining additional revenue, since the com panies a re simply reselling the finished product. As additional revenues, they also go unreported on the com panies’ books for a t least a y e a r; according to law, the com panies don’t have to en ter revenue from syndication or sales until the film is shown. So, the profits from the sale of “ Stir C razy ,” which was released in the sum­ m er of 1980, will go unreported until this sum m er, when it shows on HBO. But the real reason for Coke’s entry into the entertainm ent industry is the cable connection. With Coke supplying the in­ vestm ent for film and television ventures and providing a well- established line of distribution and m arketing, Columbia can afford to produce m ore film s, including som e risky ventures that would be left undone without guarantees. Coke can also open up Colum bia’a huge film library, a potential bonanza of cable sales, with such classics as “ L aw ren ce of A rab ia,” “ The Bridge Over the R iver K w ai,” and “ F ro m H ere to E te rn ity .” Coke also has a c ce ss to Columbia’s television holdings, which include such long-running, made-for-syndication hits as “ B a r­ ney M iller” and “ F an tasy Island.” Coca-Cola isn’t the only big corp orate gun to en ter the cable field. Shearson-A m erican E xp ress, G etty Oil, the H earst Pub­ lishing Corporation, Tim e Inc., and a host of others a re also scram bling for the megabucks. IBM and AT&T, recen tly re­ March 5 & 6 8 pm Hogg Auditorium 24th & Whitis Public $6 Students and Season Subscribers $4 Information 471-1444 Charge-a-Ticket 477-6060 Texas toll-free 800 252 9909 60c charge per ticket for phone orders Tickets at PAC, Erwin Center and Texas Union R. I den Payne Theatt 2 3 r d an d San Jacinta Public $5 Students $4 ..................................... r J e r o m e K e r n ' s v lively, enchanting m usical V E T O Ifc7& ‘‘B R A V O ! E x tre m ely a m u sin g ... highly en tertain ing. ” A lan Jen k in s A ustin A m erican-Statesm an Tickets at PAC, Texas Union & F.ru’tn C enter Inform ation, 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 C h arge-a-T ick et, 4 7 7 -6 0 6 0 T h e University of Yexas at Austin C ollege oj Fine Arts D epartm ent of Drama CURTAIN TIME Check The D a ily Texan e v e ry day to see w hat film s and J • shows a re playing and to find out the cu rtain tim es in all J the local theaters. t THE DAILY T E X A N cable television venture. With acce ss to Columbia’s lu crative film library, the capital to purchase cable networks of their own to show the film s, and a well-established, world-wide distribution and advertising net­ The answ er, stran ge as it seem s, is television. When a com ­ pany can m ake a film like “ Stir C razy” for $15 million, sell it to pay television (in this case HBO) for $6 million, also sell it to network television for $8.5 million, and clear an estim ated $75 leased from the bonds of anti-trust, are sure to m ove into the cable industry with lines of com m unication alread y reaching every nook and cranny in the nation. Orwell only knows what will happen when Coke, IBM and AT&T square off over the work, Coke stands to profit greatly from its daring venture. to $90 million at the box office, then Coke’s huge investm ent is cable. Leave a wake-up call with Big Brother. Poet David Wagoner to read works at Academic Center Award-winning writer imbues poems with human feeling By GREG BEAL There is a poem of David “ Being S hot,” W agoner’s, which describes just that sen­ sation, that startling m om ent when a bullet locates a body. a It’s strangely gentle poem, a poem about life and intrinsic living, despite horror of its subject m a tte r: it hasn’t broken your “ If the h eart or skull, this bit of m et­ al/M ay strike you as a blund­ er, a senseless burden,/An ap­ palling intrusion . . . . ” Truly appalling, “ this bit of m e ta l” that draw s death inev­ itably around an unknowing victim in a forest overrun by the minions of civilization, a w ilderness no longer so wild. U niversity of Washington in S e a ttle , W agoner is the author of 12 volum es of poetry, in­ c lu d in g . . ‘C ollected P o e m s,” and “ T r a v e llin g L ig h t ” “ L a n d fa ll,” his m ost recen t collectio n . W agoner is not a showy, flashy w rite r; solidly c ra fte d , his poem s a re im ­ bued with a sen se of hum ani­ Currently teaching a t the ty- cape A rtist,” a m ovie adapted from one of W agoner’s 10 nov­ els. W agoner will read from his works a t 8 p.m . Wednesday in the A cadem ic Center Audito­ rium. The reading is spon­ sored by the D epartm ent of English and Plan II. In to w riting, addition W agoner edits jou rnal the P o e t r y N o r t h w e s t and the P rin ceto n U niversity P re s s con tem porary poetry s e rie s. Among his honors a re aw ard s and fellow ships from the Gug­ genheim Foundation, the na­ tional Insitute of A rts and L e tte rs , The Ford Foundation and the N ational Council on the A rts. C ritic X .J . Kennedy has called W agoner " a pow erful, forth rig h t and beautifully dis­ ciplined w riter ... both a poet and a born sto ry te lle r. ” Lost Stand still. The trees ahead an d bushes D eside you Are not lost. Wherever you are is called Here, And you must treat it as a powerful stranger, Must ask permission to know it and be known. The forest breathes. Listen. It answers, I have made this place around you. I f you leave it, you may come back again, saying Here. No two trees are the same to Raven. No two branches are the sameto Wren. I f what a tree or a bush does islost on you, You are surely lost. Standstill. The forest knows Where you aré. You must let it find you. — David W agoner Iro n ically , even though he has been tw ice nom inated for the N ational Book Award and once for the A m erican Book Award, W agon er's fam e will undoubtedly reach its apogee in 1982 — this y e a r F ra n c is Coppola’s Zoetrope Studios is scheduled to re le a se the Caleb D eschan el-d irected “ The E s ­ DURHAM-NIXON CLAY COLLEGE INTENSIVE ENGLISH NOTICE TO PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS: EF­ FECTIVE MARCH 18 WE MUST INCREASE OUR PRICES. ENROLL N O W FOR FUTURE CLASSES TO RESERVE EXISTING PRICES. 478-3446 119 W. 8th 2801 Guadalupe Early Bird Specials M onday thru Friday 5 a .m . til 11 a.m . Coffee Served W ith A ny Breakfast .35 * 2 sags any sfyla, hash browns. toast or biscuits craam gravy on roquost ... 2 . 2 5 with 2 piocos of bacon or sausogo .......................... 2 . 5 0 2 biscuits or toast, ¡oily, craam gravy, coffo* « , ......... • . 3 5 with 2 pieces bacon or sausage ............... 1 . 8 5 Choice of hot homemade sweat roll or 1-breakfast toco * Coffoo with ohovo brookfast ................................ 3 5 served with coffoo .............1 . 3 5 CHICKEN FRIED STEAK F re n c h frie s , sa la d & ro ll $ 2 . 5 0 Migas Con Queso or Breakfast T a c o s ........................2.90 M eanest Frozen M argaritas in Town Happy Hour 11 A .M . - 7 P.M. M B A M IM M a s t e r O f T a x a t io n M S -E c o n o m ic s T a k e a c tio n to c h a n g e your future. 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Accountant...........................................................$29,744/yr* Attorney.................................................................$56,964/yr* Chem ist.................................................................$48,961/yr# Engineer .............................................................. $45,221/yr* LU BY’S M A N A G E R ................................................ $90,000/yr Seem hard to believe? The average Luby's Cafeterias, Inc. m anager d id earn over $90,000 last year. The average training period to becom e a m anager is 6 to 8 years. Managers attain these earnings by collecting a share of the net profits from their own cafeteria The average associate m anager last year earned $50,000. This earning level is attainable in 3 to 5 years. To becom e a m anager of one of our cafeterias is a very special business oppor­ tunity. You'll be joining an ambitious and progressive com pany that requires more of its managers than any food chain in the Sunbelt. Local managers are decision making executives who are responsible for all purchasing, menu planning, and hiring of personnel. We grant our managers a great deal of autonomy, and treat them as business partners. Luby's Cafeterias, Inc. is a firm believer in promoting from within; hence, most Corporate Officers are former unit managers. Luby's Cafeterias, Inc is not restricting interviews to only Business majors; we're open to all degrees We're looking for people who are interested in becom ing dynamic, aggressive, and well pa id business people. If that's your goal, then we're looking for you! ‘ Average salaries; highest level of experience, difficulty, and responsibility, from the National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical, and Clerical Pay, March 1979 — U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. Bulletin 2045. INTERVIEWING AT YOUR PLACEMENT CENTER MARCH 9 AND lO. LubyMs LUBY’S CAFETERIAS, INC. 2211 N.E. LOOP 410, PO BOX 330B9. SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS 7Í233 f | b i Registered Trademark of L ab )’s Cafeterias, lac. The Texas U n io n C u ltu ra l E n te r ta in m e n t C o m m it t e e c o rdiaiiy in vite s you to s p e n d AN EVENING IN OLD VIENNA fe a tu rin g The A u stin C o m m u n it y O r c h e s t r a A N E L E G A N T D I N N E R c b n s i s t m q of C o r n is h G a m e He n Wild Rice D r e s s in g G ree n B e a n s A lm o n - d m e E d a ir e S u p r e m e Tom atoe Vm e g a re tfe . Rons a n d B e v e r a g e will be se rv e d from 7 0 0 9 00 at an a d d it io n a l c h a r g e o f $7 5 0 0 Ma-rch 6 1982 9 00 p m to 1 0 0 a m Texas U n ;o r B a llro o m G e n e r a l P ubnc $9 50 C E C PAC $6 50 G r o u p s of 10 or m ore $7 50 e a c h Texas Ton Free 1 -8 0 0 - 2 5 2 - 9 9 0 9 / ' a u g e A T.cke* 4 7 7 - 6 0 6 0 16 0 c c o n v e n i e n c e c h a r g e on a p h o n e & ” at o rd e rs ) ■ ■ i ' p m T a r e a . a - u n e a f a U T T M - ' • T ’ ‘ : x -: 2 > . ‘ nr m o r e ir 'o rn -a * 0 r> ■ x e * . ’ e ! b IN CONCERT WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3| 8-30 pm WELCH 1.316 s p o n s o re d by: B a p tis t S tu d e n t Union Are You Playing Games With Us? For eight years the Back Room has been know n fo r bringing you the best in live music every night. But we have also quietly m ain­ tained the finest game room in town. All our m achines are the latest models, and kept in to p shape. If you d id n ’t know, come on in. If you forgot, come on back. S ta rg a te • Astro B lastar • Donkey Kong • D a fa n d a r(1 ) • Dsluxe Astorolds • Omaga Raca • Q lx (2) • Tam past (2) • C anti pads (3) • Q alaga(3) • P ac Man (3) • Ms. Pac Man (2) • Rad Baron • Q alaxlan (2) • Froggar • Pool Tablas • Pinball: Black Hola • Jungla Lord • F lra Pow ar • Haw Styla Tornado Foosball h o i s E . R IV ER SID E UT SURF CLUB p r e s e n t s 'Thunder Down Under" at The Villa Capri IH35 at 24th TONIGHT- R O C K -A -D IA L S THURSDAY- W O M M A C K B R O S . *Back Room 201$ E. RIVERSID E Wednesday, March 3, 1982 □ THE DAILY TE XAN □ Page 11 4 5 3 - 6 6 4 1 2200 HANCOCK DRIVE 12403 QUaoat UPE . 