Da iiy Texan Vol. 81, No. 69 (USPS 146-440) Student N e w s p a p e r a t The University of Texas a t Austin Religion OK’d on campuses By MELISSA WARD Daily Texan Staff University policy prohibiting relig­ ious worship on campus will come un­ der legal scrutiny, UT officials said, af­ ter the U.S. Supreme Court Tuesday struck down a similar regulation at the University of Missouri at Kansas City. The Supreme Court ruled 8-1 that a registered Missouri student group has the right to hold religious services on the campus of a state university. Rich Heller, assistant dean of student activities, said the ruling would proba­ bly affect the University’s current poli­ cy prohibiting worship and “attempted (religious) persuasion” on campus. The regulation, designed to ensure separa­ tion of church and state, allows relig­ ious activities on UT facilities only in academic theological discussion. In September, Heller stopped a West Mall rally sponsored by the Longhorn Christian Fellowship after informing the group that it must restrict itself to academic discussion of religion. Heller said the University general counsel, which has been following the Missouri case, will review the Supreme Court ruling and make a judgment on the UT policy to conform to that deci­ sion. In the Supreme Court opinion, Justice Lewis Powell said, “The basis for our decision is narrow. “Having created a forum generally open to student groups, the University seeks to enforce a content-based exclu­ sion of religious speech. Its exclusion­ ary policy violates the fundamental principle that a state regulation of speech should be content-neutral, and the University is unable to justify this violation under applicable constitution­ al standards.” Douglas Laycock, UT professor of law, said Powell’s opinion “applies precisely to the situation on the West Mall.” Earlier this year, seven School of Law professors criticized the policy as unconstitutional in a letter to the gener­ al counsel, Laycock said. Heller said the high court ruling did not surprise him. “I had been predict­ ing that the court would likely permit persuasion and preaching on campus. I wasn’t sure they would go for the total worship, but it appears that they did,” he said. The Missouri case stems from the university’s refusal to let Cornerstone, a registered student organization of evangelists, use classrooms to hold scripture readings and discussions. The University of Missouri allows student organizations to use its facili­ ties for purposes other than religious worship or instruction. Kurt Lenhart, founder of Students for Freedom From Religion, a campus organization, said the ruling may not affect UT policy be­ cause the University has never denied religious student groups the right to or­ ganize or use classroom facilities. “In the past, University policy has not been based on whether it’s constitu­ tional or.not, but on how much pressure groups are able to exert on the student activities office,” Lenhart said. His or­ ganization, which now has 150 mem­ bers, has much more influence than it did in its embryonic stages, he said. If the UT policy is dropped from the books rather than altered, as a result of the ruling, Lenhart said he “wouldn’t be surprised if religious groups started holding tent rallies on the West Mall. But if they did, we would sponsor the Hare Krishnas as a campus organiza­ tion so they could come on campus. That’s our strategy. “We don’t mind religious organiza­ tions on campus. We just want to be able to sit on the West Mall and eat our lunches without listening to all that,” Lenhart said. After the University of Missouri de­ nied the Cornerstone group use of its facilities, 11 members challenged the policy in U.S. District Court. While the court upheld the university policy, say­ ing that religious use of campus facili­ ties would constitute a state establish­ ment of religion, the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that decision. The Supreme Court upheld the circuit court’s ruling to invalidate the universi­ ty policy because it violated the stu­ dents’ right to freedom of religious speech and association. Three hijacks over; Lebanese fly to Iran By United Press International Three hijacked Venezuelan planes with 102 hostages landed in Cuba to end a two-day dram a, but three Islamic ex­ trem ists holding 41 hostages aboard a Libyan jetliner continued their m ulti­ nation odyssey, taking off for Iran early Wednesday. The three Moslems, after stops in Athens, Rome and Beirut Tuesday, forced Lebanese authorities to refuel their pirated Libyan Boeing 727 and took off for Tehran a t 6:15 p.m. CST Tuesday, Lebanese authorities said. To force officials to refuel the plane, a group of 20 to 30 arm ed Moslem m ili­ tia sympathizers a t the airport seized 30 passengers who had just disembarked from a plane that arrived from London. The hostages were released shortly thereafter without being harmed. The plane’s Chilean pilot, “ exhaust­ ed” after being a t the controls of the aircraft for nearly 32 hours, had no flight maps for Iran, airport officials said, but took off anyway. The officials the hijackers said threatened to evacuate the hostages and blow up the plane “ if it becomes impos­ sible to fly due to the absence of proper flight m aps.” The hijackers are m em bers of a Moslem Shiite param ilitary sect and are demanding the release of their re­ ligious leader, who they say is held in Libya. Iran is the only Moslem country in which the Shiite branch dominates, and the Lebanese hijackers may be looking for a more sympathetic reception than other nations, including their own, have given them. The leftist Latin American guerrillas who demanded a $30 million ransom landed in Havana after a seven-nation odyssey. The official Cuban press agen­ cy Prensa Latina said the passengers and crews were safe and resting. Prensa Latina said the Avensa Boe­ ing 727 and two Aeropostal DC-9s land­ ed shortly before noon at Havana’s Jose ^ Marti International Airport — the ap­ parent final destination of the two-day triple skyjack which was punctuated by repeated threats to kill the passengers and blow up the planes. Prensa Latina gave no word on the fate of the 11 gunmen, who said they represented three guerrilla groups, one Puerto Rican, one Venezuelan and one Salvadoran. It was not immediately known if the three teams of hijackers collected their ransom money somewhere along their route. They were protesting Venezue­ la’s support for the junta in El Salvador and demanded $30 million and the re­ lease of political prisoners in Venezue­ la. Some 7.000 miles away, the hijacked Libyan je t with its 41 hostages landed in Beirut for the second time in two days after stops in Athens and Rome. Beirut airport officials at first blocked the airport’s two runways in an attempt to prevent the plane from land­ ing, but relented, apparently after (See THREE, Page 8.) students once they’ve graduated. . “It definitely helped me get this job,” said B arry Robinson, a 1976 LBJ graduate who was recently appointed assistant city m anager and personnel m anager in Greenville, Texas. After four years in the Army, Robinson said he applied for the position, banking on his LBJ background. “ The school has established a reputation with nam e rec­ ognition. At least it let me get my head in the door for the interview .” Dean Rostow said about one-third of the graduates find state government po­ sitions. One-third take positions with consulting firm s, usually in Texas, and the final third work for the federal gov­ ernm ent or for non-profit agencies, or stay in school. Students often return to jobs in which they have served as interns during the summer between their first and second years in the program . The internship — a m andatory p art of the curriculum for which students receive three hours credit and are usually paid for their work — sends students to positions from Austin City Hall to Botswana, Af­ rica. “ We w rite and send hundreds of let­ ters. I w rote all the aid missions and em bassies,” Internship D irector Shelly Stanford said. “ We have gotten really good responses from em bassies and U.S. aid m issions in really exotic places — Senegal, Poland, Nepal and Botswa­ na.” Stanford said competition for the in­ ternships is so intense that students som etim es s ta rt applying nine months in advance, especially for positions with the State D epartm ent. Beth F rentrup, a 1980 graduate, said, “ My first job was a direct result of my internship. They wanted me and I w ant­ ed them .” Frentrup interned for the Environmental Protection Agency and, after she graduated, returned to work for the agency. She now works for an environmental consulting firm in Col­ lege Station. “ I t’s a good program , particularly (if you are) looking toward a government job,” she said. “ I t’s very practical. The first year is really intense, (but) the second is lighter.” to Students in their first year a re re ­ quired take seven one-sem ester “ core” courses that include classes in political economy, statistics and public financial m anagem ent. First-year stu­ dents are also required to do a policy (See LBJ, Page 9.) LBJ School enjoys national renown The LBJ Library By JENNIFER BIRD Daily Texan Staff While government officials continue to prune their payrolls, schools dedicat­ ed to breeding bureaucrats continue to be deluged with applicants. The Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs is no exception In its 12th year, the graduate school, with its im pressive faculty and inten­ sive study program , prepares students for jobs in city, state and federal gov­ ernm ents, as well as for work with pri­ vate consultants “ In a lot of cases, it’s not so much what you learn, but learning where to go to find things and the contacts you m ake,” a 1976 LBJ graduate said. “ LBJ was very good in that sense Despite its youth, adm inistrators at the school say it competes directly with much m ore established public affairs schools such as the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton and the John F. Kennedy School at H arvard. The LBJ School is the only one of its kind in the Southwest. The school trains generalists capable of dealing with specialists in various fields such as computers, budgeting and microeconomics. Dean Elspeth Rostow said. “ W herever they go, they can deal with people whose specialties are in those (fields),” she said. “ We train generalists with the capacity to move in modern train than (them) to channel in one a re a .” society, rather R ecruiters for the school are picky, the dean adm its, and the faculty-stu- dent com m ittee that screens applicants strictly follows established entrance criteria. “ We adhere to the policies. They (applicants) are better not adm it­ ted if they cannot survive,” Rostow said In th e fall of 1981, 90 students were accepted into the school from among 300 applicants, Rostow said. Students apply from undergraduate schools across the country, although more than half of the students are home-grown Texans About one-third are fem ale After two years of high-pressure schooling and 12 weeks of practical ex­ perience in various city, sta te and fed­ eral government offices, students leave the school and presumably blossom into well-bred bureaucrats. The LBJ School’s high caliber faculty seems to leap from the pages of “ Who’s LBJ School Dean Elspeth Rostow Who.” The school boasts of having fac­ ulty m em bers who cam e over from the high ranks of federal policy-makers, in­ cluding form er U.S. Congresswoman Barbara Jordan, who teaches ethics in public affairs; John Gronouski, form er postm aster general and form er am bas­ sador to Poland, who teaches public finance and international politics; and Wilbur Cohen, form er secretary of Health, Education and W elfare, who teaches a class in w elfare reform . “ B arbara Jordan is fan tastic,” a re ­ cent LBJ School graduate said. “ She kept everyone so interested. It was a three-hour class but you never got bored. She kept everyone involved.” Student-professor relationships seem to be close-knit, as it is not uncommon for students and their professors to break between classes and trot down the hill for a beer or two, one student said. “ The faculty is excellent — really, really good.” But the faculty is demanding, too. In addition to tim e spent in classes, stu­ dents m ay spend as much as 40 extra hours a week working on projects and studying. “T here’s always something to do,” said one student. “ If I don’t make tim e to socialize, I won’t . ” Just as the LBJ School — which sits apart from, and high above, the re st of the cam pus — competes for students, it also com petes for placement of these Ex-employee says she settled out of court with UT By JODI HOOKER Daily Texan Staff A former University employee who reached an out-of-court settlement with the University for al­ leged violation of her constitutional rights said she recently received a settlement check for $60,000. UT System lawyer Lynn Taylor would not con­ firm that former employee Freeda Nash was paid $60,000 because Taylor had agreed not to reveal the amount of the settlement. However, he said that to his knowledge a University employee has not previously received m ore than $60,000 in an employee dispute. But that does not mean it has never happened, he said. Nash, who filed suit against the University in spring 1980, accused the U niversity of eliminating her job as executive assistant to the chairm an of the D epartm ent of Music without perm itting her a grievance procedure and thus denying her due process. University officials had argued that she was not entitled to a grievance procedure because she was not fired They said N ash's executive assist­ ant position was elim inated in July 1979 because the D epartm ent of Music needed reorganization. No other position was dropped as a result of nated. that reorganization Nash said the reorganization was designed for the specific purpose of eliminating her from the departm ent. The letter inform ing Nash that her position was being elim inated w as received by her on July 17, 1979 at 3 30 p.m ., she said, and dem anded she vacate her office by 5 p.m. Nash said she had no previous indication that the job was being elimi­ Nash said she believes she was treated unfairly by those who w ere involved with the reorganiza­ tion and that her complaints to those in the Uni­ versity’s upper adm inistration were ignored “ If you’ve been at the University, you know about pow et politics But it’s not fair for UT not to protect the classified person (em ployee),” she said When the U niversity and Nash agreed to settle out of court Nov. 19. it was with the understand­ ing that paym ent to Nash would not be an adm is­ for $60,000 sion of wrongdoing or blam e on the part of the University. Nash’s lawyer, Derek Howard, declined to comment on the details of the case or on the amount of money Nash received. “ Everything is settled, it’s over. I will say this, though; I hope University officials involved in this have learned something and that it will result in better treatm ent of UT em ployees,” Howard said Nash, 57, now works for the Texas Employ­ ment Commission in Jasper. :ac. . "r;t. o u t \ fK.XAN Ü Wednesday, December 9. 1981 A \ \ A \ A X i, ó 6 ¿» Q - — W, >); -v4 'S .'- i — ■J' ■' A ifc Hanukkah toeing Cauls. m v 13-year-old whiz kid attends UT class o..*- c-^ oo By S U E F O S S Most 13-year-old teen-agers are concerned with the opposite sex, junior high dances and pimples. But Chris Nyman, 13, has bigger wor­ ries — auditing a class at the Uni­ versity and attending a private school for gifted children. Although he is only five feet tall and barely weighs 90 pounds, Nyman is on equal footing with the other students in his science class, ‘‘The Nature of Things.” William Coker, the professor of physics who teaches the course, said Nyman is doing very well. In September, Nyman, then a stu­ dent at Porter Junior High School, «n tha catno i«vp1 a« most scored on the same level as most high school graduates on an achievement test. The arrangement which allowed Nyman, an only child, to audit a University class was made through Brenda Rogers, his teacher at the Fleetwood School for Gifted Chil­ dren in Austin. Rogers knew Coker and asked him if Nyman could audit the class. Although Nyman receives no college credit for the class, he" will earn credit at Fleetwood. ‘‘I like it. It’s neat,” Nyman said about attending the University. Be­ cause of his size, he is obviously not part of the common crowd. ‘‘I’m a little self-conscious because every­ nnp is hipper than I am.” Nvman one is bigger than I am,” Nyman said, adding that several students have approached him to ask if he is lost. Although his fellow students were initially surprised by his presence in class, they are beginning to accept him, Nyman said. ‘‘People still give me funny looks, but some of the people in the class look after me.” In the spring of 1983, Nyman plans to apply for admission to the Uni­ versity. At that time — at age 14 — he plans to major in computer sci­ ence. “I’d like to have my Ph.D. by 21 — or 22 at the latest,” Nyman said. His father, James Nyman, said attending UT classes is “intellectu­ attending UT classes is ‘‘intellect!!- ally very good” for his son. “I never doubted whether or not he could make it. (But) I was concerned about him socially and emotional­ ly,” James said. “Socially, he has no age mates. It would be very difficult for Chris to attend high school after attending college,” he said. As of the fall semester, 25 stu­ dents under 16 years of age are reg­ istered at the University, and 28 UT graduate students are only 20 years old. At the opposite end of the spec­ trum, eight enrolled students are 65 years of age or older. Of those eight, six are undergraduates. Simare n the trac ro n a r c r-ea^rs of this joyous season. w e u c a n C.-«at »« exce* •ao©* s an American tradition VBA' litUventiiq (2e-0k m ______ w 83 p u rc h a se * —ee : h r p arking Greeting Cards Street level CA» io o im -ib A iiin m w amtadT Call the Classified Hot Une — 471-5244 Around Campus UGL to open 24 hours To accommodate students preparing for final exams, the Undergraduate Library will remain open 24 hours from 7 a.m. Wednesday through 5 p.m. Dec. 17, the last day of finals. After finals, the library will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 18. It will close Dec. 19-20 and open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Dec. 21-23. The library will be closed from Dec. 24 through Jan. 3. During Jan. 4-17, it will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and close on weekends. Regular hours will resume Jan. 18. Media study scheduled Jim Hampton, editor of The M iam i Herald, will be the keynote speaker at a symposium about business, government and the news media Thurs­ day and Friday at the Joe C. Thompson Confer­ ence Center. Thursday, the symposium will address prob­ lems of access to the media and news sources. The future of the media and changes that will result from the development of the electronic me­ dia will be explored Friday. Admission is free, but space will be limited. Film debut postponed The science fiction film “Forty-First Song,” which depicts the final battle between frat rats and punk rockers, will be shown Dec. 16, not Wednesday as previously announced. Because of production delays, the film, which centers on the aftermath of a nuclear holocaust, will be shown next week at the Academic Center Auditorium. Group selects officers The University Young Democrats Monday night student elected Demetrius McDaniel as president for 1982. communication sophomore Other officers elected were Jon Haslett, vice- president; Linda Jones, secretary; David Kaplan, treasurer; Bill Magness, ideas and education di­ rector; Geoff Osborn, A dvocate editor; Natalie Chandler, communications director; Ann Sebes- ta, publicity director; and Wayne Comeaux, par­ liamentarian. Bill Bingham was elected as state executive committee representative. John Adamo, Lau­ rence Zakson, Tami Rice, Terry Moore and Robin Rorapaugh were elected executive committee members at-large. Correction Credits for basketball photographs by Jerry Brown were inadvertently left out on Page 9 of Tuesday’s T exan and Page 13 of the Dec. 3 T e x ­ an. I T h e D ajiy T e x a n P E R M A N E N T S T A F F r * r ' r1 r i 1 i i ROCKSWRTS THE NEWEST THINUS->TC? H A P P E N 7 0 SHOES SIN C E THE N E<*Kr i v e h e e l . R o c & S fcW S A R E a s UátHT A S A f£ATR£ft W IT H A V OKTH0TIC A *6 b CLtt> f/iO M RUNNIN.(yy SH O E S. T H E M C M o/ty P O A tA THAT M OLt6 TO TOO it f E £ T . W/ITH < * R € * T L£*rH£*. UPPERS A N O DuILAe>cE //0 £ A f A •oOLES. THEY oAA/r VSE ISEAT. ( A IA i LAAl E \(SO IN fALL FOIL LjOf\Ekt) ^ off < FOOTGEAR Geared to com fort a n d q uality 2 200 GUADALUPE AUSTIN, TEXAS 78705 512-472-9433 r E d ito r M anaging E d ito r Joh n S chw artz P a u la A ngerstein-30- A sso ria te M anaging E d ito rs New s E ditor A ssociate New s E d ito r F e a tu re E d ito r S p orts E d ito r A ssociate S ports E d ito r Senior S p o rts w n te rs E n te rta in m e n t E d ito r Liaa B eyer. M a u reen P a sk in Jenny Abdo Steve Vinson C layton Stro m b e rg e r Reid L aym a nee R oger C am pbell Suzanne M ichel. Susie Wood ha m s M elissa H irsch A ssistan t N ew s E d ito r N ew s A ssistan t N e w sw rite rs E d ito ria l A s s isu n t E n te rta in m e n t A ssistan t A ssistant Spo rts hiditor Bob D avila M ike S w artz Lynn E asley . Doug M cLeod F ra n k H avanaugh C h n s J o rd a n Bob F isce lla Im a g e s E d ito r A sso ciate Im a g e s E d ito r G ra p h ic s E d ito r P hoto E d ito r A ssistan t P hoto E d ito r A sso ciate E n te rta in m e n t E d ito r Cindy W idner Ale* P la za M ike Hulta K evin V andivier W arren Spector-30- H a rry P o tte r G e n e ra l R e p o rte rs J e n n ife r Bird Jodi H ooker. G ary R asp. G a rd n e r Selby. M elissa W ard M ichelle Locke B rian D unbar A ssignm ents E d ito r C am pus N e w , in B rief E d ito r ISSUE ST A FF Spo rts A ssistan t M ake-up E d ito r W ire E d ito r Copy E d ito rs E ddie P e rk in s Ale* P la za B rian D un bar J a y H am lin, M a rg a re t M atus M arvilyn K lann M ichael F ry , Sam H urt C layton B ra n tiy P h o to g ra p h e r A rtists C alise B u rc h e tte . Doug C am pbell Jo el C a rte r. C la ire D onaldson, E n n Donohue. C laudia G ra v e s Mike L ittm a n C heryl U e d e c k e M ariann e N ew ton. Sam T o rrey . TEX AN A D V E R TISIN G STA FF J im W ells. Ken G ra y s The D ally Texan a stu d e n t n ew sp a p e r a t T he U niv ersity of T exas at A ustin, is published by T exas Student P u b lic a tio n s. D ra w e r D, U n iv e rsity Station, A ustin. TX 78712-7208 The D aily Texan is published M onday. T uesday. W ednesday T h u rsd ay and F rid a y , e x c ep t holiday and e x a m perio ds Second c la ss po stage paid a t A ustin. 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As the president m et with his National Security Council for an unusual second consecutive day, Baker told the Senate he had learnd from White House chief of staff Jam es Baker that there will be a decision on “ the totality of the situation with regard to Libya” within 24 to 48 hours. At the request of the White House, the Senate For­ eign Relations Committee postponed a m eeting on U.S. policy toward Libya and Sen. G ary H art, D- Colo., withdrew a m easure supporting a cutoff of U.S. oil im ports from Libya. House Speaker Thomas O’Neill, who follows Vice President George Bush in the line of succession for the presidency, reported the adm inistration offered him Secret Service protection but he declined. president’s flexibility. Baker, R-Tenn., called the White House to ask its position on the the H art m easure, co-sponsored by Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., to put the Senate on record in support of Reagan if he decides to cut off the $4 billion a year the U.S. government and private oil companies spend on Libyan oil. The m ajority leader said that “ while the president is in the process of considering it, the adm inistration will not favor” the Hart-Kennedy proposal although he said he was “ hard put to disagree” with H art’s contention that “ it’s a m oral argum ent — w e’re pay­ ing for Libyan terrorism . P eriod.” H art said his resolution would in no way tie R ea­ gan’s hands and he saw no reason to wait. “ How long does the president need to decide that Colonel Kha­ dafy is a te rro ris t,” he asked. “ Until his own life is in jeopardy?” But H art reluctantly agreed to withdraw the m ea­ sure from consideration at this tim e to preserve the A sim ilar m easure was defeated by three votes in October and Kennedy’s colleague Sen. Paul Tsongas, D-Mass., warned that “ a split vote would have un­ fortunate consequences.” Foreign Relations Committee chairm an Charles Percy, R-Ill., said killing the motion “ would send the exact wrong signal.” H. Stuart Knight, who retired Friday as director of the Secret Servce, said Reagan should not even venture outside to light the national C hristm as tree. “ You’re talking about a half an hour a fte r dark, stationary on a public platform, thousands of people and obviously the answer has to be why not do it from inside the White House?” Knight told a televi­ sion interviewer. Deputy press secretary Larry Speakes insisted the White House is not operating under a “ crisis atm os­ phere” but the administration is making a com pre­ hensive review of U.S. political and economic rela­ tions with Libya. White House communications director David Ger- gen grimly shunted aside all questions about the situ­ ation. He said it “ clearly is being discussed by the president with his highest advisers and (the review) will be concluded in the near future.” Gergen said allied nations have been told about R eagan’s “ evidence" that the plot exists despite Ka- dafy’s denial. But he said it would not be made pub­ lic. “ I know of no plans to disclose the various reports that have been received,” he told reporters. Relations between the United States and Libya have declined steadily since Reagan took office. Li­ byan diplomats were ordered out of the country in May and U.S. Navy jets shot down two Libyan fight­ er aircraft that attacked them during U.S. naval m aneuvers off the coast of Libva in August. Estimates of deficit rise to $109 billion WASHINGTON (UPI) - Amid esti­ m ates that the 1982 budget deficit could reach a staggering $109 billion, P resi­ dent Reagan m et with top economic ad­ visers Tuesday to consider new austeri­ ty moves and the increasing likelihood of a tax hike. The president — who in September assured the nation he would hold the current defict to $43.1 billion and have enough money to pursue a U.S. m ilitary buildup — got the bad news from budget director David Stockman during an af­ ternoon meeting in the Cabinet room. Chief White House spokesman David Gergen said Stockman presented some “ working assum ptions” to Reagan. But Gergen refused to confirm or deny that the bottom line for 1982 would be $109 billion in red ink, as official adm inistra­ tion sources reported earlier in the day. Those same reports pinpointed the 1983 deficit at $152 billion and the deficit for 1984 — the year Reagan promised during his election campaign to balance the budget — at $162 billion. Gergen refused to rebut those fig­ ures. “ We feel it inappropriate right now to start putting out a series of numbers that we recognize may well change,” Gergen said He said there were options other than those that found their way into print, but he was unable to say if any of them envisioned a deficit below $100 billion. Gergen, deputy press secretary L ar­ ry Speakes and Office of M anagement and Budget official Lawrence Kudlow all minimized the reported deficit fig­ ures, calling them variously “ prelim i­ nary,” or “ m isleading,” or “of no con­ sequence.” But no one said they were wrong. When asked if the high deficit predic­ tions were leaked to reporters to make it easier for the White House to pursue further spending cuts with Congress, Gergen insisted there was no orchestra­ tion and the news leaks were not “ en­ couraged.” Gergen acknowledged little can be done about the budget for fiscal 1982, which has already begun. The focus of the current discussions, he said, is on 1983 and beyond. “ There is a volatility in those num­ bers that you have to take into ac­ count,” Gergen warned. He said eco­ nom ic a re tentative at best and he decried news leaks for painting a confused picture. a ssu m p tio n s a lw a y s The higher deficit projections left the administration with three main options — to cut back projected increases in de­ fense spending; further cut non-defense programs, or in some way raise taxes. Murray Weidenbaum, chairm an of the Council of Economic Advisers, told Institute the American E nterprise Tuesday the adm inistration is studying possible ways to increase tax revenues by overhauling tax breaks given to busi­ nesses or individuals for special pur­ poses. Gergen confirmed that “ the question of taxes is going to be considered seri­ ously during this review process.” But he said it is clear the president “ feels strongly that the tax decreases that are in place ... particularly those on the personal side ... should rem ain in place and are an im portant elem ent in the recovery.” Weidenbaum also said the large defi­ cit now is not all that harm ful, but must be reduced in later years. He said during a recession like the one now in progress, large government borrowing to finance a big deficit does not “ crowd out” business and consumer borrowing. This, he said, is because the demand for business and consum er credit al­ ready is reduced by the recession. With demand for credit already reduced, said, other adm inistration officials competition by the government for available credit does not raise interest rates. “ But in fiscal 1983 and beyond, when we anticipate a period of rapid growth in the economy, a steady and substan­ tial reduction in the budget deficit will be very much in o rd e r,” Weidenbaum said. I think I can, I think I can UPI Telephoto Can pickers have fallen on hard times, what with the price of aluminum cans dropping several cents since a year ago. Still, there seems to be plenty of work for Jim Higgins, who weighs cans arriving for recycling at the Industrial Scrap Metals Inc. Fort Worth salvage plant. Arguments become bitter in Poland WARSAW, Poland (UPI) — Roman Catholic Archbishop Jozef Glemp told parliam ent Tuesday that passage of em ergen­ cy law and order powers could provoke widescale strikes and Poland’s news media warned of a “ civil w a r.” In a growing anti-Solidarity campaign, union leader Lech Walesa cam e under direct attack from the arm ed forces news­ paper Zolruerz Wolnoscia,, which branded him a liar and cheat. Poland faces “ the threat of a civil w ar ... to be unleashed by madmen who put their sick ambitions and interests above the destiny of the nation,” the newspaper said. It was a follow-up by authorities to a last w eek’s secret union meeting in which Walesa and other leaders discussed over­ throwing the government. Polish radio Monday broadcast tapes of the session held in Radom. Before that meeting, officials respected Walesa as a m oderate. Zoln ierz W olnosci called Walesa “ a great liar and provoca- tor who has been perfidly cheating the m em bers of worker Solidarity, indiscrim inantly slandering the authorities ...” The government also released new economic figures stating Poles face a grim Christmas. Government newspapers published texts of the tapes in a propaganda campaign to discredit Walesa and other Solidarity leaders as betrayers of the Polish people and rank and file union m em bers in a selfish drive for political power. The Solidarity national commission was scheduled to m eet again in a top secret, closed door session a t Gdansk’s Lenin shipyard Friday and Saturday to vote on a draft resolution adopted at Ractom threatening a general strike if parliam ent grants the government em ergency powers. “ At this moment, no widescale strike actions endanger the country’s situation,” Glemp said in a letter to parliam ent. Weinberger asks NATO to counteract peace groups BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI) - Defense Secretary Caspar W einberger called on NATO Tuesday to launch an offensive against the anti-nuclear move­ ment in w estern Europe and counter a tide of Soviet “ misinformation and disinform ation.” Greek P rim e M inister Andreas Papandreou, at­ tending the two-day NATO defense m inisters m eet­ ing with Weinberger, said he had begun to suspend parts of the agreem ent under which G reece rejoined NATO’s m ilitary command last year. The m atter is sure to come up when Secretary of State Alexander Haig, who was flying to Brussels, m eets the Greek socialist leader. Haig hopes to shore up support for U.S. plans to deploy U.S. nucle­ ar m issiles in Europe to counter the th re a t of Soviet missiles already in piace. A senior U.S. official said W einberger told NATO m inisters at the closed m eeting there was a need “ to get out better information to counter m isunderstand­ ings and to counter the m assive misinform ation and disinformation program that the Soviets have been mounting.” uncomfortable to see that the United States, which has provided a security umbrella to w estern Europe for over 30 years... should be equated with the Soviet Union considering the conditions of life inside that country and the foreign adventures it has been en­ gaged in.” The official said the impression had been allowed to grow among pacifists that the United States was as much to blam e as the Soviet Union for tensions in Europe — fostered by m assive anti-nuclear demon­ strations w here NATO plans to deploy nuclear m is­ siles in 1983. “ We think there has been a considerable playing around with the fa c ts,” he said. “ We certainly find it Papandreou told reporters after the m inisters’ meeting that he had already begun to “ disengage” from the agreem ent that ties G reece to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization m ilitary command. “ It is not a question of renegotiating it,” he told reporters. “ It is a question of suspending those parts of it which are contrary to our national in terests.” He declined to elaborate. NATO sources said Papandreou rejected a U.S.