T h e Da il y T e x a n Student Newspaper at The U of Tetas at A u s tin Thirty-Six Pages Vol. 78, No 157 Copyright 1979, Texas Student Publications, all rights reserved (USPS 146-440) Austin, Texas, Monday. June p , 1979 Fifteen Cents News and Ed'tonai 471 4591 Ospsay Advert'*;.ng 4? 1 1865 Business OtTce and Oassi'ed 471 5244 Clements aide o for cities in emergency move gas . a . .. .4 /A i f ¡ D I » A l l AC «-«11 DALLAS (U P I) — Edward 0 Vetter Gov Rill Clements chief energy adviser, has ordered an emergency allocation of 16 million gallons of gasoline set aside for gas-hungry motorists in the state's urban areas. t F . Ü __ rx _ _ _ “ It is the high growth areas such as Houston and Dallas that are suffering the most.” he said, “ and though this will not solve the problem, it will help some " The extra gasoline arises from last month's increase in federally mandated allocations set aside by oil com­ panies for state governments to distribute to the neediest applicants Previously the figure was 3 percent of a company's monthly volume, but the addition of another 2 percent will put another 16 million gallons at « the state s disposal. Vetter said « He said the state fuel allocation office in Austin which administers the set-aside gasoline and diesel, has had requests 2 1 2 tunes greater than the amount of fuel available But he said the federal control system is bas­ ts! on the amount of gasoline used in past years, without taking into account cities' growth 1 asked them (the allocation office» to put in a bias toward urban, growth areas in their decision,” Vetter said. If they are considering two requests of equal merit and one of them is from a growth area, it should get the preference ” Should long lin e s become an even greater problem, the energy chief said, he w ill also recommend .1 r it ton ing program to set up minimum gasoline purchases of *6 or |7 per car. prohibit filling of auxiliary tanks ami possibly establish an alternate day purchasing system Vetter met last week in Houston with representatives to keep and said he was of the nine largest oil companies m the st ¡te the misery from getting intolerable encouraged by the tone of the meeting “ The industry thinks it is in reasonable shape for the rest of the summer." he said Ho added that the representatives agreed with him that a panic” like the one in California can be avoided by clear and careful planning Connally campaign panel selected Rogers, Campbell, Royal named to committee By MARILYN HAUK and DIANNA HUNT Daily Texan Staff University President Lorene Rogers, Athletic Director Darrell Royal and Houston Oiler Earl Campbell are among 36 Texans named to the John Connally for President National Campaign Com­ mittee. The committee will serve as an ad­ visory group on campaign sti .itegy and issues. Connally served three terms as Texas governor, from 1962-1968 Sen Betty Andujar, R-Fort Worth, also named to the committee, said Sun­ day Connally is the “ man of the hour" who can win th< Republican national primaries and lead the nation Rogers, Royal and Campbell were un­ available for comment. Andujar, who compaigned for Ronald Reagan in 1976, said, I still think Reagan is a fine man, but I do think he had his best shot in 76 He was bruised by that loss " Former Texas OOP Chairman Ray Hutchison, another committee member, ex) Gov Connally is uniquely said. qualified to be president.’ (ex) Gov Connally and I have been friends for many years and he has (helped me» with the Republican par tv,' Hutchison added Although Hutchison said he thought a Texas Republican has an excellent chance of winning the primary, he said it is obvious that Reagan is running in first place right now " Other Texans named to the com mittee include Dr Denton Cooley, Houston heart surgeon. Tom Undry. Dallas Cowboy coach; entertainer Ray Price of Dallas; and James Langdon, who was appointed Railroad Commis sion chairman in 1963 while Connally was governor Also appointed are Dr. Truman Blocker J r , president emeritus of the I n i v e r s i t y m ed i ca l branch in G alveston; Abner M cC all, Baylor University president, and C W Cook of Austin, former head of General Foods Corporation. John Connally Trtxan Staff UT students arrested in anti-nuke protest By MARTHA SHERIDAN Daily Texan Staff Two University students were among 48 persons arrested for trespassing Sun­ day in Texas’ first anti-nuclear protest involving civil disobedience, at the Comanche Peak power plant in Glen Rose. A p p r o x i m a t e l y 125 m o re demonstrators and 100 members of the news media were at the protest, said Som ervell County Sheriff E'rank Laramore. Pre-law senior Deena Warfield and Kimble Varner, an L B J School of Public Affairs student, violated Sec. 30.05 of the Texas Penal Code