474-4381 upstairs A L T I M D • T A T I* . riMi A™ “ downstairs SIZZLING SENSUALITY!’ £ i m c THEATRES TIMES S H O W N FO R TO DA Y ONL Y TW I-LITE SHOWS LIMITED TO SEATING REDUCED PRICES FOR STUOENTS A SENIOR CITIZENS WITH AMC CARD A M E R IC A N A RHRI ItUEMIf IWUO MMItltllMS THU m OIHEB FILM IN IHf PJS1 IB fUHS. RED* 7 :3 0 A Q U A R IU S 4 MAKING LOVE H ( 5 : 1 5 /5 1 .M K 7 : 4 5 - ^ 4 4 4 - 3 2 2 2 isoo s pleasant v a u lt no GHOST STORY ( 5 : 3 0 / 5 1 . t 0 )-7 :4 5 THE BOOGENS (5:45/51.9014:00 HOUSE OF W A X ( 5 : 3 0 / 5 1 . W )-7 :3 0 N O R T H C R O S S 6 HOUSE OF W A X 4 5 4 - 5 1 4 7 k . ARTHUR ( 6 : 0 0 / $ 1 . 9 0 ) 4 : 0 0 ( 5 : 4 5 / 5 l.t0 > -7 : 4 5 TAPS ( 5 : 1 5 / 5 1 .t 0 F 7 : 4 5 NIGHT CROSSING PO ( 5 : 4 5 / 5 1 .t 0 h i KK) THE BOOGENS ( 5 : 3 0 / 5 l . t 0 ) - 7 : 4 5 RAIDERS LOST ARK ( 5 : 3 0 / 5 1 - t 0 )-0 :0 0 SOUTHWOOD 2 $-100 ALL MOVIES $ 100 4 4 2 - 2 3 3 3 1423 w ben white blvo ;> ■ E X C LU D IN G M ID N IG H T SH O W S “ SHARKY S MACHINE CINDERELLA 5 : 3 0 4 : 0 0 5 :4 5 -7 :3 0 ^ * 7 : 0 0 , 9 : 3 0 G E N E R A L C IN E M A T H E A T R E MON THRU SA1 ALL SHOWING!) BEFORE 6PM SUN & HOI IDAYS FIRS! M A TM tl SHOW 0HIY h n l ^ o n i n Jack Nicholson in “THE BORDER” ^ 1 10 3 15 5 20 7 55.9 30.R) CAPITAL P LA ZA ciNnE£ A I -3 5 a t C A M E R O N RO. 4 5 2 - 7 6 4 6 'BARBAROSA" W illi» N elso n 2 00-4 00-6 00 8 00-10 00 (PG) " V I C E S Q U A D " 1:30-3:30-5:30 7:30-9:30 (R) “ MAKING LO V E” K ate Jackson 1 70 3 30 5 40 7:50-10:00 (R) SAMMY HAGAR S T A N D IN G H A M P T O N T O l R r'~i-' W ith S p ec ial G u est QUARTERFLASH TONIGHT 8PM MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM T I C K E T S O N S A L E A T : R a y m o n d s D r u g s , F lip s id e R e c o rd s a n d D is c o v e r y R e c o rd s . P r o d u c e d b \ P A C E C o n c e r ts & J A M i ■ «J. • v .' — : a. i , r..- y » , y Astaire and Rogers Dudley Moore Peter Cook in __ s i • 'A '• v..-1 ■ Presents... AMATEUR COMEDY NIGHT FROM THE COMEDY CORNER IN DALLAS THE ZANY AND QUICK-WITTED RON MITCHELL SHOWTIME 10:00 P.M. WITH SPECIAL GUEST STAR FRED GREENSLEY r w w i r w * * * * i * * * * * * \ Ld a y o f t h e d a r k SUN / THE S U N- WE A T HE R ^ t y CONNECTI ON y The Gay Divorcee Studio Styles: RKO ( 1 9 3 4 ) T O D A Y at 2, 6 & 10:05 Union Theatre 1.50 U.T. 2.00 No n-U .T. C IN IM .A ‘W E s f n a i.* P E N T H O U S E 'S LONI SANDERS -SEREN A •m, U S A D e L E E U W S H A K R O N M IT C H E 1 . D O R O TH Y LcM AY ojt rurwiK N I C O L E N O L R L Y S A T H A T C H E R X - does everything and makes the j o b l o ok e a s y , Starring S E K A KAY P A R K E R R J R E V W L D S Introducing S H E R R IS S E LISA DE Cl W J H E M B tfO Italian w ith subtitles TODAY at 7:55 p.m. Union Theotre 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Non-U.T. Academy Awards Contest FREE movie pass prize s Pick u p e n t r y fo r m s a t th e U n io n T h e a tr e a n d I n fo r m a tio n D esk ( 2 n d le v e l) P R E S ID IO T H E A T R E S * * * , „ Á m m i i BEST PICTURE N O M IN A TIO N 8 Mi mmmm Academy Award Nominations SAGTIME N o d itc o u n l m o lin o •< 1:10-3:20-5:30-7:40-9 50 Nick Noite 12 3 0 - 3 : 2 0 - 5 :1 0 - 9 .0 0 ; tz r:.1 h e . X o m in « lio n * Trench i i Woman Debra Winger 4 :4 0 - ¿SM S, VILLAGE 4 2700 ANDERSON* 451-8352 S H ® T • M ® N D IA N E K E A T O N 1 2 : 3 0 - 2 : 5 0 - 5 : 1 0 - 7 : 3 0 - 9 : 5 0 ^ Timothy Hutton 1 2 : 2 5 - 2 : 5 0 - 5 : 1 5 - 7 : 4 0 - 1 0 :0 5 rRic * i.n w rnwAWts carrou sivlba It !► ..I h) V.ANIi'.W IN UILIK STTVI N: * icn JTTSRfRT spi i.vin NATIll ( X ■P LU S ^ “e a r l y b i r d S P E C I A L ” $ 3 . 0 0 A PERSOll W A RN IN G - Thi» movio contain» graphic violonco VÁI BL Vs i m 1 . rY »| (jtn n e tte ¿ fia re n £ _ 6 P-m. to 7.30p.m .. D A IL Y 6:00- 8 .0 0 - 10:0 0 RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5689 5 : 4 0 - 7 . 4 0 - 9 :4 0 R ne Under 18 Admitted urday. Sundays Open Noon s Regardless Of Age f b is c ^ 'S ljW T T !liT fí? ? P P g T P rS T n ^ -• F R I D A Y f ¿ r s h o w s S T A P T 't i C I f f e ^ m B E F O R E 6 P . M E X C E P T A S N O T L P IN A t ___________ m m n m m mmmm 8:00 P.M . Tix $3.00 at the door Q WIND AND WATER ENERGY \ Club Meeting afterwards in the Governors Room Texas Union Bldg. 10:00 p.m. FREE BEER with U.T. I.D. astronomyFILM SERIES W e d n e s d a y M a r c h 3 K I M 4 . 1 0 2 7 : 3 0 p m F r e e JESTER AUD. 7 Bl 9 p.m. $1.50 FEDRICO FELLINI S THE WHITE SHIEK Satirical work by M aster Fellini taking off on “ fu m etti,” m ag a­ zines featuring acto rs posed in com ic strip adventures. “This lively social comedy...is perhaps the freshest, and the most tender...of Fellini's films. ” —Pauline Kael y m ■ r n A FOX TRIPLEX 454-2711 6757 AIRPORT BLVD. 1 th e a tr e s -a u s tin I | 1m m 3 wesTGATtH 8922775 4608 WESTGATE BL 1 ] C hariots of F ir e (pg) (5:15)-7:30- 9:50 ABSENCE OF MALICE ( p g ) (5 :10)-7:20-9:30 ON GOLDEN POND (PO) ( 1 :15)-3:20-5:25- 7:40-9:45 THE BORDER (R) (1:30)-3:30-5:30- 7:30-9:30 TIME BANDITS (P G ) (5:1S)-7:35-9:45 BARBAROSA (PO) (1:00)-3:00-5:00- 7:00-9:00 R £ S £ 1* Drive-In 6 9 0 2 Burleson Road Radio Sound System 3 8 5 -7 2 1 7 Privacy of Your Auto XX X Original Uncut D EBB IE * * * * * ★ WlhD 0 E S D A L L A S 2224 Guadalupe 4 7 8 - 4 5 0 4 AUSTIN 6 521 THOMPSON OFF 183 1 Ml S OF M0NT0P0LIS PHONE: 385-5328 24 HOUR ADULT THEATRE COMPLEX VIDEO TAPE RENTALS & SALES LARGEST SELECTION - LOWEST PRICES SEE UP TO 6 M O V IES ON S E P A R A T E S C R E E N S FOR TH E PRICE OF ONE XAVIER HOLLANDER TEEN AG E CHEERLEADERS s . o . s . EXPOSE ME LOVELY MISBEHAVEN DEEP THROAT DEVIL & MISS JONES DISCOUNT M ILITA R Y • STU D EN T • S E N IO R S • C O U PLES SCORES • W hatever the score, win or lose, # • you'll find it in the Sports Sec-» * • tion of The Daily Texan. root on th* * h o i. wroth o f th . Hoiiywood Production Cod# whon h« mod# th u h o rd -h iltm g but gorgooutly .ty liio d .lo ry o f a junkio w h o i trying to koop tho JJJ j - - ™ , --------------------------------------- ---------- ::::: W L . | | a § jllf e jjjH|jijl FRANK SINATRA SB aj§n;IÍÍiÍiÍÍiÍiÍÍHiiii ELEANOR PARKER jjjjjijjjlj l i l i l — KIM NOVAK monkoy off hi» bock. presents tonight in BATTS AUD. an unusual iiiliiiiii ¡ | I lyiinl 50s double-featurejijyjjjjj in Otto Preminger'* THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN ARM lEOMcCAREY'S MY SON JOHN This most hysterical of all anti-i; communist movies has H ELEN il HAYES turning her pinko sonji ROBERT W A L K E R over to theji F .B .L ! “ It may startle som e people into maA-i! ing a new a nd so ber estim ate ofv. things. ” — Bosley Crowther 7:00 ONLY! ■ MATINEES DAHY-WESTGATI THEATRE ONLY. TUESDAY IS 1 1 DOLLAR DAY AT WESTGATE ONLY. | f f 1 1 REDUCED ADULT A D M I S S I O N ALL FEATURES IN (BRACKETS)-CAPACITY ONLY | | ■ :::::::::::::: 9:15 only! $1.50 "Only When I Laugh — ” Simon has ever w ritte n m arvelous ... th e best piece of w o r k ; ________ Rex Reed, N Y D a ily N e w s | A \ 1 WHO SAYS YOU CANT TAKE IT WITH VTXP ^ p i » s o r r o | | 4 \ Brooke Shields ENDLESS LOVE k Page 12 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, March 3 ,1982 FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ROOMMATES UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES TYPING C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S IN G C o n s e c u tiv e D a y R a te s 15 w o rd m in im u m .........................S 20 E a c h w o rd 1 tim e E a c h w o rd 3 tim e s ......................$ 44 E a c h w o rd 5 t i m e s ............................$ .54 E a c h w o rd 10 tim e s ...................$ 88 1 col. x 1 inch 1 t i m e ....................... *5.69 $5 49 1 col. x 1 m ch 2-9 tim e s *5.20 1 col x 1 inch 10 o r m ore tim es $1 00 c h a rg e to c hange copy. F ir s t tw o w o rd s m a y be a ll c a p ita l le tte rs 25' to r e ac h a d d itio n a l w o rd in c a p ita l le tte rs S T U D E N T / F A C U L T Y /S T A F F ( P r i v a t e P a r t y Ads O n ly ) C o n s e c u tiv e D a y R a te s 15 w o rd m in im u m E a c h w o rd , 2 T i m e s .......................... 17 E a c h W o rd , 5 T i m e s ............................ 27 E a c h W o rd , E a c h A ddtl T im e 054 1 Col. x 1 ", 1 or M o r e T im e s ....... 3.18 50“ c h a rg e to c h a n g e copy. F ir s t tw o le tte rs . w o rd s m a y be a ll c a p ita l E a c h a d d itio n a l w o rd in c a p ita ls , 25' A ll ads m u s t be n o n -c o m m e rc ia l and p re p a id DEADLINE SCHEDULE M o n d a y T e x a n ......................... F rid a y 2 p.m . T ueeday T e x a n ..................... M o n d a y 11 a .m . W e d n e s d a y T e x a n ...............T u e sd a y 11 a .m . T h u rs d a y T s x a n .............W e d n e s d a y I t a .m . F rid a y T e xa n T h u rs d a y 11 a .m . In t h e e v e n t o f erro rs m a d e in a n a d v e r­ tis e m e n t, im m e d ia te n o tice m u s t be g iv e n as th e p u b lis h e rs a re re s p o n s ib le fo r o n ly O N E in c o rre c t in s e rtio n AD c la im s fo r a d ­ ju s tm e n ts s h o u ld be m a d e n e t la te r th a n 3 0 d a ys a ft e r p u b lic a tio n AUTOS FOR SALE L & M V o ik s w e rk s new and used V W p a rts R e b u ilt e ngines $629 in stalle d e x ­ c han g e W e buy V W 's a ny condition. 