- sponsored part of the agreem ent that gave Greece and Turkey overlapping responsibilities for m ilitary air traffic over the Aegean Sea. Withdrawal from the clause is unlikely to affect G reece's ground, communications and naval com­ m itm ents to the alliance. Papandreou also appealed to his colleagues to help Greece protect its eastern frontiers against Turkey, another m em ber of the alliance which he said posed a threat to Greek territorial integrity. G reece rejoined NATO’s m ilitary wing after a six- year boycott to protest the Turkish invasion of Cyprus on the basis of an agreem ent drawn up by NATO Supreme Commander Gen. Bernard Rogers. U.S. seeks foreign steel limit America may set minimum price level * 1981 The New York Times WASHINGTON — The Reagan adm inistration, in an effort to defuse a growing conflict over steel trade with the European Common M arket, will seek a com m itm ent from the Europeans to stop shipping subsidized, cut-rate steel to the United States but will not be asking for quantitative export restraints by the Europeans. These points w ere made in a statem ent issued Monday by the White House press office and by Secretary of Commerce Mal­ colm Baldrige, during an interview in advance of conversations that he and three other Cabinet officers will hold with officials of the European Commission, the Common M arket’s governing body, in Brussels on Friday. Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig J r., Secretary of Agri­ culture John R. Block and Bill Brock, the U.S. trade represent­ ative, will join Baldrige in the m eetings, which are aimed at halting a deterioration in Atlantic trade relations. After a session with President Reagan last Friday, Ameri­ can steel industry executives agreed to delay filing antidump­ ing and antisubsidy complaints against the Europeans to aw ait the outcome of the Brussels meeting. Many analysts believe the filing of such complaints could set off a chain reaction of protectionism. Baldrige said the adm inistration was trying to deal with the situation by getting the Europeans to lift export prices to levels set through what is known as the trigger price mechanism. The mechanism is supposed to set minimum import prices. It triggers a quick investigation of shipm ents that come in below the specified prices, subjecting such shipments to puni­ tive duties. However, much European and other steel has been coming in at below these levels. Baldrige said he would tell the Europeans: “ This is a ques­ tion of saying we have a trigger-price monitoring system and trigger prices and you shouldn't sell below that unless you want to get sued.” The White House deputy press secretary, Larry Speakes, said he had not been fully apprised of the situation when he said last Friday that the adm inistration would be asking the Euro­ peans to curb steel exports voluntarily, much as Japan was asked to do last spring with automobiles. If he is unable to obtain compliance, many analysts believe, the result could be greater protectionism in the steel industry, which could deny large portions of the American steel m arket to the Europeans European sources said the Common M arket had been consid­ ering offering to negotiate with the United States what is called in the trade laws an Orderly Marketing Agreement, in which steel exports would be cut back some 30 percent from the five million tons the Common M arket producers ship here annually. But the White House statem ent and Baldrige’s com m ents indicate that the United States will reject that formula on the ground that it would represent too great a departure from free trade principles The emphasis will instead be on getting the Common M arket producers to lift their price levels. Baldrige insisted that the adm inistration had m ade “ no deals” with the domestic steel industry and that the decision on w hether to file a large number of antisubsidy cases belonged to the companies themselves. Eight bodies recovered from blast-torn mine TOPMOST, Ky. (UPI) - Rescue crew s took eight dead men from a narrow shaft a in an explosion-torn mountain coal m ine Tuesday, and miners a t the pit entrance said the thunderous blast might have been triggered by dynamite S ta te and fe d e ra l o ffic ia ls planned to inspect the Adkins Coal Co. No. 18 mine Wednesday and is­ sue a report by noon on the cause of the explosion Although m iners and some mine officials agreed that dynam ite was a likely cause. Kentucky Mines and Minerals Commissioner Willard Stanley cautioned that view was unofficial. He did say, however, he said he smelled a powder odor sug gesting explosives when he entered the mine to aid rescue efforts. Some of the dozens of miners who maintained a grim seven-hour vigil at the mine said they understood as many as 28 cases of dynamite had been taken at one tim e to the 30- inch coal seam, located 2,500 feet inside the mountain. Others said m ethane gas, another common cause of mine explosions, had seldom been a problem at the mine in operations since April 1978. State safety records show six in­ spections between 1978 and this year showed no trace of the highly explosive gas. Two “ Keep Out” signs were post* ed at the mine entrance by state and federal officials. Lester Banks, a U.S. Mine Safety and Health Admin­ istration safety inspector, said, “If we find infractions of safety rules serious enough in the operation of this mine, it could be closed for good.’’ The eruption occured Monday soon after the workers reported for the 2 p.m. shift. About 180 falsify members and friends gathered at a grade school gym two m iles from the mine to await word of the min­ ers fate When they learned eight of the nine shift workers perished, most remained silent; others wept. mmmtm World in Brief From Texan news services Bullfights in danger MADRID (UPI) - A Spanish sur­ vey showed the country’s approxi­ mately 200 bull breeders fear a 30 percent decline in births next spring, meaning a shortage of bulls four seasons from now. Lack of food and drinking water have caused many cows to become infertile, breeders told the EFE national news agency. Bull fighting is a $300 million business in Spain. Robot kills man TOKYO (UPI) - A robot crushed a worker to death at a Japanese fac­ tory last July in the first such inci­ dent on record, a labor official dis­ closed Tuesday. The accident occurred July 4 when a factory em­ ployee tried to check a malfunction­ ing robot, an official said. The em­ ployee was pinned by a robot’s arm against a machine for processing automobile gears and crushed. The official said the victim leaped over a chain fence built around the robot that was labeled “Off Limits.’’ Cypriot visits Rsagan WASHINGTON (UPI) - Visiting Cypriot President Spyros Kyprianou said Tuesday President Reagan is very interested in settling the long­ standing Greek-Turkish dispute over his Mediterranean island homeland. Kyprianou and Reagan met briefly in the Oval Office and later th** Cypriot leader had lunch with Secretary of State Alexander Haig at the State Department. Kyprianou told reporters his talks with U.S. officials were productive. Haig Isavss for Europe lies WASHINGTON (UPI) - Secre­ tary of State Alexander Haig will tell U.S. allies the best hope for East-West arms control in NATO’s standing firm on deploying medium-range nuclear missiles in Europe, officials said Tuesday. Haig was leaving Tuesday night for an 11-day, seven-nation trip that will begin with his attending the regular winter North Atlantic Coun­ cil meeting in Brussels Thursday and Friday. Health panol chosen HOUSTON — An committee of five medical experts from the UT School of Public Health in Houston was set up Tuesday by the health department to add “expertise and to the investigation of objectivity possible cyanide poisoning in a near downtown neighborhood. A doctor, who is a resident of the neighbor­ hood, said he has confirmed at least 12 cases, including his own, of cya­ nide poisoning. Dr. Tim Oesch said he thinks the cyanide poisoning is caused by cyanide leaking into the sewer system, mixing with water and acidic ch em ica ls, which transforms it into the poisonous gas hydrogen cyanide. City officials dis­ pute Oesch’s findings and said they were waiting the results of blood tests performed by health depart­ ment staff members. They said the results of the first 23 tests were neg­ ative. New nuke contractor AUSTIN — Houston Light & Pow­ er told the licensing board of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Tuesday that it should have a new contractor at the South Texas Nu­ clear Project sometime in January. Under a proposal made by the li­ censing board, actual license hear­ ings for the plant would resume Jan. 19. First to be considered would be contentions of design faults at the plant and then new con­ tentions of design and safety flaws arising from a report about the plant commissioned by HL&P. Monks march AMARILLO — A group of Buddist monks from Japan marched 18 miles from a Catholic school to a nuclear weapons assembly plant Tuesday to participate in a peace vigil and protest the production of nuclear arms. The group is partici­ pating in an eight-month walk from Los Angeles, Calif., to New York City to attend the United Nations nuclear disarmament talks which begin in June. Stocks drop NEW YORK - The stock market slumped for the second consecutive session Tuesday, a victim of profit taking from its recent rally and from year-end tax selling. Trading was sluggish. The Dow Jones indus­ loser trial average, a 5.70-point Monday, surrendered another 5.24 points to 881.75. Brokers said the Dow’s recent 48-point surge prompt- ed many traders to cash in on prof­ its. Rig Boárd volume totaled only 45,140,'000 shares compared with 45,720,000 traded Monday. Editorials Opinions expressed in T h e D aily T exa n are those of the editor or the writer of the article and are not necessarily those of the University administration, the Board of Regents or the Texas Student Publications Board of Operating Trustees Bye-bye; don’t forget to vote ftp a ... BUDGET CUTS, , . ,, . . . . . M Gomorrah on the Colorado? At the City Council hearings on the ACD proposition (which would allow landlords to deny housing to homosexuals), one perspicacious speaker said he’d heard people prophesy that if Austin passed the ordinance, Austin would become another San Francisco He went on to say that if this meant Austin would become more like one of America's most exciting cultural centers, he was all for it. On the other hand, he said, if it meant Austin would be foggy and cold for nine months out of the year, he was against it. It all amounts to words and beliefs caught in a hopeless clash. People are frozen on either side of this issue; argument persuades no one. The only answer will come from numbers. Who will get the most votes? Let's hope the Citizens for a United Austin win. Lets’ do more than hope — let s , make sure by voting. You might have noticed that election day is Jan. 16 — a couple of days before the classes begin again. That means everyone who is interested in this election must either return early or vote absentee. You don’t need us to tell you how to get back early, but you might need to know: ____ HOW TO VOTE ABSENTEE • First, if you haven’t registered to vote in Austin, now is the time to do so. There’s still time to register to vote in the coming election. • If you will be in Austin between Dec. 28 and Jan. 12, you can vote absentee at the city clerk’s office, 124 W. Eighth St. • If you’re not going to be in town, you still vote absentee. Before leaving, call or write the city clerk to request an application for an absentee ballot, which can be mailed either to your Austin address or your vacation address. City clerk: P.O. Box 1088, Austin, Texas 78767. Telephone: 477-6511 • After you complete and return your application, send it back to the city clerk. Then you will be sent the ballot. • The city clerk must receive your ballot by noon Jan. 16. If this seems too complicated, you’re right. It is. A lot of people are praying that the difficulty of voting (and the strange timing of the election) will dilute the student vote. Prove them wrong — vote. By JOHN SCHWARTZ This just about wraps up the semes­ ter for the ol’ Texan. And what a se­ mester it was — after the worst crisis in many years, the Texan, surprising­ ly, has come out stronger than before. The recruiting drive has garnered plenty of new applicants. That means a strong, fresh start in January; a combi­ nation of our best seasoned staffers and lots of neophytes, too. We’ll be back next semester — same time, same channel. Tune in again. Merry Christmas. Happy new year. Happy Channukah. And for administrators, please enjoy a pleasant mid-winter inter-session. S ch w ar t z is Texan editor APO mistakes human, but so is its service By CHARLEY MONTERO This article is in response to Steve Hill’s let­ ter to me in the Dec. 4 T e x a n (“It’s enough to make you mad” ). Many people ask what Alpha Phi Omega is. We are a national service fraternity. Our pur­ pose is: “ (To) assemble college students in a National Service Fraternity in the fellowship of the principles of the Boy Scouts of America as embodied in its Scout Oath and Law, to develop Leadership, to promote Friendship, and provide service to humanity; and to further the freedom that is our national, educational, and intellectu­ al heritage.” Alpha Rho, our chapter here at' UT, was chartered May 16, 1935. Our average member­ ship is 250-plus. This semester we are 275 strong. On the whole, we work an average of 6,000 to 7,000 man-hours of service each semes­ ter. Alpha Phi Omega performs service to the campus, community and nation. There are more than 375 active chapters across the country. Al­ pha Rho is the largest chapter in the nation, something we are very proud of. Size is not the only strength of our chapter, however. Alpha Rho has not been ranked lower than third na­ tionally in many years. Usually we are No. 1. Now that I have told you what Alpha Phi Omega is, let me tell you about the service our chapter does. Alpha Rho performs service in three main areas: to the community, to the campus and to the scouting movement. Because we are a service fraternity of 275-plus, the com­ munity turns to us many times. We work fund­ raisers, both those that we are asked to do and others we do on our own. We donate to several different organizations and societies. We have raised funds for Meals on Wheels, Muscular Dystrophy, Multiple Sclerosis and the Autistic Society. Alpha Rho has raised more money for the American Heart Association than any other APO chapter in a three-state region for four of the last five years. These are just a few of our charities, but there are more. We also usher many events: concerts, sym­ phonies, ballets and plays. Many of these are programs that we have been asked to do be­ cause nobody else will: they are not “popular’' events. Alpha Rho’s favorite area of community ser­ vice involves those projects that allow us to work directly with people. Each semester we have casino and bingo nights at several retire­ ment homes. We also work a project called “Rat Patrol.” This project requires us to go to East Austin and pick up debris, trash and dis­ carded items in the area. This is an attempt to decrease the rodent problem there. We usually fill up 15 to 20 large dump trucks. Every semester we also work with children, probably our favorite projects. Many people love working with kids, but how many of them work hundreds of hours each semester with kids at the Austin State School, the school for emo­ tionally disturbed kids? We do these projects because of the personal satisfaction that they bring. Seeing the faces of the children after we have taught them to dance, play basketball, shoot pool or have just taken them piggy-back riding ... it makes everything worth it. Their smiles, their laughter, and especially their tears when we have to leave, give us all a very warm feeling. Because of this, we know we will return in the near future. Another area of service involves the campus. Running the world's largest Texas flag at foot­ ball and basketball games is not our only ser­ vice. We sell UTMost, Deadly Texans, run ticket lines, host the state’s blood drive, work elections and give campus tours to anyone who wants one You may say, “Boy, does APO work elections and ticket lines. ” Everyone remem­ bers the mistakes we have made. I agree we should not make any mistakes, but we are only human. No one on this campus could consistent­ ly work projects for the campus for the last 46 years and not make mistakes. We try our best to do the job at hand. I’m not asking for sympathy. I’m just trying to present the side that is rarely heard. Our mis­ takes, when made, are all known, but the bene­ fits of our service are not. There is not another organization as large as ours that can regularly provide 140-plus individuals to run booths or monitor ticket lines. There is always room for improvement and constructive criticism, so if you have any, please do not hesitate to tell us. We could quite possibly use your idea Finally, we work extensively with scouting, both Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts As you read earlier, APO was founded on the principles of scouting We do two types of scouting projects. First, we work at scout camps: we have made nature trails, built fences and yes. dug latrines. Even though these can be fun projects, we vast­ ly prefer the scouting projects that we can do directly with the scouts We monitor and judge events, and help them earn badges This might not sound like fun, but once again, when you see their eyes, their faces and their smiles, it really does make everything worthwhile This column may seem long, but we hope a few more people on campus will know what APO is about and what APO does for the cam­ pus, community and the scouts I. as president of the Alpha Rho Chapter, ask you to give us a chance, to receive us with an open mind. We are not the only service-oriented organization on campus. Gamma Delta Epsilon, Circle K, the Cowboys and Silver Spurs are all service organizations. We are, I feel, the best. No matter which one is best, though, we all have a common goal: service to our fellow man We do make mistakes and we do make wrong decisions, but remember, all of the members of the different organizations are human beings and students. Before I close, I would like to share with you a few lines from Shakespeare that inspired me during my time in Alpha Phi Omega, and will continue to do so every time I read them : To thine own s el f true, And it mus t follow as the night the day, Thou const not then he false to any ma n Montero, a geology student, is president of Alpha Phi Omega's UT chapter Is all this really necessary — or beneficial ? jr m m m Lisa Black i I should have my head examined. Here I sit cramming my ever- shrinking brain full of semi-useful information so I can regurgitate it on a multiple choice exam — which will determine 50 percent of the credit I get for surviving three and a half months of tedious lectures. The purpose of this is to prove to someone who knows me only as a series of nine government issued numbers that I have been educated. Once my mental worth has been established, I will be computerized, categorized and forgotten. I do this for the sake of my posterity, who have never met me and have never done a damn thing for me. They in turn will do this for their posterity in the great American Way. I suppose you could say I’m missing out on the joys of learning. Learning ceases to be joyous when I am forced, under threat of future poverty, to prove my knowledge. Or when the divine judges of mental incompetence, after my endless slaving, mail me a degree printed by machine and stamped with the official seal of approval. I’ll never get to meet President Flawn or have lunch with the college DOONESBURY dean whose signature attests to my academic excellence I can’t name the nine regents whose decisions determine the value of my degree and I know they can’t name me. Some of my professors are as mysterious to me now as when I enrolled in their classes. I’ve dedicated the best years of my life to making the rest of my life better. I’ve spent 120 classroom hours in these hallowed halls, yet when I go out to face the world alone, I fear I’ll be armed only with the ability to learn and shielded only by naked ignorance of how to create or con­ trol. The hierarchy of computers that rules this orange and white kingdom is probably laughing all the way to the memory bank as it produces more and more half-educated people and assures itself continued con­ trol. Learning is supposed to be its own reward, and some time in the future I hope to reap the fruits of my labor. But here in the middle of finals, when I am forced to memorize the mating habits of mallard ducks and assorted beetles in order to mark the right box on a psycholo­ gy exam, I fail to see the long term benefits. I came, I see and if by chance I conquer when I leave, they’ll dub me an outstanding Texas ex, invite me for dinner and ask for my money. If I give them enough, they’ll name a building after me so that everyone will know that I once sat here cramming my head full of semi-useful infor­ __________ __________ ________ ______________ _____ mation ... Black is a Texan columnist. by Garry Trudeau prnAPs nm n/6 d m loo much R H tm C . GOUT BRA POSSIBLY BB IN m m bbcausb peone aré s k x o f hbarjng about n? i port thnk any s^OF US RSALLY KNOW! \ J&WE' THBMMAYBB THIS IS w e s h o u l p A s m FORM A S 7UPY GROUP I GROUP' ( / W A N j^a m O N LY j A P P For a fresh perspective on Christmas, get to a place away from tinsel, sales How strange, I thought, that in the face of this vastness, this implacability, we find refuge in numbered squares and clocks, in festive songs and tinsel and blinking lights, on a certain set of words or rituals ... it all seemed enormously silly. A light snow began to fall on me in my strange place, and the silence deepened. We choose a day, name a symbol, organize a rite to call up love, peace and understanding. In so doing we lose ourselves, for we entrust those con­ trivances with these qualities, when actually they depend on artifice not at a ll... They depend on us ... because, after all, that is the spot from which they spring. We’re the humus from which these ineffably beautiful flowers grow; the squares on the calendar are just pieces of paper on Popsicle sticks that read “roses,” that read “begonias.” It’s us ... it’s ours ... Christmas is the time which signifies to us these things. But those things are from deep within us. The ability to help, to love, to forgive hurt, to give without hope of receiving, to sacrifice — all come from you, and me, and the people next to you, ahead of you in traffic and watching you out of restaurant windows ... not from a plastic nativity or an amputated evergreen decorated with tinsel and glass. Not from “five shopping days left.” Not from “0 Come All Ye Faithful.” Not from Santa Claus or Rudolph. Get you to a strange place this Christmas, any­ where away from the sales and the TV specials and red and green bunting ... feel the press of years and know that you w e r e n ’t a thousand years ago, and in another thousand years you won’t be, and know simply that: Christmas is up to you. You define it; you are it. Reach out to those around you, love them, forgive them, help them; you’ll soon be gone and your shot at that definition will be past. Do it now. Why not always? — this question is my Christ- mas message to you ... love and peace to you all. Weitz is a Texan columnist. Matt Weitz A couple of years ago I spent Christmas Day in the mountains of New Mexico, a few miles outside and a few thousand feet above the architectural monotony of Taos. Since this is my last column to you until 1982, I thought I might share with you some of the thoughts that passed through my pun- kin' head on that snowy day. Christmas is that time of the year which finds most Americans extraordinarily ambivalent, tom between a sense of regenerative mysticism and an awareness of rampant commmercialism ... the Baby Jesus and Bob Hope, frankincense and five shopping days le ft... I thought about this as I watched my breath crys­ tallize in front of me and as I felt my feet turn numb in the newly fallen snow. I was sitting on a rock, alongside a high mountain road, far away from my friends. The road was a level spot be­ tween the snowy irregulanty of the valley floor; on either side of it rose the mountains, tsunamis of rock, ice and trees on a collision course with each other, racing to meet right at the spot where my road and I were situated. The ceiling of lead-colored clouds seemed to mir­ ror the even sameness of the valley floor, except that there was no little black dot leaving a trail of footprints behind it reflected in the sky. Snow brings with it a muffled silence, a vacuum which pulls out of even the most obtuse soul a con­ templative and introspective mood. So it was with me. I looked the valley up and down; with the excep­ tion of my road and I, it looked like it did on Dec. 25,1981 B.C., and as it would on Dec. 25, 3962 A.D. It wouldn’t change. A thousand of my lives stretched along time in front and in back of me wouldn’t, couldn't change it. ■y — f; y ' r Wednesday, December 9, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN Page 5 But if they ‘thought not,’ would they also disappear? 1 Bv PAULA ANGERSTEIN It’s not the way things are, it’s the way things are perceived. Pretty profound, no? My friends tell me some philos­ opher named Berkeley thought that up a while back, but I’ll pretend it’s my own personal profundity. When I took this job as managing editor back in Aug­ ust, I never could have known what was going to happen in the coming sem ester. If I would have, I wouldn’t be here now. But it was quite an experience to be part of this historic sem ester at the Texan. Among the many things I’ve learned here is: it’s not what you do, it’s what people think you are doing; it’s not what you say, it’s what people think you are saying. I was not the target of the Nov. 4 (what shall I call it?) “ incident,” but I was definitely hit hard by it. After hearing complaints from Texan staffers, I was repri­ manded by the TSP board for not “ fostering the morale and spirit of the news staff,” one of the managing edi­ tor’s duties outlined in the TSP handbook — and a task not unlike that of a Baltimore Colts cheerleader. In the first blur of activity, I perceived the actions of the rebellious staffers as some kind of coup d’etat. Since the resigning staffers were incommunicado, I had to base many of my thoughts on assumptions, not facts. It’s amazing the things you can think when you’re not sure of someone’s motivation. But after the dust cleared and I heard their point of view, my perception of the situation changed drastically. There were a lot of conflicting perceptions at the Texan this semester. Everyone saw everyone else as the problem. The funny thing was everyone kept his dissatisfaction a secret. Cotnplaints made their way around by the grapevine when a lot of problems could easily have been solved through simple conversation. It seem s to happen that way a lot. If Richard had only told Ronnie about that $1,000 earlier.... People have some sort of paranoia about disclosing what’s on their minds. It’s so much easier to avoid a problem than to confront it. It’s easier to tell someone what they want to hear instead of what you really think. In this respect, I have to admire those “ rebellious staffers” for what they did. But why wait until a crisis? People ought to talk on a two-way basis more often. Don’t trust assumptions; it doesn’t take much effort to find out if what you think really is. Now let me tell you my favorite philosophy joke: Descartes went to a restaurant, and when asked him if he wanted soup, he said, “ I think not,” and disap­ peared. So, after two and a half years of calling the TSP building my home and a sem ester of hectic 14-hour days, VDT radiation, Coca-Cola and cigarettes, it’s off to the world of academics, free time, home-cooked meals. What a frightening thought. -30- 'Surely 'says i ' not THE james watt tok-hero and famous wilderness rapist !' ‘ that's me, 'Says he And I SAYS. NOT THE RENOWNED DESFOltEROF OUR PRECIOUS NAlVm HERITAGE /# 'RléHÍ/SAYSME SO I ATE HIM/ Entertainment ‘fogey’ departs from ‘Texan’ to satisfy new obsession By WARREN SPECTOR I’ve been the editor of Images for two sem es­ ters now. and I’m burned out. I loved every min­ ute (no. make that about half the minutes) of my reign as editor, but now it’s time to move on. Oh, you'll probably see my name in these pages again next sem ester but as far as a staff position on this rag goes, forget it. That means it’s time to write the ol’ Thirty Column. (Ominous music, maestro, if you please) Steel yourself, dear readers, for yet another descent into the depths of self-indul­ gence I've been thinking about this column for the better part of three years, but now that the tim e’s come to write it, I don t know how to begin. It would be real easy to go all mushy and sentimen­ tal (bring up the violins, please, maybe “ Auld Lang Syne” ). I could talk about the great old times I’ve had at the Texan and all the great people I’ve met. My years here have been years of great joy. I’ve fought many a fight, and won a few ... but you don’t really want to hear this, do you? Oh, it would all be true ... and trite ... and boring, but I’d probably break down in tears and that would be really disgusting. I could begin with a little story, a “ humorous” anecdote: When I first descended the stairs lead­ ing to The Daily Texan offices I was a raw kid, a real greenhorn, still wet behind the ears. I made my first mistake within moments of enter­ ing the entertainment office. I admitted that I liked Jerry Lewis. I’ve never lived that down ... Okay, okay, I know. Boring. Okay, give me a min­ ute, I ’ll come up with something better. The Muse has to hit sooner or later ... doesn’t it? Maybe I’ll just start off with a phrase that’s been rattling around in my head for a while and wing it from there: Newswriters, sports report­ ers, columnists, cartoonists and editors come and go, but entertainment staffers just go on and on. And we do, you know. If you totalled the years of Texan experience represented by the enter­ tainment department, you’d come up with a truly staggering figure. We’re old fogeys, relatively speaking. Why the hell do we stick around? I wish I knew. We put up with at least as much abuse as any other group of people working on this paper (take that, Sports). But the benefits ... the benefits. Freebies (that seem s to be the entertainment department’s operative word these days) ... and ridiculously long hours (check out the other Thirty Columns on this page and you’ll probably read a lot about long hours) ... and low pay (another common sub­ ject on these pages, I ’m sure) ... and, well, free­ bies. If we were in this for the freebies, we never would have lasted as long as some dinosaurs have. No, most of us do what we do, whether that happens to be writing film reviews or whatever, because we love our subjects; we love talking about them, and arguing about them and drawing as many people into our discussions and argu­ ments as possible. We’re crazy, and craziness loves company. We’re obsessed, and that’s what keeps us going. Right now, I’ve got a new obsession — getting away from the Texan for awhile. Yeah, I know I’ve said this before and always come back for more, but this time I mean it. I ’m off, never to be seen again, except for maybe a story a week, or two or three a week maybe, or maybe a few more if I really get inspired, or maybe I ’ll start writing a weekly television column again like I did last sp rin g... Somebody stop me before I write again! -30- I’m leaving UT, ‘Texan,’ but is that ol’ spirit ever coming back? By PATRICK B R O W N It always seemed the odds were against my getting a degree I could tell you all that crap about what I went through to get it, but everybody does in some form or another But I honestly thought I would never see the day Now that it’s here, the grass doesn't look all that greener, as I had always thought it would I remember my first sem ester — fall of 77 Anyone with a half a lick of sense knows that in the fall, Texas and foot­ ball are inseparable Kind of like the way you'll automatically look at your hands when you get through with this edition of the paper There's no way around it. Back then, Earl (yeah, that one) was breaking all of the rushing records, we were the football team in the country, and generally, everything was uptight and outtasight. Those Drag parties still float back in vivid detail: the Tower bathed in burnt orange with the lighted windows proclaiming us No. 1, the pick­ up trucks herding staunch ’Horn sup­ porters up and down Guadalupe; seeing a well-endowed cheesecake flash ’em for the first time. But most of all, it was all of that downright rowdy school spirit. It was just like I thought it would be. And should be. But something happened. Ju st like Campbell, all of that rowdy spirit wasn’t around the following year. Peo­ ple were acting real reserved — I half­ expected the next pep rally to be at Weed-Corley. See, I always knew that I would end up here. Ever since my dad sat me and my sisters down and taught us how to ‘The Eyes of T exas,” I’ve always" sing wanted to be a bona fide Longhorn. When I was in grade school, if you could remember the melody to “ I’ve been Working on the Railroad,” you usually had the qualifications of being a cheer­ leader. I would sing that song and flash that particular sign we all know so well and wear Bevo T-shirts and everything. It was cool to do that. But not anymore, though. Y a’ see, ever since I’ve taken the time to notice, I’ve gotten the impression that it’s now passe to show any semblance of school spirit. So, while wanting to be as cool as possible (with an uncool success rate, I fear), I was secretly harboring an im­ mense feeling of pride for Bevo, the Tower and