to symbolize their opposition to nuclear power, they said “ I HAD B E E N nervous about it all week but after we started going over (the plant’s fence). I felt very calm. It was a supportive, hopeful situation.” Warfield said Rob Bollinger, graduate microbiology major, was one of approximately 15 Austin residents who travelled to Glen Rose as support group members “ I had met with the protesters on three different occasions and they told us their plans, which they followed to the letter,” Laramore said. At 2 p.m. Sunday, the protesters, w e a r i n g T -s hi r ts printed with “ Comanche Peak Life Force Occupa­ tion 1,” used ladders to climb over the fence and then joined in a circle and read a statement against nuclear power, she said “ Then there was a recording to leave, and when we didn t they rounded us up into two groups and took us to the police station on buses. It was very positive we sang anti-nuke songs and the (police) officer on the bus told us we were the best group he had ever seen He was smiling all the way (to the station). Warfield said Some of the arrested protesters said they would be “ back for more as they were led to the buses going to the police station, Bollinger said. “ The implications of the T-shirt slogan about it being occupation number one are pretty clear.” he added “ One vocal guy at the station said we were not from the town and if the police hadn t been there, they would have run us out of town, Warfield said. O T H ER W ISE. LOCAL residents did not harass the demonstrators, Warfield and Bollinger said The process of being photographed and fingerprinted was “ scary in a way. but the police were very nice to us. 1 had never even gotten a traffic ticket before, but I know now that this C D (civil disobedience» is a good way to take the issue to the courts,” she said Trespassers have 10 days to appear before the county justice of the peace and Warfield said the protesters plan to ask for a county jury trial. “ I d like to be one of the six or seven representatives who participate in the trial on the part of those arrested,” Warfield said, adding she believes the protesters will be acquitted According to wire reports, utility of finals held a press conference while the demonstrators were being booked and released from jail “ IT (T H E PRO TEST) went as adver tised they told us what they were go­ ing to do and they did it,” said Bill Clements, vice president of Texas Utilities Generating Co “ We d just rather build our plants.” Clements said But we've got to keep people oil our property But no we don't like those dernonstratioi The protest is evidence civil H romomh^r- People need to be prepared to pay more and remember that two or three months of low rent will not really help when trying to pay fall rates.” Davis and Associates, owner of 54 Austin apartment complex­ es, reports rent increases go as high as 12 percent, said Jim Solt, property manager, adding the increases are a result of gas price hikes. “ Since we re locked in from September to May on our leases, we have to be prepared to take a beating We never know what Lo-Vaca (Gathering Co.) will do to rates for Southern Union (Gas Company),” Solt said The decreased summer rents now in effect are little help because utility prices eat up much of the summer rent savings ALTHOUGH T H E present summer utility rate hike for May to October is the same as last year, fuel cost increases empty your wallet, said Guymon Phillips, utility customer service of­ ficer. For example, using 750 kilowatt hours of electricity means an additional $15 per month, he said “ The main emphasis is on the use of air conditioning This is where a lot of money and energy is involved,” Phillips said The next bit of bad news is that as costs increase, so does the cost of eating out, said Giles Spillar, educational director for the Texas Restaurant Association. Austin menu prices increased 10 to 11 percent last year because restauranteurs are dealing with 12 to 15 percent operating cost increases, Spillar said. “INFLATION HAS taken up a lot of your disposable income and people who used to eat out three or four times a week have been cutting it down to two,” Spillar said “ Although the summer rates drop down, they’re raising them higher in the fall than they were last year,” Goodman said. Evtdeoce of decreasing disposable income in Austin lies in a Travis County restaurant sales decrease of $8 2 million between Cheapest city to cost students more in coming year Editor’s Note: This is the first of a two-part series on infla­ Editor'! Note: This Is the first of s two-part series on infla- «n-o vi-,,, May and October 1978 according to tentative figures, he said Restaurant owners are faced with an average net profit of 1 to 2 percent bec ause of increasing