251- 2265 __ ____ _______ 79 M U S T A N G . R a r e , V8, 4-speed, AC, low m ile a g e , T R X A M - F M , sunroof, h a n d lin g p a ck a g e, e x c e lle n t in and out. S5200 479 8571 or 478 0472 (a s k fo r J o n ) _ (Tuns e x c e lle n t, new tire s, 72 2002 B M W b a tte r y , e x h a u s t, and m u ffle r See at I83N and W he e ls and D e a ls , c o rn e r of B u rn e t Rd $2950 and negotia b le . Don 474-9091. V O L K S W A G E N 411, 1974, $1200. G re a t deal, good ru n n in g condition, c lean B r i­ g itte , 471-5532, le a v e m essage 447 7080 70 T O Y O T A C O R O N A needs w o rk $300 454-3451 a fte r six. Looks good, 1 9 W T O Y Ó T Á C E L IC A G T liftb a c k , lim ­ ited e d itio n . A C , sun roof, s uper stereo, a llo y w heels, w h ite , 19,000 m iles, 2W yea r w a r r a n ty $6600 327-3957. 1973 P IN T O , e n g in e re b u ilt re c e n tly , v e ry good m e c h a n ic a l cond itio n . C a ll 471-7976 or 477-7477 $850 o n ly !___________ 1977 F I A T S P Y D E R , c e lle n t con d itio n 478-9891 low m ile a g e , e x ­ 64 V W Bug, needs w o rk but runs. $400. M a r th a : 453-7288, 474-4390 la rg e engine, o v er- 72 C H E V Y V a n 30, s u e d 40 g a llo n gas ta n k , AC u n it, h eavy duty 1 ton. $3500. C a ll 282-4428 low 79 F I A T X - l / 9 . A C , w ire w heels, m ile a g e , super c o n d itio n . A s kin g $5500. C a ll 282-4428._____________________________ 1976 M G M id g e t. 36,000 m ile s , e x c e lle n t con d itio n , o r ig in a l o w n e r. 477-6634 a fte r _______________________ 5 p .m . 74 H O N D A C iv ic 25-35 m pg, $690 73 M e r ­ c u ry M o n te g o M X , 2 door, ha rdtop. C lean, d e p e n d a b le c a r, $1100 458-2738. 1971 T R I U M P H T R 6 , w h ite , 4-speed, strong e ngine, M ic h e iin s , lugga ge ra ck , tra d e s consid­ Ton n e a u c o ve r, $2500, e red 327-4278^ ______________________ 74 O L D S T o rn a d o , w h ite , good condition m e c h a n ic a lly and body w o rk $1500 346- 3300. 197Í T R I U M P H S p itfir e . R e la tiv e ly good shape, h o w e ve r needs w o rk M u s t sell. S a c rific e a t $1200. 478-7039 FOR SALE Motorcyde-For Sal* low ) P U C H M a x i tilea g e , e x c e lle n t shape C a ll K e lly venings 467-2458 II M o p e d C heap, O R S A L E 1979 P u ch M o p e d N e w p o rt lock an d h e lm e t included C a ll T e r r y >4-6092 a fte r 5. _ _ _ _ _ >80 Y A M A H A 400 XS special, c h e rry ■d. e n g in e g u a rd , 6,700 m ile s , $1,500 BO T o m , 467-2307 O P E D M O T C B E C A N E series, excel- nt condition, 150 m p g , lig h t blue, m ust •II T e r r y , 443-2219 hom e, 472-0245 off- CONDOS FOR SALE 1 E f T H E 1980 S U Z U K I m oped, e x c e lle n t co n d i­ tion, $300 C a ll e ve nings 444-2887 H O N D A CB400A, b ra n d new, less than 600 m ile s M u s t sell, $1300 480-0100, keep tr y in g . H O N D A CX500C cooled, 4100 m i r a c k , cas e s avers, b u rgundy . 478-6776. S haft d riv e , w a te r Im m a c u la te B ack rest, 1975 N O R T O N C o m m a n d e r 850, e le c tric s ta rt, n e w clu tch , re ce n t tune-up, 9700 m ile s $1500 Ask fo r S h erm a n . 454-6678 or 258-3499 1980 V E S P A 50 3000 m ile s , 75 m pg, runs th e re fo re e x c e lle n t M u s t sell fo r $400 C a ll 474-0105. lea v e town, 1981 H O N D A 400 Custom , n avy blue, 2000 m ile s , w a r r a n ty , $1500. C a ll e v e n ­ ings 836-1941. Bkycl*~For Sal* ___ S T U D E N T D IS C O U N T . M a n y used b i­ cycles C he c ke d by m e chanics. T e st rid e 10, 5, 3 o r 1 speed N e w bicycles, re p a irs South A u s tin B ic yc les , 2210 South 1st 10a m -5 pm . 444-4819 a fte r 5 p.m . 12-speed E X C E L L E N T C O N D IT IO N 24" S ch w in n V o y a g e u r M a n y e x tra s . C a ll a fte r 5:00 and w eekends, 476-9162. $375, n e g o tia b le . Stereo-For Sal* P IO N E E R R G d y n a m ic processor RG-1. E x c e lle n t shape $100 or best o ffe r. C a ll A sh ley , 477-9629 N E E D M O N E Y bad. U ltr a acoustic s p ea k ers , 125 w a tts $1000 value, m a k e o ffe r 477-0722 or 477-9908 N A K A M IC H I 550 AC DC cassette deck D a h lq u is t D Q -10 speakers D y n a co 400- w a tt a m p lifie r W o n d e rfu l stuff, gotta sen. E r i c 471-3164. P A N A S O N IC S T E R E O cassette deck, d olby, s till boxed, b ra n d new. $100 474- 9864 K E N W O O D R E C E I V E R and speakers, P E tu rn ta b le , $290 for set 458-2738 Musical-For Sale S T R A D IV A R IU S 3 B A C H y e a rs old, gold fin is h , e x c e lle n t con d i­ tion $400. 458-5707. tru m p e t. A C O U S T IC G U IT A R - A r i a P ro I I . Solid back, m in t c o n d itio n , w ith case. N e w $400, sell $200. Bob 472-0216. Photography-For Sal* R E V E R E 16m m m o v ie c a m e ra and case, k e y w in d ty p e w ith 25m m , 50m m , lenses, $425 Bell and H o w e ll 100m m slide p ro je c to r $65. 458-2738 Homes-For Sal* F U L L Y -re n o v a te c L aM B E A U TI F U L , b ric k h o m e in d e s ira b le ne ighborhood O w n e r c a n n o t fin a n c e , so low est p ric e asked . M u s t see 4613 Shoalw ood 447- 7903, 467-9354. U N I V E R S IT Y H IL L S . W e ll k ep t 4 BR house U n d e rp ric e d fo r q u ic k sale. T w o la rg e liv in g room , spacious fu ll bafhs, fa m ily ro o m , c e n tra l k itch e n . P r iv a c y insu red by tw o w a lle d patios. C a ll 928- 2516. ________ ___ (1 4 'x 7 0 ') 1979 m o b ile L A R G E hom e 3 B R 2BA, C A /C H , U T P a r k , M S s h u ttle A s su m e loan $158/m o. n e g o ti­ a b le e q u ity . 478-2329 nice 33rd and Guadalupe F ive elegant new townhom es. 7 room s, 3 baths, m aster suite w ith w e t bar. S ecurity sys­ te m s, p r iv a te c o u rty a rd s , double garages. Leon W h it­ ney, 345-0574. Owner Financing C ute, 2 b e d ro o m hom e w ith in 4 blocks of lot U T , good con d itio n V e ry S creen ed porch. $15,000 down w ith I I 3* a s s u m a b le m o rtg a g e . Som e te rm s nego­ tia b le la rg e C A L L D O U G R O S T E D T 458 8277 D a n ie l L. R oth an d A ssociates $388 to $445 Buy, Don't Rent! D e p e n d in g on y o u r dow n p a y m e n t, w e w ill ta ilo r our 12% n o n -q u a lify in g f i ­ n a n cin g to y o u r goals. R em o d e le d 3 bed­ ro o m h o m e w ith too m a n y e x tra s to list, so see it fa s t a t o n ly $46,500! H e n ry B e n ­ edict, b r o k e r , 478-5621 or 443-0536. FOR SALE Hom**-For Sal* N E A R U T In tr a m u r a l F ield s , 4-2, C A / C H , w a s h e r d ry e r, c e ilin g fans, p e rfe c t fo r s tudent ow n e r w ith re n te r frie n d s or I l l 4 sh are cost. S pecial F r a n k lin B lv d . $59,500 by o w n e r/a g e n t 451-6834 le a v e m essage fin a n c in g . Condos-For Sal* F O R S A L E student c o n d o m in iu m s 3000 G u a d a lu p e P la c e . F u rn is h e d $38,500, f i ­ nan cin g a v a ila b le . 478-1500 255-3705 W A L K T O U T-S p a c io u s floor plan s, se­ c u re d e le c tro n ic access. W a s h er d r y e r , fire p la c e , hot tub. D o n 't w a if. $58,500. 472-0903, 926-5767 R ic h a rd , b ro k e r. F O R S A L E , student condos, 1B R , 1BA, fu rn is h ed , 3000 C A /C H , c e ilin g fans, G u a d a lu p e P la c e $38,500, o w n e r fin a n c ­ ing. C a ll B ilH < 478-1500 _______ I bafh condo S P A R K L IN G 1 bedroom , M in u te s fr o m U T . B e a u tifu l pool, c lu b ­ fin a n c in g . house M a r y Stephenson, M a r s h and Box Co. 472-1000,477-1571 e x c e lle n t $48,000, _ N E W L IS T IN G . O ra n g e T re e 2 B R 2BA $128.900 E x c lu s iv e a g e n t Jean F r a n k lin . M a r s h an d Box Co 472-1000, 327-1165 nights. F O R S A L E student c o n d o m in iu m s. 3000 G u a d a lu p e P la c e F u rn is h e d $38,500, f i ­ nan cin g a v a ila b le . 478-1500. 255-3705. L E A S E / P U R C H A S E O nly 6 le ft L o c a te d a t 45th and Ave F T re eh o u s e Condom inium s-$1000 dow n p a y m e n t, $ 25 0/m onth. L a rg e , n e a r ly 700 I b edroom residences P r iv a c y sq. ft. y e t c o n ve n ien ce of c ity p a rk , m u s eu m , shopping c e n te r, and both u n iv e rs ity a n d c ity bus lines E x tr a s include c e ilin g fa n , m in i-b lin d s , and hot tub w ith o p tio n ­ a l m ic r o w a v e oven $45,0 00 /res id en c e . C a ll fo r m o re deta ils . 458-8277 D A N IE L L. ROTH & ASSOC. LOOKING FOR LOCATIONS? T r y the S tonesthrow C o n d o m in iu m s a t 2311 Nueces fo r a super, fu lly e q u ip p ed o n e b e d r o o m , 1 b a t h . F i n a n c i n g a v a ila b le . C a ll G in g e r A y d a m , 474-5659. Greenwood Towers N o n -e sca la tin g a s s u m p tio n 11%%. 3 yea r ro llo ve r. O w ner w ill c a rry second lein. L a rg e 1BR, 1BA, $53,950. B.J. Hopkins, o w n e r/b ro k e r 345-3832, 345-2100 W a lk to C lass 2 bedroom , 2 bath condo. Has an a ttra c tiv e assum ption and is priced at $75,000. It includes a ll appliances, and com plex includes pool, hot tub, covered p a rkin g , and se cu rity. C all L in d a Thom pson 346-4786. C h a p a rra l Realtors. Tickets-For Sale P O L I cTeT G C T G O 'S *’ Joe K in g ' C a r rasco. T h re e shows in one. F r o n t and b ack floor C ra ig 474-5837 H A L L A N D O ates tic ke ts . $40 flo o r, $30 a re n a 471-2528 H A L L A N D O ates tic k e ts : P hone 447-5119 Tick*ts-For Sal* H A L L A N D O ates P hone: 476-1499. fix F lo o r s eats. H A L L A N D O ates. F ro n t ro w , sec. 2. A ll R eas o n a b le prices. C a ll fro n t C r a ig 474-5837. _____________ ____ floor R I C K I E L E E Jones on M a r c h 19th. 2 ro w F cen ter seats Best o ffe r 472-3696. B U F F E T T IC K E T S : Second row c e n te r- a re n a level. U p to six. John 255-8004 P O L IC E , G O -G O 'S . T ir e d of looking fo r tic k e ts ? C all 447-9891 a n y tim e . F lo o r & ______ a r e n a a v a ila b le . Jose. _ _ _ S E E P IE R C E T e ag le W illia m s SW C B a s k e tb a ll T o u rn a m e n t 2 good s eats. 5 30/ea ch . C a ll J e ff 471-481 1, 474-98T8.