anything with UT’s colors. Heck, my chest still starts to swell and my shirt buttons strain even when I eat a Dreamsicle But there was another type of school spirit that I ’ve felt, too. It happened this past spring, when I went to a jour­ nalism convention (the place where everyone goes by the nick­ name “ Dusty” ) with a journalism pro­ fessor and a girl who was one of those hyphenated editors the Texan has. in Lubbock There was a large crowd — schools from five states. Kind of a big to-do. We heard there was a party for the student attendees, and we didn’t have anything else to do — except marvel at how much closer buildings appeared in Flat Country. So we went. A lot of the other students must have been marveling too, as lots of people showed up. Since we didn’t know any­ one else there, Hyphen and I sorta rhumba-ed together into the kitchen. Then this little Oriental guy — a photo­ grapher from the UT Arlington Short­ horn walked over and asked us which paper we were with and where we were from. It reminded me of one of those sense­ less E .F . Hutton com m ercials when we told him we were from UT Austin and wrote for The Daily Texan. Every­ body seemed to stop whatever they were doing for a split second, and then they all kind of discretely moseyed on over and started asking questions in a tone of voice usually reserved for heads of state. We commanded an alm ost eth­ ereal respect — it was as if they were glancing upwards expecting airborne Granola and Mrs. Paul’s Fishsticks to smack ’em in the head. What made the hairs stand up on my neck wasn’t the spotlight we were holding — it was be­ ing a representative of Big State Uni­ versity (Sorry, Selby). Kind of like be­ ing the only purebred at the SPCA. It was great. But I haven’t really seen that type of enthusiasm since then. So where did our school spirit go, anyway? I ’m not talk­ ing about Memorial Stadium on a chilly Saturday night huddled up with a round- heeled coed and a pint of Jack Daniel. That would give anybody spirit. I ’m the no-holds-barred, talking spine-tingling, yell-at-the-top-of-your- lungs kind. about Did it leave with E arl? I don’t think so. The Horns are going to the Cotton Bowl to put the Bear back in his place, right? And we did beat A&M — while staring smack dab at a potentially em­ barrassing (three in a row?) situation. And if they let him, Kenneth Sims would probably play at the Cotton Bowl in a wheelchair. All of the makings are there. So where is it? We could blame battle fatigue. May­ be Flawn’s war has us too tired to yell for the closest thing the South has to Harvard. Whatever it is, it’s become popular. Maybe even cool. Y a’ know, I think I’d rather be a nurd. Hook ’em. -30- Firing Line Another call for improvement I wish to state as-a m atter of record that my own title for my guest editorial in the Dec. 8 Texan was “ A Call for Im provem ent” It is blander. I admit, than the caption you gave it — “ Yes sir, Major Flawn! The faculty is ready! (when you a r e ).” — but I still prefer mine. Also, it would have been helpful if you had published the actual questionnaire, but we will distribute it to the general faculty shortly. Karl Galinsky ~ Chairman, Faculty Senate Plan to consider us, Iscoe We feel that the decision to discontinue Plan II biology sections was both arbitrary and unwarranted. Dr. Iscoe’s position — his move will gra­ ciously provide us “ more time and teacher op­ tions” - is debatable. Why, then, wasn’t it debated? The decision was undemocratic: nei­ ther students nor faculty were informed until after the decision was made to take an action that could seriously impair the credibility of a Plan II degree. The liberal arts education, as we all know, must incorporate a grounding in science if it is to be of value. Dr. Iscoe would trivialize this grounding, and thus enfeeble the education as a whole. Perhaps Dr. Iscoe already realizes the dis­ turbing implications of both his decision and the way it was made. At any rate, we are con­ fident that he will rectify the situation. In closing, two questions: What the hell is a “ Plan II Council” ? And whose program is this, anyway? Bruce McCandless Yolanda O'Bannon Susan Whalen Roger Worthington Plan ¡1 A final word: farewell to finals At the height of the illegally scheduled final exam season, is it not time to offer a eulogy for the fading regular final exam schedule? Faced with advancing squads of hour exam s in lieu of finals, take-home finals and finals in the last week of classes, the regular final exam schedule is an endangered species in need of urgent protection. Perhaps an academic safe­ ty net should be spread beneath it. Faculty members who give finals at the des­ ignated time, admittedly a diminishing and be­ leaguered band, might have historic plaques placed on their office doors so that curious tourists and trivia-minded students can mark their unique status. Finally, pictures of actual finals being given' at the scheduled times should be taken so that our descendants will have a record of this vanishing bit of America­ na. Lewis L. Gould Chairman, Department of History > God, help those racists God, help me, I’m white, Anglo and Ameri­ can — three inherited traits over which I have no control. God, help me, I live in a nation intent on protecting its long-defended ideal of self-determined destiny. God, help me, I en­ dured the pompous, naive retoric of Juan Ocón’s recent column entitled, “ Reagan block­ ade would continue repressive U.S. spirit,” (Texan, Dec. 2). A more appropriate title is “ A racist’s view of racism in U.S.” Face it, such racism expressed against the apparent unfortunate innateness of being Cau­ casian and American should be left to inde­ pendent privately supported newspapers, not The Daily Texan. Bruce Austin Scott Graduate Nursing Reagan’s response to "crisis’ A White House spokesperson charged Tues­ day that Martian proconsul Xphthlxptc Zthlct has launched a campaign to “ turn the presi­ dent into a Jew.” The spokesperson said that the Martian dic­ tator is employing a “ psychic brain trust” to assault President Reagan and other officials with brain waves. The unidentified spokesperson told report­ ers that Americans must help the president to overcome these terrorists with a “ telepathic counter-attack,” adding, “ We call on all Americans to think about the security of the president until the new economic program starts working. For Heavan’s sake, don’t think about the recession! ” Bill S. Scarborough Austin But who is he really? OK, guys, ’fess up. Just who is this Jeff Smejkal character any­ way? I read about him all the time on the edi­ torial page, always up to some mischief, pro­ moting student government or manipulating the press, or something of the sort. So I thought to myself, Now this sounds like the kind of guy I should get to know, you know, just to see how he does it. So I got out my trusty UT directory and flipped to page 161 under “ Smej.” No Smejkal. Well, not surprisingly, I figured that an operator like this guy would have an unlisted number. By now I was getting intrigued, so I called up the University registrar, figuring to settle the matter right quick. “ How do you spell that name?” she asked. “ S-M-E-J-K-A-L,” I said, “ Just like it sounds.” You can imagine my shock when she told me there was no record of any Jeff Smejkal attending the University. At first I decided to lay low, figuring Smejkal to be a creation of the now-departed Don Puffer. But Puffer is gone, and I still hear about Smejkal as much as ever. My conscience and curiosity are killing me. I can’t wait any long­ er. So please won’t you at least give us a clue as to which one of y’all is playing Smejkal, and how you ever thought up such a crazy name? Kerry McGrath Government Editor’s note: McGrath is SmejkaTs roommate. Here’s to you, Frank \*W\T DO THEM 1H£T\H.. "WE DON'T f o e t t * 5 M 5 T E .C T " ? U>HT TOST ft N'T M O N t^ THE LOOYE AT A U l T ^ M TAONtT GOIMC) TO WASTE ON smwfS/L CttS God, 1 feel sorry for John Schwartz. The poor guy can’t remember the date of Frank C. Erwin’s untimely passing, so he has to print a public apology. Well, John, sorry, hut crank up the Olivetti. Not only was the date wrong, but t the content of your editorial was highly inac­ curate. You stated that no one remembered, remarked, commemorated or otherwise memorialized that black day. How wrong you are! Wednesday, Nov. 25 marked the second an­ niversary of the Frank C. Erwin Memorial Snort. Had you inquired at Schoiz’, you would have discovered numerous graduate students of English, wearing black armbands all, gath­ ered in remembrance of HIM, Numerous pitchers were swilled, jokes were told, breathanalysis was cursed. Considering that imitation is the surest form of Battery, Frank would have been proud. David W, Porter I It’s 8 p.m. on a Tuesday prime study time. In an effort to make full use of a rare urge to hit the books, I transport myself to the local library. I have no trouble finding a parking space once I get them, pretty amazing in these parts. I enter the Khrary and head for die fifth floor a t o e I can be sure of having at least five cubicles to myself. I get settled and am well into a chapter on protein synthesis when screaming breaks out in the elevator. I’m joto- «Tout of my biology book. It s OK, kid,” I tell myself. “ That’s supposed to be funny, their wayof letting off steam.” A few minutes later, I am once more en­ grossed in the text when quiet is again broken - this time by loud talking and laughing. These guys don’t even protend they are trying to be quiet. 1 figure they are lost, they think they are at the Posse. It took a lot of concen­ tration to get through that chapter while being entertained by those around me. I’m not a law student, but I have been known to use the law library. This week the law li­ brary has gotten serious in preparation for the uncoming exams and is refusing admittance to anyone who isn’t a law student. The complaint seems to be that the presence of non-law stu­ dents in the library, (may be interpreted as “ those who are less mature than law stu­ dents” ), is too distracting for serious stu­ dents (may be interpreted as “ law stu­ dents” ). The evenings I have spent studying in the law library give me reason to question the ba­ sis for this policy of refusing admittance to other students. Perhaps a solution to the situa­ tion would be the placing of a monitor on the floors to keep mdse levels down by asking that those not interested in studying to leave (whether they are law students or not) rather than having one posted at the door of the li­ brary mating blanket refusals to all without case books in hand. Let’s face facts, when it comes down to whose spttwad-throwing you want to put up with, the deciding factor of which library you frequent often becomes where the likelihood of having your car towed is least. Why should you guys get to keep a good thing to yourselves? Kathryn Hager Natural Science T P ln h « u m u I 1 HV I Im m fftk t JBPVWto* MvvWill Regarding the multitude of letters concern­ ing the proposed law that would allow apart­ ment house owners to refuse to rent to ban sexuals, let’s get one thing straight. No person, gay, black, Hispanicor white, has an inherent right to live on another person’s prop­ erty without that person’s consent. Only one person has the moral right (as opposed to the legal right) to decide who shall Uve in an apartment house: the owner. He or she has a natural right, as property owner, to accept or reject any potential renter for any reason, be it race, income, sexual preference, religion or any other. Man-made “ laws” that restrict this rigit are wrong; they violate eve­ ry tenet of freedom that our nation was found­ ed on. When I go to the polls next month, I will vote for the new law. But I won’t do it out of hatred for homosexual, fear of God or for any of the other reasons put forth in previous letters. I’U do it because I believe in freedom. Freedom does not include unlimited access to someone else’s property. But it does include control of one’s own property. Indeed, freedom without property rights is not real freedom at all. Kip Ingram Engineering I’ll take my own ‘truth,’ thank yea Regarding Mary Arndt’s Firing Line letter of Dec. 2 entitled “ You asked for it,” thank you for your version of the “ truth,” but no thanks. If you work in a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit tíion you work at Seton, a Catholic-funded hospital. It has been documented that the Unit­ ed States Catholic hirearchy gave the so-called “ right to life” movement more than $1.5 mil­ lion last year. I know where you get your “ truth.” If you know when life begins, then you bet­ ter get on the phone and tell Sen. Orrin Hatch because he has been having hearings on this subject. He has also stacked the panel of wit­ nesses with so-called “ pro-lifers.” Even those hearings didn’t result in a proclamation of when life begins. I am glad medical science has the technolo­ gy to save the lives of infants that are planne wanted and whose parents can foot the MU. Seton takes very few indigent patients. But tor throe of us who must make that painful decision whether or not to carry a pregnancy to term, access to abortion is still our right. It is obvious from your letter that you have 1 chosen to have a child whenever you become pregnant. You have the right to choose and so do I. Ginny Ballard Austin Page 6 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, December 9, 1981 ' ^ t r a f f i c " 1 TICKETS $45 (IN J P. OR M UNICIPAL COURT] D .W .I. (G u ilt y p le a M is d e m e a n o r ) ......................................$ 1 5 0 . D .W .I. (J u r y T r ia l M is d e m e a n o r ) .........................................$ 4 5 0 . O C C U P A T IO N A L D R IV E R S L IC E N S E ................................ $ 1 0 0 . RON SHORTES 255-4440 116 E Main St.. Round Rock. TX 78664 24 hours a day 1 1 Mengden offers challenge 'Mad Dog’ wants to debate Bentsen By LYNN EASLEY Daily Texan Staff State Sen. Walter Mengden, R-Houston, says he wants to question Texas Democratic Sen. Lloyd Bentsen in a de­ bate about some “ bad” votes Bentsen has cast during his term in the U.S. Senate. Mengden, who is running for Bentsen’s Senate seat, said Tuesday that he has sent a letter challenging Bentsen to a one-on-one broadcast de­ bate. Mengden said a local ra­ dio talk show host has offered to moderate the debate on his show. “ I ’m willing to use any debate format acceptable to Bentsen and the moderator,” he said. “ I think the public deserves a chance to compare the two candidates,” Mengden said in his letter to Bentsen. “ I ’m sure you agree.” Mengden, an arch-conserv­ ative, said he thinks Bentsen has cast “ quite a few bad votes,” citing votes to return the Panama Canal to Panama and against the AWACS sale. Mengden first attacked in October when Bentsen Bentsen voted against the sale of AWACS. The state sen­ ator claimed Bentsen intend­ ed to embarrass President Reagan by not supporting the sale of the planes. “ Obviously that wasn’t the intent,” Bentsen responded then. “ I am pleased that de­ bate on the AWACS sale did not become partisan. You had Republicans and Democrats working together on either side of the issue, and it’s good to see that partisan politics still the water’s edge.” stops at Bentsen’s office has not yet responded to Mengden’s chal­ lenge. Mengden said he does not believe Bentsen will agree to the debate, “ With his liber­ al voting record, he will prob­ ably try to be a s inconspicu­ ous as possible during the next y ear,” he said. Five vie for U.N. head (UPI) UNITED NATIONS - Five Third World representatives entered the race for U.N. secretary general Tuesday after Tanzanian Foreign Minister Salim Ahmed Salim, opposed by the United States, withdrew. A new Security Council vote may be held Friday. Salim followed the example of his rival, Secretary General Kurt Waldheim, and withdrew his name from future balloting. Neither man could get the necessary Security Council approval after 16 ballots. The United States vetoed Salim, objecting to his leftist views, and China vetoed Wal­ dheim, who is from Austria, arguing the United Nations should be headed by some­ one from the Third World. The United States and China, both per­ manent council members, have veto pow­ er over candidates for secretary generals. China, however, appeared to have gained its objective of electing a Third World candidate, since none from the West are expected to enter the race At a news conference, Ambassador Olara Otunnu, council president for De­ cember, said the council had set 5 p.m. CST Wednesday as a deadline for further candidates to officially enter the race for the U.N.’s highest office. He said the following candidates had in­ formed him of their interest: Carlos Ortiz da Rozas, Argentine am bassador to Lon­ don; Peruvian Ambassador Javier Perez de Cuellar, special U.N. envoy to negoti­ ate a solution for Afghanistan; Com­ monwealth Secretary General Shridath Ramphal of Guyana; Foreign Minister Jorge Illueca of Panam a; and Prince Sa- druddin Aga Khan, an Iranian national and former U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. OPEC meets to balance crude oil prices, mend fences ART I DHART United Aroh FTmirotoc / 1TPT ^ ^\J1 min ABU DHABI, United Arab Em irates (UPI) — OPEC oil min­ isters gathered Tuesday for a meeting of the powerful cartel that is expected to decide on further reductions in world crude oil prices. The move was unlikely to affect U.S. consumers. “ What we are going to discuss is to reduce differentials from one side and perhaps increase them from the other side,” Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani told the E m irates’ news agency, Warn. He said present crude prices did not reflect market condi­ tions and predicted there could be some alterations in the dif­ ferentials, or surcharges. But the results of the regular Organization of Petroleum /> a* tr■ Exporting Countries meeting scheduled to begin Wednesday were not expected to have any direct impact on the average consumer, conference sources said. In addition to reviewing the price differentials established by OPEC s special meeting in October, the ministers of the 13- nation cartel were also to consider a report on long-term strat­ egy prepared Monday by a six-nation subcommittee chaired by Yamani. At their Oct. 29 meeting in Geneva, OPEC ministers unified prices around a base rate of $34 a barrel and set differentials of up to $4 a barrel for certain grades of oil. When they agreed in October, the ministers said the pricing arrangement would have to stand the test of the free market but froze prices until 1982. Since the agreement, some OPEC members have been re­ ported to be selling their oil at prices below the agreed rates Nigeria, for one, is said to be selling at around $34.50 a barrel according to charges leveled by two of its main competitors Libya and Algeria. The official Nigerian price is posted at $36.50. The ministers are expected to try and revise the differen­ tials, taking into account the prevailing market situation and the charges of some members against others. Publisher’s Prices Best-v all listed hardback C p l l p | * c | | NONFICTION 1- A Light in the Attic, Shel Silverstein. 9 Reg. $10.95............................................................COOP $ 9.30. 2. Never-Say-Diet Book, Richard Simmons. Reg. $14^95 ...................................................... COOP $12.70. 3. The Lord God Made Them All, Jam es Herriot. Reg. $13.95............................................ COOP $11.85. 4. Pathfinders, Gail Sheehy. Reg. $15.95. 5. Cosmos, Carl Sagan. 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COOP $ 8.45. as told to Henry Beard. Reg. $12.95.................COOP $11.00. 15. The Soul of a New Machine, Tracy Kidder. Reg. $13.95............................................................COOP $11.85. THIS IS IT! TTie Da iiy T exa n This is the last regular issue of COOP $13.55. COOP for 1981. But never fear! We'll return on January 11 — bigger and better than ever! $ 9.30. Meantime, pick up a copy of the Texan Ex­ tra on Monday, December 14. It's been to keep you going 'specially designed through exam week! CRAM IT! House of Tutor prosonts: Marathon Typing/ Tutoring Sessions For those a day late and a paper behind, or a semester late and a grade in a bind. Experienced, professional typists and U.T. tutors can help. a IMF ACC 311 ACC 317 D P * M 110 M l K M OP* U J K o m no m 110 Ml K O M l Ft m 1 (0 N 4 Ft Ml CN M l Oil m CM NY CM NS M 0 G it « 7 • Lots o f p a t ie n c e IOC Ml SPH *M iPK « 7 ST* MS PHY Ml PVT M U PHY MX pit m; • R e a s o n a b le rates • 5 m in u te s fro m UT c a m p u s • Free sh u ttle fro m Tri-Tow ers C o ll tor o p p o t t » n l n o w a l k - in s p ie o s e 473-6598 H o w a r d J o h n so n 's " L o n g h o r n R o o m ” N I H 3 5 A H w y 1 I 3 N f ree coffee & doujfhnuta Do te a c h e rs c o m m e n d the , id e a s b u t c r i t i c i z e t h e 1 g r a m m a r a n d o r o r g a n iz a - ¡ tio n of y o u r p a p e rs '5 D r o p 1 f o r h e lp a t R A S E L A j in W r it in g W o r k s h o p I 4 00 P M , A332 J e s te r fre e 1 00- It's $11 CASH (on your first visit) 1st Donation-$8 and a 3 Bonus ( w ith a student ID ) 2nd donation-$11 ( w ithin sam e w ee k) Each donation alternates: $8 the $11 ( w ith in sam e w e e k ) $1 0 Bonu$Pon 10th Visit AUSTIN PLASMA CENTER 2800 Guadalupe 474-7941 ___________ C oupon voM on 1st visit only 15% off FICTION 1. An Indecent Obsession, Colleen McCullough. 9 5 6? .m 3-50» Z. Hotel New Hampshire, John Irving. , R? • ■ ..................................................... COOP $13.15. 3. No Time for Tears, Cynthia Freeman. L ;............................................ COOP $11.45. KeS. $M.95 ... ...................... .........3............ COOP $12.70. 4. Cujo, Stephen King. , S eg; $¡ f 95 - : .....................................................COOP $11.85. 5. Noble House, Jam es Clavell. ‘ Reg. $19.95............................................................COOP $16.45. 6. Remembrance, Danielle Steel. _ Heg $14.95............................................................COOP $12.70. 7. The Legacy, Howard Fast. _ 8. Rabbit Is Rich, John Updike. o ReJ S13,95 ••••■..................................................... COOP $11.85. 9. Spring Moon, Bette B. Lord. ......................................................COOP $12.70. 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Reg. $13.95............................................................COOP $11.85. %iiven&Vtu (?o-Ob— VISA A MasterC harge hargo f n i r n m a L Welcome f r e e ] i I I • __ p a rk in g W e a m ■ w /$3.00 purchase books second level See you in '82! th A N N U A L h A Wide Vat •ie< ted Artists Crattsper oI Gilt Items D. * and Importer'. Admission $1.00 per Person Chüdren Twelve or Under Fit December 11th through 24th 11 A .M .-11 P.M. Food & Refreshm ents Available ‘JAerry 0mstmas “fourteen davs of Armadillo Christm as” CHERRY C R EEK PLAZA s w c o rn e r • s t a s s n e y & m a n c h a c a a u s t in ,t e x a s Pick a i/Vinner in Israel A great to get acquainted with Kibbutz while learning the Hebrew language Earn from 6 to / 8 college credits at Haifa University. Several other university-related programs available Contact: A UK 114 Fifth Avenue KIBBU RUVfl DGSK NewYork’N Y> 10011 (212) 255-1338 . Reagan urges support of bill increasing foreign aid funding ® 1QR1 T k - k i . . . . w _ . 1981 The New York Times ; WASHINGTON - In a per­ sonal appeal to all House members, President Reagan Tuesday urged support of a foreign aid package, to pro­ vide “ needed flexibility for the conduct of foreign af­ fairs.” “ The foreign assistance legislation which the House of Representatives will consider this week is a requisite ele­ ment of our foreign policy,” Reagan said in a letter elicit­ ing support for an $11 billion foreign aid appropriation bill for fiscal 1982, and a total of $12.2 billion in authorizations for fiscal 1982 and 1983. “ At a time of international turbulence and uncertainty in many parts of the world, it is imperative that we have suffi­ cient leeway to respond both to the challenges of aggres­ sion and to the opportunities for peace,” he wrote. “ No one doubts that we are ready to meet the former. Prompt pas­ sage of this legislation will demonstrate that we are pre­ pared for the latter as w ell.” The letter was sent to all 435 House members, but was prim arily directed at the 192 Republicans, because Repub­ licans have traditionally voted against foreign aid. In recent years, many Demo­ crats also were reluctant to support the program at a time of reductions in domestic pro­ grams. As a result, no foreign aid appropriation bill was en­ acted in either fiscal 1980 or 1981 Consequently, the foreign aid program has been funded by stopgap spending mea­ sures, which held the funding to what had been spent in pre vious years. But the adminis­ tration now seeks to increase foreign aid spending to meet its international commit­ ments, and can do so only through enactment of a sepa­ rate bill. House Democratic leaders have warned the administra­ tion that it w ill take 100 Re­ publican votes to assure pas­ sage of the measure, which already has been approved by the Republican-dominated Senate. If Congress fails to adopt a separate foreign aid appropri- To underscore the adminis­ tration’s concern, Secretary of State Alexander Haig went to Capitol H ill for a closed- door meeting with House Re­ publicans. Haig stressed the national security aspects of the mea­ sure, which includes m ilitary as well as economic aid, ac­ cording to several House members who attended the session. He urged support for the president, and said that unlike other measures that would be approved without Republican support, foreign 'At a time of international turbulence and uncertainty in many parts of the world, it is imperative that we have sufficient leeway to respond both to the challenges of aggression and to the opportunities for peace. No one doubts that we are ready to m eet the former. Prompt passage of this legislation will dem­ onstrate that we are prepared for the latter as w ell.’ ation, only $10.1 billion would be provided under the om­ nibus funding agreement reached by Reagan and Re­ publican congressional lead­ ers. The present stopgap fund­ ing measure provides $9.5 billion for foreign aid appro­ priations. Rep Robert H. Michel of Illinois, the Republican lead­ er, asked Tuesday afternoon if the president’s plea would prove effective, replied “ We haven't got a reading yet.” But Rep Silvio 0. Conte, R- ranking m inority Mass.. member of the Appropria­ tions Committee, said that “ I think it’s going to fly.” — Ronald Reagan aid would be doomed unless most Republicans voted for it. The secretary also men­ tioned the need to provide $300 million in m ilitary assist­ ance for Egypt, Turkey, Isra­ el, Sudan, Pakistan and other Middle Eastern and African nations. He mentioned the m ilitary obligations imposed by the Camp David accords, and the need to join other na­ tions in replenishing funds for the International Develop­ ment Association, which makes long-term loans for the World Bank. Max Fried ersd o rf, the White House chief liaison, said Haig had been “ very well received. ” As to the votes, he said “ there are a lot of unde- cideds” but “ I think the Re­ publicans w ill respond to the president.” Rep. Edward J. Derwinski, R-Ill., the second-ranking m i­ nority member on the Foreign Affairs Committee, said that Haig had “ made a good case for national security — a strong argument that you don’t tie a president’s hands.” Rep. Eldon Rudd, R-Ariz., said that while he remained reluctant to vote for a foreign aid appropriation bill, “ W e’ve got to support the president,” adding, “ He gave us a foreign policy we can live with.” House Republicans mean­ while have agreed to include a 4.8 percent pay raise for 40,000 senior civil servants in their version of the omnibus funding bill, which would finance the government for much of the rest of the fiscal year. “ You can’t keep penalizing these people,” said Conte. “ They’re leaving government like a hot knife going through butter.” U nder The omnibus spending mea­ sure is expected to finance government spending for most if not all of the fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30. an agreem ent reached by the president and Republican congressional leaders, the measure includes a 4 percent across-the-board reduction in all areas except m ilitary spending and con­ struction, foreign aid, benefit programs such as Medicare and revenue sharing and veterans’ health benefits. food stamps, Free Haircuts! Your first Supercut haircut is on us — and we cut it just the way you want it. We need models for our training center. IN NORTH AUSTIN 441-7502 Just call for a n a p p o in tm e n t supercu Shampoo at home day of cut. Minimum age limit 10 years. Limited appointments r ia 7 g ¡|pev i 9gQ) e m r a Corporation a THE IMPORTANT BRIDAL ENSEMBLE Diamond-touched splendor in lustrous 18K gold. To make this Christmas the most memorable* From $800.00 I HE SHEFTAI.L CO II AVI 1.1 RS ú ! M OLOGISTS H igh lan d Mall, W estgate Mall, 22 3 6 G uadalupe In San A n to n io : N orth S tar M all ■JUST ARRIVED I CRUISERS Down Vests W e started selling them ten years ago. T h is y e a r s hew W hole E a r t h R e v e r s ib le D o w n V e s t is fille ^ i with lOOTo P r im e G o o s e D o w n a n d r e v e r s e s from s t u r d y poplin to h g h t w e ig n t t a f f e t a C u t lo n g e r m t h e b a c k t o k e e p o u t t h e co ld W e h a v e a w id e se le c tio n of b e a u t if u l m uted co lo r co m b in a t ions for m en 4 wom en. O ver th e ye a rs we ve seen w h a t w o r k s b e s t in d o w n c lo th in g d e sig n F o r lasting q u a lity , s t o p in a n d lo o k a t o u r s u p e rio r 100°7o P r im e G o o s e Down v e s ts and p arkas WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2410 S a n A n t o n io 47ft 1577 Wednesday, December 9. 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 7 Music Express & Polygram Give You A Choice E A C H OR 3 FORM5.00 All the Best-Selling Albums on the streets on sale! Featuring these new releases distributed by Polygram Records Don't Miss Out on our last Record Sale of the Year! DAYS LEFT Hurry-for best selection! Sorry, no wholesalers or dealers allo w ed l Give the gift of music. PolyGram Records ML/S/C FXPRF5S LOWER LEVEL DOBIE MALL "DEEP IN THE HEART OF U.T." OPEN 10-9 473-8500 Page 8 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ W ed n e sd a y, D e ce m b e r 9, 1981 WATSON & COMPANY BOOKS OPEN T U ES-SA T 10-6. SUNDAYS 10-4 604 BLA N C O (PECAN SQ UA RE) 472-4190 ENGINEERS Gulf Oil C orporation, a major energy company, has job openings for all types of graduating engineers who are interested in building a career in crude oil and gas producing operations. Duties include drilling, equipment installation and m aintenance, subsurface reservoir studies, econom ic evaluation of producing properties, well stim ulation and reconditioning, and enhanced oil recovery operations. Training courses will be provided to accelerate career developm ent in oil and gas producing and drilling operations. Positions are located in Gulf Coast, M id-C ontinent, Rocky Mountain, and West Coast areas. Excellent employee benefits. If you have interview ed with a Gulf Recruiter or have sent us a resume, thank you very much. If you have not, please send your resum e and transcript to: J. R. Ligon, Jr. GULF OIL EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION COMPANY P.O. Box 1166 Pittsburgh, PA 15230 An Equal Opportunity Employer M F Official estimates 2,500 to graduate By W. GARDNER S E L B Y Daily Texan Staff The end of December means only a holiday break for most students, but for Suzanne Bannayan, it means the end of col­ lege. Bannayan, a senior anthropology student, expects to join about 2,500 other UT undergraduate and graduate students in saying so long to the University within the next two weeks. She said Tuesday she will take off for home in San Antonio and probably celebrate graduation with a family get-together. After that, Bannayan said, “ I might be working in a muse­ um. That's about all I can do with my degree.” On the other hand, she has other paths worked out, including an offer from a San Antonio lawyer to train to become a para-legal. From 2,215 tall 1980 graduates, the number will slightly in­ crease this year, UT Registrar Albert Meerzo said. An economic pinch during the mid-Seventies caused many students to become part-timers, working their way through school, Meerzo said. An increase in part-time students will show up in slight increases in December graduates. Officials will not total all the December graduates until after final grades are in and individual college and school deans finalize their lists. A first batch of diplomas has already been printed and are only waiting for a dean’s go-ahead, Meerzo said. Between 200 and 300 diplomas end up in the paper shredd­ er because degree candidates fail to make the final grade, he said. Study declares air travel safe WASHINGTON (U P I) - The na­ tion’s commercial air traffic has been moving safely despite the Aug. 3 walkout by union air traffic controll­ ers, a report by the National Trans­ portation Safety Board said Tuesday. However, the Federal Aviation Ad­ ministration's estimate of when the air safety system can be back to nor­ mal ‘‘is optimistic by 6 to 8 months," the staff report said. Rebuilding the system and replac­ ing the 11,400 fired controllers could take two-and-one-half to three years, it said. Air traffic was cut back sharply at the time of the walkout and is now running at just over 75 percent of pre-strike levels. The staff presented its assessment of post-strike operations at a meeting of the five-member board, an inde­ pendent agency investigates transportation accidents and other factors affecting safety The board recessed for lunch without adopting the report. that covered during the staff’s eight-week investigation, which ended Oct. 9. ‘‘The air traffic system operated safely during our two-month investi­ gation and has the capability of being operated safely during the rebuilding years,” the report said. However, it said continued safety of the system depends on FAA man­ agement and controller training pro­ grams. ‘‘Future safety will depend on proper management of total traffic capacity of the system in relation to the individual controller's capacity to handle traffic, and the quality of the the controller training program," document said. The report said ineffective FA A management helped lead to labor- management "turm oil" with mem­ bers of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization, which called the illegal summer strike. "Management changes must be made in FAA administration if the problems are to be resolved," it said what it described as a lack of person­ nel for both initial and on-the-job training, adding. "Over-the-shoulder training evaluation is not productive and should be replaced by a more meaningful system.” A board task force visited 45 air traffic control facilities and inter­ viewed 220 controllers and supervi­ sors during its investigation. "No basic air traffic control proce­ dures were changed or compro­ mised,” the report said, despite the fact that the system is handling 78 percent of pre-strike air traffic The report listed several reasons for the system’s safe and effective operation: • The FAA's use of "flow control" to level out peak traffic periods • Increased work weeks and fewer vacation periods for controllers. • The use of pilots, military con­ trollers and others for support servi­ ces to free fully certified controllers for radar screen work. • Combination of several air sec­ No major safety problems were un­ And it expressed concern with tors and controller positions. Court rules government can restrict legal Information n j U 7 A C L i T M p m n i M WASHINGTON n n r ^ (U P I) — Government agencies may refuse to disclose some docu­ ments — particularly internal law enforce­ ment information — on grounds the disclo­ sure might help lawbreakers, a federal appeals court ruled Tuesday. The 8-1 decision by the the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia could have a major impact on how the Freedom of Information Act is applied. In the specific case before it. the appellate panel upheld the government's refusal to dis­ close portions of a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobac­ co and Firearms training manual on how to conduct surveillance. The government argued — and the court agreed — that releasing such information would benefit those attempting to violate the law and avoid detection." The lone dissenter. Judge Malcolm R. Wil- key, protested that the majority did not go far enough in restricting access to docu­ ments dealing with law enforcement mat­ ters. He charged the decision will allow "enor­ mous discretion for judges to make their own assessments' in determining what the "pub­ lic’s interest" may be in the release of a con­ fidential document. The court said the agency or judge must determine whether a document is used for "predominantly internal purposes," and whether its disclosure "significantly risks circumvention ot agency regulations or stat­ utes." "The instructions to BA T F agents con­ tained in the B A T F manual are not written to regulate the public," Judge Harry Edwards wrote for the majority. Unless overturned by the Supreme Court, the decision will have a major impact on en- forcement of Freedom of Information Act guidelines, since the Washington appeals court handles nearly all appeals of suits against federal departments and agencies. The dispute began in 1978, when Michael Urooker asked the bureau for a copy of an agency manual entitled. "Surveillance of New Premises, Vehicles and Persons Agent Training " The agency agreed to release some of it but said 22 pages were exempt from disclo­ sure ('rookor filed suit, arguing. "The citi­ zenry certainly has a significant interest in the manner in which they are spied on bv agents of the federal government iO' \ r ' f t * ’' " ' ' .0^ C , s e& et» W ^ *• Apt' \j\ sV ‘ r‘ \ X « A • vo s ,r o*' U 4 ° « - i o * £ oX* Ce?