utility and food costs, he added it takes a real restaurant management Spillar said . ______ . . . . . V w professional to operate at a high profit margin if»«J shoppers on a low budget have to be equally intelligent to u* a with higher food prices Tuesday: Ways to help fight increasing costa Pane 2 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. June 11, 1979 BEAUTY BECOMES YOU u itlt individualized skin care h\ E m o ImszIo No. 5 Jefferson Square call 452 8846 Student Financial Aid Check Release Texas Union Ballroom Tuesday, June 12 Wednesday, June 13 Naurs: 1:30-11:30; 1:00-4:30 Check release w ill be accor­ ding to the last tw o digits of Hie student's Social Security number. Please refer to the d i s b u r s e m e n t s c h e d u l e m ailed to a w a rd recipients far specific times. R E M I N D E R : A p p l i c a t i o n is deadline for fall/spring July 1. OFFICE OF STUDENT FINANCIAL AID 2 6 0 8 W h itit across fro m K m solving Dorm 8 :3 0 a .m . to 4 3 0 p .m . Th< T e n n a ilu d en ! n ew sp ap er at The U n iversity of T esa* at Austin is p e t ti ?>ed by T eta* Student P ub lication* D raw er D , U n iversity Station A ustin. TX 1*712 The D aily T r**n I* pabtafecd M onday Tuesday W ednesday Thursdav and F n ex cep t holiday and ex am period» Second c la s s p u siag e paid at Austin Tea N ew s contribution» w ill be a. ep ted by telephone «71 4691 at the e d itorial o ffic e 'T e a a i Student P u b lication s B uilding 2 123 > or at the new * laboratory 1C om m unication HbUdin* A « 1361 In q u in e s con cern in g d e liv e r y and cLaasified a d vertisin g should be m ad e in TSP Bunding 3 300 «71 V24« and d isp lay a d v ertisin g in TSP B uilding 1 210 « ttl-lM S Tie national a d vertisin g r e p r ese n ta tiv e of The D aily T exan is C om m u n ication s and A d vertising S e r v t m to Students 6338 N P ulaski C h icago II. #0946 Tie D ailv Texan subscribe* to 1 m ted P r e ss intern ation a l and N ew York T im e* the and M ee» S erv ice The T e sa n i* a m em b e r u t the A ssociated C olleg ia te P r e ss Southw est «Journalism t o n g r o the T r ia s D ally N ew sp a p er A ssociation At**» • ar, New spaper Put>n»t.c’ • Asm* .ation t i g » f i g h i 197» T e n s Student P u b lication s TH E DAILY T E X A N SURSCHIPTTON RA TES Les Amis s t«i< n . i l k < a(« — I l f * «K N . m \ M I n i t i o S O M tu r S ession 10?$ By m ail un T exa s By m ail o u tsid e T e x a s w ithin U S A DO* S e m este r > F a ll or Spring) 1070-80 Picked up on cam p u s By m a il in T e x a s By m ail o u tsid e T exas wtthtn basic student le e Tw u S e m e s te r s .F a ll and Spring 1070-00 By m ail By m att o u tsid e T e x a s w ithin in T e x a s USA U S A Sexto ord ers and ad d ress ch an ges to TE X A S ST U D E N T PU BLIC ATIO NS P O Box P U B NO 140440 I», A ustin T exa* 7*712 or to TSP Kuildm* tT 200 I $ so 10 00 f © 10 00 17 00 S2V 00 21 00 LOW COST FLIGHTS e q n o e t - A i L C i T w s (212)689-8980 O utside N Y S tate ;S“f F800-223-7676 f k t C e n te r to. S tw d tn l frw v e l 1 t a o S W O A D W A V N v C N V LATE REGISTRATION FEE PAYMENT IS today a t the ACADEMIC CENTER Hours: 10:00 a .m .-5 :0 0 p.m. Office o f the Registrar MNIYER5ITY* B-K5ELLER5 a PRICE 5flLC NftftfQWjK) — ----------- I— ' Z0D 9 * ^ - 9 ^ ° s u I 2 t ‘ .-.m M • f- J Concert plans presented Adequate supervision promised for Willie’s picnic The key factor is getting them in and out a fte r they ve been entertained and that s w h at th is m e e tin g w ith R ichards) was about. We re planning how to best facilitate safety and well­ the health being of the concert-goers as well as the general public, he added P rom oters will meet with R ichards a t 1 p m June 18 to f u r t h e r d i s c u s s c o n c e r t a rrang em ents. By SHONDA NOVAK Daily Texan Staff Adequate medical services, sufficient parking and law and traffic enforcement will be provided at Willie Nelson's seventh annual Fourth of July Picnic, concert planners told Travis County Commissioner Ann Richards N e ls o n ’s a tto rn ey , road manager and security coor­ dinator met with county of­ ficials Friday to discuss plans for the picnic, which will be at the 75-acre Pedernales Coun­ try Club in the Briarchff sub­ division near Lake Travis Two main problems facing promoters are obtaining ad­ ditional parking space and tran sp ortin g p erso n s who need em ergency medical care from the site “ WE RE SHORT about 10.000 parking sp aces.” said Randy F le tc h e r , N e lso n 's security coordinator. “ We re looking for some place we can lease out for a couple of days, but the problem is being pur­ sued ” Plans for shuttle buses from Austin are being m ade to avoid traffic problems in the area dunng the concert, and som e dirt roads will be opened