____ A I R L I N E T IC K E T S discounted. D a lla s to Los Angeles ro u n d trip C a ll L e e 475- 7805 or 444-5318 SW C B A S K E T B A L L tic k e ts F o r T h u r s ­ d a y , F rid a y , S atu rd a y B est o ffe r, e x c e l­ le n t seats C a ll 458-1515 be tw ee n 12-9 p .m . ________________ Miscellaneou*-For Sal* S A L E ! I N D IA N je w e lry is 25% o ff! N e l­ son's G ifts , 4502 S. C ongress. 444-3814, 10-6, closed M o n d ay s. H A R D W O O D P IC N IC benches fo r $10 e a c h . C a ll 477-6025. F R E N C H BO O K S . L ite r a t u r e and e le ­ m e n ta ry /s e c o n d a ry te a c h e r's te s t. $25 fo r a ll $41 sold s e p a ra te ly 445-2379 a fte r 7 p .m . _________ ____________ N EG A TIVE ION g e n e ra to rs R e m o v e s sm o ke , dust, pollen, odors fr o m a ir C a ll 474-9029 for m o re in fo rm a tio n O L I V E T T I E L E C T R IC 9Ó-C ty p e w r ite r A u to m a tic backspace c o rre c tio n N o t p o rta b le H e a v y duty. R a r e ly used $450 n e g o tia b le 458-9415 a fte r 6 p .m C O F F E E T A B L E , desk c h a ir, c o rn e r desk, s tudent desk, bookcase, flo o r desk la m p , b riefca s e, suitcase, s tereo e q u ip ­ m e n t, stereo speakers, R e a lis tic m in i cas se tte re c o rd e r N o th in g o v e r $100 458 9415 a fte r 6 p .m . ____ G R E A T SEL E C T IO N B e a u tifu l in d o o r and outdoor plan ts. V e r y re as o n a b le Y 'a l l com e 1813 Cullen A v e . 459-6834 F O R S A L E M a h e r a ja h (w o o d e n ) s la ­ lo m ski, e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , only used tw ic e $150. C a ll Ted a t 327-6133 ____ V I P Apts. Plush 1 bedroom , 2 w a lk-in closets, lovely pool area, shut­ tle bus at door. F or a p p o in t­ m ent call 476-0363 or 474-8482. Unexpected, 1 Vacancy 1 bedroom a t 302 W. 38th. Gas and w a te r paid. Vi block to shuttle. 453-4002. $235-275 FOUNTAIN TERRACE APTS. fu rn is h ed , w a lk -in c lo ­ L a rg e 1BR a p t to w a ll c a rp e t, c a b le T V , sets, w a ll s w im m in g pool, w a te r an d gas paid W a lk in g d istan c e to U T No c h ild r e n / pets. 610 W . 30th A p t. 134, M a n a g e r S u m m e r ra te s a v a ila b le . 477-8858 472-3812 ABP L a rg e 1BR, C A /C H , carpet, dishw asher, disposal. W alk or sh u ttle to UT. 2212 San Gabriel $360/month W A L K TO UT OR ACC CAMPUS A v a ila b le now. F u rn is h e d 2 B R , 2B A . $425 plus e le c tr ic ity . Pool, la u n d ry room , p le n ty of p a rk in g space C re s R e a lto rs , 346-2193 or 478-7598 IB M S E L E C T R IC . C o rre c tin g c a r tr id g e rib b o n O ld e r m odel, n e w ly r e b u ilt. $475. 471-3164 E r ic . ________________________ W A L K TO c am p u s . C ity 8. s h u ttle bus. F u rn is h e d or u n fu rn is h e d . 2 B R -2 B A , e f­ fic ie n c y 1BR 472-2147. D I A M O N D E A R R IN G S U n iq u e desig n in 14k gold an d s ilv er $150. M u s t sell. 477-3921 evenings. Sa Tl R ID E R S A IL B O A R D . Good c o n d i­ tio n $625 477-1480. " I LOVE U T " K E E P S A K E S P.O. Box 14276, A u stin 78761 F o r price sam pler send self- addressed stam ped envelope. WE BUY GOLD S ilver, E state J e w e lry D iam onds and Coins H igh Prices Paid S A N D C LIFF S J E W E L R Y D obie M a ll 2nd L e v e l 2021 G u a d a lu p e FURNISHED APARTMENTS O L D M A IN A p a rtm e n ts , 25th and P e a r l. 1 B R , e ffic ie n c ie s . F o u r bloc ks U T , s h u t­ tle , cable, pool. 476-5109 2502 N U E C E S . B ro w n le e D o r m ito r y , close to c am pus $200 A B P 478-4038. W E S T C A M P U S Big 2B R in 4 -plex w ith fro m H o lly w o o d b a th . O n ly 4 blocks c a m p u s . C A /C H , q u ie t an d cozy C a ll Ken M c W illia m s 477-9937, 478-2410 a fte r 6 p .m . IN s m a ll c o m p le x C A /C H , c a rp e t, 1-1 la u n d ry room $265 plus E 441-9616 or 451-8178. E llio tt S y s t e m .________________ $230 P L U S E Q u ie t one b e d ro o m . W e a re looking fo r a quie t, conscientious, nonsm oking stu d e n t in te re s te d in a 1BR a p a r tm e n t n e a r sh u ttle C A C H , la u n ­ d ry , dead b o lts. 458-2488 L O V E L Y 1BR. Q u ie t, pool, c a b le , s h u ttle , c ity bus. $280 R e n t s u m m e r 479-0679. lo w e r Í R in S U B L E A S E 2 be d ro o m a p L 1 b a th . O n ly $117 fo r M a r c h . $350 plus E . 467-9478 in b e fo re 3-13. $50 B O N U S . L a r g e 1BR fu rn is h e d , one block IF sh u t­ tle s280/ m onth J an e 459-0822 evenings. If m o v e S T IL L L O O K IN G fo r th a t p e rfe c t loca lu x u ry e ffic ie n c ie s tion? B ra n d new fe a tu r in g C A /C H , a ll new b u ilt-in a p p li­ ances $385. H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s 477-9925 fo r N E W ~ f \ j R N I S H E cT lu x u ry c o n d o m in i­ lease now u n til S ep tem b e r u m C hoice U n iv e r s ity location, R io G ra n d e and W 28th, P a r a p e t 2BR 2BA, v e ry re a s o n a b le (5)2)476-4895, (817)767-4321. E F F I C I E N C Y N E A R c am p u s a v a ila b le til S a tu rd a y C a ll 473-8806 $210 plus E . FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS DO ALL THESE ADS DRIVE YOU BANANAS? WE RENT AUSTIN, FREE! apartments duplexes, & homes all over NORTH 4 5 8 -6 1 1 1 SOUTH 4 4 3 - 2 2 1 2 NORTHWEST 3 4 5 - 6 3 5 0 PAUL S. M EISLER PROPERTIES ★ C O ND O S* HOMES-DUPLEXES If you w a n t to liv e w ith in easy dis­ tance of cam p u s , c a ll the U T a re a s p ec ialis ts, $39,900 to $ 120.000 THE UT AREA SPECIAUST John B. Sanford, Inc. ft « a lt a n 4 5 1 -7 3 6 2 4 5 4 -6 6 3 3 ORANGE TREE N U E C E S P L A C E , T H E G A Z E B O , T H E T R E E H O U S E , H Y D E P A R K O A K S , P A R K E R S Q U A R E and H Y D E P A R K a re just a fe w of the U T condos w e h a ve a v a ila b le F O R S A L E and F O R L E A S E C a ll in fo rm a tio n about us these an d oth e rs . W e 'r e the condo spec ialis ts. fo r m o re L IN D A IN G R A M A N D ASSOC. ______________4 76-2673 ______________ SETON AVE. ORANGE TREE (2) Exclusive Agent WEST END Also Horn** and Dupl*x*s M A R S H A B O X C O . 472-1000 N IG H T S Jmii Franklin 327-1165 Virginia Fleming472-3120 ? I A p a r t m e n t , Selector® Fee Paid By Apartment Owner North 451-2223 8501-B Burnet Road m . Central 474-5357 3507 N Interregional South 441-2277 Kiverstde "Our Professional Service Also Includes Houses, Condominiums and Duplexes 4 7 5 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ I * * + * * * * * * * STUDENTS WELCOME ★ ★ ★ « * ¥ ★ ★ ★ APRIL 1 st Move-in 2 Bedroom - 1 Bath, South Location •365 I CAYWOOD LOCATORS O th e rs A v a ila b le * * * * 4501 Guadalupe Suit* 201 458-5301 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 113855840 1076% f in a n c in g I $34950 1 B E D R O O M S . L O F T S A N D 2 B E D R O O M S R A C Q U E T BALL. POOL AND JA C U Z Z I 5 M I N U T E S F R O M DO W N T O W N . M e rk r rrd B y ........ ............ PAUL S. MEISLER 1512:5 T 5 1-------- PROI ’EKTIES” 3 0 7 W e s t M . l . K . ( 1 b lo c k f r o m c a m p u i l 4 7 9 - 6 6 1 8 W e've Done Your Homework S e r v i c i n g a l l o f A u s t i n s p e c i a l i z i n g in c a m p u s a n d I 7 s h u t t l e a r e a s . W a l k o v e r o r c a l l b e fo r e y o u r p a r e n t s c o m e to m a k e a p r e v i e w i n g a p p o i n t m e n t . 4 7 9 - 6 6 1 8 WK^cmpme Cvndwitniwh w B r WW r It's an investment for the future Before you invest in a condominium, visit Pecan Square. After you compare quality, location, and cost, you’ll be glad you looked at Pecan Square Located at 2906 West Ave • 2 bedrooms available • 6 blocks north of UT • Quiet neighborhood • Professionally decorated • Fireplace k microwave • Swimming pool • 52” ceiling fans ---------------------- x ------------------------------ J ta m S q u a ir Model Opca 114 Dally or by appointment contact M a 4 a U M ram * Aaooc 1306 Nuece* . «762873_________ UT AREA — M O V E IN TODAY — Timberwood 478-1376 Hyde Park 458-2096 2207 Leon 478-1781 Thunderbird 458-3607 Mark II 451-2621 If f . Furnished $275 plus E 1 BR Furnished $250 plus E 2 BR Furnished $430 plus E 1 BR Furnished $280 plus E 2 BR Furnished $360 plus E Professionally Managed By Davis & Associates * ESTRADA J * * * Preleasing fo r S u m m e r * 1, 2 & 3 bedrooms * * * * * * * * * * * Special Summer Rates $235-475 On Shuttle 442-6668 1801 S. Lakeshore HARDWOOD FLOORS O n« b # d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts w it h a classy d iffe re n c e M in u te s fro m SR s h u ttle . $ 2 3 9 plu* E 2 6 0 6 Wilton If no answer 4 4 3 -8 3 6 6 4 7 7 -4 5 3 9 T e r r ill H ill Townhomes 2 B R / l j B A in B e a u tifu lly d esigned s m a ll new c o m p le x 1 c a r g a ra g e , u p ­ s ta irs patio, w a s h e r /d r y e r connections, $425 d ish w a s h er, disp osal, m o n th . fir e p la c e H a rriso n Pearson Assoc. 305 W. 6th, 472-6201 Fleur de Lis Apts. 404 E . 30th in ft. la rg e 2B R , 2BA O v e r 1450 sq. a p a r tm e n t, p re v io u s ly o w n e r's a p a r t ­ m e n t Also in clu d e d : tw o liv in g a reas, one study, la rg e k itch e n w ith s e lf-c le a n ­ ing oven, d is h w a s h er Cable, w a te r , gas paid S 700/m onth W ill r e q u ire a t least 6 m onths lease b eginning M a r c h 1. If in­ te re s te d call C liff M u s g ro v e , ow ner agent, 476-7011 or 263-5455 P r im e W e s t A u s tin E ffic ie n c y Located 1111 W. 10th. $275/ m onth, gas and w a te r paid. Call Pat Swantner, 478-5621, 443-8668. T a r r y t o w n C ondos 2-2/pool, New O rleans atm os­ phere. Close to park, just off M opac at E n fie ld . 