‘ Jo c' CO?' ^ S fv o A » * Color/B&W Darkroom Rental Complete Range of Classes Austin Photo Center otters a total range ot services and facilities New state-of-the-art equipment Abundant darkroom space And fresh individual chemistry for each customer FREE: 1 free hour of B&W dark room rental time with this ad One coupon per customer Offer valid Until 1/15/82 AISTIN (CENTER) 3409 Guadalupe 453 004/ Ample parking in the rear Studio Rentals Now Available Open 9am to midnight, 7 days a week. The D ivisio n of H ousing and Food S e r v ic e m a i n ta i n s a in d ic a tin g v a rio u s housing a c c o m m o d a t i o n s listin g a v a ila b le to students in the A ustin c o m m u n ity Contact the D ivisio n of Housing and Food S e r v ic e 26th and Wh • s for m ore in fo rm atio n Immigration Matters Student visas Tourist visas Investor status Corporation transfers Temporary workers Fiancee visas School approvals ' 1-201 Exchange students Labor ( i-rlilu ations-Perm anenl T e m p o ra r> Skillrd P ro fe ss io n a l Asvlum Relative visas Deportation Exclusion Orphan petitions Medical graduates Refugee documents Citizenship Jones and Bennett A T T O R N EY S AT LAW S E HA BLA ES P A Ñ O L PH . 512-476-0672 208 W E S T G A T E BLD G 1122 COLORADO A l’S T IN .T X 78701 off Any knife in stock Sports Stop Offer expires: 12/24/81 j ■ W e have a great selection of the finest knives available. Our Genuine Swiss A rm y Knives have thousands of handy uses: scissors, can opener, corkscrew, universal wrench, saw or screwdriver...an ideal gift for men or women. The Buck Knives* are designed with the sportsperson in mind. Guaranteed for life, they are excellent utility knives for hunting, camping and fishing. Any of these fine knives would be the perfect gift for the outdoor people on your holiday shopping list. Binoculars F o r the s p o rts f a n , n a tu ra list, outdoors person or sig h tse e r. O u r high quality o p tics include standard, wide angle. ? mini b in o s. Also zoom telescopes % monoculars. G iv e som eone a d o s e r look with optics by B a u sh f Lombj^wift P e n ta x , Z e is s , 4 bushnell... from*50 WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY 2410 5 am An t o n io 476-1577 «flMfcl 8 8 6 8 R es c A fsc u j 4 5 6 - C S 3 3 CRYSTAL SALE! 20% O FF All crystal prisms — this week only. And remember — the Unicorn has a fan­ tastic selection of Christmas Cards, Calen­ dars, Jewelry, and, of course, gifts. Unicorn KB Gallery and Gift Shop Consumers rate toys, national outlets Organization labels projéctile weapons as most dangerous WASHINGTON (U PI) — a collec­ tion of p ro jec tile guns, slingshots, archery sets ánd toy guns a re the m ost dangerous toys on the store shelves this C hristm as season, a consumer group said Tuesday. The group, also listing the best toys it found, gave top rating to the Asteroids video gam e and the Py- raminx, a three-dim ensional p y ra­ mid puzzle along the lines of R u­ bik’s cube, last y e a r’s hot-selling brain teaser. In addition, the Consum er A ffairs Comm ittee of A m ericans for D em o­ cratic Action said its survey indi­ cates th a t Toys-R-Us charges the lowest toy p rices am ong national chain stores. It said a sam pling of toys a t S ears was 9 p erc en t cheaper the sam e sam p le a t J.C. P enney’s and the sam e “ m a rk e t b asket” of toys bought at Toys-R-Us was 13 percent cheaper than Sears. than Ann Brown, head of the group, said the toy weapons the group col­ lected “ look like they w ere donated to us by (Libyan lead er M oam m ar) K hadafy.” The burden is on the p a re n t,” she told a news conference. “ These toys require supervision.” The group said its operatives, conducting th eir 10th annual survey, w ere “ easily able to p u rchase in toy stores a wide range of rea listic looking and potentially dangerous toys and arrow s, d a rts, slingshots, cap bombs, d a rt guns and cork guns of all types.” Because the C onsum er P roduct Safety Commission decided e a rlie r this year not to im pose regulations on toys that shoot p ro jectiles, the m a tte r has been left to voluntary in­ dustry efforts, Brown said. But she said because the industry has not fully geared up its program , projectile and gun products on the m a rk e t this y e a r a re not as safe as they w ill be in la te r years. The com m ission said la st week it has not found any single toy this y ear th a t is dangerous in te rm s of federal law, and it em phasized the need for p are n tal supervision. The ADA consum er group did not claim the guns and other toys violate fed ­ era l law , but said th a t as a ca te g o ­ ry, they could be hazardous. In its “ m ost dangerous to y ” c a te ­ gory, the group singled out the F al- conm atics cap gun, the G host cap gun w ith rem ovable silencer m ade by Edison tojte and ABC’s Wide World of Sports Deluxe D a rt Set m ade by Crown R ecreation. The group said it did not like the cap guns because they a re too real- istic-looking and would be difficult to supervise. It said the d a rts con­ tained no w arning label of any kind on the package and should be sold in toy sporting goods stores, not stores O ther toys the group placed in the dangerous ca te g o ry w ere the S afari, T ra ce r Gun and Zebra A utom atic P istol, all p ro jec tile guns; a cap bomb se t; the Six-Shot Cork Ball W estern R e p e a te r; the Hopi H unter A rchery Set, and the B atm an Space Rocket w ith R e-entry Chute, a sling-shot type device. One toy, the Alien B laster G iant T arget Set has a snub-nose pistol and a hum an-like figure for ta rg e t practice, w hich Brown said could lead the cou n try “ to raise a nation of little a s s a s s in s .” The “ m ost disgusting to y ” this y ea r is Jig g les, m ade by the Duncan toy division of F lam bau P roducts Corp., it said. The toy, a se rie s of molds out of w hich children m ake edible g elatin snakes, lizards, spi­ ders and bugs could teach children bad habits and gave the toy r e ­ view ers the creep s. L B J . (Continued from P age 1. > includes research project, which this year the study of maternal and child health on the U.S.-M exican border and evaluating federal energy pol­ icy. “ T h ere's an initial stress period during the first sem es ter. Y ou’re getting used to be­ ing back in school and into this intensive w orkload,” said se co n d -y ea r Ja n e Schneckenburger s tu d e n t The second year, although considered less grueling than the first, is spent w riting a professional report. In recen t years, requirem ents for th at report -have increased, Ros- tow said, as p a rt of a “ tig ht­ ening" of curriculum require m ents. Alan Neidle, visiting Tom Slick p ro fe sso r of w orld peace, lauded the LBJ School. the Neidle, who cam e school a fte r 25 years working in governm ent to teach c la ss­ es in a rm s control, said he to w as very im pressed w ith the pro g ram and th a t it prep ared students well for life in the priv ate sector. The Slick professorship is one of m any endowed ch airs and professorships th a t, along w ith UT funding, support the renow ned LBJ School faculty. “ The infusion (ch a irs and UT is a very valuable m oney) “ The said. o n e,” Rostow ch airs and professorships we have allow for the ta le n t we h a v e .” The school c re a te s p ressu re to re c ru it m in o rities w ithin its own p ro g ram , Rostow said. Two of its p ro g ra m s a re designed . to m ake m inority students m ore aw a re of public affairs schools, she said. F o r the p a s t two y e a rs the school has hosted a seven- week p ro g ra m in policy m a k ­ ing sponsored by the Sloan Foundation. The p ro g ra m will continue for a third y e a r this sum m er. The school also offers a two-day conference em phasiz­ ing m in o rity issues, which this y e a r featu red San Anto­ nio m a y o r H enry Cisneros. T hat kind of m inority effort is tr a c k c o n s id e r a b le re c o rd ,” Rostow said. a The value of the LBJ School is th a t it not only gives its stu ­ dents “ th e ability to describe w here they w ant to b e." R os­ tow said, but it gives them a “ post-graduate ability to go th e re .” | Feb. 20 1 Stunning. Eighteen karat gold cuff bracelets with ear clips and rings to match. All are hand-crafted in Italy f o r our Roman Collection. B racelet, domed $3850, fla t $1850. E ar clips $690. Ring $525. Smith in protective custody * ^ ^ By JIM H A N K IN S Daily Texan Staff Convict plaintiff F ran k Sm ith spent the night a t the F ed era l C orrectional F acility in B astrop County because of a federal dis­ tric t court o rd er issued T uesday to protect Sm ith from being “ injured, m aim ed or m u rd ered ” in sta te custody. The te m p o rary custody order, issued by U.S. D istric t Judge H .F. G arcia, places te m p o rarily under custody of the Smith B astrop facility and enjoins the facility from retu rn in g Sm ith to s ta te custody until his law suit ag ain st the Texas D epartm ent of C orrections is resolved. The suit, filed Nov. 9, seeks to have tra n sfe rre d to federal custody to Sm ith serve the rem a in d er of his arm e d robbery sentence. Sm ith has been supplying infor­ m ation to a federal m onitor assigned to ob­ serve court-ordered prison refo rm s in Tex­ as in com pliance with a ruling by U.S. D istrict Judge W illiam W ayne Ju stice . Smith, a fo rm e r Austin bail bondsm an, learned of the order while he w as giving a deposition for the suit a t the s ta te atto rn ey the T exas Suprem e g en eral’s office in C ourt building. S m ith’s lawyer, Bob Loo­ ney, said the convict w as “ shaking, he was so re lie v e d .” S m ith has been kept in solitary confine­ m ent a t a Texas D epartm ent of Corrections facility in Rosharon since Nov 10. Looney said an inm ate assigned to guard the isola­ tion cellblock had th reatened to kill Smith. ‘T hey've set him up to murder him ,” Looney said. “ This guy (the inm ate guard) has control of the m echanism that opens the cell doo rs.” In his deposition, Sm ith ch arg es that TDC officials have been trying to arrange his m u rd er because he supplied information to special m onitors. His own life is in danger because he fun- neled inform ation to the special m onitors,” Looney guards) “ They prom ised him he'd never leave the facility aliv e.” (TDC said. Looney said the deposition re la te s the “ ongoing h o rro rs’ Sm ith has w itnessed in TDC custody, including hom osexual rapes and beatings by inm ate guards. The Texas attorney g e n e ra l’s office has declined com m ent on all asp ec ts of the Sm ith case. Three (Continued from P ag e 1.) arm e d over the control tow er. s y m p a th iz e rs took In a co m m u n iq u eread from the plane to the B eirut airp o rt control tow er, the hijackers said they w anted “ fuel and food," officials reported. “ We will shoot anyone who gets near our plane w ithout our perm ission. “ D eath to Khadafy, the im ­ p eria list ag e n t,” the h ijack ­ ers said referring to Libyan leader Col. M oam m ar K hada­ fy. It was the fifth hijacking since 1978 stag ed to win the release of Lebanese Shiite leader M ussa S adr who disap­ peared in Libya, and the gun­ men dem anded a U.N. probe into his w hereabouts. It's a Round-Up! Call D a ys E ve n in gs & Weekends Tl. In Austin: M l 801 Lavaca, Suite 104 Austin, Tx. 78701 5 1 2 /4 7 2 -8 0 8 5 in Dallas: n 6 i 7 N C . n f . E x prw y . D alla », Tx. 7 5 2 4 3 *14 7 5 0 -0 3 1 7 Educational Center T£ST PREPARATION SP EC IA LISTS SIMCE 1938 TEST FORMAT C H A N G IN G FOR NEXT E XA M IN JUNE OF 82. ” CHRISTMAS CHEER Annual Education Council CHRISTMAS PARTY Wednesday, Dec. 9th 4-6:00 PM AI Kiva Room in Education Bldg. 104 Faculty, Students and Stafj Welcome Monograms Say It All! The perfect way to personalize your gift . . . a m onogram adds that special accent to towels, robes, towel wraps, shirts, jackets, sweaters, and accessories. At Scherts & M ore, we can m onogram just about anything in the store — and we can do it fa st! Let us help you say it all on Christm as Day. É H H So folks ca n m eet that g e n u in e Texas auth o r, R osem ary Kent, who will b e on h a n d to sig n copies of h er n ew book: THE GENUINE TEXAS HANDBOOK, th e bigg est, b ra sh e st, m ost g u ssie d -u p book th a t gets to th e h e a rt of Texas . . . all th e bull, th e b oast, a n d th e g o sh -d a rn truth a b o u t G od's Big Acres. Y a 'I I com e on down! W ednesday, D e ce m b e r 9, 1-3 p.m., U n iv e rsity Co-Op, street level. (Books will be on hand.) Co-Op Books University Co-Op / 2246 G uadalupe / 476-7211 C a U ig r a p h u jran clubtb * * instructor a t faquna Glorui c irt, e *(\AST. cuncwuoti) will xfxc create i Our Wea rever 5 ock guaranteed for 1000 miles/ [also colorful 'kntcker s o c k s in N ordic p a t t e r n s $ - Good Things in Small Packages (G ifts for* 15 or less) Dird Feeders many -types £ sixes ^ Leaded (Mas?) Crystab and Crystal M ob ile s j -from A u s t r ia - an infinite 'jarie ty of ra in b o w s Next Whole Earth Catalog completely revisedi, updated th e ultimate, access to o l P lus many o t h e r fine, g i f t Cotton S h ir ts books for chhdren^adults for ment women n x i n in w i n i t f i r f r u n » <1* 1. M r n v n n tim e : 11:30 - 1:30 2901 M e d ic a l A r ts St. Plenty of free parking FOR THOSE OF YOU ABOUT TO RECORD WE SALUTE YOU! Give the gift of music. 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Anderson Ln 454-5221 1712 LaVaca 478-7311 basting’s records & tapes BARTON CREEK SQUARE DOBIE MALL MALL 327-7055 478-6119 T T I Peace rally marks Lennon death Wednesday, Decem ber 9, 1981 □ T H E DAILY TEX^ N □ Page 11 Jan. 23rd | | ¿Piefíate G M A T Call Days Evenings & Weekends I n A u s t i n : 18 01 L a v a c a , S u i t e 1 0 4 A u s t i n , T x. 7 8 7 0 1 5 1 2 4 7 2 - 8 0 8 5 In D a lla s: 11617 N Cent Exprw y D a lla s. Tx 7 5 7 4 3 3 1 4 7 5 0 - 0 3 1 7 E d ucatio na l Ce nte r TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 IS THERE GOLD IN YOUR FUTURE? w o r k T h e r e is ...if y o u r q u a l i f y f o r a P i l o t N a v i g a t o r P r o g r a m . W h e n y o u do, y o u ' l l w i t h p r o f e s s io n a ls in a r e w a r ­ d i n g f l y i n g c a r e e r f i e l d , p lu s get the be nefit of ou r e m p l o y m e n t p a c k a g e . F i n d A i r F o r c e G o ld by c o n t a c ­ ting : Bill Reetman Southgate Office Bldg. 2101 S IH 35 Austin, TX 78741 (512) 442-0481 < 5 A g re a t w a y o f life i W . “ Classes forming the week of Dec. 14 ” ¥ Icy mu/t do Paris •<--------- Larry Kolvoord, T S P Sta Emil Ottis of the Peacelight Fellowship speaks on the West Mall. Law, said. “ The goal is to goal is to stop the arm s race on both sides.” It is important for people to organize and express them ­ selves, she said “ When you don't agree with what is going on in the world you should express it, and one way is to organize and demon­ s tra te .” she said. “ So many people in Europe dem onstrate.” Snoeker said, mentioning a Nov. 21 peace demonstration in Am sterdam that drew pants. 400,000 partici­ Tony Switzer, a senior his­ tory student and U.S. Navy veteran, said. “ Last Friday two things happened The Sen­ ate passed a $208 billion de­ fense appropriations bill — largest defense budget the ever — and on the sam e day (Secretary of State Alexan­ der) Haig gave a speech and accused Nicaragua of. quote, an unprecedented m ilitary buildup. “ I think th a t’s blaming the victim ,” he said. “ I don’t think our leaders are capable. I think they’ve lost touch with reality ,” Switzer said. We need to freeze develop­ ment of nuclear weapons on both sides of the arm s race, he said. “ Any kind of crisis anywhere, a com puter m al­ function, could trigger a nu­ clear a tta c k .” He queried the crowd on the idea of a limited nuclear the war. “ You know what The SALE You've Been Waiting For! K D M o n WORLDWIDE FULL LIFETIME WARRANTY From $300.00 THE “M U S T ” VENDOME.™ Louis Cartier was inspired by a carriage harness in 1933. Today’s Vendóm e contains the only quartz movement in the world with a lifetime warranty. Roman numeral and plain lacquer dials in vermeil cases. ($625). Les must® de Cartier. The earth abounds with luxuries. But precious few are musts. t h e S h e f t a l l CO. JEW ELERS GEMOLOGISTS Highland Mall, Westgate Mall, 2236 Guadalupe In San Antonio North Star Mall A By DOUGLAS McLEOD Daily Texan Staff On the first anniversary of the death of John Lennon, stu­ dents rallied on the West Mall Tuesday in an effort to pro­ mote world peace. The noon rally, organized by a new student group called Peacelight Fellowship, fea­ tured various speakers who urged the crowd to get in­ volved with the peace move­ ment. Lennon, who spent much of his life crusading for peace, was a casualty of the w ar be­ tween peace and violence and the w ar between sanity and insanity, said Roxanne Elder, quoting Lennon’s widow, Yoko Ono. “ We need to build a m ass peace movement the size of that in Europe if we want to survive,” said Elder, a m em ­ ber of the Texas Mobilization for Survival. P e a c e lig h t F ello w sh ip , which was started by Quakers earlier in the sem ester, was formed “ to promote peace on all levels, personal, global and com m unity,” said Judith Horton, a group spokeswoman and foreign language gradu­ ate student. “ There are huge establish­ m ents devoted to w a r.” she said, “ but we don't have any equivalent to study the oppo­ site. There are no federally funded organizations to study to non-coercive w hatever the world Everything is seen in term s of I lose, you lose solutions is afflicting in “ What the world spends on arm s two weeks would feed, clothe and give w ater to the world for a y ear." she told the crowd. “ Please get involved; we are truly in a time of c risis,” she urged. “ The first thing you have to do is love your­ self, then you can love your neighbor and write you con­ g ressm an,” she said. Lucie Snoeker, a visiting student from the Netherlands the School of registered in kinko's copies introduces IBM CORRECTING SELECTRIC SELF SERVE TYPING only S 2.0 0 per Hour K O D A K C O PIES BINDING IN S TA N T P A S S P O R T P H O T O S - THIS STO RE ONLY* 2913 Medical Arts 476-3242 consequences are? Seventy million dead. Is that accept­ able to anyone h ere?” “ Hell no!” shouted a young man in the audience. Elder said that on June 7 the United Nations will hold a special session on worldwide d isarm am en t. The world peace movement m arch that is now in progress will culm i­ nate at the United Nations on that date, she said, to push for positive results from the ses­ sion. .‘We want to apply pres­ sure so a definite tim e will be se t” for concrete action to be taken, she said. The special session will not achieve anything “ if they just compile ream s of paper talk­ ing about disarm am ent,” she said. The rally was interlaced with peace songs, speeches and a few Lennon quotes. Switzer ended his speech with a request — he wanted the imagine a world crowd w ithout nu clear weapons. “ Im agine,” he said referring to one of Lennon’s most popu­ lar songs. to Lennon was shot to death on Dec. 8, 1980 in front of his New York City apartm ent by Mark David Chapman, 25, a self-proclaimed Beatles fan. From around the world peo­ ple were drawn to sites fre ­ quented by Lennon during his lifetime, recalling his words, his wisdom and his artistic and spiritual messages. Reports from United Press In te rn a tio n a l e n u m e ra te d public gatherings in Europe and In the United States. Liverpool, England, Lennon adm irers from abroad gath­ ered at the Cavern Club, where Lennons career with the Beatles began. At The Dakota, Lennon’s New York apartm ent, about 100 people gathered. At “ Stawberry Fields,” a section of Central Park named after a B eatles’ song, about 25 people gathered and sang Lennon s a w o rd s, chance." “ G ive p e a c e BASIC LEVI'S SALE Today thru Saturday: Levi's Str. Leg Jeans (zipper and button fly) Levi's Boot Cut Jeans Levi's Flare Jeans Levi's Cord Straight-Legs (All Colors) Levi's Boot Cut Cords (All Colors) Levi's Cord Flares (All Colors) 1599 Come j Meet The Gang Texas Longhand Ies M ade of unique 2~layer fabric Outer layer ot c o tto n ,w o o ln y lo n gives extra warmth while inside, finest combed cotton is s o f t o n th e s k i n Machine wash4dr\/able,too! /Wen's and Women s s ix e s WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY ( 0 4 J 2410 S A W A w t o n i o 4 T B 1 5 7 7 ONLY AT KINGKdOcin 4 7 4 - 1 5 8 4 Page 12 □ T|iE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, December 9, 1981 From our outstanding selection of 1982 Calendars. Use your VISA or MC j ree j |,r p a r i n g in Co-Op lot w/$3 purchase ^M-effecrs- 476-7211 • 2268 Guadalupe St. * FOREIGN STUDENTS GOING BACK HOME AFTER GRADUATION OR FOR THE HOLIDAYS • Ship your personal effects, household goods, automobiles: Any and all belongings, by • We are the most experienced and reliable export packing and forwarding company in • 15 years of specialized service in handling and shipping personal effects to foreign coun­ • Service to: Central and South America, Africa, Far East, Middle East, and many other • General Electric Home Appliances Export Dealer. 220 volt, 50 cycle appliances available. Give us a call and discuss your move home. We have special rates for students! moving and packing international, inc. * a 2303 Nance - Tel. (713) 222-8886 ocean or air carriers! Houston. tries. parts of the world. NO. 1 DESIGNER Men's Short Sleeve Knit Shirts this F a sh io n c o lla rs and fa m o u s logo fo r the d is ­ c r im in a t in g m a n . S lig h t irregulars won't affect good looks or w earing a b ility. Fall and new bright spring colors in sizes S-AA-L-XL. COMPARE TO $37 Campus News in Brief THE DEADLINE FOR ITEMS TO SUBMITTING CAMPUS NEWS IN BRIEF IS 1 P.M. THE DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION. NO EXCEP­ TIONS WILL BE MADE. EACH ITEM MAY APPEAR ONLY ONCE. ANNOUNCEMENTS MUSIC DEPARTMENT will sponsor a performance by the UT Chamber Music En­ semble at 4 p.m. Wednes­ day at Recital Hall West, near Littlefield Fountain. FOREIGN LANGUAGE ED­ UCATION CENTER will hold an open house at 3 p.m. Thursday in the FLEC office the Education Building. in GRADUATE SCHOOL OF LIBRARY AND INFOR­ MATION SCIENCE will sponsor a puppet show p e rfo rm a n c e of “ The Brementown Musicians" at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Austin Public Library, 800 Guadalupe St. EDUCATION COUNCIL will hold its Christmas party at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Al Kiva Room in the Educa­ tion Building. for UNIVERSITY REPUBLI­ CANS is accepting appli­ com m ittee cations chairmen, which may be obtained by calling the or- ganizaton. Applications are due Friday. MATH DEPARTMENT will hold an honors reception for new Pi Mu Epsilon m em be rs, g ra d u a tin g seniors and Bennett Prize winners at 3 p.m. Wednes­ day in Robert Lee Moore Hall 12.104. CAREER CENTER: Digital Equipment Corp. will re­ cruit science, math and engineering ma­ computer jors for associate software positions from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday in Jester Center A115. Also, a re­ sume critique session will be held at 2 p.m. Friday in Jester Center A223. MEETINGS ANGEL FLIGHT will meet at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday in Russell A. Steindam Hall 317. STUDENT COUNCIL FOR EXCEPTIONAL C H IL ­ DREN will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Educa­ tion Building 286. SIGMA DELTA CHI will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Sinclair Suite of the Texas Union Building. Dave McNeely, political ed­ itor of the Austin Am arl- can-Statesman will speak. TRI-BETA will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Gover­ nors’ Room of the Texas Union Building. TSIPS will hold a meeting of delegates the model to United Nations at 10:30 a.m. Thursday in the East­ woods Room of the Texas Union Building. STUDENT TELECOMMUNI­ CATIONS GROUP will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Texas Union Building 4.226. UNIVERSITY GAY STU­ DENTS ORGANIZATION will meet at 7 p.m. Wednes­ day in Texas Union Build­ ing 3.116. The Austin Po­ lice Department’s minority liaison will speak at 8 p.m., and Dr. Michael Storms of the University of Kansas will speak on "Theories of Erotic Orientation," at noon Thursday in Texas Union Telephone Counseling and Referral Service 476-7073 Telephone Counseling an d R e fe r r a l Service has a staff of tra in e d counselors a v a ila b le 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, to discuss any p r o b le m you m a y ha ve and to give in ­ f o r m a t io n about cam p us and c o m m u n i t y services. Con­ ___________ f id e n t i a l i t y is assured. Building 3.128. UNIVERSITY MOBILIZA­ TION FOR SURVIVAL will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednes­ day in Calhoun Hall 21. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE OR­ GANIZATION will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday in Ge­ ography Building 425. LECTURES TEXAS UNION: “Managing Stress for Exam-Taking," presented by staff mem­ the University bers of Counseling Center, at noon Wednesday the East­ in woods Room of the Texas Union Building. COMPUTER SCIENCES: "Shape and Structure from Motion of Objects,” by Jon A. W ebb, at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Painter Hall “ The Compo­ 3.14 and nents of the Cambridge Distributed System," by Dr. Andrew Herbert of Cam­ bridge University, at 4 p.m. Thursday in Painter Hall 3.14. PETROLEUM ENGINEER­ ING DEPARTMENT: "Air Drilling," by Dr. Chi Ikoku, at 3 p.m. Wednesday in Petroleum Engineering Building 311. PHYSICS DEPARTMENT will present a joint physics and astronomy colloquium at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Robert Lee Moore Hall 4.102. COLLEGE OF ENGINEER­ ING Chair of Free En­ terprise: "Bioethics and Free Enterprise,” by Dr. Margaret N. Maxey of the Energy Research Institute of Columbia, at 4 p.m. Monday in the 10th Floor Conference Room of Cock­ rell Hall. UNIVERSITY NEW AMERI­ CAN MOVEMENT and University Democratic So­ cialist Organizing Commit­ tee "Socialism in France," by Hal Wylie, professor of French, at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday the East­ in woods Room of the Texas Union Building. BACK TO THE GOOD OLD DAYS 25( BREAKFAST AT 6505 AIRPORT BLVD. ACROSS FROM HIGHLAND MALL FRENCH TOAST 25' Please present this coupon before ordering. Limit one coupon per customer. Void where prohibited by law. This O ffe r e x p ire s on Dec. 15, 1981 T h is o ffe r good at 3427 Je ffe rso n , 2700 G uad alu pe & 1001 W. Ben W h ite MfiHStSpatai Wednesday, December 9, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 13 Convicted killer sues estate of his two victims Driver guilty of negligent homicide in head-on seeks damages for injuries PONTIAC, Mich. (UPI) - Five years ago, Andrew Collier drove his car down the wrong side of a high­ way and struck another c a r head- on, killing a Pontiac couple. Now he is seeking damages from their es­ tate. Collier, 28, told an Oakland Coun­ ty Circuit Court jury Monday his life has fallen apart since the Aug. 10, 1976 accident and he often feels he would be “ better off dead.’’ Maureen McBride, his attorney, told the jury Collier is entitled to unspecified damages from the es­ tate of Sigmund and Irene Fitz be­ cause the driver of the car he hit head-on was partially at fault. She said whoever was driving the Fitz vehicle “ had the time, the op­ portunity and the ability to avoid this accident” by either changing lanes or swerving out of the way. But Michael Schloff, the law yer for the Fitz estate, said Collier was the “ sole, complete cause” of the accident that killed the elderly cou­ ple. Schloff said he would present tes­ timony that Collier had passed sev­ eral vehicles just before the acci­ dent and was driving a t least 60 mph in the wrong lane for a half mile before he struck the Fitz car. Collier suffered brain dam age as a result of the accident and now walks with a limp. He contends in his suit that his speech is slurred and his left leg and arm are virtual­ ly useless. His attorney said he will never be able to work again. A blood-alcohol test given to Col­ lier as he lay unconscious in a hospi­ tal after the crash revealed that he had been drinking, but a judge later ruled that police violated his consti­ to file tutional rights by failing proper procedures in adm inistering the test. Collier was first charged with in­ voluntary m anslaughter while un­ der the influence of intoxicating li­ quor, but the charge was reduced to negligent homicide. Three years ago, he pleaded no contest and was fined $400 and placed on two y e a rs’ probation. Presiding Judge George La Platu ruled Monday that the attorney for the Fitz estate could not introduce the blood-alcohol test in this week’s civil trial because it would violate the sta te ’s rules of evidence Professor says Saturn has razor-sharp rings SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) — The spectacular rings of Saturn are so thin on the outer perim e­ ters that their edges are razor sharp, the Ameri­ can Geophysical Union was told Tuesday. “ A razor blade blown up to the sam e size would not have nearly the sharp edge of the Saturnian rings," Stanford electrical engineering professor G. Leonard Tyler told a regional meeting of the American Geophysical Union. He said if a scale model of the rings were made of paper, the paper would be half the size of a football field but still be paper-thin. Tyler’s description was based óñ data sent back to earth by Voyager 2, now on its way to Uranus. Voyager 2 flew past Saturn last August. Saturn’s rings now are generally believed to be mainly composed of fine pieces of ice. Tyler was interpreting data from radio waves aimed at earth as the spacecraft passed behind the rings. The diffraction and deflection of the waves sug­ gested ice particles ranging from the size of golf balls to houses. The largest ring, the B ring, Tyler said, is no more than 1,500 feet thick. Voyager found bands of m aterial along the length of the rings which Tyler called “ condensations.” M aterial in the rings is bunched up into these condensations and especially on the outside edg­ es. What process causes this — why the sm aller m aterial piles up — is totally unknown at this time, he said. But the sam e process seems to be a t work in the nine narrow ringlets of Uranus, the next plan­ et out from the sun. The largest Uranian ring is only 60 m iles across. The scientists not only studied the Sat iraian rings by the occultation of radiowaves, but by the occultation of starlight as well. Before the Saturnian visit in 1979 by Pioneer 11, it had long been believed that Saturn had only the three large rings first sighted by Galileo. Subsequent spacecraft encounters, however, discovered several additional rings. The rings possess an ice m aterial clumped into spokes and the F ring was found to consist of three separate strands braided together. This twisting was thought to have been caused by the gravity of two nearby small satellites. Shoe Shop ^ SHEEPSKIN COW & CALF ★ SADDLES ★ ENGLISH WESTERN Capitol Saddlery ** VISA’ 1614 Lavaca Austin, Texas 478*9309 H ap p y H our in th e M oonlight HOLDING DOWN THE FORT Wednesday night only from 9-10 p.m. áeata, 477-8999 311 W. 6th Austin Cruzer Bicycle Factory 6 20 B W. 34th 452-6864 $15-20 OFF Now till Xm as AUSTRIA 10 D ays J a n u a r y 6 1 5 , 1 9 8 2 DPR KAISERHOE HOTEL Badaastcin, Austria 5 -Star de luxe $1399 For information call: 472-3454 cappuccino Les \ r n i s G afe 3 li l i X S a n V n l n n i o around the corner from the Party Born "Horn* of the tw enty-six in c h srt” Mongoose Cook Brothers Power Uto Laguna Cycle & Pr° Parts Salas Service (pleas» post on bulletin board) CATCHING A COLD? F R E E T R E A T M E N T OFFERED! I am now testing a rapid acting anti-viral agent for the common cold. Come in as soon as possible today for results often measured in hours. Remember, don't wait or it may be too late! No vitamins used. SEE: Dr. William W. Halcomb, D.O. 8311 Shoal Creek Blvd. Phone: 451-8149 NOTICE Open Meeting University Co-op Society Board of Directors ★ ★ ★ Thursday, December 17th 6:30 p.m. Student Union Building Eastwoods Room 2.102 -AGENDA- 4. Continued (from Novem ber M eeting) Consideration of Proposed Nam e Change (R. H am ilton). 