off Bee Creek Road to allow ad d ition al parking sp ace Fletcher added One county official said he is concerned that the 15.000 vehicles expected in the con­ cert vicinity will make it dif­ ficult to transport emergency to B rackenridge p a tie n ts Hospital Based on past experience with concerts like this one. they < the medical staff • won t be able to get out of the area except via air because of the traffic congestion." said John Mu r r a y , T r a v i s Co u n t y Emergency Medical Service coordinator MU R R A Y SAID m edical attendants and technicians will be stationed primarily in ( P a l e f a c e » the Pace Bend Park area and along Highway 71 and Farm Road 2322 They w i l l be e q u i p p e d w i t h resuscitation, oxygen and ban­ daging and splinting supplies to treat automobile accident victim s and persons suffering from overexposure and drug related problems. Hopefully, we re going to have boats involved as far as transport capability is con cerned We re expecting the worst and trying to gear up for that ” M urray added P rom oters said they plan to ‘totally- have one helicopter d e d i c a t e d to m e d i c a l transportation and have con­ tracted with M ayday Medical Services to provide a staff of 45 doctors and nurses to tre a t em ergency cases P L A N N E R S ALS O to ld R ic h a r d s m o re th a n 300 se c u rity g u a rd s and o th e r law enforcem ent of­ county ficials would be presen t to t h e c r o w d . ” “ c o n t r o l H o w e v e r, M ike S im p so n , p r e s i d e n t a n d g e n e r a l m anager of R anger Security System s Inc said he foresees no m ajo r problem s in the area of law enforcement. "T h ese people a re going to hear a concert. They don t want to hassle hom eowners, burn dow-n people's houses and inflict injury on people in the a re a and dam age their property Simpson said Construction Willie Nelson — Texan Staff City Council to vote on Red River expansion By DIANE JANE MORRISON Daily Texan Staff If all goes as planned, construction of the new portions of Red River Street should begin some time this summer W'hether all will go as planned is an entirely different question "The plans are virtually complete and it’s just a matter of getting the specifications together." said Carl Conley of the city engineering depart­ ment Before construction may begin, the City Council must vote on an amendment to the orginal agree­ ment between the University and the City of Austin The amendment is scheduled to com e before the council Thursday. According to speculations of a city employee, the council will not approve the amendment Though he also said he has "quit trying to second guess our City Council," the employee said, "I don't think they «the council) will approve the amendment as is ” "I recommend that they do vote in favor of it (the amendment) for the benefit of both the University of Texas and the City of Austin," said City M anager Dan Davidson it." 1 hope they vote for I ju st haven't m ade up my mind on which way I'm going to go on th is." said council m em ber Jim m y Snell. The only thing th at concerns m e is the traffic that needs to be re-routed when the old Red R iver is c lo s e d . ' s a id c o u n c il m e m b e r B e tty th at the Him m elblau H im m elblau speculated am endm ent will be approved by the council if the tra ffic can be re -ro u te d , and re-ro u ted safely." If the am endm ent is not approved by the coun­ cil it will have to be adjusted Then it m ust go back to the Board of R egents for another vote. A fter that it will again com e before the City Coun­ cil for approval. Since the regents do not m eet again until July 24, the relocation construction could be delayed several m ore m onths unless the council approves the am endm ent. Under the original agreem en t, dated Dec 13. 1973, the U niversity would obtain property which it would donate to the city in exchange for por­ tions of Red R iver S treet. The U niversity would then m ake those portions into an inner cam pus drive. along with p arts of San Jacin to Boulevard. The city would use the land donated by the U niver­ sity to m ake a new p a rt of Red R iver for use by non-Universitv traffic. The University still m ust obtain property between 26th Street and 32nd S treet before con­ struction may begin The am endm ent s ta te s that if the U niversity does not obtain the land by July 1. the city m ay use any m eans, including condem ­ nation of buildings, to get it. S p e a k in g a b o u t c o n d e m n a tio n , D a v id so n said. If that s w hat's required to com plete the project, th a t's what th e y ’ll do ’ One U niversity System official says the U niver­ sity will not be able to purchase the needed land. Probably m ost of it will be done by the city a fte r July 1,” said Joe E. Boyd J r., vice-president for business affairs. it bought the project, When the U niversity first began buying proper­ ty for the Northwood T e rrace A partm ents a t 3003 Red R iver St.. and on Oct. 19. 