1514 Forest T r. $450-465/month. Call Kay or B ill 443-4796, 442-3640, or 441-1913. A v a ila b le Now Doyle W ilson N E A R S H U T T L E bus, 9th an d WÜñficT E x c e p tio n a b ly nice IB R 's s ta rtin g $295 plus b ills , lease 477-4609 N E W L Y R E F I N I S H E D la rg e IB R apt fo r m a le students in best loca tio n w est of U T cam p u s . CA C H , c a rp e te d , A B P S385 H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s 477-9925 R O S E G A L E A R E A near p a rk p o o l/te n - in q u ie t c o m p le x F u lly nis C le a n 1-1 c a rp e te d , d ra fte d C A /C H a p p lia n c e s W a te r , gas, c a b le paid N o c h ild r e n / pels $255 A v a ila b le A p ril 1st. 452-3834. E F F I C I E N C Y , E R M S s h u ttle , ~*225 plus e le c tr ic ity 8 0 8 W m flo C a ll 480 9732 S E C L U D E D A N D p r iv a te 2 B R in s m a ll la u n d ry $295 plus E Th e c o m p le x Pool E llio tt S ystem 443-9074 MUSICAL IN STR U C TIO N E X P E R l E N C E D P I A N O G U I T A R te a c h e r. B e g in n e rs -a d v a n c e d U T d e ­ g re e A fte r I p m 459 «082, 451-0053 P IA N O L E S S O N S E ve n in g s . Reason a b le r a te s . C a ll 479-6012. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ &uj)ar Fjd. die. M a n d o lin , a n d D obro T a u g h t by na tio n a l D o b ro c h am p io n , D a n H u c k a b e e 445-5219 When you need a roommate in a hurry call the profeteionaU 4 * 2 - 0 4 3 0 454-3751 mm VR oom m ot* Inc. F A C U L T Y - G R A D S : U n iq u e g u e s t ro o m s N o rth e a s t (u n fu r n is h e d ) , N o r t h ­ w e s t ( f u r n is h e d ) . S h a re e x p e n s e s , a m e n itie s . N o n - s m o k in g f a m ily a tm o s ­ p h e re s 346-4513 ( p m ) . S H A R E S P A C IO U S hou se in N o r th A u s ­ tin . P r iv a t e b a th b e d ro o m M a le g r a d u ­ a te /s e n io r , no p e ts $200 p lu s V i b ills . 837-3078, 476-9269 _______ r o o m ­ N E E D F E M A L E n o n s m o k in g m a te L a r g e 2-2 w e s t c a m p u s a p t $212 50 p lu s Vj b ills P o o l. A n y t im e 479- 0975 R O O M M A T E N E T W O R K . " Y o u r B e st t h a t A lt e r n a t iv e . " w o n 't w a s te y o u r t im e . 473-2800. I n d iv id u a l s e rv ic e R O O M M A T E W A N T E D f o r la rg e 3B R . 2 B A co n d o on la k e P o o l, c a b le . $200 p lu s u t ilit ie s 443-4300. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D ! S h a re la rg e tw o b e d ro o m h o u se n e a r c a m p u s Y a r d , f ir e p la c e , 2 b a th . *250 m o n th C a ll E d 467-9328 o r 451-7373. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to s h a re lo v e ly 2 B R H y d e P a r k house, fe n c e d y a r d . $210, a v a ila b le 3*1. 458-4079. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d to s h a re tw o b e d ro o m a p a r t m e n t on SR s h u ttle $147.50 p lu s 1 2 u t ilit ie s . 441-3683 T W O S E E K I N G t h i r d to s h a re la r g e 4-2 fu r n is h e d h o m e . W / D , g a r a g e , b ig y a rd , q u ie t, c le a n N o c ig a r e t t e s o r p e ts $180 837-3916 e v e n in g s 1 M M E D I A T E L Y . R E S P O N S I B L E p e r ­ son f o r 2-1 h o u se f o u r m ile s s o u th M u s t lik e d o g s $150 445-2411, k e e p t r y in g . S H A R E 2-2 a p a r t m e n t o ff R iv e r s id e $162 50 p lu s ’ 2 E . C a ll L u k e , 443-9684 C h a r lo tte , 471-4311. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E n e e d e d f o r h u g e f u r n is h e d 2 B R 1B A W 'D $130 p lu s 2 b ills A v a ila b le M a r c h I C a ll A llis o n , C a th y , 441-7522. ___________________ F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E w a n te d . 2 B R , p ets, $125, Vj b ills , n o r th M o r n in g o r la te e v e n in g c a ll L y n n , 458-1635. W A N T E D F E M A L E r o o m m a te to s h a re m y th r e e b e d ro o m d u p le x L o c a te d one b lo c k o ff O lt o r f, f o u r b lo c k s f r o m SR a nd RC s h u ttle A v a ila b le M a r c h I. $125 p lu s VS b ills . C a ll L is a , 442-2543. L I B E R A L , P R O F E S S IO N A L w o m a n w it h y o u n g c h ild w a n ts w o m a n (25-37) to s h a re n o r th 3 B R to w n h o u s e . $150 p lu s ) E . P o o l, te n n is . 346-2015 e v e n in g s . H O U S E M A T E M / F s h a re 3 B R , 2 B A N o rth A u s tin . N o t on a n y b us ro u te , non- s m o k e r. $150 p lu s V i b ills . 255-1974. S T U D E N T N E E D E D to s h a re 3 B R , 2 B A house, C R $150/ m o n th p lu s 1 i u t i lit ie s C a li J o h n o r V a n c e 452-2071. fu r n is h e d s h u ttle , F E M A L E N E E D to s h a r e 2-1. C lo se to CR o r IF s h u ttle C a ll 451-7863 a ft e r 6 00 N o n s m o k e r. ____________ 2 N O N S M O K IN G r o o m m a te s n e e de d to s h a re 2 b e d ro o m a p t. F ir s t m o n th s r e n t _______________ fre e . 467-9478. ro o m , b a th F E M A L E : O W N f u r ­ n is h e d N W co n d o . P o o l, c a b le , W D $250 p lu s 1 1 e le c t r ic . K im 346-2676 a ft e r 6 p m . _________________ in M A L E R O O M M A T E m e n t ro u te tw o b lo c k s . 476-7012. to s h a re a p a r t in w e s t c a m p u s a re a . W C b us f e m a le C O N S E R V A T Í V E C H R IS T IA N ro o m m a te . 3 B R house. $ 1 3 0 /m o n th , j b ills . 926-9592 b e fo re 10 a m a ft e r 10 p.m.__________________________ _ _ _ H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D ( p r e f e r a b ly f e m a le ) to s h a re 4 B R hou se Y a r d p oo l, w a s h e r / d r y e r , e tc P le a s e c a ll 928-3775. R E N T N O W B e a u tifu l s p a c io u s s u n n y 2 B R d u p le x . F ir e p la c e , c e n t r a l a ir , s u n ­ r o o m m a t e n e e d e d u n t il ro o f. F e m a le s u m m e r $190 p lu s 2 b ills th e n h o u se is y o u r s . O n ly 5 m in w a lk to c a m p u s . C a ll 835-9623 a ft e r 5 p .m . S H A R E H U G E in e x p e n s iv e house, c o -o p liv in g s ty le W a lk to c a m ­ p us, a d u lts p r e fe r r e d . 471-4626, 479-0534. f r ie n d ly B A R T O N H I L L S ! Y o u n g m a le p r o fe s ­ s io n a l w a n ts M / F r o o m m a te . N ic e 3B R , 2 b ills , liv e w it h , $175 p lu s e a s y o w n e d b y m y s e lf . B illy 444-U 76, 454- 9578 to N IC E T W O b e d ro o m , 1 V j b a th a p t. n o r th w e s t a re a $205 p lu s E . N o d e p o s it or le a se 345-6760 S U P E R A P A R T M E N T p o o ls id e , R iv e r- s io e , s h u ttle b us o u ts id e $131 m o n th ly M a le . C a ll C r a ig 476-3393 o r B ra d 444- 5974 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D . M a r c h 23 t h r o u g h M a y 23 o n ly . $ H 7 /m o n th , b ills . O w n ro o m , s h u ttle 472-5573. 1 O R 2 r o o m m a te s n e e de d for n i l e 4 bed ro o m h o u se in N o rth ' A u s tin . C a ll 458- 5707. M A L E H O U S E M A T E n e e d e d . N o n - s m o k e r, n e a r s h u ttle D a ily 459-2121 e x t 6312, e v e n in g s 458-1088 PUBLIC NOTICES NOTICE OF INTENTION TO INCORPORATE N O T IC E is h e re b y g iv e n th a t A uto R e al ty, w hose p rin c ip a l business o ffic e is at 299 N o r t h H ig h w a y 3, L e a g u e C ity , G a lv e s to n C o u n ty, T e x a s , inte n d s on or before F e b r u a r y 1, 1982, to b e co m e in ­ f ir m c o rp o ra te d w ith o u t a c h an g e of n a m e D a te d J a n u a ry 29, 1982 A V E N U E A 2-1. G ood c o n d itio n . A ll a p p lia n c e s . in N E A R S H U T T L E , q u ie t e ff ic ie n c y H y d e P a r k a re a A p p lia n c e s $185 p lu s E J a c k 472-2277, W e s tw o rld R e a l E s ­ ta te . S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E . L e a s e n o w f o r A p r il 1. N e w 2-2. $425. C a ll C a y w o o d L o ­ c a to rs , 458-5301. D U P L E X C O N D O M IN IU M t o r le a se . 2- I , 6 m o n th s o ld , n o r th - M c K ie C o ve. $425 453-8625, 452-1891 S P A C IO U S . C O N T E M P O R A R Y , 2 -s to ry d u p le x n e a r s h u ttle bus, s o u th $440 m o n th . 474-2522. 2 B E D R O O M , g as sto v e , a n d h e a t p a id A v a ila b le now , 3 m o n th le a se . $265 345- 5268 UNFURNISHED HOUSES A V A I L A B L E N O W tw o a n d th r e e b e d ­ ro o m o ld e r h o m e s, a p a r t m e n t s C a ll n ow fo r 24 nou r in f o r m a t io n . 452-5979. E N F I E L D A R E A . N e a r s h u ttle , 3-2, g a ­ ra g e , 2100 N e w fie ld $5 7 5 / m o n th p lu s d e ­ p o s it 479-0008, d a y s , 327-3606 n ig h ts a nd w e e k e n d s ___________ R E M O D E L E D 2 B R , 4608 S h o a lw o o d $ 4 3 5 /m o n th . N o k id s , no p e ts D r iv e b y. C a ll Sue 4 4 5 - 0 5 5 9 . ____________ 3 B R , 2 B A , 5300 b lo c k b e tw e e n B u r n e t a n d N . L a m a r Q u ie t n e ig h b o rh o o d , fe n c e d y a r d $ 4 5 0 /m o n th . A v a ila b le 3-1- 82 C a ll 459-8492. ROOM AND BOARD U N E C H A M B R E p o u r d e u x a lo u e r a L a M a is o n F ra n c a is e T e l 478-6586. N E W G U I L D C o-op h as m a le a n d f e m a le v a c a n c ie s . N ic e o ld h o u se tw o b lo c k s f r o m c a m p u s C a ll us a t 472-0352, o r s to p b y 510 W 23rd S tr e e t b y N u e c e s . F E M A L E R O O M /B O A R D in e x c h a n g e f o r lig h t h o u s e w o rk . M u s t h a v e o w n t r a n s p o r t a t io n N o rth a re a 835-5688 V A C A N C Y A T V -W e a re f o r so m e o n e to f i l l one v a c a n c y In a s e m i­ v e g g ie c o o p e r a tiv e h o u se 6 blo< ks f r o m c a m p u s . P e ts o k 474-7767. lo o k in g ROOMS C O -E D D O R M I b lo c k f r o m c a m p u s . P r iv a t e a n d s h a re d ro o m s a v a ila b le im ­ m e d ia t e ly a n d f o r s p r in g 474-6905 C O N S ID E R A T E P E O P L E w a n te d s h a re S te v e a t 479-0681. to la rg e hou se n e a r c a m p u s . C a ll S T I L L L O O K IN G f o r t h a t p e r fe c t lo c a - 'lo n '5 T h e n e w m a n a g e m e n t o f R io A r m s is n o w le a s in g th e f in e s t in la rg e p r iv a t e ro o m s f o r m e n C A C H , A B P . $195. H o w e ll P ro p e rtie s 477 9925 S IN G L E S , D O U B L E S o n e b lo c k o ff f o r c a m p u s s p r in g C a ll E r ic 480-0989 Im m e d ia t e ly A v a ila b le PERSONAL HOLLY I love you Mike P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y ? F re e p r e g ­ n a n c y te s tin g a n d r e f e r r a ls . 474-9930. INSTEAD OF abortion, c a ll 454-6127. H E L L O , K A Y ! G u e s s w h o ? I 'm b a c k . L o v e , Z a h ib . _____________ S U P P O R T G R O U P fo r a d o p te e s 18 o r o v e r c o n s id e rin g s e a rc h f o r b io lo g ic a l p a r e n ts I f in te r e s te d c a ll M H M R 447- 2055 f o r in f o r m a t io n . B e g in s M a r c h 25. WANTED WE W A N T YOUR B IK E S ! W e b u y , r e p a ir , s e ll a n d t r a d e b ic y c le s BOB'S B I K E AN D K E Y W e s tw o o d S h o p p in g C e n te r 5413 N. L a m a r 327-4034 452-9777 F A S T C A S H . W e b u y o r lo a n on g o ld a n d s ilv e r in a n y f o r m N o r t h . 