6 Consideration of Proposed By-Law Changes on Faculty Board Member Qualifications (D. M atthews). 7. Report on Developm ents on Board Procedure Manual. 8. Report from CAMI Com m ittee on Proposed U se of “ Student Input Sub-Committees" and “ Sandwich Sem inars 9 Com m ittee Reports: a. Audit — Witt b. CAMI — Swope c Em ployee Input — Cunningham d. Personnel — Hamilton 10. Old Business. 11. New Business. ALL STUDENTS, FACULTY & STAFF INVITED-PLEASE COME TWELVE LOUSY BUCKS GETS: 1. A N ew F riend 2. 36 T o ta l Years o f E xp erien ce. 3. H air Care & L o v e Iu fe A dvice. 4. Free S h a m p o o & C o n d itio n e r. 5. N o n-P lastic A tm o s p h e re 6. O p in io n s O n A n y S u b je c t. 7. W ash & W ear P recision Cuts. 8. S ty le s For You & Y o u r Hair. 9. P ersonalized Service. 10. B est H air J o b In Texas. 1 Approval of Minutes of Novem ber 19 Meeting 2. Report of President: a Sales Report b. Report on Other A ctivities c. Consideration of Computer Proposal 3. Report of Chairman. Get a $500 Christmas Bonus from Doble Mall! 2512 Rio Grande 477-7202 5. Consideration of Proposed By-Law Change on Student Board Member Qualifications (R. Ham ilton). EARN CASH | You can m m a Mo by bo* I mg a blood plosma donor. It tobos only lVt hours, I and you can donato ovary ■ 72 hours. ill rocohro $1.00 for first donation and for a sac end dona- Hta sumo wook. ¡TIN BLOOD COMPONENTS, W est 29th j , T tw ri m Tiger Deluxe, “ Instant R eplay” elecironk football. T he m ost sophisticated RUBIK’S CUBE Give a practical gift of beautiful durable Woolrich out­ door clothing, including — • Chamois Shirts — classic comfort in 100% cotton • Wool & Flannel Shirts in several styles • Wool Sweaters in classic ski styling • Nieht Shirts — sleep in the comfort of cotton flannel • Down Parkas & Vests — lightweight & warm (synthetic fills also available • Mountain Parkas - windproof, breathable shell garments Both stores open ’til 8 weekdays after Dec. 10 Shop at either location! 2901 N . Lamar 476-3712 Burnet Hoad at Anderson Lane 452-83 ............ THE GPIfTlE PLfWEPi H igh la n d M a ll N orth C ro ss Máll 453-0670 Barton Créek Nquare 327-8267 Page 18 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, December 9,1981 Aiming to please you... Brittons. VISA* BUY. SELL. TRADE Oft RENT THROUGH THE CALL THE HOT LIN E} 471-5244 l i g h t s When going on v a c a ­ tio n , c h e c k o u t an electric t i m e r to tórn ( f o r a on ''liv e d -in '' look). Stop newspapers and other d e l i v e r i e s . H a v e a n e i g h b o r p i c k up m ail. Call police at 471-4441 for a "close p a tro l" w h ile you a re gone. Joy Williams down, but not out By SUZANNE HALLIBURTON DaiJy Texan Staff Maybe it was the dark clouds dominating Aus­ tin skies. Or perhaps it was Texas’ dismal per­ formance during its California road trip. What­ ever, Longhorn post player Joy Williams was down. An hour before, Williams had returned along with the rest of her team from Los Angeles. There, the Longhorns had lost badly to No. 4 Southern Cal and No. 5 Long Beach State. And Williams’ performance in both these games, she said, was not up to her usual standard.___________ Basketball Against the 49ers, Williams only scored four points and fouled out late in the game as Texas lost, 74-61. Against USC’s sagging defense, Wil­ liams managed only five points. The Longhorns lost again, 83-67. Those two games are not typical of what Wil­ liams can do. When the Longhorns won the An- heuser Busch Classic at San Jose State, she was the tournament’s most valuable player. Williams stayed hot through the Oregon State game in Austin. But midway through the first half, after she had already scored eight points, she went down with a sprained ankle. Even though Williams did return to play later in the game, she had to m iss the team ’s last two practices before traveling to Long Beach State. “It started out in the last road trip to California that I got my confidence back up,” Williams said. “But it hurt me not to practice those two days before we left. I wasn’t really mentally ready to play.” Coach Jody Conradt says that as Williams goes, so do the Longhorns. “I think more of what she is talking about is the example I have to set,” said Williams, who is the Longhorns’ only upperclassman. “If I didn’t set the example of hustling and trying to win, then we would lose. (Freshman) Annette Smith has been picking up a lot of the slack, but we need at least 35 points from the post positions in every game. “Like I said, I have to be able to set the exam­ ple, and I’m not right now. I felt like I was in control of the situation, but I guess I wasn’t. My goals are to become the leader of the team, help the team. All we have to do is be ready mentally to play. We have the physical ability to match up with anybody. But we have to be mentally pre­ pared, be placed in those situations over and over.” Now with Texas Tech next on the Longhorns’ schedule, at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Frank Erwin Center, Williams and the rest of the Long­ horns hope to break their two-game losing streak and avoid the turnovers and shooting slumps that have followed them like the plague through their swing in California. But Williams said the Red Raiders would not be the ideal opponent for Texas to blow away and break out of its slump. In fact, Williams said that no team on the Longhorns’ schedule is a prime target for a runaway. “Tech’s not easy — they’ve got a good squad,” Williams said. “I don’t think we have any easy games on the schedule. Everybody has a better team this year, and they always play Texas tough. I saw USC play Stanford the night before we played them, and they were missing shots, turning the ball over. But because they played us, they played better.” Williams will be hoping Texas can break the slump — and that her bad mood will disappear along with it. Longhorns’ blueprint paying dividends Top-seeded Texas prepares for AIAW national championship “During Septem ber, w e’ll concentrate on developing our skills. In October, w e ’ll e m ­ phasize coordination. W e’ll worry about winning in N ovem ber and December. ” — Mick Haley before the 1981 volleyball season By STEVE CAMPBELL Daily Texan Staff September, October and November are long gone. By December, the Texas volleyball team usually is, too_______________________ _ Volleyball A funny thing happened this year on the way to Christmas, however. The Longhorns started doing something they’d never done consistently in the past: winning. Winning, as in a mid-season, 23-match winning streak that helped vault them into the top 10 for the first time ever. Winning, as in a 55-6 overall mark and a No. 9 national ranking. And winning, as in their first SWAIAW title and a spot in the AIAW national tournament Thursday through Saturday in Tallahassee, Fla. “The power of suggestion is an amazing tool,” Coach Mick Haley said. “I’ve always felt, and the players have always felt, whether or not they ver­ balized it, that they can cause something to hap­ pen. If they say September is going to be this, then they cause it to happen that way. We’ve con­ trolled our own destiny. We’ve followed our blue­ print to a T.” A “T” as in top seed in a weakened AIAW tour­ nament field, that is. Most of the nation’s leading teams have defected to the NCAA, leaving Texas, No. 12 Utah State, No. 15 UT Arlington, No. 18 Portland State and No. 19 Southwest Missouri State as the only members of the top 20 in the tournament. Three wins over UTA and victories over Ohio State, Minnesota and California give the Long­ horns a 6-0 record against tournament opponents. “We re going in as the top-rated team, and there’s a lot of pressure on our kids,” said Haley, whose team is in a pool with unranked Pittsburgh and Michigan. “I believe the intermediary step in our program is to win the tournaments w e’re sup­ posed to win. Winning this tournament would be a very positive thing for our program The Longhorns have thrived on tournament play all season, finishing first seven times, third twice and fifth once in 10 outings. Indeed, Haley traces Texas’ development to its tournament appearances. Texas came of age in the UCLA Invitational, beating No. 5 UC-Santa Barbara, No. 6 USC and No. 17 Arizona State en route to a fifth-place finish in a tournam ent that included the nation’s top 12 team s. In 1980, the Longhorns dropped all five m atches in the tourna­ ment. “ They started believing in them selves as a na­ tional power and as a potential national champi­ on,” Haley said. “ I think they knew all along af­ ter UCLA that the sta te and regional titles w eren’t going to escape them ” They didn’t. Texas breezed through both the TAIAW and SWAIAW double-elimination tourna­ m ents without losing a m atch Although Texas had never won either title before, Haley said the wins were no accident. “ This is not a fluke by any m eans,” he said. “They have earned every dam point that they've won this year. I don’t think there s a team in the country th a t’s been as consistent and porked as hard as they have “ We’re really on the verge of exploding,” he said “ We really don't expect people to jump on the bandwagon without our earning it I think it will take us four to five years to have things to the point where we have the tradition and where we have the community expecting us to play at a certain level But I think we can be competitive They already are. PEANUTS® by Charles M. Schulz TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Liniment 5 In case that 9 Actress Bernhardt 14 Celebes ox 15 Road to Rome 16 An Astaire 17 Symptom 18 Mets' park 19 Barer 20 G ive-------- whirl 21 Refuge: 2 words 23 Sweets 25 Italian wine 26 Hostelry 27 Surplus 29 Roam 32 Trounce 35 Garments 36 Via. Informal 37 Rest on 38 Container 39 On tiptoe 40 Monk parrot 41 Route 42 Thread 43 French noble 44 Mailed 45 Relative 46 Greek letter 48 Sprinkle 52 Redford role: 2 words 56 Eggs 57 Dudgeon 56 African city 59 Male 60 Steer 61 Smidgen 62 Created 63 WWII guns 64 Cards 65 Stouts DOWN 1 Fundamental 2 Santa — 3 Yukon peak 4 Homo sapiens 5 Lend an ear 6 Nation's character 7 Palm reader 8 Vehicle 9 Most rational 10 Of age 11 Stop signals: 2 words UNITED Feature Syndicate Tuesday's Puzzle Solved □ □ a a a a a a a a a a a j o a a a na a n j a j j j j a a j j a a a a 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 □ □ □ □ 3 3 3 3 □ 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 a 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 □ □ □ □ 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Q 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 □ □ □ □ 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 B Q 3 Q Q 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 3 3 0 12 Wisdom deity 13 German title 21 Without: Lat 22 Make happen 24 Likewise 27 Confer 28 Former 30 Seed case 31 Tool 32 Unconcealed 33 Arab father 34 Saddle belt 35 Husk 36 Blemish 38 Deterge 42 Oppress 44 Inaugurates 45 Backbones 47 Theater 48 Ray 49 Absolute 50 Quibble 51 Frenzies 52 Weakens 53 Ohm or rel 54 Catalepsy 55 Noted Viking 59 Petty: Scot. ONCE THEY bET SCRATCHED OFF MY CHRISTMA5 LIST, THEY NEVER 6ET BACK! BLOOM COUNTY by Berfee B rea th ed well.. 1)111165 ARE HNAU.Y BACK ID HOW THEY SHOULD BE HERE IN WASHIN6)DN, noun YOU 1WNK’ i HUH’ | m CARTER AWVUNISTR/TT10N... IT WA5 AN mWLUTZ TRAV657Y... 5iWtY 5HAM6RL' A 10W POINT F0RTHI5 CO/NTRY, I A55UP6 m ANP i SHOUIP KNOW. I WAS H6P6. Y0VH6AW m WORST, PfPN'T WILLie N6CS0N SP rr TOBACCO RIGHTIhCRB OH / I WAS AUM5TÍLL. M\10- WA7CH/T, We’re open late, every nite ‘till 8! From Monday, December 14 thru Friday, December 18. All departments except: Textbooks, Co-Op East ft The Bike Shop B .C . (The Bike Shop will be open Thursday 'till 8 as usual.) A N P r n e e & i r w a s ! ^ FINALLY!... r s a w THE UsHTATTHE &I4DOF THE TUNN&U-- by johnny hart 6 0 vM M íé ir r u iC N e p o jr t c ee a t r a in C£WllN& THE OTHER WAY A re deficiencies in m ath prerequisites giving you some problem s w ith U T 's m ath and science courses? Check out RASSL's individualized and group m ath review s ... A332 Jester, 471-3614. lltUuen&tiM (Zt-Ofb £)FMd CnterprtMi. Inc 1M1 Storewide holiday savings Wednesday, December 9,1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 19 from your Eagle Discount Center! 8 A.M. Til 10 P.M. Daily 8 A.M. Til 9 P.M.Sunday Ki'ip %é STRIPE KNIT TOP ireve A ttractive v neck and styling in 100 acrylic w ith lurpx Assorted colors Sizes S M t Reg S 96 KNIT TOP Sharp looking top has long sleeves and v neck styling Assorted colors Sizes s M i 4 FOOT SCOTCH PINE Nicely shaped artificial tree by Mr Christmas 21/2" X 7" RED CANDLE With Poinsetra ring Beautiful table center piece for rhe holidays MINI HOLIDAY STOCKINGS Plush mini stockings are S' r tall 5 ROLLS OF GIFT WRAP Assorted designs each roll 36" wide 25 HOLIDAY BOWS Assorted sizes to add that special to u ch 5 RIBBON >12" TAPERED CANDLES Box of 10 looks great on your holiday table ASSORTED TAGS, CARDS & TRIM Adds a little extra to set your package apart • 20 LIGHT OUTDOOR SET Add some holiday sparkle C 9 size Low pnce 50 MIDGET LIGHT, CHRISTMAS SET Ul approved for safety Beautiful light set Make it happen for Christmas Lamps ‘CHRISTMAS TREE HOLDER Heavy duty stand w ith 4" ring and 4 legs Model 41 REPLACEMENT BULBS Multi colored 5 pack to fit size C 7 5 5 5 5 N. I a m a r« 512 W, Stassney« 13450 U.S. 183 N P R E - T E S T E D D I S C O U N T C E N T E R S P m p p r o t e c t . o n P e i" , o tia fa n tp p * . Thursday npcpmon' 1 ’ 'n n Awinpsflav p o ' e 1 r< h e e f f e c r . y i * r > f f t r I N I fry lu e h y *to>*» lr*c All NlflAli LlrrHI N lgh l* « • • • **•* on Comm on: 1*1COMPARE EAGLES LOWER PRICES OVERALL] Mthe leader 5 5 5 5 N . L A M A R « 5 1 2 S T A S S N E Y • 1 3 4 5 0 U S 1 8 3 N GROUND BEEF 5 Lb Pkg or More FRYING CHICKEN Whole Body, country Pride, Grade A Lb BONELESS ROUND STEAK Heavy Mature Beef TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Boneless, Heavy Mature Beef Loin LARGE END ^AQ RIB ROAST y Heavy Mature Beef Lb BOTTOM ROUND STEAK Boneless, Heavy Mature Beef Lb TOP ROUND STEAK Boneless, Heavy Mature Beef lb Outstanding produce BLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST Heavy Mature Beef FRESH MEAT BONELESS HEAVY MATURE BEEF C H U C K ................... LB 2.29 CROSS RIB ROAST A OQ LADY LEE SLICED BACON ,1.69 LEAN GROUND BEEF ................................. 1LB PKC, I • mm W Bonded Beef A ll our beef is selected according to our ow n rigid standards o f quality. We offer a m oney-back B o n d on every cut, guaranteeing you the best beef value for your money. T-BONE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF LO IN ................................. LB s jm BONELESS TIP STEAK 7 M Q O QQ I HEAVY MATURE BEEF........................................ LB E-Z CUT CUBE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF......................................... LB 7 OQ mm s j HEAVY MATURE BEEF......................................... LB A C Q 7-BONE CHUCK ROAST SMALL END RIB STEAK O 88 7 OQ PORTERHOUSE STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF........................................ LB s j | # HEAVY MATURE BEEF LO IN .................................. LB • mm 7-BONE CHUCK STEAK HEAVY MATURE BEEF......................................... LB | • A C O 5 9 MIXED FRYER PARTS FRYING CHICKEN COUNTRY PRIDE GRADE A ................... LB • S j S j FAJITAS (SKIRT STEAK) HEAVY MATURE BEEF I PLATE STEAKI...................... LB mm• I S J BREAST OR LEG QUARTERS O Q 7 0 FRYING CHICKEN COUNTRY PRIDE GRADE A ...................LB • / HORMEL BACON A QQ SLICED (2 LB PKG 3 7 6 I............................. 1 LB PKG l * W w SMOKED (BEEF, LB 2 1 9 )............. ..................... LB HILLSHIRE SAUSAGE O 0 9 OSCAR MAYER PORK LINKS O 79 i 79 RATH BACON OR SMOKIES................................................... I 0 mm* & S j V 1 LB PKC I t # SLICED ■ V / * 1 1 5 77 g Q PSENECA LEMON JUICE ¿ ......................................................... 32 02 BTl pHI-C DRINKS ¿ 6 FLAVORS.................................................. 46 02 CAN • # » pFRENCH’S MUSTARD ¿ ............................................................... 24 02 JAR • W ¿ ¿ ONION MUSHROOM, ONION OR BEEFY ONION ............................................................... 14 02 B O X n ^ ^ y pLIPTON SOUP MIX PLADY LEE INSTANT RICE Q 5 75 pCHEF BOY-AR-DEE PASTA A r Q 4^ M " ATB‘U50' .................. .0 OZ CAN I.UtJ QQ pHORMEL CHUNK CHICKEN 2 02 BOX • / S f ............................................................ 6’ * 02 CAN • Sm Sm ¿ PWORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE ¿ FRENCH'S..................................................10 02 BTl • S j ■ QA pTACO SEASONING MIX ¿ LAW RY................................................... .. 02 ENV • 7 Q S S SAVE 26C SWISS MISS HOT COCOA MIX With Marshmallows or Lite, Ct.. 9 Cz. Box 1 51 125NO Reg Limits PCOLDEN GRIDDLE SYRUP A R Q ¿ PANCAKE ........................................ 24 02 BTL I • s j pACCENT SEASONING ¿ ........................................................ 4vj 02 CTN pRANCH STYLE BEANS ¿ ......................................................... 52 02 CAN A C 7 I » V / V / A OA I PSHOESTRING POTATOES 7 *5 ¿ L A D Y LEE..................................................... 7 °2 C A N . / pTOMATO JUICE COCKTAIL A A 7 ¿ SNAP E T O M ......................................... 32 02 BTL I * I / g l pPACE PICANTE SAUCE ¿ MEDIUM OR EXTRA H O T .................................. 8 02 JAR • \m ■ pGREEN GIANT MUSHROOMS 1 1 5 ¿ WHOLE OR SLICED..................................... 4’ ¡ 02 JAR I • I FRUIT SNACKS Grocers Choice, Great Stocking stuffer 32NO Each RUSSET POTATOES 428 Idaho. U S No 1 NO Limits Limits 8 Lb Bag EVERYDAY LOW PRICES O 7 0 A ¿ l g Q2 * HI CLASS DOG FOOD HI PROTEIN D R Y .......................... HI CLASS CAT FOOD ....... 10 lB BAC “ ■ • " HI PROTEIN............................................. 418 BAC 8 * HARVEST DAY PEARS ..................................... 29 02 CAN • STRAWBERRY PRESERVES A g HARVEST DAY......................................... 32 02 JAR I • > / * SALAD DRESSING HARVEST DAY ............. 32 02 JAR Q 1 HARVEST DAY SHORTENING A g l .................................................. 48 02 CAN | « W ■ LOW SUDS LAUNORY................................ 20 LB BAC ^ ^ ^ VILLA DETERGENT VILLA DETERGENT g 9 9 A g g DISHWASHER......................................... 5002 80 X " • HARVEST DAY GREEN BEANS 7 g ........................................................... 16 02 CAN» s j S j GOLDEN BANANAS Great in Lunches .28NO jjmlts SAVE 32C ROEGELEIN SLICED HAM Cooked, 16 Oz Pkg 3 » Reg 3 61 NO Limits ¿ LOUIS RICH 4 02 PKG SLICED HAM pTURKEY BOLOGNA 1.19 .91 .83 PKRAFT AMERICAN CHEESE A Q 7 CHEESE 8 02 PKG 8 02 PKG O SLICED 17 07 I . U J pKRAFT DIPS ¿ JALAPENO FRENCH ONION OR AVOCADO 8 02 PKC • 5 5 S * CANNED & PACKAGED DAIRY & FROZEN_______ ¿C H E E SE SPREI pKRAFT ¿ C A N N E D REGULAR OR DIET 17 FLAVORS VELVEETA SPREAD................................. *2 02 LOAF i pSHASTA BEVERAGES pHERSHEY’S CANDY BARS 2.77 .21 1.43 1.11 PPILLSBURY BROWNIE MIX A A Q AUNT JEMIMA BUTTERMILK COMPLETE ¿ GIANT CHOCOLATE WITH AIMONOS MIX OR CHOCOLATE 12 02 C A N ( 32 02 BOX 8 02 PKG ¿ FAMKV ........................................................01 5 r » I . « W » JLADY LEE FRUIT COCKTAIL o can>7 5 £ GEISHA SMOKED OYSTERS^ SAVE 7C DOWNYFLAKE PANCAKES 1 0 O z Pkg 84 .77 NO Reg Limits LEE TOPPING ......................... REAL CREAM PBANOUET PIE SHELLS 6 02 CAN 7 'T PKG .89 .63 HARVEST DAY GOLDEN CORN CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL...................... 17 02 CAN • ■ ■ A A pKRAFT CHEDDAR HORN 7 8 9 ¿ M ID G E T . • • 24 02 PKC DELICATESSEN ITEMS SAVE 6C SHREDDED CHEESE Lady Lee, Mozzar ella or Cheddar, 8 Oz Pkg ^ 3 5 Reg 1 41 NO Limits QQ pTURKEY FRANKS ¿ LOUIS RICH ................................................ 12 07 M C . > / > / pREDLEFSEN SALAMI ¿ I M P O R T E D GERMAN HARO 7 8 9 Sm 12 02 CHUB m m m HOUSEHOLD & PET EYES CAT FOOD BEEF & CHICKEN SEA FOOD OR BEEF LIVER 12 02 CAN <.45 A DA I • mm I pCAT'S PRIDE CAT LITTER 1 10 LB BAG PREYNOLD’S ALUMINUM FOIL A H A O HtAVV DUTV ROU =’S FACIAL TISSUE A SSORTED X TAMPONS REGULAR OR SUPER 28 CT BOX 200 tT BOX Q H 2.25 Wednesday, December 9, 1981 D THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 21 FOR GREATER EVERYDAY SAVINGS! in low prices DOLE PINEAPPLE in Syru p Sliced cru sh e d or Chunk 20 Oz Can Lady Lee, R egu lar or H ot for less. Holiday Gift Baskets From Eagle. Here's ,i delicious " a> to I ' c m c m b c i lolks during I lie holiday season. Our baskets are filled with fresh seasonal and exotic ! in its. nuts and cheeses, and even wine. Fach is wrapped in cellophane 111 a wicker basket that can be used time and time again. Order your (>ilt Baskets todav trom F.agle. C ustom-filled baskets also available. RED DELICIOUS APPLES Washington E x tra Fancy Bag 97NO Lb Limits PHEFTY FOAM PLATES........... 5 0 C T P K G 1 . 9 9 T W E N T Y B E L O W WRAP T N S f H O U 1 . 3 2 BUBBLE BATH l a t h B E A D S 0 O U O O C T OR P O W D F R 1‘. OZ BOX 1 . 2 9 WHITE HO CKSH O fTfRG iN T art 0 7 O H 0 PINE CLEANER INFECTANT . . . OZ B T l 1 . 2 9 2.21 fOLD DUTCH CLEANSER wwcan>3 0 pTOSS N' SOFT SOFTENER 2 2 3 . . 6 0 C T 8 0 X ^ ¿ F A B R I C S H E E T S rSTA ROSTARCH A l i o o i o ................................. pOVEN CLEANER A A R M & H A M M E R A F E O S O t £PUREX LIQUID BLEACH ^ ob/ | . 4 9 A 3 9 5 5 I • H O J E A N Pick up your free copy of "Twenty-four days of Christmas. " t agio is proud to spoilsoi dm annual series ol \ ignetics tcllmg ol t h e eelebialion ol l lilísimas ,,ound the wmld In eomunetion with tins holiday series, we oiler a full-eolor souvenir booklet with program information to our family ol shoppers P,ek up vour tree copy with our hmi wishes lor a __--- --- ,>voiis holiday season DEL MONTE SWEET PEAS 17 o z can htNIBLETS jiCORN © W hole Kernel 12 Oz. G in HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS VARIETY SHAMPOO 1 . 8 9 o r ( n N i n i i o N l R HAIR SPRAY , . 1 . 4 7 pTYLENOL CAPSULES A REGULAR STRENGTH d 7 3 ', 0 f l ••• pTYLENOL CAPSULES ¿ EX T R A STRENGTH . . . . . 7 0 7 • 100 CT » BATH BCADS T0UCH . 1 . 5 8 LOTION i REGULAR OR DRY S K IN .................. „oj2 . 2 9 PLISTERINE MOUTHWASH / ] 5 4 | SCHICK ULTREX CARTRIDGE , 1 . 3 7 ^CLAIROL FINAL NET a o; 1 .1 9 pVIDAL SASSOON A SHAM POO REGULAR OR EX GENTLE . . . 2 2 7 . . . 12 OZ mtm • p VIDAL SASSOON A RINSE REGULAR OR EX P R O T E C T IO N ...................... 12 OZ 2 2 7 # * pVIDAL SASSOON ¿ PROTEIN RFMOISTURIZING CREME 2 2 7 ‘1 OZ f c » • f c » / pDIAPARENE BABY POWDER d 2 9 A WITH CORN STARCH <» OZ I • f c W & LOMB & LOMB i P R E S E R V E D S A U N E SO L U T IO N . . , 1 . 8 9 i PISINFFC TING SOLUTION & LOMB . . . 2 . 5 9 2 5 9 QQ pMASSENGILL DOUCHE PVASELINE PETROLEUM JELLY QQ ¿ DISPOSABLE TWIN PACK . . 1 1 75 OZ lAR • PQ TIPS COTTON SWABS / | 5 5 POLISH REMOVER ....8 3 HIM I ' l l , r n u l l ' , l i l i l í I S . i l . y Ml l. l i . m u ' lh lllM l. L V l l r n ' H a i i ’1 I ' M h m W n l n i I I I ' ' . * ' I ' " " ' 1 tv O n r m h . ’t U Compare our low prices on live Christmas trees. I ake \ our pick I rom our fine selection ol three to eight-loot I )onglas. Plantation and Noble Ins delivered Iresh to our store every ciav Pick up your free booklet I l u s week, pick up \« m u Iicc copy ol mu booklet “ Holiday lavorites liom aimind the world. It s a collection «>1 delicuuis iecipes with an international llavoi :s, ^ \K * 5 ,iSáp^H I v % , HOLIDAY t< IV O fitO ^ tf< 'I I I L If i H II W 1 th» * W ‘ H L 1 eagle l%»ki it hjpp n toi /ess/ Lower prices overall OPEN 8 AM-10 PM DAILY 8 AM-9 PM SUNDAY THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, December 9, 1981 Yule love these latest Christmas memories on vinyl Entertainment Page 22 the from In Bed” (Warners) — Holiday erotica gravel­ voiced bantam rooster of rock “Come on little an gel/leave those gifts beneath the tree I’ll roast my chestnuts in your ... m elting pot/you’ll use your Christmas charm s/pleasuring m e ...” If not the hot Rod of least getting old, h e’s at warm. Various Artists — “ Christ­ mas Heaven” (K-TEL) — Don’t know about you. but personally we find the idea of putting out a collection of C hristm as songs — the only thing in common am ong them being that the artists a r e dead — a little distasteful A dm it­ tedly, M am a C ass’ version of “ Rudolph the Red Nose Rein the overrated d e e r ” gives Gene Autry version a run for its money, but who really w ants to hear a studio outtake of Jim i Hendrix doing “ Come All Ye F aith fu l?” The really irksome, if not outright sacri ligious aspect of the whole a l ­ bum is the sham eless padd the hell do The ing. What Doors' “ The E nd " or Joy Di vision’s “ Love Will T ear I s A p art” have to do with the holidays'1 of seven Neil Young — “ 0 Little Tow n B a k e r s f ie ld ’’ (Reprise) — Young w rote songs while th e se “ The Rockford w atc h in g F ile s ” one night, and record ed them shortly before he fell asleep a couple of hours later Cleverly, all the song t i t l e s a r e the traditional while verses a re his own F o r exam “ We Three Kings of pie, Orient Are is about Chinese food - “ Ain't got no chow mein Got moo goo gai pan A sic joke on seasonal a l ­ bums, with a titantic guitar solo several thousand tim es during “ Away in a Manger that ranks among his very best three notes repeated Fran k Zappa “ Ex Mass Some wise gu\ (Warners) kidded Zappa about thi on aspect of American culture he hadn't dumped on < hrist and he replied with mas this three-record set about a pubescent Catholic chotrbos who is beaten by i nun after during voice his “ Noel. Noel c r a c k s By CHRIST LITTLE BABY JESUS WALTERS, Jr. and LOUIS "PAGAN RITES” BLACK I c a l l e d u p S a l l y a n d S u e w i t h n o t h i n g b e t t e r to do t h e y w e r e d o w n t u r n i n g at D i s n e y b ut t r i c k s W o r l d I n d e s p e r a t i o n I c a l l e d M a r y L o u bftt h e r m o t h e r s a id l iv i n g s h e ’s o u t w i t h h e r gi rl s I ’m g o n n a s t a r t a g a i n i f it ki lls m e ... — D a v e E d m u n d s , Ca r - l e n e C a r t e r a n d N i c k L o w e “ Are there any c e l e b r i t i e s h ere? !” Neil Young shrieked those words at a party not long ago, and in m any ways he was right. What with the in ruins, A1 Haig econom y gearing up for war with N i­ caragua, Ronnie gearing up for winter hibernation and the rest of us feeling that good ol' horror in face of the void, the new batch of Christmas re­ leases has arrived in the Nick of tim e. The best records here roar out of the gloom like a turbocharged d eath-sleigh crashing through Foley s dur­ ing peak buying hours, manned by a grinning psycho spitting death in every direc­ tion from the barrel of his Uzi. Dig it, and rem em ber, anyone who ever had a heart, he wouldn’t turn around and break i t ... - applied BowWowWow “ SEE PR E SE N T S!! SE E P R E ­ SENTS!! MOUNT BIG TON­ KA TRUCK!! MAKE DAD A N G R Y !! GO M O N E Y Y EA H !!” - Mal­ (Virgin) colm McLaren’s deathless crass ironies com m ercialism , a topic he knows intim ately. The cover (not reproduced here for legal this rollicking reasons) of five-song E P features 15- year-old Annabelle, nude, be­ ing attacked by Burundi tribesmen disguised as rein­ deer. to Johnny Cash — “ Santa Wore Black” (CBS) - A stun­ ning Appalachian song cycle about the son of a train con­ ductor who violates his sister on Christmas eve, failing to realize that she is also his mother. When he does, he isn ’t kills her. Although it Neil Young dashes off Christ­ it on the mas classic, drops m arket in record tim e (above r); BowW owW ow full of holiday I); Frank Zappa spirit (above slanders again (I); Elvis Costel­ terrors of lo explores the Christm as childhood (r); Rod Stewart unveils sexy Xm as (far r). m a de explicitly clear, one c a n ’t quite shake the feeling that this is an allegory to the Christ story. (CBS) The Clash — “Christmas In E l S a lv a d o r ” - Against a backdrop of gu erril­ la w arfa re. Joe, Mick. Topper and Paul paint a vivid p ortrait of Y uletim e te rror. As the s o u n d s h e l i c o p t e r s , of sc re am ing children and boil­ ing flesh overw helm the s o k a rhythm s of “ Silent N ight,” this album becomes a scarify­ ing catharsis. E lvis Costello — “ Santa Can’t Hurt Me Anym ore” (F- links Beat 45) — E.C. the the deepest to Claus m yth sources of emotional fascism. Ruthless and unrelenting. Don Ho — “ A Hawaiian Christm as” (ABC) — It's not rock, but the diminutive m a s ­ te r of island ro m an c e has nev­ e r been in c lu d es b e t t e r “ W i n t e r “ W h ite C h r i s t m a s ' “ F rosty the Snowman W o n d e r l a n d . and ' this album. Meatloaf — “ Straight Out Of C hristm as” — The con­ sensus around our office is that Meatloaf sounds like no one so m uch as Christopher Cross on Jim Steinman can, however, w rite a m ean carol Our favorite cut, “ Spiritual AM,” is about teen-ager the thoughts of a having a little C hristm as-E ve back-seat sex with his girl­ friend. while the radio plays seasonal music. The high point is a spoken n arration of what the guy is thinking while he climaxes. Appropriately, it is a list of the presents he has bought for her Wayne Newton — “ Christ­ mas In Las V egas” - Mr E n ­ tertain m e n t himself, and he even rocks out on a couple of cuts! Includes “ Winter Wond­ erla n d ,” “ White C h r istm a s,” “ Frosty the Snowm an'' and “ New York. New York ” Elvis P resley — “ Christ­ mas M em ories of E lv is” (RCA-Camden) — All ot the King s favorite seasonal tunes are here, sung by his ex-body­ guards. ex-karate instructors, ex-one night stands, ex-ac­ countants and the am bulance d river who drove E l to the hospital for his rendezvous with the Creator Public Image Ltd. — “ aer­ osol Snow on Dead T rees” (Virgin) — John Lydon and Co. turn “ Little D ru m m e r Boy” into an 11-minute dirge about death, nuclear w arfa re, the European Economic Com ­ munity and. I think, the inedi­ bility of British food Side two is taken up by seven v a r ia ­ tions on title theme, and sounds rath e r like a series of teeth being rapidly extracted with a crow bar the alb u m 's Tom Robinson — “ I Saw Daddy Kissing Santa Claus" Soulful role-re- (Pickwick) versal beneath the mistletoe B ru ce S p r in g s te e n — “ Snow On My Chevy” (CBS) — Delayed until April 1982 Rod Stewart — “ Christmas Networks offer courageous new programs, good cheer to holiday viewers By ROBERT MEAD Daily Texan Staff For those of you who are sick of low-brow, corn-ball, 40-year-old kiddie Christmas television specials, there is hope. The big three — ABC, CBS and NBC — have all scheduled intelligent, enjoy­ able, adult entertainm ent for the holiday season. First, ABC has decided to forego the traditional trappings of such kid-vid b a s u r a as “ Frosty the Snowman” and “ How the Grinch Stole Christ­ m a s” and broadcast a whole new slew of Yule- tide, (that word alw ays sounds like an E ast Texas native reading the sports) specials. Replacing “ F rosty” in the line-up is an endearing vignette called “ Snowbound,” which chronicles a San Di­ ego fam ily’s quest for a happy Christmas. The story concerns a mother, a father and two 3-year- old bagmen running Cadillac-quality cocaine from Tijuana to Portland, Ore. The two children, Leo and Fritz, team up with a 90-year-old parrot, named Count Leopold, on their trek across the West. Meanwhile, their parents, Fred and Ethel, run a decoy mission down south in Caracas, Vene­ zuela. (They stage a tongue-in-cheek coup, killing only a few top m ilitary spokesmen to m ake it all look good). Follow the wacky crew as they dodge roadblocks and police helicopters, stopping to sell small quantities of their septum serum to nur- sery-schoolers all along the way. Instead of “ The G rinch ,” ABC is braving the w aters of the new tide of conservatism by broad­ casting the 16-minute-epic “ How the F irst Lady Stuffs Her Stocking,” sta rring the late Totie Fields in w hat m any a re calling her finest role and w hat othe rs a r e calling the m ost tasteless display of necrophilia to slide down Hollywood’s pike in three or four weeks. F ie ld ’s d ram a tic por­ trayal of a Washington housewife struggling with her C hristm as shopping will m a k e you laugh be­ tween trips to the toilet. CBS, still the big kid on the block, has thrown its hat into an even tighter ring. Abandoning its traditional block-buster holiday favorites like “ Rudolph the Red-Nosed R e in d e e r” and “ The is Andy Williams C hristm as Special, CBS has scheduled instead two soap opera style diatribes. the multi-million dollar production of One C hristm as in the Holy R om an E m p ire, called “ The Pope Goes K aroling,” sta rring J a m e s E arl Jones as the Polish-born pontiff (of Swahili de­ scent) who sings Little Richard-style hymns in the s tre e ts of the Vatican. Brilliant photography and “ film n oir” lighting punctuate the lavish soundtrack while Jones sings such classic Christ­ m a s favorites as: “ We T hree K ings,” “ White C h r is tm a s ” and “ Jingle Bells” accom panied by the USC Marching T rojans and the P apal Choir. The second CBS special s ta rs B arbara Man- drell and the Mandrell Sisters as a group of Cath­ olic schoolgirls in Detroit. B arbara s role as Louanne F u rrb u rg e r, the brightest of the girls, brings forth the finest Shakespearean talents of the singer/songw riter. In a three-m inute solilo­ quy on the m e rits of playing field hockey withou* pants, Mandrell d em o n strate s once and for all that this little lady is m e ant to be taken. Last and certainly not least is NBC. The le m m ­ ings over at the third-place network, a r e refusing to tollow the lead of m a ste r p r o g ra m m e r Freddie Silverman — who being Jewish, refused to sched­ ule any C hristm as specials during his tenure NBC executives have placed their hopes on Bob Hope and Leonid Brezhnev, two aging stand-up comedians, to extricate their h u e r o s from the blender. Hope will sta r in his 342nd NBC special, a C hristm as salute to the International Women’s G arm e nt W orker’s Union called: “ Bob Hope's Christm as Salute to the International Women’s G arm ent W orker's Union.” Co-stars on the spe­ cial will include ex-President Gerald Rudolph Ford, who will, along with his wife Betty, portray two aging, out-of-work winos who steal nylon rem nants from the factory so that they might one day build their d rea m home along the discharge strea m . Also appearing with Hope, in his first television role. Dallas Cowboy lineman Ed “ Too T all” Jones, as a gay g arm e n t w orker who longs to design evening gowns for high-fashion, Cleve­ land models. Brehznev is back on NBC with a Barbar t Walters-style interview special with Rona Bar rett and Cher Brehznev asks all the right ques tions as the girls give their loving and surprising ly ac cu rate analyses of the revolutionary leftists in El Salvador Singing her new song. “ C h ristm as is Never Happy if Your Legs Get Blown Off, Cher with a trac to r-tra iler tire ja m m e d into her navel, and accompanied by Rona B a rre tt on the skin flute, steals the show All in all. it should be a delightful holiday sea son for all you television lovers out th e re AB( CBS and NBC have all thrown away their usua; trite and pretentious C hristm as schedules in search of always eager-to-bo pleased, intellectual adult W'ASF audience, th* very sam e people who buy S u m m e r ’s Eve and Ban Roll-On by the carload. that elusive, Editor’s note: This page is (ha, ha) a joke You can now safely turn the page. Latn&v Fine h a irc u ts by d es ig n 478-6754 2408 Sat Gabriel THE TEXAS TAVERN 9SOSOSÉ Located on the second level of the Texas Union BELLYDANCING ROCK lNf ROLL NIGHT Tonight Friday END OF SCHOOL BASH BETO Y LOS FAIRLANES 9:30pm , $2 UT ID /$ 3 public Saturday PRESSURE Hot Reggae! 