1977 sent eviction notices to the residents of the ap artm en ts, telling them that they m ust be out by Dec.31, 1977. A c c o rd in g to C o n le y , th e C om m a n c h e A partm ents on Swisher S treet will be the only other building that will have to be condemned before construction of the new road m ay begin. SEM I-A N N U A L SHOE SALE ALL LATEST STYLES FAM O US BRAND NAM ES* VALUES TO 66.25 34.90 3 LARGE GROUPS TO CHOOSE FROM SELECTIONS INCLUDE DRESS & CASUAL SHOES — SANDALS — BACKLESS SHOES M & tuiuj 4 on-ihe-dtog at 240 6 Gulup« Monday, June 11, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 3 New tests ordered on jet mountings W ASHINGTON (U P I) — The F e d e ra l Aviation A d m inistration, expanding its s ea rch for unsafe tran sp o rt a ir c r a ft, has ordered an inspection of the engine m ountings on all U .S. wide-body je ts , of­ ficia ls said Sunday. E ngine m ounts or pylons a r e the stru ctu res that a tta ch engines to the wing. They b eca m e suspect when a DC- 10 lost an engine and then crash e d near Chicago M ay 25, killing 275 in the w orst U.S. a ir d isa ster. The order went out la te F rid a y or e arly Saturday, said FA A spokesm an Dennis F eld m an. He said it applies to a ll 747 je t s m ade by the B oeing Corp ; the L-1011 m ade by Lockheed, and the A300 Air Bus m ade by a E u ro p ean con­ sortium . T H E O N E -T IM E inspections of the pylon will be c a rrie d out under the r e c o m m e n d a tio n s m a d e by p la n e m a n u f a c t u r e r s , Lockheed has estim ated it will take th ree hours of work and Boeing 16 hours, he said. F e l d m a n s a id As of F e b ru a ry , th ere w ere 354 747s in se rv ice . E a s te r n A irlines owns the only seven A ir B u ses in the U .S. co m m e rcia l plane flee t. A Lockheed spokesm an said th e re a re 162 L -lO lls in s e rv ice worldwide with 93 used d o m estically by TWA, E a s te r n and D elta. The spokesm an said the in sp ec­ ta k e a p p r o x im a te ly six tion should hours fo r each je t. A spokesm an fo r TWA said the a ir ­ lin e ’s 20 L -lO lls have been inspected and no problem s w ere found. Inspection of TW A ’s 11 747 je t s will be com pleted by Monday. " E a s t e r n has alread y sta rte d th e ir in­ spection and im ag ine o th ers have begun th e ir inspection to m in im ize the down t im e ." F eld m an said I A D elta A irline spokesm an said his com pany has 27 L-lOlis. He said he did not exp e ct the new FA A order to tie up a ir tra ffic . "W e have h isto rica lly been inspecting the pylon and we will inspect them a s they co m e in ," the D elta o fficia l said. The ord er re q u ires only a visual in­ spection of the pylon fo r c ra c k s or oth er problem s and does not requ ire use of sp ecial dyes to d etect fine c ra c k s or e le c tro n ic equipm ent, F eld m an said. “ T H E F A A W I L L o b s e r v e a re p re sen tativ e sam pling of the inspec­ tio n ," he said. FAA A d m inistrator Langhorne Bond, in a May 29 new s co n feren ce , said the FAA would the pylon a t­ ta ch m en ts of oth er wide-body je ts . look into We went to the o th er m an u factu rers a fte r the news co n feren ce , had them take a s im ila r look at o th er wide-bodied je t s They issued a s e r v ic e bulletin and we a r e m aking it m a n d a to ry ," said F eld m an . The a irlin e s will rep ort back to the FAA on the resu lts of the new inspec­ tions, he said. E a s t e r n A ir lin e s p o k e s m a n B o b C hristen said his a irlin e had alread y in­ its seven Air spected about half of B u^es He said inspection of E a s te r n ’s 30 L-lO U s would begin Sunday night The a irlin e s have 45 days to co m p lete the inspections, he said , adding that the order should not fu rth er disrupt U.S. a ir trav el "T h e pylon inspection s can be handled ju st like inspection s of oth er a r e a s going on all the tim e ," said C h risten. The N ational T ran sp o rtation S afety Board said som e of the c ra c k s in the pylon m ay have resulted from im proper m ain ten an ce p ra c tic e s , by re-atta ch in g the engine and pylon in one p iece to the wing. Supreme court lagging on equal employment ( U P I ) W A S H IN G T O N - M o s t w orkers a t the Su p rem e Court a re w hite and m ale, s ta tis tic s re le ase d by th e tribu nal show. T h e re have been only two b lack law cle rk s in the c o u rt’s history. The d a ta , re leased by the co u rt in response to re p o rte rs ’ q u eries a fte r la st T u esd ay ’s co u rt d ecision th at con­ g ressm en w ere lia b le