454-0459, 5134 B u r n e t R o ad S o u th 892-0019, 5195 290 W e st. P A R E N T S ' N IG H T O u t $ 50 p e r h o u r c h ild c a r e F r id a y n ig h t, 6 p m - llp m , U T f a m ilie s . C o o p e ra tiv e a r r a n g e m e n t s a v a ila b le 472-2168 TUTORING Im p r o v e y o u r E N G L IS H T U T O R IN G . g ra d e s w ith the assistan c e of a c o lle g e E n g lis h te a c h e r w ho has a P h D and 23 y e a rs of te a c h in g e x p e rie n c e w ith a spe­ c ia lty in com position 479-8909 G R É C L A S S E S fo r A p r il e x a m b e g in ­ le ft F o r m e r ning soon A fe w places R A S S L in s tru c to r 443-9354 TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING The C om plete P rofessional FULLTIME TYPING SERVICE 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 2 7 0 7 HEMPHILL PK. P le n ty o f P a rk in g T M X J . I n c . T y p i n g f * n r k « 1 00 5 E. St. Elmo Rd. P k k u p /d « liv « ry pom»» 5 0 copy r««um « p o ckaa* $ 1 2 -0 0 T«rm papar» T h « « i Ru»h service • Oi»»«rtart»m • Tachnkal typ in g • A» lo w a * $1 2 5 /p a g e 443-4433 M E L I N D A ' S T Y P I N G SE RVIC E 95‘ p er page 15 years experience E x c e lle n c e , s ty le , q u a lit y g u a ra n te e d 458-2312 ( A n y tim e ) L E G A L A N D K a th e 's Q u ic k -T y p e e n c e p r o f e s s io n a l t y p i n g 15 y e a r s e x p e r i­ I B M 111. 443-6488. S o u th A u s tim N E E D A f a s t a c c u r a te ty p is t? I h a v e a B A in E n g lis h , a c o r r e c t in g S e le c tr ic a n d 12 y e a r s s e c r e ta r ia l e x p e rie n c e C a ll A n n a t 447-5069, 8-6. W O O D S T Y P I N G S e rv ic e - w h e n y o u w a n t it d on e r ig h t . 472-6302, 2200 G u a d a ­ lu p e , sid e e n tra n c e . __ T Y P I N G - C O R R E C T I N G S e l e c t r ic , o v e r n ig h t s e rv ic e , p ic k -u p a v a ila b le t i l l 11:50 p .m E x p e rie n c e d , p r o fe s s io n a l. _ P a tty , 345-4269 t i l l m id n ig h t. W O R D P R O C E S S IN G th e s e s , e tc 1 fre e p a g e o f ty p in g w it h a m i n i ­ m u m o f 10 p a g e s M e r r i- M a g In c . 837- 5184 re p o rts , A c c u r a t e P R O F E S S IO N A L s e rv ic e , T h e s e s , d is s e r ta tio n s , p ro fe s s io n a l re p o r ts , e tc . B a r b a r a T u llo s , 453-5124. T Y P IS T t u r n a ro u n d . fa s t P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P I N G d o n e in m y h o m e L e g a l o r t e r m p a p e rs . S l/p a g e . M in im u m - 5 p a g e s. D a n a , e v e n in g s 288- 1 1 0 8 . _______ E X C E L L E N T T Y P I N G - r e p o r t s , d is s e r ­ ta tio n s , re s u m e s , e tc . C o r r e c t in g S e le c ­ t r ic . 836-0721. sure w e DO type FRESHMAN THEMES why not stort out wilk jood frodas 2 70 7 Hemphill Ju»l North of 27th ot Guodaiupe 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 472 -7 6 7 7 T H E S E S A N D te r m p a p ers b y c a r e fu l, ty p is t w ith P h D ., m a n y e x p e rie n c e d y e a rs of c o lle g e E n g lis h te a c h in g and a n $1.2 5 /p a g e up. e le c tro n ic 4 7 9 - 8 9 0 9 . ____________________________ ty p e w r ite r ty p in g . I N T E U J G E Ñ T , A C C U R A T E lite r a c y ; c u s ­ R e ports , re su m e s. H ig h to m e r m is s p e llin g s c o rre c te d . Rush s e r ­ v ic e a v a ila b le . T u to rin g . C r e a tiv e S e r v i­ ces, 2420 G u a d a lu p e , 478-3633 T A M A R A 'S T Y P I N G S e rv ic e , É . R iv e r ­ s ide a re a 443-9570 ’ L I N D A S T Y P I N G , south. F a s t, e f f i ­ c ie n t, and in e x p e n siv e . 442-7465 a fte r 5 p .m . _ ty p in g . A C C U R A T E P R O F E S S IO N A L S l/p a g e , m ost cases. C a m p u s p ick u p , d e liv e r y . O v e rn ig h t s e rv ic e . S e le c tric . J a n ie , 250-9435. T y p I Ñ G f R E S E A R C H papers, theses, C o rre c tin g d iss e rta tio n s, s ta tis tic a l S e le c tric , p ic a /e lite . W ill proof, e x p e r i­ enced, re a s o n a b le 4 4 1 -1 8 9 3 .____________ P D Q T Y P I N G S e rv ic e of A u s tin . 1802 L a v a c a . P rofe ss io n al, a c c u r a te ty p in g . T im e ly rush w o rk a v a ila b le . 474-2198. i 95 /P A G E . D o u b le spaced. 13 y e a rs e x ­ p e rie n c e D is s e rta tio n s , theses also. C a ll D onna 441-9245 noon-6 p m . TECHNICAL TY PIN G s e rv ic e . D is s e r ­ ta tio n s , theses, speeches m a n u s c rip ts T h e s e rv ic e you can a ffo rd C a ll 836- 3902. RESUMES w ith or w ith o u t piciure* J im R ains, O w n e r Susan R a in s, O w n e r TYPING T H E T Y P IS T -P r o fe s s io n a l ty p in g , s a tis ­ fa c tio n g u a ra n te e d C a m p u s d e liv e r y IB M C o rre c tin g S e le c tric . a n d pick up H e le n 836-356? 2 7 0 7 H em p hill Park Just North of 2 7 th a t G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 6 7 7 HELP WANTED ■ HELP WANTED ■ HELP WANTED GRADUATING??? Computer Science/Math/Science or Accounting Majors C om puter Language Research, Inc., (F a s t-T a x ) is the in d u stry leader in the de­ velopm ent, m a rk e tin g , and support of sophisticated com puterized income tax planning and p re p a ra tio n system s. We a re a young, d yn am ic, $50 m illio n m u lti­ national fir m headquartered in the N orth D allas suburb of C a rro llto n . We now have en try-le ve l care er op po rtu nitie s fo r: APPLICATIONS PROGRAMMERS 'F in a n c ia l Applications using PL/1 'H e a v y user interface TAX ACCOUNTANTS 'T a x law research, planning and tax compliance 'C lie n t problem definition and solutions 'H e a v y DP interface C om puter Language Research, Inc. offers not only co m p e titive sa la ry and bene­ fits, but an o p p o rtu n ity to learn and m ove up in a fa st tra ck com pany Our re p re ­ sentative w ill be on cam pus conducting personal in te rvie w s one day only on M a rch 10. SIGN UP AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE NOW! YOU WILL BE PLEASANTLY SURPRISED AT WHAT YOU FIND R s s n f t x Equal O p p o rtu n ity Im ploytM M, f SERVICES HELP WANTED TRAFFIC TICKETS Affordable Professional Defense for your Traffic Violations ATTORNEY: Edith L. James Call 477-8657 Le ya/ Fees: 155 per city ticket ...185 DPS 3 0 6 E. n t h St. Suite L-7 Austin, TX 78701 PHOTOS for PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 minute service MON-FRI 10-6 SAT 10-2 477-5555 THE THIRD EYE 2530 GUADALUPE P R O B L E M P R E G N A N C Y C O U N S E L IN G , R E F E R R A L S & F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T IN G Texas Problem Pregnancy 507 Pow ell St M-F, 7:30-5:30 474-9930 DON' T L E A V E TOWN! F R E E P R E G N A N C Y T E S T S A N D R E F E R R A L S TO AUS TI N R E S O U R C E S W o m e n 's Referral Center 603 W. 13th No 210 476-6878 M S Shuttle N E E D C R ED IT Acquire M astercard or Visa even If you have bad credit, no credit, divorced, or bankrupt. M ust be 18. Send self-ad­ dressed, stamped envelope to A m erican Credit Services, 3202 West Anderson Lane, Suite 203. Drop-in Counseling Service New for South Austin 7 p.m .-9 p m. T hursdays P re sb y te ria n Church 1314 E Oltorf (south of the river, just west of IH35). Psychotherapy and pastoral counseling available. F a ith at F o r more i n f o r m a t i o n c a l l United Campus M in istry of Austin 478-5693 South Austin's N E W " P a r e n t s ' N igh t O u t " Co-op Open 6:30-11 p.m. F rid a ys at F a ith Presbyterian Church 1314 E . Oltorf (south of the river, just west of IH35) Call United Campus M in istry of Austin, 478-5693, for details. J E N N I N G S ' M O V IN G and Hauling. De­ pendable personal service, large or small jobs 7 days/week 442-6181. A R T 'S M O V IN G and Hauling: any area 24 hours, 7 days. 447-9384, 442-0194. C A R IN shop? Rent one from AA Rent A Car. 201 E . 2nd 478-8251. 8-6 Monday- Friday, 9-3 Saturday. HAN D W R IT IN G A N A L Y Z É D t o i d e n* i - fy personality traits and career apti­ tudes B y appointment, 8:00 a.m.-noon. 2420 Guadalupe. P R IV A T E M A IL B O X E S for rent U ni­ versity Mailbox Rentals. 504 W. 24th, or call 477-1915. W O R D - P O W E R : Resum e's custom de­ signed for m aximum results Call Av- erett at Word-Management Services 7am-7pm M onday-Sunday: 444-8425. A L T E R A T IO N S C L O T H E S don't fit you right? Call M rs. B., she alters to please. 477-7294, one day service A N N O U N C IN G DR Scott's exclusive remedy for shyness, boastfulness, ner­ vousness, m elancholia, hysteria, home­ work nausea, and other forms of insani­ ty through dream analysis, hypnosis, and philosophical reorientation 478- 8811. M A N IC U R E S B Y V ¡ ck 1. 