9:30pm , No Cover Sunday MEDINA 9:00pm , No Cover •Proof ot ago roquirod for a k o h o l purchato- ■ t THE BEST GAMES ON THE DRAG ARE NOW THE BEST BUY! 6 plays fo r $1 All video and pinball games are now 1 token, and tokens are 6 for a dollar. Centipede • Pac Man • Red Baron • Tempest • Defender • Galaga • Lock n’ Chase • Om ega Race • Asteroids • Donkey Kong • Make Trax • Pool Tables • 5 ball Pinball Machines E rbE 5C BEER NIGHTPlus Great Country Music H O L E theW A L L 2538 G uadalupe Ladies $2.00 DOUBLE EAGLE 5337 Hwy. 290 W (Oak Hill) Men $3.00 892-3452 Wednesday, December 9, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 23 Page 24 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, December 9, 1981 fBROKEÑ! SPOKE 3201 S. Lamar THE BEST IN UVE BAND COUNTRY MUSIC NICKEL 5* BEER NITE EVERY WEDNESDAY MILLER UTE TAP 8:00 PM TIU 10:30 MUSIC BY PKOPLI'S CHOICE We Serve the Best Chicken F ried Steak in Town Oliphant cartoons strip America bare By LISA BEYER Daily Texan Staff “ The Jellybean Society: A Cartoon Collection by Pat Oli- phant” ; Andrews and McMeel Inc.; |6.95. "The m ain m ission o f the ed itorial cartoonist is to be like the kid who stands on the side o f the street during the p a r a d e and says, the em p eror has no 'Hey, clothes' Cartoonist M ike P eters That is just what Pat Oliphant does in his latest collection, “The Jellybean Society” — he stares bug-eyed at Ronald Rea­ gan, Jimmy Carter, Jam es Watt, et al. Like the kid in “ The Emperor’s New Clothes,” he stares long and hard and then, intrepidly, he tells what he sees. The cover of “ Jellybean” is an appropriate tease for the jewels which lie inside. Oliphant depicts Reagan with his most exaggerated “ we’re a very happy group” smile, frolicking down the street, tossing jellybeans behind him. A wino stands in the background, staring amazedly at his jellybean-filled hat, while Punk the Penguin (Oliphant’s trademark) looks on in disbelief. In the forward to the book, Larry L. King, co-author of “ The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,” recounts his weekly lunch meetings with Oliphant: Oliphant is habitually late, p r o b a ­ bly becau se he has been reh earsin g his lam ents and d ia ­ tribes again st the w orld’s latest fra u d s and outrages. B efore he has properly settled onto his bar stool he b e ­ gins to b a rk ch allen g es and invectives. Ju st when it a p ­ p ears he is certain to gradu ate fr o m curm udgeony to apoplexy, Oliphant b reaks into huge guffaw s. P resu m a­ bly, these laughing fits ce le b r a te the w orld ’s insanities and his left-han ded appreciation o f them . Oliphant’s ca r­ toons not only reveal but also celebrate the absurdity of Ameri­ can politics. He spares no one, lashing out at the liberals as well as conservatives. In “The Democratic Alternative,” he takes Reagan’s detractors to task. The cartoon pictures Reagan in front of a chalkboard on which he has written “ 2 + 2 = 4 .” A frenetic Tip O’Neill stands behind him, scrawling “2 + 2 = ...” followed by a mess of indecipherable numbers and symbols. What most distinguishes Oliphant’s style is that he almost always tells two jokes in one cartoon; he gives us the main punch in the foreground and then from some corner throws in an additional sotto v oce comment from Punk, who with his long upturned nose and bubble eyes bears some resemblance to his creator. Ironically, it is this same technique of cramming a number of messages into one frame which often makes Oli­ phant’s cartoons too visually busy. Lacking a distinct focal point, the reader is sometimes hard put to figure out which bubble contains the punch line. Still, it comes as no great surprise that “ Jellybean” is bril­ liant. Oliphant is less an advocate of any particular cause than he is a critic of those who would take themselves too seriously. Oliphant has described the cartoonist’s role as “ buzzing around, trying to make people angry. My job is to try and find fault. I don’t do anything laudatory.” In “Jellybean,” Oliphant is true to that description. He is as biting and sardonic as ever, but at the same time hilarious. NIGHTCLUB Presents. . . Am ateur Comedy N ight All Richard Pryors, Steve M artins, and Lily Tomlins, come reveal your hidden w it1 Featuring your host for Comedy N ig h t. . . LARRY WINSTON Showtime 10:00 PM * * * * * * * A Guaranteed night of outrageous insuits and disrespect. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * * ★ * * * * * * * Tútcfc 'V ltetqi . 606 Maiden Ln. 458-5950 F E A T U R IN G THE TOUGHEST MARGARITA WEST OF THE GUADALUPE AU. NIGHT EVERYNIGHT! 60 OZ. PITCHERS OF EVERCLEAR $4.50 MARGARITAS $4.50 The All N ew Nasty Hour 5-8:00 p.m. all highballs 5 0 c i EVERY HOUR! EVERY DAY! HAPPY* HOUR a t Nasty Habits Coors Lite Miller 60 oz. Pitchers $ | 5 0 DURHAM N IX O N - CLAY COLLEGE INTENSIVE ENGLISH CLASUS BEGIN JAN. 4, 1982 REGISTRATION DEADLINE: DEC. 11, 1981 TOEFL U N IVE R SITY PR EPARATIO N U N IV E R S ITY LEVEL A N D A D V A N C E D COURSES — SIX M O N T H BASIC COURSE FOR BEGINNERS — SHORT COURSES A N D PR IVATE IN S T R U C T IO N — SMALL CLASSES C O N V E R S A T IO N A L M E TH O D — A U T H UNDER FEDERAL LAW TO ENROLL N O N -IM M IG R A N T ALIEN STUDENTS (1 -20 ) CALL FOR APPT. 478-3446 DECEMBER 11 & 12, 1981 8 P.M . U.T. PERFORMING ARTS CENTER GUEST CONDUCTOR SUNG KYVAK James M cCracken, Tenoi Samira Warfield, M ezzo ‘Sovrant Barber of Seville O verture ROSSINI O Don Fatale from Don Carlo V I RDI lorestan's Aria from Fidelio BI K11IOVI \ N essun Dorma from Turandot Pi CCIN1 Habanera from Carmen BI/FT Final Duet from Carmen BI/1 l Fifth Svm nhom SHOSTAKOVK H VS All Day! Every Day! From 5-8 All Bottle Boor SO* Mon-Sat 12-12 Sun 12-10 600 W. MIX Tickets available concert week at U T-PAC Box office, 23rd and Old Red River. Monday Thursday 10 6 and concert dav 11 8- Call 476-4626. t Wednesday, December 9, 1981 □ TH E D A ILY TE X A N □ Page 25 TONIGHT- A U S f IN A L L -S T A R S THURS- O C T A V K D O C T O R S * B a c k R o o m 2015 E. R IV E R S ID E TONIGHT Hard Rockin’... THE SKUNKS with Special Guests PURELY PHYSICAL For just $2.99 Show starts 9:30 TOMORROW THE LIFT/$1.99 SAT: Rock-a-Billy THE BLASTERS ■ STATE ;=;$g A A I M 7 1 » CONORS»*0’ 3 30,^ r M 47S-S2S0 k 8 3 0 O, 0 1 theI otoofI THE R IN G S ’ (PG 6:00 \M upstairs 2 d a y s o n l y BON A PP ITIT X ■ F 6:15, 8:10, 9:50 J4 « * OUAOALUFC • 474-4381 down PHILIPPE DE BROCA’s. king of hearts 6:00 8:00 10:00 Telephone Counseling 476-7073 anytim e y-F*PRESIDIO THEATRES Vgl? "M Walt Ditney's B e t t e Davis Carroll Baker ^fell d ie r in i h e , w c x x i^ g s Georg* Segal En d l Thursday Susan Saint James OM0ONCOPV ®EAB©e¡Bíl Q s M i VILLAGE A 2700 ANDERSON • 451-8352 Sean Connery TIME BANDITS *> ..thev didn't rrukehistory, they stoly it! nm oour«TtHroi 1: 0 0 - 3 : 1 5 - 5 :3 0 -7 :4 5 -1 0 :0 0 Marsha Mason ■ Kristy McNichol o f the L O S T R 1 \ K fin í OOLBYSTCTFD | P(J 2 :4 0 -3 :0 0 -5 :3 0 | 7 :5 0 -1 0 :0 5 LAKEHILLS 2428 SEN WHITE *444-0552 1 2 :3 5 -2 :5 0 -5 :1 0 - 7:30-9:50 Treat Williams Week! §§j H ie m ost fan ■ m oney can b ay 111 O utlay Moors Dili Arthur RIVERSIDE 1930 RIVERSIDE • 441-5689 5 :5 0 -7 :5 0 -9 :5 0 REDUCED PRICES UNTIL 6:00 - MON. THRU FRI. BRUCE LEE CHALLENGES THE UNDERWORLD IN HIS LAST AND GREATEST MOTION PICTURE ADVENTURE. The Fall of The Roman Empire TTVSf) --- Directed by A nthony M a n n TODAY at 2 I 6:45 p.m. 1.50 U.T. Union Theatre 2.00 Non-U.T. & m l m : - y Frank Zappa's 200 Hotels w ith kingo Starr f LATE SHOW 11:30 p.m. 1.50 U.T. Union Theatre 2.00 Nen-U.T. u LATE SHOW on Thursday, Friday, Saturday Union Theatre 11:30 p.m. 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Non-U.T. y rrrr7-:.x:v.'- Sean Connery as Jam es Bond i n -V-* > *V*V ■ >■> *'•'/> s"."- A V / y .'l’v. v IAN FLEMING'S Diamonds Are Forever mm Thursday, Friday, Saturday Union Theatre 7 & 9:15 p.m. 1.50 U.T. 2.00 Non-U.T. ------- I M l f l a e m s FREE PARKING IN DOBIEGARAGE^H DOBIE MAIL 47/ ¡3 ? 4 ^ ^ h IÍÍÉ ÍÍ A m erican Independent Films presents T H E D A R K E N D O F T H E S T R E E T I nusual portrait of con tem p orary urban cla s s youth F ri- 6 ’ 0 - 8 : 0 0 - 9 : 5 0 Ends Thursday a m c THEATRES TIMES SH O W N FOR TODAY ONLY A M E R I C A N A ^453-6641 2200 HANCOCK ORIVE WARREN BEAííy. OIANE KEATON Special engagement No pattai or ditrovnlt pi; REDS ia m / m m u m (4.JU/>a.0U|-#.JU | 1 1 ■ A Q U A R I U S 4 ^444-3222 isoos p l e a sa n t y a i l e y ro SATURDAY th e 14TH SOUTHERN COMFORT (4K»/$1.75)4K» p(i HALLOWEEN II (6.-00/$!.75)4:00 (5:30/51.75)-7.-45 PICK-UP SUMMER (5:45/51.75)-7:45 NORTHCROSS 6 ^454-51 47 .„„t;s0o"Ñ7c.i!s*%Mu*.V,■ - E Y E S O F A S T R A N G E R SOUTHERN COMFORT (5:45/$!.75)-7:45 GALLIPOLI (5:30/$ 1.75)4r00 (5:45/51.75)4:15 SATURDAY th e 14TH (640/$1.75)-7:45 ...they didn't make history they stole il! SHOWING ON TWO SCREENS p,: TIME BANDITS (SJO/$i.75)4ao 1 I * SOUTH WOOD 2 $100 ALL MOVIES $100 4 4 2 - 2 3 3 3 U23 w ben white blvd I I i ' — - R e x c lu d in g MIDNIGHT SHOWS I A M ER IC A N W E R E W O L F '« imAm 6:154:15 H " STRIPES 5J0-7:45 “ DARK END“ -A ta le of ra c ia l tension a m o n g s t in n e r c ity youth V C om ing Decem ber 11 MOMMIE DEAREST" and "PATERNITY' % LAUGH CRY AND DREAM.. ■ 1 iirardot and Alric display Venus envy. ‘Jupiter’: De Broca catches sequelitis By JOSEPH KAY Varsity Theater. “Jupiter’s Thigh” ; directed by Philippe de Broca; at the Alas and goddam, Philippe de Broca succumbed to the siren call of the money men, and the result is (shudder of drums, screams from the huddled masses) a sequel. “ Jupiter’s Thigh” features Annie Girardot and Philippe Noiret, the amiable and exceedingly talented pair who made last year’s “ Dear Inspec­ tor' so charming. It does not feature that movie’s intelligence or careful production, and the result is one of those “ frothy entertainments” one sees when ABC runs out of college foot­ ball games. De Broca pays his rent with the proceeds of “ King of Hearts," a cult favorite starring Alan Bates which occupies some art houses like the Russkis occupy Latvia. Confected of the same blend of good cheer and parlor irony, “ Dear Inspec­ tor” was a major meal ticket in international release, and somewhere a troglodyte accountant proposed a sequel. Apparently, the idea reached de Broca while he was on vaca­ tion in Greece, whereupon he summoned his cast and made the movie in some haste ... say, over a long weekend. The plot is largely an excuse to feature resort photography ( “ Greece, Cradle of Lib erty!” ) and shows signs of being developed be­ tween takes; it involves the madcap pursuit of various frag­ ments of statuary in the hands of a sinister Professor Blanken- berg. The inimitable Philippe Noiret plays the loopy classics prof, newly hitched to tough cop Annie Girardot. (You know she’s tough because the opening sequence features her break­ ing up a dope ring on her way to the altar.) Off they go to Greece, where the prof devotes their honey­ moon to a tour of the hottest ancient temples. Thus engaged, they encounter a young couple consisting of a disposable hus­ band and the blond, toothsome Catherine Alric, an actress who displays a becoming modesty with respect to her talent, if not her clothing. Together, these merry madcaps stumble through the Hellenic countryside in pursuit of marble fragments and opportunities for Mme. Alric to disrobe. Still, “ Jupiter’s Thigh” is good clean fun, only not too good and (fortunately) not too clean ; it’s best feature by far is that it leaves no jagged wounds. ■ 5 :4 0 -8 :5 0 k[A ■ .'v... rnr*--------- ..■./'...-y.... \ H d p as close as a phone. AUSTIN 6 521 TH O M P SO N O FF 183 S OF M O N TO PO LIS B R ID G E r R E B E L Dr be-In 69 02 Burleson Road Radio Sound System 3 8 5-7 217 Privacy of Your Auto X X X Original Unnut SKIN * *<2? ON SKIN ★ ** ^ "An Erotic Masterpiece of Fleshy Delights!” -ADAM FIUI NORID . o ' ,o * % a * v MONDAY ONLY S2 00 PER PERSON V OPf NS-6 30 STARTS 1 00 OPfNS-6 31 AmFOX TRIPLEX 454 2711 6757 AIRPORT BLVD THEATRES AUSTIN MANN 3 WESTGATE 892 2775 4608 W ESTG A TE BL IALLOWEEN II (*) (5 :0 0 )-7 :0 0 -9 :0 0 REDS (PG) ( 4:45)-8:40 CHALLENGE TO BE FREE (G) ( 5 :3 0 )-7 :2 0 -9 :10 CHALLENGE TO BE FREE (5:30) D I M OF THE LOST ARK A PA tA M O U N T M C T U RI (5:15)-7:20-9:30 G EYES OF THE STRANGER (*) (5 :3 0 )-7 :15-9:00 C O M IN G SO ON N EIG H BO R S WESTGATE THEATRE A SHARKEY S MACHINE FOX THEATRE AT BOTH THEATRES GH OST STORY REDUCED ADULT ADMISSION ALL FEA TU RES IN (B R A C K ET S)- C A PA C IT Y ONLY | | ADULT T H EA TRE C O M P LE X ft VID EO C A S SET T E C EN T ER ONE PRICE SIX SC R EEN S OR ONE 100 TITLES ADULT VIDEO IN STOCK DELUXE THEATRE OPEN 24 HOURS PHONE 385 5328 JOY OF LETTING GO HEALTH SPfr S E X W O R L D SHEER PANTIES DEEP THROAT poktomt of seouction DEVIL IN MISS JONES DISCOUNT MILITARY • STUDENT • SENIORS • COUPLES GENERAL CINEMA THEATRES SIM A HOLIDAYS 1ST U T IN H SNOW OMY $2.00 RON THRU SAT. AU SNOWIMS IV M B A M i HIGHLAND MALLcT&si¥A 451-7326 HIGHLAND MALL BLVD. 1 r (R) 1 4 5 - 3 4 5 - 3 4 5 - 7 3 0 - 9 5 5 HIARTLAND (PG) 1 : 4 5 - 3 : 4 0 - 5 : 3 5 - 7 3 5 - 9 : 3 5 CAPITAL PLAZA CI.fSW* 452-7644 1*35 a t CAMERON 4D. ARTHUR PG 1 30-3 : 30-5: 30- 7 30-9 30 FRINCH LIBUTINANTS WOMAN 3 13-4 45-7 : 15-9:43 M artha Matan ONLY W N IN I LAUGH 3: 35-4 : 50- 7 05-9:30 tssix PlCTUtlS PksinisI H H C IN E M A "W e s T uyffM C fatíets m % í - D é v U m m . C Im m X a n d * vSho|7|>e of Stakjunc JOHNHOUWS ALSOSTAMWSmORLB'SMJt B l I f S U f W V H » Temptations I PACIFIC Cq J sT FILMS w A 1G Q S tu d e n t p resen ts A NEW WORLD PICTURES Rim Classic U I S ¥ 3 S T E P H A N I E R O T H M A N ^ e m i n i s t D ire c to r* ■TASTE ADULTS ONLY * ELAINE WELLS JOSEPH NASSI ■ A:, . 4V ' ' 1 X * >r/ •. .,/ \ ■ m / *. STARBING THf NfW 5INSATION VERO NICA HART a t A m a n d a with SAMANTHA 101 • USA DFittOW A F ilm b y H a r o ld L im e • In C o io r K t r l y B i r d S p e c i a l itt T e x a s T h e a t r e A L L S e a ls S TO O F ro m 6 :0 flio 7 - 3 0 p w r __ They're learning fast... TONIGHT ONLY IN JESTER AUD. 7 & 9 p.m. $1.50 AND TOMORROW! — IN JESTER AUD. A T7 & 9P M FOR ONLY $1.50 — HALLOWEEN, the original the. mi ilka CONTINENTAL C L U B M H I h a l l o t o e e n I 4 4 2 - 9 9 0 4 1 3 1 5 S. Congress T h e N ig h t /£C a m e H om e! Donald Pieasence jamie Lee Curtts p.j. soles Four stars • * * * Halloween is an apsolutety merciless thriller a movie so scary that, yes, i would compare it to Psycho —Robert Ebert, Chicago Sun Times THE NEW C O M ED Y ABOUT TEXAS TRANS/ACT JHEATRE & BARt A 472-4654 L Dec. 3-19 M ^ Thurs Sat. AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE AUTOS FOR SALE FOR SALE FOR SALE FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS Page 26 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wed.nesday, December 9, 1981 L & M V o lk s w e r k s new a n d used V W p a rts R e b u ilt e n g in e s $629 in s ta lle d , e x ­ c h a n g e W e b u y V W 's a n y c o n d itio n . 251- 2265. 78 M U S T A N G M a c h I. A M F M c a s s e tte PS, P B AC, 39,000 m ile s , good c a r c a r e . C a ll 345-1272 a f t e r 6 p .m . 1974 V W D a s h e r R e c e n t v a lv e job, good ta g s S2000 c o n d itio n , n e w in s p e c tio n , 837-0278 e v e n in g s , w e e k e n d s 72 M E R C U R Y M o n te g o . B o d y in good co n d itio n N e ed s u p h o ls te rin g $500 C a ll 441-2249 1979 M A Z D A R X -7 . R ed 5-s pee d. AC E x ­ c e lle n t c o n d itio n . R us s ell e v e n in g s 258- 0856 1973 F O R D M a v e r ic k G ood c o n d itio n $950 C a ll 471-1562. 1978 C H E V E T T E 40,000 m ile s , no A C . Runs b u t needs w o r k M o v in g , m u s t sell. 478-6586, ask fo r D u a n e . 73 P IN T O w o r k . $350 836-2440 L o n g h o rn c olo rs. N eed s 67 'C U D A , ru n s good N e w c lu tc h , tire s . In t e r io r needs w o r k $suu ■ hest o ffe r . 451-6807 V W 411, 1972, good c o n d itio n , v e r y c le a n , ra d io $1300 C a ll B r ig itte 447-7080, or w o r k : 471-5532. S T U D E N T G A S s a v e r . 7 7 1 ^ P in to , e x c e l­ len t c o n d itio n , f e w m ile s . C a ll m o rn in g s 442-7928. V W ~ K aTr M A N G h ia c o n v e r tib le , 1968 E x c e lle n t m e c h a n ic a l c o n d itio n . G ood body, n e w top $3000 452-3676 CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE R i v e r O a k s CONDOMINIUMS 107/s% Financing If a secluded hilltop residence with a panoramic view of the Austin skyline is what you desire give us a call at RiverOaks. We offer a combination of a tranquil serene environment, and a convenient loca­ tion just 5 minutes from downtown. You will benefit with the tax saving of a condominium while receiv­ ing the best financing available in Austin. Come by and see us today. Marketed by PAUL S. MEISLER From $34,950 .__________ . Properties READY NOW!! 2 BEDROOM CONDOS (7 Blocks from Campus) $53,950 O w ner Financing — Hot T u b — M ic ro w a v e s — Ceiling F an s — Bookshelves —C e ra m ic T ile —M ir r o r e d Doors — Designer W a llp a p e r — G ard en Windows ST. CHARLES 2413 Leon Open Weekends 1-5 Or Call: THE CONDO CONNECTION 479-6618 READY FOR SPRING! 1 & Loft 2 Bedroom Condos Two Blocks fro m Campus THE ELMS L U X U R Y C O N D O S I N C L U D E S E C U R I T Y SYSTEM, JACUZZI , A L L A P P L I A N C E S , F I R E P L A C E S & UNI QUE F L OORPLANS For Your Personal Showing Or Fur t her Inf ormati on , Call: f THE CONDO CONNECTION 307 W est M L K 479-6618 I 1 i 1977 T R A N S - A M , o r ig in a l o w n e r, o n ly 31,000 m ile s E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n , n e w r a d ia ls , r a ll y w h ee ls, 400 e n g in e , c h o c o ­ la te b ro w n , AC, p o w e r w in d o w s an d locks. $4,550 4 7 8 - 2 7 4 8 . ____ 75 P IN T O . SW , w h ite , A T , A C , C B , r a ­ dio , v e r y c le a n , ru n s fin e . $1395 o r best o ffe r . 477-5393. ____ 1978 F O R D P in to , fa c to r y a ir , e x c e lle n t 37,000 m ile s , m e c h a n ic a l s o m e body d a m a g e . $1500. 478-9936. c o n d itio n , 1979 M A Z D A R X 7 , a ir , 4-speed $6,500 C a ll San A n to n io , 512-695-8419 o r 512-340- 3219 ( w o r k ) . A s k fo r L . E . S h o k le y . 1974 M G M id g e t. $2,000 442-8544. 1972" M E R C U R Y M a r q u is 4 d o o r, A C , A M - F M , a lm o s t n e w r a d ia ls , good c o n ­ d itio n . $900. 476-2356 (e v e n in g s ). 1972 H O R N E T . 2 d o o r, 6 c y l., s ta n d a r d , 7 g ood tir e s , o r ig in a l o w n e r. $500. 476-2356 (e v e n in g s ). 1978 V W R a b b it " L " s ta n d a r d t r a n s m is ­ sion . $3300 n e g o tia b le . 445-2731. 1971 F O R D T h u n d e r b ir d . E x c e lle n t c o n ­ d itio n , V -8 , a u to m a tic , a ir . B e s t o ffe r . 261-6471. FOR SALE Motorcyde-For Sale 198T K R E Í D L E R m o p e d . 2 -s p ee d , 75 m ile s , e x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $575. G r e a t C h r is tm a s g if t ! C a ll 471-5162. K e e p t r y in g . V E S P A S C O O T E R T980 P 2 0 0 E . 1,500 Im m a c u la t e . m ile s . W in d s h ie ld , t r u n k $1,500 255-2380. H O N D A 175. N e e d to sell im m e d ia t e ly . $300 o r be st o ffe r A f t e r 5 :00 p m . C a ll D o u g 477-8280 o r 477-1644. 1978 Y A M A H A 750, in v e r y good c o n d i­ tio n $1300 C a ll 288-3189 1979 S U Z U K I G S 1 0 00 E , p u rc h a s e d new M a y 1980 N e w tire s , e x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tio n . $2400 obo C a ll a f t e r 7 p .m . o r T u , T h m o r n in g s 441-4434. 1975 H U S Q V A R N A 250 d i r t b ik e R uns g r e a t , c o m p le te ly r e b u ilt . $400 o r best o ff e r . M u s t sell A S A P . C a ll F r e d 445-4150 m o r n in g s . 1975 C U S T O M K a w a s a k i K Z1 0 00 . V e r y good c o n d itio n M u s t see to a p p r e c ia t e S a c r ific e $1195. 345-6383. 1981 H O N D A E x p re s s E x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tio n , 80 m p g , o n ly 600 m ile s . $375. 473- 2963. 1978 H O N D A E xp res s. $225 C a í F D oug 458-9314 n ig h ts o n ly . Bicyde-For Sale 10-speed b ic y c le . 2 5 " M I Y A T A B r o w n , 1 y e a r old. E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n . $125. 453-5069. 210 Stereo-For Sale 3 -w a y A L T E C M O D E L 5 s p e a k e rs , s p e a k e r s y s te m . W a ln u t 25’ 2 " c a b in e t. 1 2 " e f f i c ie n c y , d u c te d p o r t ; H ig h le v e l c o n tr o l. fr e q u e n c y w o o fe r ; h ig h R e ta il $150 e a c h ; a s k in g $90 e a c h . C a ll 454-1291. FOR SALE Stereo-For Sale E C I P R O F I L E 600 s p e a k e rs . 25 'x 15" c a b in e t, 1 2" w o o fe r , m id r a n g e , tw e e te r . $100 e a c h o r be st o ff e r . 476-9269. Musical-For Sale V A N T A G E V S -65 0 e le c tr ic g u ita r and Sunn A lp h a 212-r a m p li f i e r B oth in p e r ­ fe c t c o n d itio n . 474-0&47 J o h n , a n y t im e . F L U T E F O R s a le . G e m e in h a r t : solid s ilv e r , open hole w ith lo w b foot. O v e r ­ h a u le d in A u g u s t. A s k in g $550, 473-8640 V I O L I N . T u r n -o f-th e -c e n tu r y S t r a tiv a r - ius c opy $400 476-7038 S O N G B O O K S A R E good c h e a p g ifts fo r r e la tiv e s w h o do not d e s e r v e m o re . A l­ p h a M u s ic C e n te r , 611 W 2 9th. 477-5009 Y A M A H A G U I T A R F G 1 6 0 . G o o d c o n d i­ tio n . tlOO. 458-3822 Photography-For Sale O M 10 bod y C H R I S T M A S C A M E R A w ith O ly m p u s 1 0 0 m m lens . 3 m o n th s old. $300. 467-2688 e v e n in g s o n ly Pets-For Sale A K C A F G H A N pups. B e a u tifu l b la c k - m a s k g o ld s . T w o m o n th s old , shots, X m a s d e liv e r y . $200-300. 837-5553. Homes-For Sale U T A R E A Less th a n 3 y e a r s old, e x c e l­ le n t c o n d itio n , 2-1, e x c e lle n t fin a n c in g . $59,950. 346-5425, J e r r y C h o a te , R e a lto r fo r s a le close to L U X U R Y D U P L E X c a m p u s . E x c e lle n t in v e s tm e n t fo r p a r ­ liv e C a ll Don ents , g r e a t p la c e H a r r is . S a n d lin R e a l E s t a t e 478-5621 to la r g e C o lo n ia l H E M P H I L L P A R K f iv e to w n h o m e s w ith d o u b le g a r a g e s u n d e r c o n s tru c tio n , 33rd a t G u a d a lu p e L u x ­ u rio u s a p p o in tm e n ts $185,000-5200,000 345-0574 A T T R A C T I V E , 198cT m o b ile h o m e , 2-2, id e a l a r r a n g e m e n t fo r r o o m m a te s . A s k ­ ing $15,000. C a ll 474-2839 I N F O R M A T I O N p r o v id ­ S T A T I S T IC A L ed on r e s id e n tia l a n d c o m m e n c ia l in ­ v e s tm e n t p r o p e r ty c lo s e to U T C a ll th e R e a l E s t a t e o ffic e s of F r a n k C a r r ic o , lo­ c a te d a t 2910 F r u t h , 3 b lo c k s n o rth of U T 472-6667, 454-9218 e v e n in g s Condos-For Sale B E A U T I F U L N U E C E S P I a c e C a m p u s C o n d o m in iu m B r ig h t a n d s p a c io u s tw o lo fte d b e d ro o m , v a u lte d s to ry con d o , c e ilin g s , fir e p la c e , a ll a p p lia n c e s . T w o b lo c ks fr o m U T c a m p u s . E x c e lle n t in ­ v e s tm e n t, s u p e rb ta x a d v a n ta g e s C a ll 476-1558 CONDOMANIA H a v in g tr o u b le w ith k e e p in g up w ith condos in th e U n iv e r s it y a r e a ? W e h a v e 1,2,3 b e d r o o m condos a v a ila b le w ith p ric e s s ta r t in g in th e m id 30's C a ll th e c ondo s p e c ia lis ts - Linda Ingram and Associates 476-2673 CONDOS FOR SALE CONDOS FOR SALE L e ra ly n n Place L iv e in q u ie t lu x u ry , a ll c e d a r a n d stone e x t e r io r O v e r 1100 sq. ft. 2 B R , 2 B A , big liv in g ro o m w ith k itc h e n , u t i l i t y ro o m , Lu s h f ir e p la c e a n d c a th e d r a l c e ilin g tre e s , s p r in k le r e d la n d s c a p e . S h u ttle bus a t I n t r a m u r a l F ie ld T a k e G u a d a lu p e to to L e r a ly n n B e lo w m a r k e t r a te 51st fin a n c in g a n d low do w n p a y m e n t. 70's. C a ll S h e ila P lo ts k y T o w n h o m e s , 345- 1040. “ n e w l is t in g s ~~ C O N D O M IN IU M S W IT H S U P U R B LO C A T IO N S S eton A v e n u e O r a n g e T r e e G r e e n w o o d T o w e rs St. C h a r le s P la c e A ls o n u m e r o u s o th e r condo lis tin g s as w e ll as h o m e s . C a ll J e a n or V ir g in ia a t M a r s h a n d Box 472-1000. N ig h ts 327-1165 o r 472-3120 ★ C O N D O S^ HOMES-DUPIEXES If yo u w a n t to liv e w ith in e a s y d is ­ ta n c e of c a m p u s , c a ll th e U T a r e a s p e c ia lis ts $39,900 to $100,000. THE UT AREA SPECIALIST John B. Sanford, Inc. Realtor* 4 5 4 -9 2 1 8 4 5 4 -6 6 3 3 PECAN SQUARE CONDOS L u x u r y s p a c i o u s 2 B R u n i t s w i t h f ir e p la c e , m ic r o w a v e , v a u lte d c e ilin g , p a tio , pool a n d m u c h m o re 12' 2 % A R M fin a n c in g . O n ly 9 u n its le ft O ffic e open 1 0 a m -2 p m Sayers & Assoc. R ea ltors 478-9991 or 474-2173 N O C O M M O N W A L L S S pacious 1BR by $45,400 O w n e r -b ro k e r M a r y M o p a c N u n n a lly . 345-4887 $40,950 B E S T L O C A T IO N a v a ila b le n e w one b e d ro o m A ll a p p lia n c e s in c lu d ing w a s h e r d r y e r , c e ilin g fa n s G ood f i ­ P e c a n T r e e C o n d o m in iu m s n a n c in g 472-4032 443-9314 L U X U R Y O N E b e d ro o m c o n d o m in iu m , th r e e b lo c k s fr o m c a m p u s , c e ilin g fa n b a lc o n y a ll a p p lia n c e s e x c e lle n t c o n d i­ tio n . 16 m o n th s old $37,500 477-4113 E F F I C I E N C Y C O N D O M IN IU M S ^ b lo c k s n o r th of c a m p u s , 3400 S p e e d w a y A ll a p p lia n c e s $39 500, 9 5% fin a n c in g 476-2673, 479-6618 5 2B R C O N D O M I N I U M p r iv a te d e c k , a ll a p p lia n c e s , W D 5 bloc ks n o rth of c a m ­ pus, 3400 S p e e d w a y $72,000 95% f in a n c ­ ing 476 2673, 479-6618 O N E B E D R O O M , 594 sq. ft ,, 11710% a s ­ s u m a b le , c o v e r e d p a r k in g , pool, ja c u z z i, s e c u r ity G r e e n w o o d T o w e rs , 1800 L a v a F u r n is h e d ca $53,000 258-1548 U n f u r n is h e d $52,000 CONDOS FOR SALE ; , i \ R iverO aks CONDOMINIUMS 10% % FINANCING Nestled among the trees on a quiet secluded hilltop with a panoramic view of the Austin skyline, at RiverOaks Condominiums we offer the unique combination of tranquil serene environment, a convenient location just 5 minutes from down­ town, with the lowest prices and best financing available in Austin. From $34,950 Marketed by. PAUL S. MEISLER Properties O L D M A I N A p a r tm e n ts , 25th a n d P e a r l 1 B R , e ffic ie n c ie s F o u r b lo c ks U T , s h u t­ tle , c a b le , pool 476-5109, W A L K T O c a m p u s . L a r g e e ffic ie n c y . S h u ttle a n d c it y bus. M a u n a K a i, 405 E 31 St. 472-2147. f ü 7 C A Y w O O D PROPERTIES has in n lsh ed a n d u n fu rn is h e d a p a r t m e n t U T a r e a C a ll us f ir s t fo r f r e e a s s is t­ a n c e . 458-5301. W A L K T O c a m p u s -m o d e r n 1 B R . V a u l t ­ ed c e ilin g , b a lc o n y , a p p lia n c e s Q u ie t $295 plus E . J a c k 472-2277 W e s tw o rld R e a l E s ta te N E W L U X U R Y e ffic ie n c y a p a r t m e n t in S p ru c e H o u s e c o m p le x n e a r U T c a m ­ pus $ 400-41 0 /m o n th . H o w e ll P r o p e r tie s 477-9925, 476-8144 fu rn is h e d A S S U M E L E A S E on 1 B R , n e a r s h u ttle A v a ila b le by J a n 1 $335 m o n th , A B P . 454-4799. la r g e DO ALL THESE ADS DRIVE YOU apartm ents duplexes. & homes all over BANANAS? WE RENT AUSTIN, FREE! S O U TH 4 4 3 -2 2 1 2 N OR TH 4 5 8 -6 1 1 1 N O R T H W E S T 3 4 5 -6 3 5 0 PAUL S. MEISLER PROPERTIES mApartntfiit. ■ U S fk H o r. ■ FREE — Apartment referral service FEE PAID BY A P T OWNER all sizes, prices and locations 3507 N 474-6357 INTERREGIONAL 441-2277 RIVERSIDE AREA 0 88 U T A R E A ” 1 SHUTTLE FRONT DOOR ¡ | AVAILABLE JAN. I Aspenwood 4 5 2 -4 4 4 7 IBRFurn. $280 plus E f 2BR Furn. $3 60 plus E f Barrister Manor IBRFurn. $280 plus E 8 478-3 98 6 IBRFurn. $280 plus E Chez Jacques 4 7 8-2 05 7 Diplomat 4 7 6-7 39 9 IBRFurn. $270 plus E | PRE-LEASING FOR JAN. 1 NOW | UT AREA SHUTTLE FRONT DOOR AVAILABLE JAN. 1 La Canada 4 7 8 -2 08 7 Timber wood 4 78 -1 37 6 Tanglewood West 4 7 2 -9 61 4 Tanglewood North 4 5 2 -0 0 6 0 M ark XX 451-2621 Continentals 4 51 -7 71 8 1BR Furn. EH. Furn. $350 (All Bills Paid) $275 plus E 1BR Furn. $ 2 5 0-29 0 plus E 1 BR Furn. $ 29 0 -3 2 0 plus E 1BR Furn. $ 290 plus E 2BR Furn. $360 plus E PRE-LEASING FOR JAN. 1 NO W Garage-For Sala H O U S E S A L E e x t r a o r d in a ir e . W e 'r e s e llin g e v e r y t h in g . S a tu r d a y a n d S u n ­ d a y Dec 12, 13 1209 W 22’ 2. 478-1587 Tickets-For Sals C O T T O N B O W L tic k e ts . 4 on 15 y a r d lin e . $30 e a c h . 467-0034. C O T T O N B O W L tic k e ts . O n e p a ir , best o ff e r . 477-5935, k e e p tr y in g C O T T O N B O W L tic k e ts , 35 y a r d C a ll 445-6268 p r ic e 4 o r 2, th is w e e k lin e R e a s o n a b le M iscellaneous-For S a l e ___ S A L E 1 I N D I A N je w e lr y is 2 5% o ff! N e l­ son's G ifts , 4502 S C o n g re s s . 