for em ploym ent d i s c r i m i n a t i o n s h o w e d a p r e d o m i n a n t l y w h ite an d m a l e w o rk fo rce d espite a national equal em p loy m en t opportunity push in the 1970s. s u i t s , T H E S T A T IS T I C S sh ow b la c k s clu ste re d a t the low er lev els of em p loy­ m ent. W hite m a le s continue to hold m o st of the c o u rt’s top-level jo b s. T hey include M ichael R odak, c le rk of th e co u rt, and M ark Cannon, a d m in istra tiv e a s s is ta n t to Chief Ju s tic e W arren B u rg er. The only black law c le rk s on record a re W illiam C olem an, who clerk ed for Ju s tic e F e lix F ra n k fu rte r in 1948 and la ter b e ca m e tran sp o rtatio n s e c re ta ry , a n d K a r e n H a s t i e W i l l i a m s o f B a l t i m o r e , w ho c o u r t s p o k e s m a n B a r r e tt M cGurn said clerk e d in 1974 for Ju s tic e Thurgood M arsh all, the c o u rt’s only b lack ju s tic e . O V E R T H E P A ST seven y e a rs , 22 women have served as law c le rk s — about 13 p ercen t of the total. In the cu rren t te rm , th ere a r e five fe m a le cle rk s and 27 m ale c le rk s — all of whom a r e white. r e s u l t o f an th e c o u r t s a id " o u t r e a c h " As a i t had p r o g r a m , em ployed an O riental — Alfred Wong, who is in ch a rg e of the co u rt’s police fo rce, and an A m erican Indian — E . J . Shegonee, a th erap ist. Segregated Iran beaches called for Iran ( U P I ) — T E H R A N , Is la m ic revolu tionary co u rts execu ted four m en convicted of m urdering and torturing anti-shah p ro te ste rs, bringing to 296 the num ber of execu tion s sin ce the cou rts w ere set up in F e b ru a ry . T h e M oslem re g im e of A yatollah Ruhollah Khom eini also ordered sw im - m i n g o n C a s p i a n S e a b e a c h e s seg reg ated by sex — draw ing p ro tests fro m m e rch a n ts in the a re a — and said new spapers m ust identify th e ir p o litical position on the front page fro m now on so re a d ers ca n identify " a n ti- Is la m ic " pu blications. T h e E tte la a t new spaper said uniden­ tified persons blew up a sectio n of railroad in Khuzestan province, w here e th n ic A ra b s d em an d in g au to n o m y clash ed with g overnm ent troops m o re th a n a w e e k a g o . T h e t r a c k w as rep aired a fte r five hours. O N E O F T H O SE execu ted Sunday w as a fo rm e r arm y serg ean t. A co u rt in K h o rra m s h a h r co n v ic te d a fo r m e r a rm y m a jo r of o ffen ses punishable by death but reduced his sen ten ce to th ree y e a r s ’ im prisonm ent P ro m in en t religious lead er A yatollah Syed K azem S h a ria tm a d a ri, in re m a rk s published Satu rd ay, said Ir a n ’s Is la m ic constitu tion must be approved by an in ste a d of d ir e c t e le c te d a s s e m b ly referendu m He said it would be a " g r e a t m is ta k e " not to have the co n ­ stitu en t a ssem b ly . S h a r ia tm a d a r i’s w arn in g fo llow ed fu n d am en talist clerg y sta te m e n ts by th at a quick p assag e of the con stitu tio n through a " y e s ” and " n o " referend u m and a "lim it e d ” assem b ly w as needed to sta b ilize th e p o litical situation M in ister of G uidance N asser M m achi said all Iran ian new spapers would have to s ta te th e ir p o litical position a t the top of the front page to com ply with a new introduced by the govern­ law being m ent. MLNACHI SA ID the req u irem en t was to avoid “ d e ce p tio n by to n e c e s s a r y new spapers not Ira n ’s Is la m ic revolution truly co m m itted " T h is is deception which we want to a v o id ," M inachi said B u t M inachi said his m in istry did not intend to a c t a s the ce n so rs or a co n ­ tro llin g instru m en t ov er jo u rn a lis ts , as did Shah M oham m ed R eza P a h ia v is M inistry of In fo rm ation A rescue team removes the body of one of five miners killed in a Friday night explosion in the Belle Isle Salt Mine in Calument. La. The explosion is believed to have occurred when a dynamite charge ignited prem aturely Seventeen other workers were injured, and four were hospitalized 2 Mine explosion Nicaragua fighting fierce Sandinistas near Somoza bunker M A N A G U A , N i c a r a g u a ( U P I ) — S a n d in is t a g u e rrilla s and governm ent troops fought fie r c e b a ttle s thoughout the ca p ita l Sunday only four blocks from the b om b p roo f h e a d q u a rte rs of P r e s id e n t A n a sta sio Som oza Thousands of people fled th eir hom es Sunday a s the pitched b a ttle s erupted throughout M anagua in a driving tro p ical rain sto rm . The stu tte r of m ach in e gun fire filled the humid a ir of the N icaragu an ca p ita l, on the 15th day of w hat San ­ d inista g u e rrilla s c a ll the " fin a l o ffe n s iv e " aim ed