47Í9705. LOST & FOUND T O Y P O O D L E , female, nearly blind. Needs medication. M issing from west campus since Ja n 7 Answers to Wibbet. Please call 447-2446, keep trying. LO ST B L A C K Lab/Shep puppy near 45th/Duval Answers to "Stoney " About 3 mo. old. Call 467-0108 Rew ard HELP WANTED L IK E TO T A LK ON T H E P H O N E ? Positions open im m ediately for tele­ phone work, both day and nite shifts ivailable. S a la ry dependent on experi- snce. For interview appointment call U1-9621 M onday-Friday 1-4 p.m. Resident A ssistant Dobie Center Applications are now avail- ible for Resident A ssista n t >ositions for the 1982-83 school tear. A p p lica tion s m ay be >icked up at the front desk ind m ust be returned no later han M a r c h 12 by 5 p.m. Pelican's Wharf We are now accepting appli­ cations for part tim e evening help. No experience neces­ sary. A p p ly in person only. 9- 11 a.m. 425 W. Riverside. No phone calls, please. E .O .E. Banker's Hours P e lic a n 's W h a rf is now ac­ cepting app lications for part tim e m o rn in g food prep help. A p p ly in person only. 9-11 a.m. 425 W. Riversid e. No phone calls, please. E .O .E . Jonah's R estaurant Austin's newest and finest seafood res­ taurant is open W e have a few jobs still available in the following positions: *door hostperson - lunch and dinner •cocktail person - dinner “dishwashers - lunch and dinner Apply in person at 3407 Greystone at Mo- Pac, M onday-Friday between 3 and 5 p.m. “ R E C E P T IO N IS T PART-TIM E E M P L O Y M E N T AT ROLM-OSD IN AUSTIN R O L M is a rap id ly grow ing high technology com pany that has achieved outstanding suc­ cess by a p p lyin g com puter technology to telecom m unica­ tions and advanced office s y s ­ tem s products. c o m p u te riz e d You will be trained to use R O L M the phone system . D uties will in­ clude routing incom ing calls, handling m ail and m essages, greeting visitors, and light typing. A pleasant personality and neat appearance are re­ quired. A junior or above, m a ­ joring in engineering, techni­ cal writing, or m arke tin g is preferred. R O L M is an equal opportu­ nity em ployer. We offer ca­ reer opportunities in a very people oriented com pany. Call (512) 479-5000 A sk for Personnel R O L M O S D 4100 E d Bluestein Blvd. Austin, T e xa s 78721 A d m issio n s Inform ation Delegates Positions A vailable 15 hours/week. M inim um qualifica­ tions 2.5 cum ulative G P A , 2 semesters residence at UT Austin. For further in­ formation call or come by the adm is­ sions office M ain Bldg. Room 13B 471- 1711 ext 325 or 326 Deadline 5 p.m. Thursday M arch 11. R E S E A R C H S U B J E C T S needed to rate speech samples for intel­ ligibility. P riv a te research company. S3.35/hour plus paid holidays and atten­ dance bonus Work 12 hours/week M-W- F. 8am-12 noon or l-5pm (Schedule not flexible.) Perm anent position. Must be native English speaking and have good hearing. D Y N A S T A T IN C 2704 Rio G ran de Suite 4 476 4797 ROOM C L E R K S applications taken for two part tim e shifts from 2 :3 0 p.m. to 9 p m daily F irs t shifts, M W F and Sun-26 hours, and TT and Sat-19 hours, alter­ nating weekly. Consider training per­ sons with previous business experience at m inimum wage. M ust be available thru spring and sum m er terms Apply in person, West W inds Motel. Airport Blvd. and IH 35. T O K Y O S T E A K House is taking appli­ cations for waitpersons and buspersons. Call 453-7482 after 2:30 prn. P A T M A G E E 'S now accepting applica­ tions for full-time salespeople with R E ­ T A IL C L O T H IN G S A L E S experience for their newest location in Austin's High­ land M all. 451-4592. _____ E N G I N E E R I N G stu­ E L E C T R IC A L dents: slot for part tim e technician. Con­ tact Jim Baines, 451-6427, Sm ith securi­ ty-________________________________________ W E E K E N D D IS P A T C H E R S needed, no experience necessary Apply Sm ith Se­ curity, 4910 Burnet Road. _____ H E L P W A N T E D Posse D rive Through 701 W. 24th. Apply in person only. See Dick. B R O W N BA G E X P R E S S delivery lunch service needs delivery person with econ­ omy car during lunch hours. Call 477- 3328 M A IN T E N A N C E M A N needed at Dobie Twin Screens. Involves maintenance, carpet cleaning and light carpentry. 25- 35 hours a week. Start at $3.50/hour. Please apply in person. M A JO R N IG H T C L U B has openings for bartenders, waitresses, barbacks, door and security personnel Em ploym ent is seasonal Experience necessary. Call 477-0461 M onday-Friday for an appoint- ment. S T A R T E A R N IN G money for summer now! Work 20-30 hours a week, salary plus commission Flexib le hours. Call 473-2025 MxTIF R IV E R S ID E D rive M agic Time M achine Positions open for bartender, assistant food servers and beverage ____ __ servers. Apply in person only. ____ P A R T T IM E delivery people needed Í-2 days every other week 3-6 hours/day. Larg e car or truck needed. The Austin Chronicle, M argaret or Jam es. Call 473- 8995 for information. IN T E R N U P P E R D IV IS IO N business m ajor with heavy concentration in eco­ nomics and business w ill be trained to provide technical assistance to small businesses. For further information con­ tact: Mexican A m erican Research Cen­ ter, 2525 Wallingwood Suite 115, Austin, T X 78746. Bilingual preferred 20 P E O P L E needed for part time tele­ phone sales (5 30-9 p.m .). Experience not necessary C lear speaking voice only requirement Cash paid weekly. Apply at R & B Corporate Park, 6448 Highway 290E, Suite B112, or call 453- 0039 DON T W A IT Now's the time This is an opportunity to grab now If you have the initiative ambition, energy, and are looking tor a challenge call 443-2839 P A R T T IM E waitpersons Apply in per­ son 2-4 p m only, M onday-Friday Ask for Price SchoU s Beer Garten, 1607 San Jacinto. No phone calls please. TYPING TYPING MASTER TYPIST, INC. THE CO M PUTERIZED TYPING SERVICE We do RUSH work! SAME DAY & ONE DAY SERVICE Grad Students Save Yourself Headaches USE W ORD PRO CESSIN G on your Dissertations, Theses, PRs, & Law Briefs Dobie Mall N. 36 2021 G uadalupe St. 472-0293 Free Parking TUTORING ■ M A T H TUTOR nrionced, professional tutors can hslp you moho better dee. Struggling ft Frustratsd on teetef TUTORING________ Call or coma by for appointment. M-301 M-302 M-316k M-316L M-603a M-603b M-304a M-305g M-808a M-808b M-362k M-311 M-608*a M-608eb M-325 M 427K4 ACC-311 ACC-312 STAT-309 i't puf this off until tho night bofors exam. Too late then. • Clooe to UT campus • Very reasonable rates • Lots of patience ao high school comes, SAT, GRE, and LSAT Review Pat Lut«y L f . g * » * VA approved 8 8 8 8 Wednesday, March 3, 1982 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 13 State hopes Amdro will deter fire ants By RICHARD GOLDSMITH Daily Texan Staff Statewide distribution of the pesticide Amdro will begin this spring to control imported fire ants, although proponents and opponents of the program agree the poison will not stop the spread of the ants. Seventy-five of the 107 Texas counties infested with fire ants, including Travis County, met the Monday deadline to request stocks of the state and federally subsidized poison from the state Agriculture Department, said Mark Trostle, state import­ ed fire ant specialist. Distribution should begin by April 1. Al­ though the state will not have enough funds to meet all the requests, Trostle said Amdro will be distributed “ fairly.” The state never expected to be able to meet all the requests, he said. Amdro is a dry granular material composed of the toxicant corn grit. Soybean oil is added as an attractant. Imported fire ants are more aggressive than native species and are a nuisance at parks and to farmers and ranchers, said David Ivie, director of the Agriculture and Environmental Sci­ ences Division. The ants have infested about a third of the state and can spread up to 30 miles a year following the mating flight of the queen. A rough outline of their infestation runs on a line from Texar­ kana west to Denton, from there southwest past Kerrville to an area west of San Antonio, and then back to the southeast to Corpus Christi. The fire ants were accidentally imported from South Ameri­ ca about 30 to 40 years ago through Mobile, Ala. They have no natural enemies in North America and have spread throughout the South. Amdro is the first pesticide used on a massive scale against imported fire ants since Mirex was banned by the EP A in 1978. Ivie said Amdro can be applied either aerially, by gound ma­ chinery, or by individual mound application. The option is up to each county. “ There’s no way that we want to tell the people this is the final answer, that this is going to get rid of all the fire ants. What this will do if used properly, it’ll reduce the fire ants to a level that is more tolerable,” Ivie said. He said tests run by the Texas Agriculture Department have shown an 85 percent reduction in fire ant population with the use of Amdro. However, the chemical is not expected to stop the spread of the pests, he said. Environmentalists agree the answer to the problem is not Amdro, but for a different reason. They oppose its use because ants multiply faster with the use of pesticides than when left untreated Jackie Jacobson, chairwoman of the Pesticides Committee of the Lone Star Chapter of the Sierra Club, said it appears that pesticides clear ecological space for fire ants by killing off non­ target species. After the initial die- off, the imported fire ants reproduce faster than native species. On these grounds, the Sierra Club opposes any presently available pesticide. But specifically, Jacobson said, Amdro is opposed because the safety data has not been released to the public. “ We originally opposed the use of Amdro because the safety data was not released to the public. We had no idea whether it was good or bad,” she said. Under the state program, Amdro will cost the counties $1 per pound, the correct amount to treat one acre. Ivie said the Tex­ as Agriculture Department has about $1.5 million to use in the program and expects to receive just under $1 million from the U.S. Department of Agriculture The state gets Amdro for about $4 a pound HELP WANTED P A R T T IM E mail clerk, m ajor Austin based trade association. Hours 1-5 p.m. Monday-Friday. Sa la ry m inimum wage. Good driving record required. Call 458- 1257 for an appointment. C O N C E S S IO N H E L P w anted four nights/week S3.35/hour. Apply Show- town Drive-In Theater 8100 Cameron Rd after 6 p.m. BASS, A N D keyboards needed for R8.B, rock band. Call 282-4102 after 4 p.m. T EA C H O V E R S E A S ! For detaiTs send self-addressed, stamped, long envelope to: Friends of World Teaching, P.O. Box 1049, San Diego, CA 92112-1049. P A R T T IM E file clerk needed at down­ town law firm to work afternoons Du­ ties will also involve errand running, an­ swering telephone Must know how to correctly file alphabetically and numer­ ically M ust be good with details. Need resume Parking provided, S3.45/hour. Call Ju d y tor appointment at 476-6003. IM M E D I A T E O P E N IN G salad prep person. M ust be dependable and able to meet people and work independently. Apply in person. Green Goes Salad Bar, 17th and San Jacinto. 