444-3814, 10-6, clos e d M o n d a y s . S H O E S , C H I N E S E soaps, w oks, in ce n s e L ib e r t a r ia n books, P A C I F I C S U N R IS E , s c ie n c e fic tio n 1712 S C o n g re s s, 441-4565 s e v e r a l s ty le s C O L O R T V 19" Z e n ith . G ood p ic tu r e a l ­ m o s t n e w O r ig in a l p r ic e $450, p r ic e $300 V a c u u m $35 327 3696 S E A R S W H I T E P r o v in c ia l b e d ro o m set 5 piec e s plus b o x s p rin g an d m a ttr e s s $350 447-1217. F O R SALE. Pilot'» lighted k n e e desk m o v in g boxes, la d ie s r a c q u e tb a ll r a c ­ q u e t a nd a r t p o rtfo lio s C a ll 346-5466 a f ­ te r fiv e O N E P A IR of R ossigno l 150 snow skis E x c e lle n t c o n d itio n w ith b in d in g s U sed on c e, $200 or best o ffe r C a ll D a v id 837- 1614 or 454-8078 $50, o n e ~ 7 u ll- O N E D R A W I N G le n g th r a b b it c o at, $100, one la r g e d o g ­ house, $10 836-5841 ta b le U S E D R E F R I G E R A T O R fo r s ale G ood c o n d itio n , w h ite , P h o n e 441-8350 a p p ro x $275 48 U S E D C O U C H a n d c h a ir s lig h tly d a m ­ a g e d . $75 A lso la r g e w o oden desk, $75 A f te r 6, 345-6436 S K IS - V O L K L Z e b r a 195cm w ith look N e la r g e p ro boots (s iz e 9) v a d a b in d in g s , $175, w ith o u t boots $150 T I -59 c a lc u la to r $110 454-3356 e a r ly m o rn in g s D R E S S E R 50 S syie m a h o g a n y speak e rs C a ll V iv ie n n e 476-9269 C O M P O U N D B O W b e a r w h ite fa il h u n t­ e r N e w w ith c a s e $80 C a ll 837 0869 a fte r 6 ,B O n ly W O M F N S F R Y E boots w o rn tw ic e , g r e a t c o n d itio n $55 C a ll H e id i a t 451 2897 8 E L E C T R O N I C C O M P U T E R C h r is tm a s a nd g ifts -te le ty p e s 258 o th e r C h r is tm a s ite m s ' C a ll Bob 9095 e q u ip m e n t te s t F O O S B A L L T A B L E D y n a m o s best M i r r o r e d sides Cost $600 sell fo r $250 C a ll M a r k 458-4300 a n y t im e S O L ID B R A S S L o n g h o rn boot M a d e m C a n a d a A v a ila b le 443-3749 la c k s love F O R S A L E H e r c u lo n co u ch a n d s ea t P r a c t i c a l l y new B e d ro o m f u r n i ­ tu r e a ls o a v a ila b le C a ll D a v id 346 4713 F U R N I T U R E L E S S th a n y e a r old Sdfa lo v e s e a t $55 c h a ir $45, d esk $30 $95 C a ll V in c e 451 3769 D O U B L E B E D fo r s a le $125 C a ll E s te e 451 9626 20 s-50 s new V IN T A G E C L O T H I N G w a v e n e w r o m a n tic A r m a d illo F le a M a r k e t , 2301 S C o n g re s s a t O lto r f 1 S L E E P E R sofa $250 G ood c o n d itio n I r e c h n e r $50 P le a s e c a ll a f t e r 5 30 p m 385 6648 We buy je w e lry , esta te je w e lry , d ia m o n d s and old gold. H ig h e st cash p ric e s paid, C A P I T O L D I A M O N D SHOP 4018 N. L a m a r WE BUY GOLD S ilv e r, E s ta te J e w e lry D ia m o n d s and Coins H ig h P ric e s Paid S A N D C L I FFS J E W E L R Y D o b ie M a l l 2nd L e v e l 2021 G u a d a lu p e FURNISHED APARTMENTS ARBOR 1500 Royal Crest • All Adult • First stop on RC shuttle • Balconies • Fireplaces • Walk in closets • Pool • Laundry • Gas paid Barry Gillingwater 444-7516 U N E X P E C T E D V A C A N C Y 1BR g a rd e n a p a r t m e n t H y d e P a r k N e w c a r p e t, pool, c e ilin g fa n s $270 plus E C a ll 451 - 9444 a f t e r 6 p m E F F I C I E N C Y A P A R T M E N T S C lo s e to u n iv e r s it y a n d W e s t A u s tin A v a ila b le n ow $225 m o n th M a n a g e r a p a r t m e n t 206, 6 10 p m 3 b lo c k s e a s t of W e s t L y n n o ff W e s t 9th 808 W m flo 476-7554 CONDOS FOR SALE 4821 East Riverside • Austin, Texas 78741 _____________ (512) 385-5840___________ UJ.Piitcnts... amula'a condominium It’s an investment for the future. Before you invest in a condominium, visit Pecan Square. W hen you com ­ pare quality, location and cost, you’ll be glad you looked at Pecan Square Condominiums. Financing Excellent investment in dynamic University market. • Tax advantages. • 90% financing at 12 lA% interest ARM. • Priced below appraisal from the mid 80’s. Office/Model now open. 10—2 Weekdays or by appointment. Call Collect (512) 478-9991 or 4 7 4 -2 1 7 3 . Location 2906 W est Avenue. • Six blocks north of U .T . • Five blocks south of Seton Medical C enter. • Q uiet, secluded neighborhood. Features Two bedrooms, professionally decorated. • Fire­ place, microwave, quality appliances, energy saver features. • Patios. • Vaulted ceilings. • 52"Ceiling Fan. • Landscaped pool and grounds. • C o n ­ venient and ample parking. • Security lighting. CPttan Square CONDOMINIUMS Sayers 61 AsstKiates, In c., Realtors Call C oll e c t ( 5 1 2 ) 47 8- 9991 or 47 4 -2 1 7 3 SOUTH SHORE • Convenient for UT students • Easy access to IH 35 • Lake Views • Close to restaurants, shopping • Built-in dresser/vanity • Carpeting w all to w all • Wall to w all closets Gas, W ater and Cable RAID 300 E. Riverside Drive 444-3337 Barry Gillingwater Management Co. A P A R T M E N T FO R re n t Tw o bed roo m , one bath. $360 plus e le c tr ic ity , 38v2 and G ua d a lu p e C a ll 467-9105. N IC E 2B R, l'/ jB A s tu d io on SR 8. RC s h u ttle N ew c a rp e t, big w a lk -ln closets. A v a ila b le Dec. 15. $367. 443-0555. FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ UNFURN. APARTMENTS ROOMMATES ROOMMATES Leasing for Spring 108 PLACE F U R N . E F F . A P T . • D isposal, D is h w a s h e r • S w im m in g Pool • P a tio B a rb e cu e • In d iv id u a l S torage • B o okshelves • V i B lo ck to S h u ttle • C a ble T V • L a u n d ry F a c ilitie s • R e sid e n t M a n a g e r $240 plus E 108 w .4 5 th 452-1419 453-2771 A L L BILLS P A ID Small 2 bedroom $340 C A /C H , w a lk or shu ttle to U T 2211 Leon 2505 E N F I E L D E ffic ie n c y and 1 and 2 bed roo m (fu rn is h e d or u n fu rn is h e d ) Pool, la u n d ry . M g r. No. 1, 478-2775 1717 E N F I E L D 1BR, e ffic ie n c y . M g r. A p t. 113, 478-9767 Casa de Salado 2610 Salado 4 b lo c k s to ca m p u s o r ta k e WC s h u ttle . 1 b ed roo m fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t a v a ila b le s p rin g s em ester. C A /C H , pool, la u n d ry room , pa id cable, gas g r ille and o ff s tre e t p a rk in g . C a ll 477-2534 o r com e by a p a rtm e n t No. 114 i E S T R A D A Í P re le a s in g fo r Spring + 1,2,3 B edroom s S269-535 on shu ttle 4 4 2 -6 6 6 8 * * f 910 W. 26th Select e ffic ie n c ie s a v a ila b le for spring . $235, gas heat and cooking p aid. On shuttle. 477- 2160. Le Marquee Apts. 302 W . 38th St., la rg e com plex to choose w ith m a n y plans IB R 's and e ffic ie n c ie s fro m , a v a ila b le fo r sp rin g . C a ll 453- 4002. 2800 RIO GRANDE 1 B edroo m , $250 plus e le c tric . A v a ila b le J a n . 1. 477-8533 A P A R T M E N T L E A S E to ta k e o v e r end of Dec m o n th 474 4832, 472-5723 la w school $275 IB R ne a r W A L K TO ca m p u s R e n tin g fo r Jan F u rn is h e d or u n fu rn is h e d la rg e e ffic ie n ­ cies, 2BR. 2BA e ffic ie n c ie s M a u n a Kai, 405 E 31st 472 2147 2502 N U E C E S B ro w n le e D o rm ito r y $210 a ll b ills paid 478 4038 IB R W A L K to cam pus, fu rn is h e d or u n ­ fu rn is h e d $250 plus E 301 W 29th 474 8738 4 7 2 3895 H U R R Y ' 2BR on CR sh u ffle , ne a r shop­ ping $360 C a ll 467-0375 E F F IC IE N C IE S CLOSE a v a ila b le Jan m a tio n to cam pus, I C a ll 472-1337 fo r in fo r ­ la rg e TWO E X T R A IB R a p a rtm e n ts w ill be a v a ila b le Dec 15 and 26th at s m a ll q u ie t c o m p le x C a ll 453-3851 fo r d e ta ils and a p p o in tm e n t 710 W 34th, H a llm a r k A p a rtm e n ts B E E H IV E S A P A R T M E N T S le a sin g for S p rin g E ffic ie n c ie s 4209 A ve nue B 451 - 5586 453 0555 L A R G E IB R . w a lk m clo set pool, c o v ­ ered p a rk in g , ca b le TV, s h u ttle $275 plus E A n o th e r W o rld A p ts 415 W 39th 453 8148 a fte r 3 p m e ft' F U R N IS H E D U N F U R N IS H E D to sublet on WC s h u ttle $210 cie n c y m o n th A B P A p t 24 474-7732 d a y, 478 8126 n ig h t F U R N IS H E D E F F IC IE N C Y a v a ila b le now $195 plus E Close to IF sh u ttle C a ll R a y m o n d 453-2238, keep tr y in g 1-1, N E W fu rn itu re , c a rp e t, E R s h u ttle , need out Dec. 17, fre e tw o w eeks r e n t u n til Jan. 1. C e n tra l a ir, heat, $250 plu s E. 479-8663 a fte r 5:00 p .m . 451-7042 be­ fore . lo n g e r L A R G E ~ E F F IC IE N C Y to su b le t 1-1-82 to 3-1-82. A v a ila b le if needed. F u rn is h e d $195, u n fu rn is h e d $185. R iv e r ­ side 327-5646 a fte r 5:30 p .m . o r w e e k ­ ends. D O W N TO W N W E S T ! T2TI W. 8th St. S h u ttle bus, w a te r, gas, ca b le p aid. F u ll kitch e n , la u n d ry , p a rk in g . E ffic ie n c y $192, IB R $235. 474-1107.________________ L A R G E O N E bed roo m . Lots of lig h t, ba th ro o m s k y lig h t. Pool, q u ie t. E x c e l­ le n t m a n a g e r. On IF s h u ttle . 3301 Speed­ w a y. C a ll P a m 476-5674. CLOSE TO C A M P U S . E ffic ie n c y $235, IB R $250, 2BR $410. P re-lea se fo r s p rin g sem ester. P r iv a te P ro p e rtie s . 472-2477. Q U IE T R O O M Y e ffic ie n c y a v a ila b le Jan 1 or b e fo re In s m a ll c o m p le x . C A / CH E x c e lle n t m a n a g e m e n t. $240/ m onth. 459-4589, 474-6056. F E M A L E " N E E D E D T ow ers c o n tra c t. C a ll M in d y 479-8504. to sublease T r i- N IC E O N E bed ro o m ap t. E x c e lle n t lo ­ cation , RC s h u ttle . W illo w c re e k A p t. 445-0358. K eep try in g . A n y tim e . A v a il­ able Jan. 1st o r sooner. E F f To E N C Y T I M B É RW O O D A p a r t- m ents, fire p la c e , high c e llin g . $275 plus E. 1000 W. 26th No. 204 . 341-8581. A v a il­ a ble Dec. 15. M A T U R E S T U D E N T . L a rg e , cle a n q u i­ et e ffic ie n c y and IB R on s h u ttle . $245- $220. Popolo V illa g e A p a rtm e n ts , 111 W. 38th. E F F IC IE N C Y -S P R IN G sem e ste r. $225 plus E Pool, la u n d ry , cable. Vi b lo ck fro m IF s h u ttle . C h im n e y Sweep A p ts. ]05 W. 381/ 2 . 454-2339. 2BR, 1BA. L a rg e , nice, cle an, good c a r ­ pet, d is h w a s h e r, RC s h u ttle . $339 a m onth 445-6232. s ta rtin g S U B L E A S E E F F IC IE N C Y , J a n u a ry , p riv a te , f rie n d ly co m p le x, b a l­ cony $210 plus e le c tr ic ity . S p eedw ay on sh u ttle . C a ll Soledad 476-6381, e x t. 388, 5- 9 p m . O N E B E D R O O M condo a v a ila b le D e­ c e m b e r 17. F o u r b lo cks fro m ca m p u s, $325 plus e le c tr ic ity , $150 dep osit. D e­ ce m b e r re n t fre e . 479-6738 . 3000 G u a d a ­ lupe No 301. D anny IB R 2 b lo cks o ff cam pus. C a rp e t, drapes, w a te r paid $240. 480-0766, 459- 6042 T R I-T O W E R S s p rin g sem ester L a rg e 2- 1 w ith k itc h e n . A v a ila b le Dec. 15. A sk fo r Ann 477 2101 * 4 . 1 N E E D AN a p a rtm e n t7 H a ve a 2BR. 1BA w ith new ru g and p a in t. L o ca te d on R iv e rs id e c o n n e ctin g w ith the s h u ttle bus 445-5389 betw een 1-5pm . A V A IL A B L E J A N U A R Y 1 F u rn is h e d la rg e e ffic ie n c y a t 108 P lace A p a r t ­ m ents On IF s h u ttle $230 plus e le c tr ic i­ ty. 452-1419 F U R N IS H E D A P A R T M E N T fo r re n t $330 m o n th , a ll b ills paid One b ed roo m , B u rn e t Road nea r H ig h la n d M a ll C a ll 458-5018. TW O s p rin g C a ll C h e ri 474-8903. T R I-T O W E R S c o n tr a c ts fo r UT A R E A w a lk o r rid e sh u ttle , n ice IB R New c a rp e t and p a in t C A /C H , e x ­ tra s $235 plus E 1801 M a n o r Rd. 474- 2700, 478-8845 C H E A P R E N T S m a ll e ffic ie n c y In o ld ­ er co m p le x nea r s h u ttle $90 J a ck 472- 2277 W e s tw o rld Real E s ta te S U B L E T IB R $270 plus elec A v a ila b le Dec 12 D e c e m b e r re n t paid C a ll 467- ______________ HOl L A R G E E F F IC IE N C Y on R iv e rs id e near s h u ttle Sublease in s p rin g s ta rtin g Dec 16 $230 plus E 445 5333, 444 7880 S P AC IO U S O N E b ed roo m New c a rp e t, new ta k e m y s p rin g lease $270 m o n th 476-7399 fu rn itu re , WC sh u ttle , IB R fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t w a lk in g $210 d ista n ce of U n iv e rs ity W a te r and gas paid 2108 San G a b rie l, 345-1552 or 478- 9691 H Y D E P A R K 2BR in s m a ll co m p le x a v a ila b le Jan 1 W a te r, gas stove and heat paid $350 plus E 4541789 L A R G E O NE bed roo m fu rn is h e d . A v a il­ a b le s p rin g sem e ste r one b lo ck fro m ca m pus 476 8663 L A R G E 2BR IB A , w a lk in g to ca m p u s or CR sh u ttle Jan 1, 3212 Red R iv e r No 113 $320 plus E Gas, h e a tin g 478-2579 a fte r 8 p m i ’ N t B E D R O O M fro m ca m p u s $265 478 4097 fu rn is h e d one b l o c k A P A R T M E N T A V A IL A B L E Jan. 1. *200 plus b ills S e nior o r g ra d stu d e n t o n ly 6 b lo cks to c a m p u s 473 2599 UNFUR N. APARTMENTS I B e d ro o m a p a rtm e n ts , P A R K S ID E A P A R T M E N T S . 4209 B U R N E T R O AD , fu lly c a rp e te d , c e n tra l he a t and a ir. L o ca te d a cross the stre e t fro m R a m se y id e a l fo r fa c u l­ P a rk , nice n e ig h b o rh o o d ty or se rio u s stu d e n t No c h ild re n , no pets C a ll 454-3251 betw een 9 and 5. Ask to r M rs T h o m pso n S H U T T L E BUS stops at your fro n t door E ffic ie n c y , one bed roo m , 2 bed roo m s $220 up P r iv a te P ro p e rtie s 472-2477. CO ND O ON Tow n Lake L a rg e 3BR, 2! ;B A R lv e r w a lk C o n d o m in iu m s fo r lease im m e d ia te ly $ !5 0 / m o n th d is c o u n t to $595 m o n th Im m e d ia te ly C a ll N a n cy a t L in d a In g ra m 8, A s s o c i­ ates 476-2673 leased if R OOM AND BOARD ROOM A ND BOARD Give your lifestyle a lift m m Pressed for a place to live? Try Plaza 25. A coed dorm, where we offer a non-regimented life style. N o w Leasing for Spring, 2 5 0 5 Longview, 4 7 2 -0 1 0 1 ProfeeeionaUy m anaged by Barry G illingw ater M anagem ent Company ft0d space is available for the spring term in three of the rf convenient residences in the University of Texas area. Contesse will be open for both sessions this summer. Located at 2706 Nueces, (« je H rE s s a three blocks from campus and on a shuttle bus stop. Nineteen delicious meals per week, maid service, parking, swimming pool, lounges, many extras. Coed. 477-9766. venfen. toso^ort ty houses and shopping, parking on premises, maid service, nineteen meals per lounges, w e e k , pool, sundecks and kitchenettes in each suite. All women. 476- 4648. 2700 Nueces, on the shuttle bus route Smal| and quiet no frills housing. Meals served at the Contessa, maid service and parking included. All private rooms. Coed. 472-7850. Call or w rite for information, or ju s t come on by. Wednesday, December 9, 1981 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 27 TYPING S E R V IC E S TYPING ZIVlfY s T H IS IS IT le a v in g A u stin . Assum e I'm m y lease on la rg e 1-1 in sm a ll q u ie t c o m p le x . N o rth , 2 blocks off IF . Pool, la u n d ry . $210 plus E . G as, w a te r , cable paid. A v a ila b le by J a n . 1st. 458-4975, keep try in g . T h is is the one. S T IL L A LL B ILL S P A ID Q u ie t a d u lt c o m p le x , c o n ­ v e n ie n t to U T and dow ntow n, R iv e r s id e a r e a . 1B R -S 315, 2BR-S395. C a ll 444-1229 a fte r 2:30. P R O F E S S O R /S T U D E N T R ent on s h u ttle bus ro u te a t I n tr a m u r a l F ie ld . N ew b ig 2B R , 2BA, class 1-story w ith fire p la c e , p r iv a te patio s, elec. s e lf­ cle a n in g ra n g e . E n e rg y package. Lush and la v is h . $65 0/m onth. C a ll F r a n c lle 345-1030 S H E IL A PLOTS KY R E A L T O R S H E A T E D O U T D O O R g ia n t p o o l-e ffl- cie n cle s w ith r e fr ig e r a to r and h o tp la te . N ew c a rp e t, new c u rta in s . $195 plus gas, no dogs. 441-8314 o r 441-2594. U T A R E A . W a lk o r rid e s h u ttle . N ice IB R , new p a in t, c a rp e t, ap p lia n ce s, C A / CH, e x tra s . $225 p lu s E . 1801 M a n o r. 474- 2700, 478-8845, 9 2 8 - 0 5 3 4 . __________ D U V A L V I L L A has 2BR apts. n e x t to pool a v a ila b le . Close to UT, sh u ttle and sh op ping 4305 D u v a l. 451-2343. C E N T R A L L Y L O C A T E D N E w T U x I T R Y C O N D O M IN IU M S N E A R H A N ­ CO CK C E N T E R . 1-1, a p p lia n ce s, C A / CH, W /D co n n e ctio n , c a rp e t, fire p la c e , la rg e tre e s. A d e q u a te stora ge. $345, D E C R E N T F R E E . 345-9643. L A R G E IB R , w a lk - in closet, pool, c o v ­ ered p a rk in g , c a b le T V , sh u ttle . $260 plus E. A n o th e r W o rld A p ts. 415 W. 39th, 453-8148 a fte r 3 p .m . ____ Q U IE T L U X U R Y a p a rtm e n t nea r c a m ­ pus. S p aciou s 2B R , 2B A. $1000/m onth. D a lly T e xa n , Box D -l, A u s tin 78712-7209. L A R G E A T T R A C T IV E 2B R , 2BA a v a lf- ab le Ja n . 1. SR sh u ttle , te n n is co u rts. $ 40 4/m onth. C a ll 444-1246. 2-2, A B P , ne a r la w school. $450 u n fu r ­ nished. C a ll m a n a g e r 476-5631 a fte r 1 p.m . T he E llio t S ystem . 2BR, I '/ j BA , a ll b ills p aid. A v a ila b le fro m Ja n . 1. C a ll 452-9165. N e a r ca m p u s and sh u ttle . B R A N D N E W 3 m in u te s fro m d o w n ­ to w n . 2-1 Vi, fire p la c e , c e ilin g fan, $450. 708 S. 1st St. 474-9918. O N E B E D R O O M a p a rtm e n t fo r sub­ lease S pacious. P riv a te . V illa g e G len A p ts. C a ll 442-1606, ask fo r Lee. HO U S TO N ^ L O C A T IO N , condo. G reen- w a y -G a lle r la 2B R , a ll new a p p lia n ce s and $550/m onth. A d u lts (713)781-6223 or (713)781-2145. c a rp e tin g A S S U M E L E A S E IB R a p t. th ro u g h M a y 1982. $25 5/m onth. D e ce m b e r re n t fre e . J im 476-9809 S P A C IO U S 2B R , 2BA a v a ila b le T a n . L Fenced, p o rch , la rg e w a lk -ln closets, q u ie t a tm o s p h e re . E x c e lle n t m a n a g e ­ m e n t SR RC s h u ttle 2124 B u rto n . C a ll to d a y ! 444-9229 N E A R L A W school L a rg e 1 bed roo m in s m a ll q u ie t c o m p le x $260 plus E. 474- 1240, 477-6191. S P A C IO U S E F F IC IE N C Y and IB R , f u r ­ n is h e d or u n fu rn is h e d . $215 plus E and $230 plus E C o n v e n ie n tly lo cate d in nice c o m p le x , 451-4206, 477-6191 E S T R A D A A P T S 2 be d ro o m 2 bath, fire p la c e , NR and SR sh u ffle S ta rt lease J a n u a ry 1st $363 C a ll 447-9133. 2BR G A R A G E a p t $275 N e a r B u rn e t 8. 45th on R osedale W ood flo o rs , gas heat, stove 8. r e fr ig e r a to r A v a ila b le by Jan. 1st, m a y b e Sooner 467-0978 E N F I E L D A R E A e ffic ie n c y Pool, s h u t­ tle, A B P , $185 1311 E x p o s itio n No. 6. 477-6850 K eep try in g . FURNISHED HOUSES TW O H O U S E M A T E S needed fo r huge JBR house A ll a p p lia n c e s Pool, y a rd , p a r t ia lly fu rn is h e d M F C a ll 928-3775 R E S P O N S IB L E N O N S M O K I NG fe m a le to s h a re 3-21i tow nh ouse south F ir e ­ place, W /D , pool, sauna $250 plus 's u tilitie s , d e p o sit No pets 443-6496 e v e n ­ ings S P R IN G S U B L E T 4BR, 2B A house CA CH Sunny, spacious P re fe r q u ie t, m a tu re g ra d stu d e n ts F u rn is h e d . $600/ m o n th , d e p o sit 447-6071 3 1 ON s h u ttle , ne a r H a ncock C enter. Clean, new c a rp e t, fu rn is h e d N e g o ti­ a b le re n t 447-2728 12 BLOCKS north UT. 2BR fu rn is h e d house $390 A v a ila b le J a n u a ry A C /C H S m a ll s tu d y R e sponsible a d u lts No pets 478-5850 R E S P O N S IB L E F E M A L E to share f u r ­ nished house in T a r r y to w n 1 b lo ck to s h u ttle $140 No pets 472-3209 ROOMMATES Í9 1 1 V Roommate Inc. When you need a roommate in a hurry, call Texa s' largest roommate locater. Austin 452-0420 7701 N. Lamar No. 519 R O O M M A T E W A N T E D R esponsible fe m a le g ra d . L a rg e IB R , SR shuttle, pool, c a b le . $15 7/m onth, V i b ills 445- 5949 _____________ F E M A L E S U B L E A S E E sought fo r lo v e ­ ly u n fu rn is h e d 23rd St a p a rtm e n t S hare w ith fe m a le a rc h ite c tu re g ra d , p r iv a te b e d ro o m w ith huge w indow s, hard w o o d s, fa n , a m b ia n c e $175 plus, dep osit D e c /J a n I 479-6219, 442-1935 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d to share 2BR d u p le x ne a r N o rth c ro s s M a ll $135 plus Vi b ills . No dope o r a n im a ls . C a ll K a th y 454-3462. _______________ fro m F ra n c e G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T needs p la c e to s ta y fo r s p rin g sem ester- p re fe ra b ly w ith nea t fe m a le (o r m a le ) hou sem a te C a ll Je a n -Jacq ues 928-3775 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E . Fun, re s p o n s i­ b le n o n s m o k e r g ra d . C h a rm in g , s p a ­ cious, s u n n y 2BR p a r t ia lly fu rn is h e d , ne a r ca m p u s . $162.50 plus ' j b ills 476- 9269, keep t r y in g ! U n iq u e F A C lTl T Y -G R A D S g u e s t ro o m s. N o rth e a s t ( u n fu rn is h e d ), N o rth ­ w e s t ( f u r n is h e d ) . S h a re expe nses, a m e n itie s . N o n -s m o k in g fa m ily a tm o s ­ pheres 346-4513 (p m ) . F E M A L E N O N -S M O K IN G fo r 2-1 a p t. 1 b lo ck to CR o r IF sh u ttle . C a ll between 8-5 a t 475-3091. A sk fo r Deane. A fte r 5, 327 5351 H O U S E M A T E ( S ) W A N T E D fo r Jan. 1. Q uiet, c le a n and re s p o n s ib le fo r b e a u ti­ fu l N E W fu rn is h e d hom e. G ra cyw o o d s, 15 m ln c a m p u s In NW A u s tin $190-210 plus V3 u t ilitie s . C a ll Doug, e ven ings 837- 3632. _ S H A R E H O U S E H yd e P a rk 3BR, study, 2BA No p e ts /s m o k e N e ar IF , u n fu r ­ nished $217, b ills . F e m a le s p re fe rre d 454-0122. ___ ro o m m a te needed N O N S M O K IN G to share new 2B R , 1BA m o b ile hom e on E a st R iv e rs id e $165. C a ll a fte r 4 K y le 385-4049 D u rin g X m a s c a ll 1 -214-753- 6862 M A L E S T U D E N T to share 2BR R iv e r ­ side condo non -sm oker. F u rn is h e d , $26 0/m onth plu s 1 i u tilitie s . C a ll 445-6439 o r 478-2292. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d 2BR c o n v e n ie n t lo c a tio n S h u ttle area $125 m o n th plus e le c tr ic ity 441-9451. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D Ja n 1 S tu d i­ ous, n o n s m o k in g m a le to sh a re 2-1 f u r ­ nished a p a rtm e n t. D is h w a s h e r, la u n ­ d ry , c a b le C ity bus $145 plus '2 b ills . 467-8230 __________________________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to occupy room o f 2BR, 2B A t u r n a p t 1 b lo ck fro m IF sh u ttle 400 W 35th $180 C a ll Jodi 458- ___________ 5603. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D to share 2BR tow nh ouse $15 5/m onth plus 1 2 e le c tric L iv e w ith 19 y e a r old m a le w ho sm okes J e tt a t 451-7091, even in g s. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to share 2BR, 2B A a p a rtm e n t. CR sh u ttle $185, a ll b ills p a id . 467-9119. W A N T E D V E G IE (M a c r o b io tic ) , non­ s m o kin g , in te llig e n t, c r e a tiv e person to share une m a is o n w ith m e R ent re a s o n ­ ab le C a ll A n d y 476-6532 a fte r 6 p m F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d to share b e a u tifu lly fu rn is h e d c o n d o m in iu m fo r s p rin g s e m e ste r. $150/m onth plus Vs u tilitie s . C a ll K im 442-7043. H U G E H O U S E to share w ith studio us fe m a le . On 45th St., ju s t east of M o pac. F u rn is h e d , In c lu d in g a ll household ne­ c e ssitie s. Y a rd , c a rp e te d , a v a ila b le Jan. 1. L is a 452-2172. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed Jan. M a y . N ic e 2-1 apt. 5 1 st/G u a d a lu p e . $175 plus '/2 b ills . F u rn is h e d . 467-8202. R O O M M A T E N E E D E D fo r s p rin g se­ m e s te r. 2BR, 2BA, NR s h u ttle . $190/ m o n th . A ll b ills paid. The L a n d in g , c a ll Jo h n 445-5861. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E N eat, re s p o n s i­ ble to sublease to r J a n u a ry t h r u M a y 1982. 2B R , 1 BA fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t on RC s h u ttle . $185/m onth plus V2 elec. 441- 9375. F E M A L E N E E D E D to ta k e o v e r C a s ti­ lia n d o r m ito r y c o n tra c t fo r s p rin g se­ m e s te r. C o n ta ct M ic h e le 478-8332. W A N T E D M A L E no n sm o ke r, studio us, nea t, cle an. F u rn is h e d fo u r b e d ro o m on CR sh u ttle . $175 plus. 454-6021.__________ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E s p rin g sem es­ te r, no s m o k in g , share IB R , 1BA. $140 m o n th , a ll b ills pa id . S h u ttle . L in d a 445- 2008. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to s h a re new 2 b e d ro o m condo. Good lo c a tio n . P re fe r s eriou s s tu d e n t. S k y lig h ts , c e llin g fan, fire p la c e , etc. $210. C a ll Stephen 327- 3103. ____________________________ F e m a l e h o u s e m a t e fo r s p rin g . Q u a in t 2-1 house, CR s h u ttle . $150/ m o n th plus Vi u tilitie s . H a rd w o o d flo o rs , p r iv a c y 454-9039. M A L E R O O M M A T E 2B R , 2B A. M u s t be stu d io u s, nea t and s tra ig h t. On U T s h u t­ tle $120 plus '/3 b ills . 445-6527. 2 H O U S E M A T E S 4 bed ro o m la rg e house Ja n . 1. 807 E. 45th, CR, w a s h e r /d r y e r , som e fu r n itu r e . $150, Vs b ills . L ib e ra l, s e m i-se rio u s. 452-7775 a fte r 6:00. fe m a le N E E D O N E to share N o rth A u s tin 4 bed ro o m house. U T s h u t­ tle , $130 m o n th ly plus Vs b ills . C a ll 451- 1258 a fte r 5:30 w e ekdays. re n te r IN T E R N A T IO N A L ro o m ­ m a te needed. P re fe r O rie n ta l, cle an, q u ie t, 5 m in . w a lk in g d is ta n c e to UT. A v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly . 480-8819. F E M A L E W A N T E D F E M A L E , clean n o n s m o k e r S hare 2BR house, ow n ro o m $175 A B P . M o v e In Jan. 1. 453-0676, Syndy. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E to sh a re la rg e fu rn is h e d 1 b ed roo m . $175 A B P , CR r o u te 476-9691. fo r c e n tr a lly F E M A L E H O U S E M A T E lo ca te d 3BR fu rn is h e d house. L a rg e y a rd , h a rd w o o d flo o rs , g a ra g e . $150 plus V3 u tilitie s . C a ll 452-9692. W A L K TO ca m p u s. F e m a le ro o m m a te needed fo r b ra n d new c o n d o m in iu m on 24th St. $250 A B P . J e ff I 477-8467. G R A D U A T E S T U D E N T w a n ts room-­ m a te fo r IB R fu rn is h e d a p a rtm e n t, near c a m p u s. $142.50, V i e le c tr ic ity . Koh 471- 7558 S E N IO R E N G IN E E R IN G s tu d e n t needs r o o m m a t e h o u se eq u ip p e d w ith b a r and keg f r ig fo r o c c a ­ sio n a l w e ekend p a rty . $120 m o n th ly plus '/3 u t ilit ie s D e posit. Scott 928-0059. 3 b e d ro o m f o r F E M Á L E V E G E T E R IA N p r e fe rre d . N o n s m o k e r 30th S tre e t T w o b ed roo m . $125 plus e le c tr ic ity 480-0461. M a ry . J a n . 1. TW O G IR L S lo o kin g fo r a m a tu re lib e r ­ al re s p o n s ib le s tu d e n t ro o m m a te M /F o v e r 21 to sh a re 3BR house. $17 5/m onth plus V3 u tilitie s . A S A P 458-2012. P A R T Y IN G S T U D IO U S m a le stu d e n t w a n te d to h e lp fin d and sh a re expenses on 2-3 b e d ro o m house nea r c a m p u s fo r s p rin g '82. Pets ok. M ik e 345-1419. H O U S E M A T E f ir s t of J a n u a ry . M o s tly f u r ­ N ow o r n is h e d flo o r s , ( a n t iq u e ) , h a r d w o o d fire p la c e , F re n c h d e ta ils , huge k itc h e n , i n t e r e s t i n g g a r d e n s , w a s h e r /d r y e r . W a lk to ca m p u s. 31st and Speedw ay. C re a tiv e a w a re . $187.50 plus Vi u tilitie s . N o te: house Is nice, b u t I'm fa r m o re In te re s tin g . M ic h a e l 480-9165 (479-8525). D o n 't m is s out. K eep t r y in g to reach m e. L a te O .K . s p a c e s , H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D to s h a re la rg e 2'/2 b e d ro o m house n o rth c e n tr a l. $150, V i b ills . 454-4105 a fte r 6. R O O M M A T E S N E E D E D to s h a re one b e d ro o m In tw o b ed roo m , tw o b a th con­ d o m in iu m . N e w ! W a lk in g d is ta n c e to c a m p u s . $150 plus '/3 e le c tric . C a ll D a v id 479-8292 ___________________________ S E R IO U S S T U D E N T w ith lib e r a l life ­ s ty le w a n te d to share 4 b e d ro o m house ne a r c a m p u s. $125/m onth plus b ills . C a ll C ra ig o r P a u l, 474-6784. F E M A L E P E R S O N w a n te d . R oom In house lo c a te d in South A u s tin . W a shing m a c h in e , d ry e r. F ire p la c e , k itc h e n p r iv ­ ileges, Vs b ills . C a ll S a lly 444-6460. $110/ m o n th . _____________________ __ O P E N -M IN D E D , s e m i-s tu d io u s person needed A S A P to sh a re 2BR d u p le x nea r St E d w a rd s . $137.50 plus. 444-8986 Su­ _ _ _ san. ____________ 85 D O L L A R S plus V3 u tilitie s . 5 m in u te w a lk fr o m cam pus. No d e p o sit neces­ s a ry . S tudious m a le . B ill 474-5108. N O N S M O K IN G F E M A L E fo r s p rin g se­ m e s te r. 2BR, 2BA $212.50 plus E. N e ar ca m p u s , c a ll 479-0975, t r y a n y t im e.___ N E E D E D F E M A L E to s h a re 2-1 apt. on RC, SR routes. $167.50 p lu s Vi E. I w ill pay $50 of 1st m o n th s re n t. C all _______________ S haron a t 444-1716. B É Á U t Tf I j L H O U S E Close m o n th . C a ll B ill 453-4509, s ta r t J a n . 1st. In H y d e P a rk . to ca m p u s and s h u ttle . $170/ F E M A L E Ñ O N S M O K E R . Q u ie t, s tu d i­ ous to s h a re fu rn is h e d 2 b e d ro o m a p a rt­ m e n t on CR s h u ttle . $147.50 p lu s e le c tr ic . $70 dep o s it. 453-2071, keep t r y in g ._______ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to ro o m w ith tw o fe m a le s . 312 V illa g e G le n A p ts, sh u ttle , D e ce m b e r p aid, m o v e In now. ________________ K a re n 458-4029. H Y D E P A R K 3BR house, need fe m a le r o o m m a te (s ), $100 plus b ills . C a ll 451- 4 3 6 7 . __________________________ _ _ S P R IN G S E M E S T E R ro o m m a te s need­ ed, s tu d e n ts p re fe rre d , fu lly fu rn is h e d condo in N o rth w e s t H ills . $150, fra c tio n of u tilitie s . C a ll Rod 345-2828, keep t r y in g . ________________ fo r new , M A L E R O O M M A T E needed. One bed­ ro o m a p t 404 E. 30th. $147.50 p lu s E . Be­ tw een S p eedw ay and D u v a l b y Pizza Inn. U T , 4 m ln . w a lk . 478-7228. A V a Tl a b L eT j a n u A R Y 1st. H ouse­ m a te , spacious house on g o lf c o u rs e 3 m ile s east. $150. C a ll T im da ys 928-0124. H O U S E M A T E M /F . $150 plus V5 re sp o n ­ s ib ilitie s . V e ry nice lo ca tio n , 3 B R , 2BA, 2 s tu d e n t/w o rk e rs . A S A P fo r c o n v e rs a ­ tio n 472-6444. R OOM A ND BOARD T IR E D OF LA N D LO RDS?? J O IN A C O -O P ! House of C om m ons has s in g le /d o u b le ope nings. C a ll o r d ro p by fo r d in n e r 6:30 p .m . A sk a bo ut o u r cu is in e , costs, re c e n t re n o v a tio n s and g e n e ra l a ttitu d e s a bo ut living. 2610 R io G ra n d e 476-7905 U N E C H A M B R E po u r deux a lo u e r a La M a iso n F ra n c a is e . T el 478-6586. r e ­ S T U D IO U S C O N S ID E R A T E and s p o n sib le g ra d u a te to s h a re nice 1-1 a p a rtm e n t on W. 21st. $135 plu s elec. No T V . C a ll D ia n a 476-8179. fe m a le needed M A T U R E , R E S P O N S IB L E p e rs o n w a n te d S e m l-veg coop, n e a r c a m p u s , b e a u tifu l house, ten m e m b e rs . Sandia H ouse: 474-2026, 472-6091. A B P F U R N IS H E D apt 2BR, 2BA. Need fe m a le to sublease o ne -ha lf. RC s h u ttle , te n n is c o u rts . 443-3723. DOB IE : S IN G L E fo r s p rin g s e m e s te r-c o n ta c t D e b b ie a t 478- 3564 o r p a re n ts a t (713)668-1155. ro o m a v a ila b le F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d s p rin g sem e ste r. 3B R , 2BA bouse on l R s h u ttle $155 plus >/3 b ills . 459-4671 fo r F E M A L E N O N S M O K IN G ro o m m a te needed s p rin g sem ester to s h a re N o rth A u s tin condo C a ll 836-3507. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d s p rin g 2-1, A B P , $200/m onth One b lo ck fro m p re ­ c a m p u s. U p p e rc la s s m a n fe rr e d M u s t be cle a n and s tudio us. C la ris s a 478-1425. fo r S T U D IO U S G R A D or fa c u lty w o m a n 2BR a p a rtm e n t nea r Z ilk e r P a rk $150/ m o n th , u tilitie s . 327-8384 even ings. W A N T E D F E M A L E no n sm o ke r share t r ip le x ne a r ca m pus, s h u ttle P r iv a te fu rn is h e d ' 1 b ills . 480- 8923 ro o m $142.50, ___ M A T U R E R E S P O N S IB L E person w a n t­ ed. S e m l-veg co-op, nea r cam pus, bea u­ t if u l house, S a n d ia House: 474-2026, 472-6091. te n m e m b e rs R O O M A N D M O R E ! P le a sa n t old hom e o ff N L a m a r P r iv a te are a plus c o m ­ m on a re a s P re fe r no n sm o ke r. M a le or fe m a le $205 A B P C a ll 467-8825 a fte r 6 p m ______ S H A R E L A R G E 2BR a p a rtm e n t ( p ic ­ tu re w in d o w s ) v e ry q u ie t f rie n d ly c o m ­ ple x Pools, la rg e shade tree s 2 b lo cks In tr a m u r a l F ie ld s /IF s h u ttle F a ir ly s tu d io u s g ra d u a te u p p e rc la s s m a n p re ­ fe rre d . R e ference s re q u ire d 5106 N L a ­ m a r $155 plus 1 7 b ills $100 d e p o s it See Bob J o n e s /C o m p u ta tio n C e nte r, R m . 18. R E S P O N S IB L E R O O M M A T E : C la r k s ­ v ille L a rg e , old, 2BR apt. $200 m o n th . No sm oke, re lig io u s e x ­ re p u b lic a n s , t re m is ts 473-2213 6-10 p .m . G a y p re ­ fe rre d . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a n te d fo r house in South A u s tin . Ben W h ite and South F ir s t a re a . On c ity bus route, 8 to s h u ttle . $150 m o n th , Vi m in . d r iv e b ills 444-4910 re ­ H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D , m a tu re , s pon sible, to sh a re 3 be d ro o m , 2 bath house Fen ced b a c k y a rd , pool, ga ra g e , $200 plus b ills . C a ll Joe 477-6505 days, 459-1808 n ig h ts F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed Ja n . 1. S hare ro o m in nice 2-2 ap t. RC s h u ttle $122.50 plus 1 3 E. 445-5688 m a l e r o o m m a t e ! N R route. $115 m o n th , V3 elec. 445-0353. S p rin g sem es­ te r. R E N T F R E E u n til F e b ru a ry . Share la rg e 2B R , 2BA fu rn is h e d ap t. on NR s h u ttle $140 plus '2 b ills M a le s tu d e n t p re fe rre d . C a ll 445-5492 R E S P O N S IB L E P E R S O N sh a re house V e ry p riv a te . N e ar ca m p u s , sh op ping A v a ila b le Ja n . 1. C a ll 477-3211. to L I B E R A L M A L E to share la rg e 2BR house. $150 per m o n th . C a ll a fte r 5 p m . 451-7622. ro o m m a te R O O M M A T E N E E D E D im m e d ia te ly fo r re a l nice dup les ne a r 3 3 rd /D u v a l. $160 plus. C a ll P e rr y 480-9644 n ig h ts. G A R D E N G A T E A p a rtm e n ts . F e m a le r o o m m a te needed to sh a re one be d ro o m fo r s p rin g . C a ll 477-1529 N E A T N O N S M O K E R w a n te d to sh a re 2BR d u p le x N o rth n e x t to a il hw ys $175 plus V i b ills . C a ll R u ssell 454-0659. N ew a p a rt­ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E m e n t 2-1 Vj, $160, te n n is c o u rts , m i­ c ro w a v e . G ra d students p re fe rre d C a ll M a rlis e a t 836-5839 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to share 2BR d u p le x , $170 plus ' 2 b ills , on S R /R C sh u ttle s C a ll 445-5138 M A L E R O O M M A T E w a nte d to sh a re 2-2 apt on RC-SR s h u ttle SI80 m o n th plus V i elec C a ll a n y tim e 443-2922 M A T U R E 18-25 y r old G W M w a nte d fo r fu rn is h e d 2-11 2 d u p le x. $180 plus E, de­ p o sit SR RC s h u ttle P re fe r easyg oing, se m i-stu d io u s, o cca sio n a l p a r ty e r P O Box 7574, 78712. L IB E R A L , O U T G O IN G fe m a le fo r 3-2 house clo se to ca m p u s F ire p la c e , h a r d ­ w ood flo o rs , spacious k itc h e n $200 plus '/3 b ills $150 d e p o sit A v a ila b le J a n 1 477 2472 S H A R E H O U S E S h uttles, spacious, In e x p e n s iv e L ib e ra l m a le C a ll la te if nece ssary P h il 452- 5511 fle x ib le . T im in g R O O M M A T E W A N T E D to sh a re condo fo r s p rin g N e a r R iv e rs id e s h u ttle s C a ll T o m 443-0520. F E M A L E E N G L IS H m a jo r to share spacious IB R a p t $157.50 A B P 2 b lo cks fr o m c a m p u s. 477-2531. R O O M M A T E FO R s p rin g 11, $125/ m o n th plus E. J u s t fo u r blocks to c a m ­ pus F iv e m in u te w a lk . 