at toppling Som oza s re g im e. T R U C K S AND J E E P S c a r r y in g h e a v ily a rm e d national guard sold iers in co m b a t fatig u es c ris s-cro s s e d city s tre e ts . In som e neighborhoods, youthful looking g u e rrillas arm ed with a u to m a tic w eapons crouched behind b a r r ic a d e s and fire d a t p a ssin g m ilita r y v eh icles Light arm o red c a r s fired on som e b a rric a d e s. M ost of the gunfire c a m e fro m an a re a behind a hill w here Som oza's personal o ffice is located Fighting also was reported in b a rrio s along the highway to the airp o rt, which rem ained open Thousands of m en, women and children poured out of the b a rrio s onto the m ain roads as soon as the fighting erupted. Many people ca rrie d fu rnitu re and clothing on c a r ts or in burlap s a ck s M ost of the women and child ren waved flag w hite flag s, fashioned from sh irts or bed sh eets and tied to wooden stick s B U R S T S O F G U N F IR E could Ik» heard ail along the road to the airp ort as the refu g ees headed out of town O ccasio n ally , m ilita ry tru ck s could be seen d arting into the resid en tial d is tr ic ts and sold iers firing th e ir guns into the houses. in cred ible th in g s," said a South A m erican " I saw rep o rter "A ll the b arrio s which until Satu rd ay w ere fre e of b a rric a d e s, w ere now taken by g u e rrilla s Arid sy m p ath izers, including women and ch ild ren , w ere all m anning the b a rrica d e s and buildings " The Sand in istas repeated ly have said th eir iuial g« i! is an a ssa u lt on M anagua to ca p tu re S o m o za's heavj y guarded bunker a huge fortified com p lex of o ffice m ilita ry in stallation s m the h eart of the cap ital * SOMOZA L E F T the bunker at the height of th** fighting Satu rd ay, but returned In the mghl H a l i l ( ano his press s e c r e ta ry said Som oza was still m tBe Of f i ce despite Sand in ista rep orts he had fled the co u n t)» Sunday s fighting co n traste d with cla im » bv m i l i t a » an alysts that Som oza s troops had broken the b ack i f the g u errillas* " f in a l o ffen siv e.*1 f The national guard cla im ed in a 24 hour period e n d i i Saturday they had < rushed Sand in ista strongholds ai<>i& the U ratcgu sou thern b ord er with C oeta K ica and in Mus.iya an Indian settle m e n t ju s t south of M anagua said " I n th ree days every th in g will be iver,* one an a ly sl M G overnm ent re p o rts said Som oza s troops a lso had gained ground in n orthern M atag alp a, an oth er key c i t f ! In re b e l hand s. News Capsules By United Press Intern atio nal Shah leaves Paradise Island M E X I C O ( T T Y , M e x ic o — T h e d e p o s e d s h a h o f I r a n le ft h is P a r a d i s e Is la n d r e t r e a t in th e B a h a m a s and fle w to M e x ic o C ity S u n d a y , a i r p o r t o f f i c i a l s c o n f ir m e d T h e o f f i c i a l s , b r e a k in g h o u rs o f s il e n c e , s a id th e e x i l ­ ed m o n a r c h ’s s le e k w h ite j e t b e a r in g a M e x ic a n fla g la n d e d a t M e x ic o C i t y ’s I n te r n a tio n a l A ir p o r t T h e j e t , c a r r y i n g th e e m p r e s s F a r a h an d th e s h a h ’s o ld e s t s o n , to o k o f f fr o m N a s s a u a t 2 :2 5 p .m . and to u c h e d d ow n in M e x ic o C ity a t 4 30 p .m ., a n o f f i c i a l a t th e M e x ic o C ity a i r p o r t s a id T h e o f f i c i a l s a id th e s h a h a n d h is f a m il y a r r iv e d w ith to u r is t c a r d s iss u e d th e m by th e M e x ic a n g o v e r n m e n t an d p a s s e d th ro u g h i m m ig r a t io n an d c u s t o m s b e fo r e le a v in g th e a i r p o r t in a lim o u s in e Japan has square watermelon l a t e s t TOKYO — T h e in te c h n o lo g ic a l a d v a n c e s fr o m J a p a n c o m e s n o t in th e fie ld o f e l e c t r o n i c s , b u t in th e fie ld o f e d ib le s — s q u a r e w a t e r m e lo n s . T h e y a r e now b e in g s o ld on a c o m m e r c i a l b a s is a f t e r b e in g d e v e lo p e d by h o r t ic u lt u r i s t T o m o y u k i O n o , w h o is k e e p in g h is m e th o d s a “ tr a d e s e c r e t . ” O n o b o a s t s th a t th e n e w b r e e d o f w a t e r m e lo n is m issile w a s p e r m itte d u n d e r the S A L T II a g r e e m e n t but its m e th o d o f d e p lo y m e n t c o u ld violate the pact T h e v a g u e ly w o rd e d th e authoritative in te r n a tio n a l r e v ie w s e c t io n o f P ravd a in a long a r t i c l e t r a c in g th e h is to r y o f n e g o tia tio n s on th e r e m a r k s a p p e a r e d in S t r a t e g i c A r m s L im it a t io n T r e a t y I L a s t w e e k . P r e s i d e n t C a r t e r a n n o u n c e d p la n s to sp en d $30 b illio n *>ver 10 y e a r s to