476-9187. B A R T E N D E R P A R T time to serve Aus­ tin's finest beer clientele. M ust be a v a il­ able 3:30 and 8:30 shifts as needed, and spring break, summer, and beyond See M r Overton, The Draught House. 4112 M edical Pa rkw ay, between 3:30 and 5 p.m. N E E D S O M E O N E with m otorcycle li­ cense to till out repair orders and other paperwork. F u ll tim e summer, part time winter. W ill train. John 451-4039. C A M B R ID G E T O W E R hiring door per­ sons weekends 4-12 and 12-8. M ust be personable and well groomed. M ay study between duties Come by 1801 L a ­ vaca for application and interview. L E A S IN G A G E N T part time for small South Austin apartm ent complex. Phone 443-8366 or 477-4539. JU A N G O L D S T E IN 'S C a viar B a r is now accepting applications for doorman $4.00 per hour Fri-Sat 9:30-2:00 Apply at 404 E . 6th after 4 p.m. SA LES-G O O D commission-if you have a car, and can work 15-20 hours a week, please call collect 1-713-865-5395. Stu­ dents only. JO B S IN Alaska! Summer/year-round High pay; $800-2000 monthly! All fields- parks, fisheries, oil industry and more! 1982 Em p lo yer information guide. $4 95, Alasco, P.O. Box 60152, Sunnyvale, CA 94088 listings, N U T R IT IO N A L T E S T E R S needed Us­ ing muscle testing, you determ ine cus­ tomer's weaknesses/needs for vitamins, herbs 477-2796 B A B Y S I T T E R N E E D E D tor 13 month old 8:45am-12:15pm, Tuesday-Friday. Near UT P refer parent, vegetarian. 477-2796 S W IM M IN G T E A C H E R Summer afte r­ noons, experienced, mature, W S I, syn­ chronized F a r Northwest Austin. Call B a rb a ra Denny 258-3141 before 10 p.m. G R E E N H O U S E A SS IS T A N T , flexible time, 15-20 hours a week, $3.50/hour. Need transportation 451-1716 M A IN T E N A N C E P E R S O N for general work, Saturdays and Sundays or just Saturdays. Hours 8am-lpm. Call 327- 1530 after 4 p.m. H O U S E K E E P E R N E E D E D for resi­ dence, 8:30-3:30 5 days/week No cook­ ing, no babysitting M ust have transpor­ tation Good benefits and salary. Please call 474-1917 ___________________________ M IK E A N D C harlie's 34th St E m p o ri­ um needs counter help Tuesday and Thursday 8 30-1 30, Saturday 9-3. 451 - 4808 New plan splits minority voting power By TINA ROMERO Daily Texan Staff The new congressional redistricting plan approved by a federal three-judge panel last weekend either could ben­ efit or deter minority voters — depending on one’s opinion on packing minorities into one district. While some believe draw­ ing districts with concentrat­ ed minority populations in­ sures at least one minority representative from that dis­ trict, others say splitting up a minority population so the mi­ nority community has a vot­ ing impact on two districts in­ creases minority power. The three-judge panel de­ cided that it would redraw only six of the congressional districts in the Legislature’s plan — Districts 3, 5, 24 and 26, in Dallas and the mid-cit­ ies area, and South Texas Dis­ tricts 15 and 27. Essentially, the remap plan for Dallas County and the metropolitan area resembles district lines drawn before any changes were made to the 1973 version by the Legisla­ ture last year. The court dis­ mantled the minority-domi­ nated southern Dallas County District 24 that the Legisla­ ture created, changing the district back to a white dis­ trict with a 46 percent minori­ ty population. In the plan drawn by last year’s Legislature, U.S. Rep. Martin Frost’s district had been changed from majority white to a 64 percent minori­ ty-populated district. The Trinity River histori­ cally has divided two black Dallas communities into two political districts, Oak Cliff and South Dallas. The Legis­ lature combined those two communities to create one congressional district. The court changed the dis­ trict back, with the Trinity River once again serving as a dividing line. Blacks in Oak Cliff will be represented in District 24 and South Dallas blacks in District 5, which will have a 32 percent minori­ ty population. Analysis Blacks and Mexican-Ameri- cans will not have another chance to elect a minority congressman until 1990 unless the Legislature changes the new congressional plan to in­ clude a minority-dominated district in 1984. The three- judge panel decided that the court-ordered plan would be only an interim plan and that the Legislature will take up the task of redistricting again in 1984. Dallas County currently is represented by three Demo­ crats and one Republican, a pattern that is likely to con­ tinue even though it has one of the highest Republican con­ centrations in the state. The county also is 60 per­ cent Republican but will not have the opportunity to elect an additional Republican con­ gressman. Many minority politicians believe it is unfair for Dallas County, with its 40 percent minority population, not to have a congressional district from which to elect a minori­ ty representative. The federal judges rational­ ized that having substantial minority populations in two districts, where minorities can provide a swing vote, is better than packing minori­ ties into one district. When Texas gained three new congressional seats, the court placed one of those new districts in South Texas. Pre­ viously most of South Texas was represented in District 15 with a Mexican-American population of 77.3 percent, in­ cluding a negligible number of blacks. The new 27th Dis­ trict, placed in South Texas because of its substantial pop­ ulation growth, almost will guarantee that two Mexican- Americans will be elected from South Texas. Prison reformist Ruiz faces ‘pot’ charges David Ruiz, whose federal lawsuit objecting to prison conditions in Tex­ as led to an order for widespread re­ forms in the state prison system, has been charged with possession of marijuana in the Travis County Ja il, where he is awaiting trial on robbery charges. Ruiz, who was charged with two counts of aggravated robbery in con­ nection with the Nov. 15 holdup of an East Austin tavern, is accused of passing seven marijuana cigarettes to another inmate last week. Ruiz was charged in Precinct 5 Justice of the Peace Court. While serving a 25-year sentence for armed robbery, Ruiz in 1972 initi­ ated the class-action lawsuit — Ruiz vs. Estelle, which charged the Texas Department of Corrections with vio­ lating his constitutional rights and the rights of other prisoners. In the suit, Ruiz complained of overcrowd­ ed prisons, overly aggressive inmate enforcers and insufficient prison medical facilities. In April 1981, U.S. District Judge William Wayne Justice ruled in fa­ vor of Ruiz and called for massive reforms in Texas prisons. Following Justice’s ruling, Ruiz was paroled by Gov. B ill Clements and worked as a consultant for an East Austin community organization until Austin police arrested him in November. If convicted of the rob­ bery charge, Ruiz could be sen­ tenced to life in prison as an habitual criminal. For possession of marijuana, Ruiz, if convicted, could face a max­ imum penalty of a $1,000 fine and six additional months in jail. Woman chancellor picked for UH’s Victoria campus By RICHARD GOLDSMITH Daily Texan Staff University graduate Martha Piper has been appointed chancel­ lor of the University of Houston at Victoria — the first woman to be­ come a top administrator in the UH system. The UH Board of Regents made the appointment at its regular monthly meeting Monday. Piper said Tuesday she was con­ fident she would be chosen over the other four candidates because of the job she did as interim chan­ cellor of the school, a position she has held since July. More women are not higher edu­ cation administrators, Piper said, because the pool to choose from is so small. As a result, most appli­ cants are men who have more im­ pressive resumes, she said. Men also are more likely to be chosen because the search committees are made up largely of men, she said. “ I hope more women in higher education will see themselves as administrators in the future,” Piper said. Prior to her position as interim chancellor at Victoria, Piper was special assistant to UH System President Charles Bishop. Bishop said Piper was chosen because she was deemed the most capable. “ I think we’ll see more women administrators in the fu­ ture,” he said. Piper received a Ph.D. in sci­ ence education from the Universi­ ty in the summer of 1973. She ob­ tained a bachelor’s degree at Elmhurst College, 111. and her master’s degree from the Univer- sity of Kansas.___________________ NAJIONAL W EATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 PM EST 3 - 3 - 82 30.00 29 77 PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz 10W 30 00 A I R>\ BOSTON U PI W E A T H E R FO T O C A ST Partly cloudy skiaa and continuad warm tomporaturaa ara foracaat for Auatin and vicinity Wadnoaday. Highs will ba naar 80, with Iowa Wadnoaday night in tha mld-50a. Winds will ba from tha south at 10 to 20 mph, turning gusty Wadnoaday aftar- noon. Nationally, rain is axpactad ovar portions of tha cantral Plains, tha middla Mississippi VaHoy, tho Ohio Valloy, Tsnnos- saa and tho mid-Atlantic a tatas. Soma snow is foracaat for parts of tha northern and cantral Plains. Eiaawhara, generally fair weather is expected. B .C . ...AflDTHATS MY oflN ic*!! W5 Welcome Yoji? ^ coW em ts. ’# 1 3 3 C F|«W Ent 31 32 L44 IT m L 52 t «9 J 1 ] ■ 2 GREAT LOCATION^! ■ COMING AT Y O U f l 20% Off Everything O FFER GOOD THROUGH SATURDAY FREE ^ LACES WITH $10 PURCH ASE When it comes to your sport shoe needs we have them all: Nike, Puma, Adidas, Pony, New Balance, Saucony, Etonic, Foot-Joy, Brooks, Converse, Spotbilt, Tiger, Sperry, and more. So if your sport is soccer, running, tennis, golf, football, basketball, racquetball, baseball, bowling, walking, volleyball, or spectator, foot action has the shoe you need. Our professional sales staff are trained to make sure you get the best shoe and proper fit for all your sports. Whether a serious athlete or a casual walker we have the sport shoe and clothing to fit your sport. o K-Swiss ST *«! of 2222 Guadalupe Next Door to the Texas Theatre Phone: 472-1841 oot 4* action