474-4893 a fte r 9 00 R O O M M A T E T A R R Y T O W N F e m a le o r m a le g ra d u a te student, re s p o n s ib le nea t to s h a re 2BR, 2BA hom e c o m p le te ­ ly fu rn is h e d C a ll A l 477-1841, le ave mes sage ___________ H O U S E M A T E ( S ) O N E or tw o desper a te ly needed N ice la rg e house, S160 a m o n th A v a ila b le im m e d ia te ly , IF s h u t­ tle . 479-8914 u n til D e ce m b e r 15 A fte r c a ll c o lle c t 713-893-2966, keep try in g R O O M M A T E N E E D E D on 2BR 2BA ef flc le n c y a p a rtm e n t fro m c a m p u s and s h u ttle bus access $133 A B P C a ll M ic k e y 467 2374 5 m in u te s f u r ­ F E M A L E R O O M M A T E w a nte d, In W e stla ke H ills , nished 2-2 house q u ie t w a sh e r, d ry e r, lo ft n e ig h b o rh o o d , no n sm o ke r o n ly $100 plus ' 2 b ills Bob 327-3684. ___________ fire p la c e , N E E D F E M A L E to share q u ie t house n o rth c e n tr a l P re fe r no n sm o ke r veg g le 4150, 1 3 b ills 451-9555 N E W G U IL D Co-op now a c c e p tin g ap­ p lic a tio n s fo r s p rin g s e m e s te r. Som e Im ­ m e d ia te ope nings a v a ila b le . C om e by b etw een 6-7 p .m . Sunday th ro u g h T h u rs ­ d a y to e a t d in n e r and m eet th e fo lk s . 510 W est 23rd St. o r g iv e us a c a ll a t 472- 0352.__________________________________ fo r s p rin g . T ire d of D O B IE S IN G L E noisy ro o m m a te s ? I m u s t sublease. Q u i­ et flo o rs , new p a in t and c a rp e tin g . C a ll 477-8490, keep tr y in g ! _____________ D O B IE S IN G L E ro o m a v a ila b le to sub­ lease fo r s p rin g sem e s te r. 478-4923. A T T E N T IO N F E M A L E -s p a c e a v a ila b le D oble s p rin g s e m e ste r. S w im m in g pool, sauna and m u ch m o re C o n ta c t A n n 479- 8 5 2 1 . ________________________________ D E U T S C H E S HA US , tw o b lo c k s fro m cam p u s , w ill have v a c a n c ie s fo r G e r­ m a n and S panish spe a k in g s tu d e n ts n e x t sem e ste r. A p p ly now fo r th e s p rin g se­ m e ste r Com e by and m eet us a t 2103 Nueces o r c a ll 477-8865. FO R S A L E -c o n tra c t fo r s p rin g s e m e ste r re s id e n ce co-ed d o rm . $352.00 p e r m o n th . G ir ls c o n ta c t D o lores at 474-4335. _______________________ in Contessa C A S T IL IA N RO O M a v a ila b le fo r m a le d u rin g s p rin g sem ester L e a v in g A u s tin , m u s t sublease. C a ll 477-6466, 474-5857. RO O M A V A IL A B L E D e posit p a id . The C a s tilia n . 2 g irls . 477-4455. S U B L E A S E C A S T IL IA N d o rm F u ll m e a l p la n 478-7853. ro o m . O P E N IN G FO R m a le a t D o b ie fo r the sp rin g s e m e ste r. C a ll John 477-3870. D O B IE S U B L E A S E a v a ila b le fo r s p rin g sem e ste r, s in g le ro o m . P hone 480-0796 a n y tim e betw een 8am -12:30pm , keep t ry in g E x c e lle n t ro o m , new c a rp e t, p a in t, q u ie t flo o r. C A S T IL IA N S U B L E A S E s p rin g sem es­ te r, 22nd flo o r o v e rlo o k in g h ills of A u s ­ tin 480-0627, keep try in g ._______________ D O B IE S U B L E A S E fo r m a le ! s p rin g se­ m e ste r P a rk in g c o n tra c t a v a ila b le . C a ll V e rn 346-4825 o r 474-5639. D O B IE S IX T H F L O O R S ID E S U IT E a v a ila b le to m a le fo r s p rin g sublease. G re a t ro o m m a te , f u ll m eal p la n a v a il­ a b le C a ll John 479-6396 o r p a re n ts 836- 3 8 7 5 . ____________________ ___ F E M A L E N E E D E D to sublease d ou ble In D oble A v a ila b le s p rin g . C a ll ro o m 473-2558. Keep try in g ^ __________________ V A C A N C Y A T V. O n ly 2 le ft. In te r e s t­ ing, v a rie d household, s e m i-v e g g le , 6 blo c ks fro m cam pus, pets ok. 474-7767. P E N T H O U S E S U IT E in D o b le . Sub­ lease a v a ila b le fo r m a le In 25th flo o r dou ble o r side su ite . C a ll D a v id 474-1756. D O B IE S P A C E a v a ila b le s p rin g sem es­ te r 6th flo o r, m a le . C a ll K e v in 478-1213 o r p a re n ts (214)276-0680. SP A C E A V A IL A B L E s p rin g s e m e ste r, fe m a le C a s tilia n . A sk fo r L isa 478-4824. O N E P E R M A N E N T and one te m p o ra ry (th ro u g h M a y ) ope n in g a v a ila b le In o u r hom e G ro u p o w n e rs h ip and m a in te ­ nance of s m a ll c o o p e ra tiv e ju s t south of the r iv e r W a rm , s u p p o rtiv e , and m a ­ tu re hou sehold (ages 23-39). V e g e ta ria n , n o n -sm o kin g . 447-1268, 447-1344. H E A L T H A N D n u tr itio n o rie n te d co-op seeks re s p o n s ib le In d iv id u a ls . W e o ffe r q u ie t r e s id e n tia l n e ig h b o rh o o d nea r cam pus, v e g e ta ria n , s m o k e -fre e e n v i­ ro n m e n t, sundeck, open fie ld and g a r ­ den R o y a l Co-op, 1805 P e a rl, 478-0880. C O N T E S S A S U B L E A S E -fe m a le , g re a t food, fr ie n d ly co-ed, m a id s . 476-9853. 20% D IS C O U N T on p r iv a te ( s in g le ) In Contessa 19 m eals, pool, sund ecks, fre e co ve re d p a rk in g , m a id s Scott, 476-9182 o r 397 2522 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES W E W A N T people to he lp us In tro d u c e a new p ro d u c t th a t e v e ry o n e needs. M a ke s a g re a t C h ris tm a s g ift, b u t Is not seasonal Y o u r ow n hours, y o u r ow n business F u ll In fo rm a tio n by phone. Leah at 445-2045. UNFURNISHED HOUSES L A R G E 3BR, 1BA u n fu rn is h e d ro c k h o u s e -fu lly c a rp e te d , pan eled, C A /C H , r e fr ig e ra to r , stove, u t il it y ro o m , W /D co n n e ctio n s Close to M o to ro la , D a ta G e n e ra l, U T buslines, B e rg s tro m . No pets C all d a y or n ig h t to 11 p .m 385- 3911. A V A IL A B L E NOW tw o and th re e bed­ ro o m o ld e r hom es, a p a rtm e n ts . C a ll now fo r 24 hou r In fo rm a tio n 452-5979. N E A R c e ilin g Jack 472 2277 W e s tw o rld Real E s ta te IF sh u ttle , 3-1, a p p lia n c e s , AC, fa n , garage , nice y a r d $380. F O U R B E D R O O M , tw o bath, p le a s a n t n o rth w e s t n e ighborhoo d C A /C H , som e fu rn itu re , a p p lia n ce s A v a ila b le J a n u ­ a r y $550 478-9936 __________ ___ 2 OR 3 bed ro o m house 5 b lo c ks fro m ca m p u s H a rd w o o d flo o rs , n ice n e ig h ­ borhood $600 m o n th P lease c a ll Bob L ile s 327 5000 ____________ O N E B E D R O O M , fenced y a rd , w a sh e r d ry e r, de ta c h e d g a ra g e Close to s h u t­ tle $290 per m o n th 259-2024, keep tr y in g T h u rs d a y and F r id a y too. L e a v e m e s ­ sage TYPING, PRINTING, BINDING The Com plete Profettional FULL TIME TYPING SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2707 HEMPHIU PK P l e n t y of Pa rk in g eionotype e4onocopy j j o o o • o IBM Correcting Se/ecfric I Typing, Copying, Binding, Printing R ental A Supplies 5e copies North 8:30*8:30 Mon-Thurs 8:30-5:30 Fri Sat. 10-4:00 37th & Guadalupe 453-5452 South M-F 8:30-5:00 Sat 10-2 E. Riverside & Lakeshore 443-4498 e a e • e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e T.E.C.S., Inc. Typing Se rv ice 1005 E. St. Elmo Road "O ffe rin g Professionalism with a Personal Touch” PICKUP POINT 8-5 D aily * M a in O ffice " G re e n w o o d Tower» 1 8 0 0 - A Lavaca S:30-7:45pm D ally or by appointm ent * 1 8 0 0 Lavaca, N o. 8 0 9 (M o lly Ficken: 4 7 8 - 2 2 5 3 ) Term Papers, Theses, a n d Dissertations as p age lo w as $1.25 RESUME PA CK A G E '/O rig in a l & 5 0 copies $9.00 443-4433 FAST T Y P IN G ON W O RD PROCESSOR 8 5 7 p a g e p ro ofed. 24 hour ser­ fo r v ic e , u s u a l. C o p ie s 3‘ c ustom ers. 458-2059 u ntil 11 p .m . M E L IN D A 'S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E 95* per page 15 y e a rs e x p e rie n c e E x c e lle n c e , s ty le , q u a lity g u a ra n te e d 458-2312 (A n y tim e ) L E G A L A N D ty p in g K a th e 's Q u ic k -T y p e . 15 y e a rs e x p e rl- ence. IB M 111. 443-6488. South A u stin . p r o fe s s io n a l T Y P IN G -T H E S E S , m a n u s c rip ts , s ta tis ­ tic a l, p ro fe s s io n a l. E xp e rie n c e d . 453- 1138.___________________________________ T Y P IN G - F A S T rate s. C a ll G re tc h e n 928-1751, 451-2332. s e rv ic e , re a s o n a b le N E E D A fa s t a c c u ra te ty p is t? I have a B A In E n g lis h , a c o r re c tin g S e le c trlc and 12 y e a rs s e c r e ta ria l e x p e rie n c e . C a ll A n n a t 447-5069, 8-6. W OODS T Y P IN G S e rv ic e - w hen you w a n t It done r ig h t. 472-6302, 2200 G u ada­ lupe, side e n tra n c e . N A T A L IE 'S T Y P IN G S E R V IC E . A ll types of ty p in g done. IB M C o rre c tin g S e le c trlc and IB M d is p la y w r ltq r . C a ll 255-3143._______________________________ J E A N N E 'S T Y P IN G S e rv ice : T y p in g in m y N o rth A u s tin hom e. F a s t, a c cu ra te , reasona ble. 836-4303. ty p in g . I N T E L L IG E N T , A C C U R A T E R eports, re su m e s. H ig h lite r a c y ; cus­ to m e r m is s p e llin g s c o rre c te d . Rush ser­ v ic e a v a ila b le . A ls o : e d itin g , co n s u lta ­ tio n . C re a tiv e S e rvic e s, 2420 G uadalupe, 478-3633. sure w e DO type FRESHMAN THEMES why M l start art with feed fiada» 2707 Hemphill Juit North of 27th at Guadalwpo 472-3210 472-7677 A N D E R S O N T Y P IN G S e rvice, 302 W. 15th, R oom 206C. 472-4196. $1.50/page. D is s e rta tio n s $2/page . T Y P Í Ñ G ~-CORRE C T I Ñ G ~ S e le c tr lc , o v e rn ig h t s e rv ic e , p ic k -u p a v a ila b le t ill 11:50 p.m . E x p e rie n c e d , pro fe s sio n a l. P a tty , 345-4269 t i l l m id n ig h t. PD Q T Y P IN G S e rv ic e . N ew lo cation, 1802 L a va ca P ro fe s s io n a l, a c c u ra te ty p ­ ing T im e ly ru s h w o rk a v a ila b le . 474- ___ 2198. T H E T Y P IS T , p ro fe s s io n a l q u a lity ty p ­ ing, g u a ra n te e d C a m pu s d e liv e ry , p ic k ­ up IB M C o rre c tin g S e le c tric . Helen, 836-3562, 835-5235. L IN D A 'S T Y P IN G S e rvice-S outh. 442- 7465 a fte r 5 p .m . P a s t, e ffic ie n t and in e x ­ pensive. C A L L D E A N N E a t 459 1620 w eekends and evenings. N o rm a lly 1-day s e rvice PR OF ESS IO N A L M AN U S C RI F»T T Y P ­ IN G G u a ra n te e d A ll fie ld s . 5 page m in ­ im u m . Y vo nne, 474-4863. M R F S T E N O G R A P H IC Serv ¡ces “T y p ­ in g , s e r v ic e , resum es. S p e cia l a c a d e m ic rate s. E xp e ­ rience d, fa s t, r e lia b le . 472-3499. t r a n s c r i p t i o n , c o p y F R E E T Y P IN G . O ne fre e page fo r eve­ ry tw o a t re g u la r p ric e . 15 page m in i­ m u m 282-0500. RESUMES w i t h o r w i t h o u t p i c t u r e » 2 7 0 7 H em p hill Park Ju s t N o r t h o f 2 7 t h o f G u a d a lu p e 4 7 2 -3 2 1 0 4 7 2 -7 6 7 7 F A S T S T U D E N T rates. Professional typing. Ca ll or leave message, 441-8933. 95* D O U B L E spaced typing. 13 years ex- perience. C all Donna 441-9245 noon-6 p .m . T Y P IN G IN m y home. N o rtheast Aus- tin, eight years secretarial experience. Reasonable rates. C all P at 454-5924. ____________________ P R O F E S S IO N A L T Y P IN G In m y home! CaH Sandra a fte r 6 p.m . at 476-5081. T Y P IN G B Y C A R L 24 hour service, low rates. 327-6769. T Y P IN G : R E S E A R C H papers, theses, statistical. C orrecting dissertations, S electrlc, p ic a /e lite . W ill proof. E x p e ri­ _____ enced, reasonable. 441-1893 E X P E R IE N C E D ty p in g . 80w pm . Reasonable. 442-0396 a fte r 6 p . m . __________________________________ 12 yea rs T E R M P A P E R S by careful, e x p e ri­ enced typ ist w ith P h .D ., m any yea rs col­ lege English teaching and an electronic ty p e w rite r. $1.25/page up. 479-8909. ROOMS A T T E N T IO N F E M A L E fa c u lty or g ra d ­ uate students. Complete p rivacy In one w ing of home In N orthw est Austin. $295 A B P . 346-2043. C O -E D D O R M 1 block fro m cam pus. P riv a te and shared rooms a v a ila b le Im ­ m e d ia te ly and for spring. 474-6905. N IC E P R IV A T E rooms for m en and wom en students near UT cam pus. C A / CH , carpeted , kitchen privileges. *165- 170/m o n th . Howell Properties 477-9925. D O R M room . M a le nonsmoker needed to assum e spring semester contract. refrig erato r, bunkbeds, $6Q0 cable T V , study rooms, kitchen, pool, coed. N e a r cam pus. Call Bob 478-0821. fu ll-size S IJ B L E Á S E D O R M IT O R Y ~ M a le , kltch- re frig e ra to r, phone, en, m ic ro w ave , s w im m in g pool, consider discount. Call Dan 480-0366. T R I-T O W E R S contract a v a ila b le now. Call m e, we can w ork the details out. Karen 480-0612. P R IV A T E ROOMS co-ed house. Now leaslng-sprlng semester. 2 blocks fro m U T . Furnished, bills paid, share kitchen. $135-169. 480-0372. FO R R E N T room $80 A B P . Kitchen 11. privileges, 2602 G uadalupe No. Above health foods store, evenings. V E R Y N IC E p rivate dorm room -share w ith one. 6 blocks fro m cam pus. $675 spring te rm . Reply D a lly Texan, Box D- 2, Austin 78712-7209. W ill contact you for view ing. T A K E O V E R my contract! Taos p riv a te dorm , one block fro m cam pus. M a le / fem ale . Spring sem ester. Call Lisa 478- 8379.____________________________ S P A C IO U S RO O M one block fro m c a m ­ to assum e pus. M a le /fe m a le needed Taos d o rm contract. Two spaces a v a il­ able so call now for spring sem ester. • 474-2573. L A R G E RO O M S m a le /fe m a le needed to ta k e ove r contract for spring In coed dorm 2 blocks from U T . Call Shelley 478- 8379.______________ _______________ R O O M A V A IL A B L E for spring sem es­ ter. Taos dorm sublease. $197.50/m onth, $790/sem ester. Call N ick 477-8675. C O N S ID E R A T E P E O P L E w anted for a coeducational house very close to c a m ­ pus. Steve a t 479-0681. B A R T O N S P R IN G S area. F an tas tic view . U nfurnished, $150 plus E . A fte r 6:30 p .m . 445-7558, or 836-6856___________ S T U D E N T O N L Y , m ale. Furnished bed­ room , kitchen privileges, bills paid. $85/ m onth. In te rv ie w afte r 3 p.m . 478-8909. 1 B LO C K fro m campus. 1 m ln . w a lk to U T Business School. Nice, quiet IB R , furnished, S225/month A B P, a v a ila b le alm ost Im m e d ia te ly . Call 473-2946 (p r e f­ e ra b ly e a rly m orning, late n ight). G O O D A L L W O O TE N room a v a ila b le spring te rm or Im m ed iately, t w ill pay your deposit. Call 472-1343 or 478-4476. C O N T E S S A W E S T contract for lease for spring sem ester. Four g irl suite. Call 477-5619. M A T U R E R E S P O N S IB L E person w ant- ed. Sem i-veg co-op, near cam pus, beau­ ten m em b e rs . S a ndia tifu l house, House: 474-2026, 472-6091. R O O M S A V A IL A B L E . 2 blocks off cam - pus. A B P . Share bath, no kitchen. $150- 190.480-0766,459-6042. D E S P E R A T E ! M U S T sublease Taos dorm room one block fro m cam pus for spring. O ne month fre e rent. Big screen T V , H B O , 24-hour security, room r e frig ­ e ra to r. 477-2341 a fte r 3:30 p.m . G R A D S T U D E N T -b ed ro o m , bath, sit­ ting room . Furnished or unfurnished In N o rthw est Austin. $295 AB P. 346-2043. L A R G E F U R N IS H E D room for rent. $135 plus utilities. .4309 Belvue. P r iv a te en tran ce and bath. 258-3336. in house w ith 5 RO O M S A V A IL A B L E other g rad students. 6BR, 2BA, split be­ tween tw o buildings. CR shuttle. Y a rd . $125-135 plus utilities. 453-K843. sem ester. D O R M ROOM-$600-spring Short w a lk to campus. Call T e r r y 478- 3892 (a n y tim e ) or M a r y 441-5943 (a fte r 5:00). UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES O U T S T A N D IN G D U P L E X for Close In. C all Don, agent, 478-5621. rent. S U B L E A S E 1-1 Vi, C A /C H , 4-plex. 2 blocks fro m Z ilke r. $280 plus (lo w ) bills. A v a ila b le Jan. 1. 445-4222. TICKETS WANTED W A N T E D F IV E $15 tic k e ts to N e ll D ia ­ m ond. P ric e n eg otiable . C a ll G onzalez (1)828-7141.____________________________ I N E E D fo u r good se a ts-flo o r o r a re n a - to N e ll D ia m o n d . C a ll 443-6708 F r a n c is ­ co. I 'l l pay w e ll. PHOTOS f o r PASSPORTS APPLICATIONS RESUMES 3 m i n u t e s e r v i c e M O N - F R I 10-6 THE THIRD EYE 2 5 3 0 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 Prob lem Preg nancy 507 Powell St M -F , 7:30-5:30 474-9930 D O N 'T L E A V E T O W N ! 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 A U ST IN R ES O U RC ES W o m en 's R e fe r ra l C e n te r 603 W. 13th No. 210 476-6878 MS Shuttle J E N N IN G S ' M O V IN G and H a uling. D e­ la rg e or pendable personal service, sm all jobs 7 d ay s/w eek. 442-6181. A R T 'S M O V IN G and H a uling: any area 24 hours, 7 days. 447-9384, 442-0194. I am looking for H A IR C U T S - 477-8467 all of m y old custom ers (and frie n d s !) Call, or stop by — 24th at Longview . New custom ers are w elcom e, too. Jeffi. P R IV A T E M A IL B O X E S fo r ren t. Uni- versity M ailb o x R entals. 504 W . 24th, or call 477-1915. P R O U D P A IN T IN G and tape and flo a t. N ew homes and repainting jobs. Clean, dependable w ork. 385-2596. CA R IN shop? Rent one fro m A A Rent A C ar. 201 E. 2nd. 478-8251. 8-6 M onday- F rid a y , 9-3 Saturday. M O V IN G , P A C K IN G and “d e liv e ry 7 days a w eek-reasonable rates. Leonard Carlson 928-2108, 452-3145.__________ __ B A C K A C H E ? M assage brings re lie f! T r y it just once, you 'll com e back. Ste­ ven F earing, M s. T. 477-1465. G IV E Y O U R S E L F a clean a p a rtm e n t for the holidays-starting a t *15. The U p­ stairs M aid . 447-6278. C H R IS T IA N C H IL D C A R E a ll ages. foods. F le x ib le hours, O nly n atural weekends, nights. 480-9268. Good loca­ tion. WANTED Need C h ris tm a s M o n e y ? Bring your bikes to us for fast cash! Bob's B ik e and K e y 3205 Bee C ave Rd. 327-4034 5413 N. L a m a r 452-9777 F A S T C A S H : W e buy or loan on gold and silve r In any fo rm . N o rth: 454-0459, 5134 Bu rn et Road. South: 892-0019, 5195 290 W est. je w e lry , B U Y IN G W O R L D gold, gold scrap gold, old coins, antiques, pocket w atches. Paying fa ir m a rk e t p rice. Cap­ itol Coin Co., 3004 G uadalupe, 472-1676, P h illip Nohra, owner. G O L D E N R E T R IE V E R beyond "p o tty tra in in g " stage. C all T im 458-4533. E A S Y M O N E Y ! Need Adv. 325 notes. W ill pay *15 for legible xeroxes of notes fro m 2nd half of sem ester. *10 e x tra for chapter outlines. Call 441-7272. PERSONAL Giggles, H a v in g a N ic e D a y ? Red H a ir Is N ic e Too. Guy. nancy testing and re fe rra ls . 474J ? « p re 9930. " D A T E L IN E , " A U S T IN a re a sw ingers listings, *2.00, "A ustin Sw ingers Fo­ r u m ," hot letters, *3.00. P riv a c y Com pa- ny, 504 W. 24th, Box 20, 78705.___________ M A N N E E D S a ttra c tiv e w om an fo r se­ rious relationship, 18-25. Box 307, 4502 S. Congress, Austin, Texas 78745. N E E D " B E " to com plete Taco Bell. .Will split. 467-0537. MUSICAL INSTRUCTION E X P E R I E N C E D P I A N O / G U I T A R teacher. Beglnners-advanced. U T de­ gree. A fte r 1 p.m . 459-4082, 451-0053. N E E D TW O N e ll D ia m o n d tic k e ts . 443- 9619 o r 4/5-5687, J im m y . TYPING TYPING MASTER TYPIST, INC. THE COMPUTERIZED TYPING SERVICE W e do RUSH work! SAME DAY & ONE DAY SERVICE Grad Students Save Yourself Headaches USE W O R D PRO CESSING on your Dissertations, Theses, PRs, & Law Briefs Dobie Mall N. 36 2021 Guadalupe St. 472 -0 2 9 3 Free Parking 15% DISCOUNT G R A N D O P E N IN G SPECIAL SECRETARIAL/WORD PROCESSING SERVICES (MANUSCRIPTS, RESUMES, TERM PAPERS, ETC ) 1106 CLAYTON LANE, SUITE N O .12 0 -E 4 5 2 -9 2 2 4 TW IN TOWERS OFFICE BUILDING O N U.T. SHUTTLE ( C R STO PS A C R O S S STREET) THE TYPING STORE ( 1 BL O C K S O U T H O f B I S T P R O D U C T S ) HELP WANTED HELP W ANTED WANTED 28 DELIVERY PERSONS NOW Can make $6-7 per hr. grots tips, m ileage and w ith bonus using your own car. Apply at 404 W. 26th from 9am -9pm b 2 < 2 N O S o a G IR L S R O O M a v a ila b le a t Contessa W est fo r s p rin g sem e ste r. E x c e lle n t food, m a id s e rv ic e . C a ll 473-2971. R E S E A R C H P A P E R S ty p e d p ro fe s s io n ­ a lly . Ire n e 's B u siness S e rvice . 282-5500, 282-0622._______________________________ N E E D O N E p a ir d a te tic k e ts fo r C o tto n B o w l. P lease c a ll Gene eve n in g s a t 445- 5577, keep try in g . Page 28 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Wednesday, December 9, 1981° MSCISUANEOUS J LOST & FOUND B HELP WANTED HELP WANTED B HELP WANTED HELP WANTED WHY M Y DOW MÍ FOR A DIAMOND ■NOAOWMNf RING With band, half karat, w hit* firm gold, appraisal $1500, $ 7 5 0 like now. Confirm with your jowolor. 837-0869, aftor 6._______________________ TRAVEL NEW YEAR'S EVE IN NEW YORK CITY Dec. 3 0 -J a n . 2 In c lu d e s : • B r o m f f r o u n d t r ip a ir • 3 n ig h t s h o t e l • B r o a d w a y s h o w • O n e d i n n e r • E m p i r e S t a t e B ld g O b s e r v a t o r y • C r u i s e o f N Y H a r b o r • S t a t u e o f L ib e r t y • B e in T im e s S q u a r e w h e n t h e b a l l f a l ls L i m i t a d s p a c e C o l l n o w 4 7 7 - 6 5 0 5 EXPERTS IN TRAVEL 8 2 0 A m e ric a n B ank Towor , G R E E N TO RTO ISE leaves A u stin Westbound 121, 12/21 (E xpress), 16, 1 11. Eastbound: 12/21 and 1/7. Call evenings: 473-8820. I N EED ride to Nebraska. Vt gas, Vj drivin g Diane 478-4536. A IR L IN E T IC K E T fro m Houston to Denver Leave Jan 9, return Jan 16 N orm a lly $270 but w ill sell for $230. 474-8887. __________________ round tr ip OPEN T IC K E T one way, round trip , anywhere T .l flies. Use before 12-16-81 M ark, 928-1315 evenings. LOST & FOUND G O LDEN R E T R IE V E R , eight months old Answers to " C h a rlie ." Call 458-4533. LOST 12-2. Navy blue coat w ith pile la ­ pels, near 1300 block West 29th. Reward. Call 454-8039 ________________ LOST! SET of keys possibly a* West M a ll P O.. 11-11-81 Brass holder 7 keys, one w ith black rubber end If found 467- 2371 or U.T. Lost and Found. LOST A T W U R S T F E S T H U G E R E W A R D ! Small w hite w ith a p rico t dog. A c c id e n ta lly ta k e n , g iv e n away, or strayed near Antique Shop S a tu rd a y n ig h t (N ov. 7th). Call a n ytim e 441-0507. TUTORING SPANISH TUTOR Professional Spanish instructo r w ith 5 years experience. Call Sergio 451-4704 a fte r 4 p.m. S PA n TShT B IO LO G Y tu to r, natTve speaker graduate student, cheap. Call Juan 451-2502, leave message. ACCO UN TING TUTOR-214 years expe- rience. 444-2712. TU TO RING W A N TE D in Engllsh-Jun lor High School level. Upperclass or graduate student required. Call 454-5757 or a fte r 5 p.m . 474-5555 FOR RENT F E M A L E ROOM M ATE wanted Three bedroom duplex Barton Springs area. $135 a m onth Call 444-9955 HELP WANTED " M E ! S H IN E SHOES?" ...U p to $100 n ightly Development Assistant We have a positio n -a va ila b le fo r a co lle g e g ra d u a te w ith p revio u s fu n ­ d ra isin g experience to assist in the im ­ p le m e n ta tio n o f o u r fo u n d a tio n p rogram s and a ctivitie s The successful type 50 w pm and be a p p lican t m ust th e c l e r i c a l a n d f a m i l i a r w it h organizational sk ill necessary to plan fu n d raising events, to research donor lists and to w ork w ith the m em bers of the H ospital and Foundation. Please call or send resum e to: D Bronken St D avid 's C om m unity H ospital 919 E 32nd St. Austin, Texas 78765 (512) 476-7111 Ramada Inn Capitol is looking fo r an experienced p a in te r to w o r k d u r i n g C h r i s t m a s h o l i d a y s . M u s t h a v e references. A pply in person at 300 E. 11th St. H oliday W ork Clerks, Typists Laborers If you have tim e off and need extra money, V o lt can keep you busy. No fee, good pay rates. Call fo r details. VOLT T e m p o ra ry Services 1507 Guadalupe 472 6916 8300 Research 454-4741 E qual O pp o rtu nity Em ployer, M-F is black slacks, f o r h ig h l y U n iq u e o p p o r t u n it y intellig e n t, and a ttra c tiv e m otivated, to m a ke e x c e lle n t m o ne y. persons Fem inine a ttire red cobbler's apron and w hite french t-sh irt Beautiful, hand-carved shoe shine stand. Tra inin g provided fo r fu ll or p art tim e im m e d ia te o p e n ing s. A p o s itio n s ; n a tio n a l co m p a n y in US fe a tu re d magazine, PM magazine, W HAT'S M Y LIN E , M ike Douglas Show, ABC, NBC, and CBS News We d id n 't invent the shoe shine, we m e rely perfected it A pply In person a t San A n to n io Rose, G re a t N orthern Blvd at M opac and Anderson Lane between 7-9 p.m ., M onday-Friday, ask fo r Heather. a fte rn o on -e ve nin g ROOM C LE R K applications being taken s h ift. fo r e a rly Hours 2:30 p m .-9:00 p m., a lte rn a tin g M onday, Wednesday, F rid a y, 1st week; and Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, 2nd week etc. A pply in person 9 a .m .-l p.m. d a ily West Winds M otel, A irp o rt Blvd. and IH 35. IM M E D IA T E L Y p a rt tim e W A N T E D checkers, package help, and deli clerks. A p p ly in person Tom Thum b, 206 E Bee Caves Rd M O N IT Ó R É Q u lP M E N T ’ fo u r tim es w eekly Clean police record Local re f­ erences Free study tim e 452-5763, 10 a m. to 4 p m. weekdays. T E X A S C O M M E RCE B ank A u s tin needs 2 proof m achine operators. P e r­ m anent p a rt tim e lpm -6pm or 2pm-7pm M onday-Saturday w ith day o ff during the week. M u st have 10-key by touch- w ili test. $3.55/hour plus incentive pay. Call fo r appointm ent 476-6611 ext 2501 E O .E ./A .A .E . E X P A N D IN G C O M PAN Y has im m e d i­ ate openings fo r 3 d is tric t m anagers and 15 insurance agents E xcellent com pen­ sation and benefits. Call 479-0388 be- *ween^ a m .-2 p.m . fo r an appointm ent. S E C U R IT Y PE R S O N -uniform ed or plain clothes, p a rt-tim e or fu ll-tim e . Previous experience preferred. A pply in person to Kaye Teatf, Y a rin g 's High- land M a ll. LOS TRES Bobos is now accepting ap­ plications fo r w aitperson, cocktail w ait- persons and hostpersons. Please apply unperson at 1206 W. 38th N E E D PAR T tim e em ployee fo r elec­ tronics gam e room in S. Austin, through C hristm as and spring, 10-20 hours/week 441-8105. AU STIN 6 now h irin g ticke t and sales clerk. 385-5328, ask fo r A rt. IM M E D IA T E O PE N IN G , fu ll or part tim e, fo r ladies sportsw ear shop. Expe­ rience necessary. A pply in person M ain Street, low er level, H ighland M a ll. N E E D C HR ISTM AS money? Have a car? Can you mop floors? Call The Up­ stairs M aid. 447-6278. A F T E R SCHOOL ch ild ca re and pickup near Z ilke r. Needed in Ja nuary R efer­ ences required 447-9799 a fte r 7 p.m. STU D EN T W A N TE D to stay w ith teen­ age g irls (16) 1/4-1/14, 1982. References required. On shuttle. 474-1976 evenings TO KYO STEAK House is h irin g w ait- persons (b ilin g u a l) and a busperson Call 453-7482 a fte r 2 30 p.m M A D DOG & BEANS is now accepting fu ll tim e a pplications fo r day counter help A pply in person 512 W. 24th. N E E D A good job between semesters and next sem ester? Banana's and The Red Tom ato R estaurants are accepting applications to r a ll positions. No e x p e ri­ ence necessary. Lunch and dinner shifts available. A pply in person between 4 30- 5 30 Tuesdays-Fridays. 1601 Guadalupe BR ID G E R 'S C R E E K R estaurant needs p art tim e help, w aitperson trainees and hostperson A pply between 9.30-11:30 a m M o nd a y-F rid ay or a fte r 2 30 414 Barton Springs Rd r u u c a n m ake over $ l5/hour dancing at Daisy M ae's, A ustin's newest/best topless showbar. T o ta lly fle xib le hours are a vaila ble to m atch your schedule. inquiries. Contact We w elcom e your P a t/Tony 835-9204, 1-4 p.m d aily. M CDONALDS R ESTAU RAN TS now hirin g F u ll and p a rt tim e shifts a v a il­ able. A pply at 2818 Guadalupe in Dobie M all. PART T IM E office help needed. M ust be at least 19 and have own tra n sp ortatio n . M ust be able to type and do general o ff­ ice w ork. S tarting salary $3.75. Call M r or M rs. Don H ill, 926-2372 NUR SER Y SCHOOL teacher's aide and substitutes needed M onday-Thursday 9am-noon. Bull Creek Road area. Phone 454-3860 fo r Info rm a tio n. C AR EG IVER 2-3 afternoons/w eek fo r 2 year old and 6 m onth old near law school beginning spring semester. Debi 472- 4052. T EX AS COM M E RCE Bank needs a p art tim e tra n s it cle rk 4 p .m .-10 p.m. M -F. S3 60/hour plus 7' J% sh ift d iffe re n tia l. W ill tra in Call fo r appointm ent. 476-6611 ext 2501. E.E.O A .A .E , W AN TED DESK clerks. No experience necessary M ust be able to w ork durin g the holidays. 16-30 hours/week. The Best Western C ross C ountry Inn 452-8861. TEXAS COMME RCE Bank needs a p er­ m anent p a rt tim e sta tistica l typ ist. T yp ­ ing 55wpm accurate. 2-6:30 p.m. M on­ day-Thursday, 1-5 p.m. F rid a y. $4.25/ hour, w ith review in 90 days. Call fo r ap­ pointm ent 476-6611 ext. 2501 E E O and A .A.E. M CAT AN D DAT in stru cto r position Requirem ents Scoring 90th percentile or above and teaching experience 472- 8085 L IV E -IN H O U S E K E E P E R wanted' Ma ture nonsm oker fo r a le rt congenial eld ­ e rly couple in exchange fo r room and board plus $3 35 hour w ith weekends off in lovely large apa rtm e n t. Car provided. Hours negotiable. For m ore inform a tio n call 453-3990 between 10am-9pm A C T IV IS T S -F U L L tim e co m m un ity o r­ ganizers w ith low and m oderate income people. W ork fo r neighborhood power. R eform of health care, energy, tax stru ctu re Long hours, low pay T ra in ­ ing provided. R ew arding career Call ACORN 442-8321 TEAC H IN G -P A R E N T S M a rne d cou­ ples to live-in, co-direct tre a tm e n t p ro ­ gram for troubled youth C om prehen­ sive tra in in g and support services Salary S16-25K/couple plus excellent fringes, including room board Contact HAP, Houston (713) 868-1943 PART T IM E afternoon 1-5 p.m . Recep- tionist-secretary. W estlake area. S tart im m ed iate ly. 327-4106 for appointm ent. N O W -s p rin g s e m e s te r, A P P L Y m other's helper, g irls 11 and 13. M ust have car, sw im well. L ight housework. 15 hours/week, $3.50/hour. 345-1965 a fte r 5:40 p.m. WOMAN TO clean a pa rtm e n t weekly, south. Salary negotiable. 443-9619. T Y P IS T -E D IT O R IA L assistant. UT pro- fessor needs action-oriented lib e ra l arts m a jo r to assist w ith ty p in g /e d itin g , a f­ ternoons. 12-15 hours/week. 471-3765. ÜT STU D ENT needs m other's helper Mon., Tues , Wed. fo r spring semester. M ust be a vaila ble at 2:30 and evenings, own tra n sp ortatio n . M in im u m wage. 451-5067. AR T STU D ENT to illu stra te childrens book. Call 250-1372. CAREER ” M IN ID ED workaholiC fo r off- ice coordinator-business m anager posi­ tion in doctor's office. D ependability, good a ttitu d e a m ust Business e xp e ri­ ence, organization skills, people o rie n t­ ed. $800-1200 m onthly. Call 9-5, 327-3385 and leave a message. PART T IM E errand clerk fo r law office M orning hours only. Call 476-6391. CLAIM S O F FIC E assistant p art tim e m ornings $4.70/hour. 5 day week, 20 hours week 282-5480. AFTERNOO N TEAC H ER needed for m a in stream ing pre-school beginning Jan. 4 U n ive rsity area. M ust have expe­ rience and enthusiasm Call 477-9632. 9- 12 noon. M O T H E R 'S H E LP E R d aily 2 30-5 00 N orthw est H ills. One 11 year old child Dishes, vacuum , change beds. $50/ week. 345-3634 _______ O O P playing every Monday in The Daily Texan O x y v x X V V W W O O O O Q O ^ V O Q Q \ I ^ For current Union events and film s c h e d u le s , cal l T H E V O IC E OF T H E U N I O N at 471-4747. Call Days Evenings & Weekends In Austin: 1801 Lavaca, Suite 104 I Austin, Tx. 787 0 1 | 5 1 2 4 7 2 -8 0 8 5 E d u c a tio n a l Ce nte r TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 In Dallas: 1 I 6 1 7 N C « n l E v p w y b a l l o t T * 7 5 2 4 3 3 1 4 7 5 0 - 0 3 1 7 CIo i i m Now Forming? V2 PRICE FRAME SALE! !* expires 12 19 81 whm aea n e e d H m m Personal AM-FM Stereo Take anywhere w ith the SR-600 favorite music your \> Infinity Deluxe Personal Audiophile sound quality from the D o lb y system , dual flywheel drive, metal capabili- ty and more u^k J¡JH oven ae/u O p tio n al F M M o d u le $45. 0 HITACHI O"soiüm Completa Home Steteo Dyer’s beet selling system Includes the 25-watt per channel á Hitachi SR-2000 receiver, auto* return Hitachi HT-2* turntable, S pair of Model 2 Sludiocralt ft f t speakers by Dose, end eleg^it ■ AR-t 72 stereo rack by O’SulUven. ■ Mo better system for the prlcei All fra m e s included (w ith p rescription) Dior, Playboy, Zeiss, Silhouette, C a rre ra , Revue, YSL A vailable with new P e r m a lite ‘ sc ra tch re sista n t p lastic lenses G ift c e rtific a te s O ne-year g u aran tee JEFFER SO N SQUARE 38th at Jefferson 451-1213 GOING PLACES with Ms. Brittons irittons L C -8 42 M l IMIKKO A U D IO Deluxe Cassette HftH Get full 1C logic controls, dual motor direct drive system, fast LED metering, memory, and performance specs that rival many decks costing much more. Nikko ND-800. m e dial S-wau Speakers Very efficient, the M o d e l S S -1 2 ’s have 5-year parts & labor warranty. DHR DEAL INIIKKO A U D IO 25-wpe Stereo Receiver The NR-300 has circuit breaker protection and 3-year warranty just like the larger Nikko’s GENESIS Two-way Speakers with Radiat Passive the "tight" fljH M B Get bass sound you want the from G e n esis 210's. Better than most 3-ways %i*249P H AM-FM -i ';tL \A' ; S i tlj f Cassette. BBMri Car Stereo Get a great price on a cassette car stereo right when you need it most. Tancredi TC-2010. Tha 35-watt par channel MNcko ND-800 receiver Is perfect for this system. BaK-ddva t#kko 500 turntable has auto ahut-od. 3-way SS-12 speakers are fuse protected and sound great The AR-1T2 rack has glass doors and casters. Hear it today at Dyed fT a n c rc d n VWISTLER gl! Deluxe W Radar Detector m e bul than 200,000 More th e tr u c k e r s Whistler Q-1000simply because it works! tru s t L SONY B MM-ehassis B Auto-Rev. Cassette Deluxe stereo for small cars, the XR-25 has built-in 3-step equalizer, full auto­ reverse and a lot more. a s td tm d h M S I