b u ild a s p ra w lin g < m o b i l e m is s ile s y s te m a c r o s s Southwest. t h e A m e r i c a n California patrol strikes for wages S A C R A M E N T O , C a lif. - M ort* th a n 90 p e r c e n t of California h ig h w a y p a t r o l o f f i c e r s s ta y e d o ff th e ir jo b s S u n d a y , th e s e c o n d d a y o f a p r o t e s t o f G o v E d m u n d G B ro w n J r s w a g e o f f e r . P a t r o l s p o k e s m a n K e n t M ilto n sa id o f 542 o f f i c e r s s c h e d u le d to w o rk , 510 s ta y e d o ff th e jo b On Saturday, 531 o f 504 p a tr o l o f f i c e r s s ta y e d a w a y fr o m w o rk Fires rage in southern California L O S AN< I E L E S A h a l f d o zen b ru s h an d g r a s s f i r e s b u rn e d in southern California Sunday, whipped by d ry 30 m p h w in d s a n d f i r e o ffic ia ls sa id th e s t a t e faced a “ critical fire situation m u c h e a s i e r to t r a n s p o r t in la r g e q u a n t it ie s b e c a u s e o f it s s h a p e an d is e a s i e r to s to w in a r e f r i g e r a t o r th a n is a c o n v e n tio n a l-s h a p e d o v a l melon A rso n w a s s u s p e c te d in a f i r e n e a r r o n t a n a S a tu r d a y th a t d e s tr o y e d 10 d w e llin g s and 15 o t h e r s m a ll s t r u c ­ t u r e s a n d c a u s e d th e e v a c u a t io n o f a b o u t s e v e r a l hum The deposed shah leaves Paradise Island M O SC O W — The < om m unist P a rty n e w s p a p e r P r a v ­ d a s a id S u n d a y the developm ent of the A m e r ic a n MX UP! Telephoto Pravda says MX missile allowed d re d p e o p le N o i n ju r ie s w e r e r e p o r te d and t h e r e w a s n o im ­ m e d ia te d a m a g e e s t i m a t e , f i r e o f f i c i a l s sa id M o st o f th e h o m e s w e r e d e s c r ib e d a s o ld e r s t r u c t u r e s Federal workers being told not to buy bonds Union directive protests government wage restriction W ASHINGTON i U P I ) — Don’t buy U .S. Savings If you own any now. cash them in b efo re Ronds Thursday to T h at m e ssa g e is being spread by the la rg e s t union it the 700 000 m e m b e rs fe d era l w orkers of re p re sen ts throughout the United S u t e s It is to a le rt P resid en t C a rte r that the union is upset ov er gov ernm ent p o licies m em b ersh ip to w ard th e a d ­ fe d e r a l e m p lo y e e s , e s p e c ia lly m in istra tio n ’s in sisten ce that m ost fed eral w orkers g e t a 5 5 p ercen t pay in cre a se , w hile C a r te r ’s w age g uidelines allow a 7 p ercen t y ea rly boost fo r oth er w orkers. K enneth B lay lo ck , p resid en t of the A m erican F e d e ratio n of G o v ern m en t E m p loy ees, contends w o rk ers g et a b e tte r d eal by putting th eir money elsew h ere. He said w orkers " g e t a b e tte r ra te of retu rn on your investm ent m s c o re s of no-risk p la ces, like c re d it unions, savings and loans, even the c o m e r bank ’ B lay lock is pushing for th e savings bonds cash-m s by T hu rsday b ecau se it is th e d ate for a nationw ide A w areness D a y " p ro test by fed eral w orkers unions that will include p ick etin g the W hite House T he U S Savings Bond D ivision of the T reasu ry D ep artm en t said ap p roxim ately 91.1 billion A the 18 billion spent on bonds last y ear ca m e from fed eral em ployees Ja c k N iles, national d irecto r of bonds s a le s, cla im s B lay lock is only hurting the very people he is trying to help "H e felt becau se he had no other weapon, that he was going to use us a s a c lu b ," N iles said in an in ter­ view " I t ' s bad enough to club us. but the w orse thing 1 think a re go­ is that the m em b ers that follow him ing to be in ju re d ." N iles em phasized in­ dividuals who cash in th e ir bonds now in protest ui- tax conseq u ences of the sumu of waiting until they r e tir e and a r t in a low< r tax brac ket He a ls o a s s a il* d B la y lo c k s su g g e s tio n th. t w orkers m oney w as b e tte r spent in c re d it u n ions Becau.Hr of fe d era l s u t e and lo ca l ta x e s . Nil!® said a 7 p ercen t yield from a cre d it union is e ffe c tiv e ­ ly only 4 1 2 p ercen t com p ared to the n o n -tax ab le excep t on a d eferred b asis a t m a tu rity ) yield erf 6 l } 2 p ercen t on bonds. ! The A F G E tried to g et th e A F L -C IO E x e c u tiv e Council to p lace U S Savings Bonds alo n g sid e th o le of J P Stevens te x tile s, C oors B e e r and other itera» in a nationw ide b oycott, but the co u n cil b alked EDITORIALS Klan, blacks clash Blatant racist attitudes persist Recent Ku Klux Klan activities in Decatur, Ala., provide disturbing evidence to support a statem ent made three years ago by Roger Wilkins, member of th e e d ito ria l b o a rd of T he New Y ork T im es ”A m e r i c a can d e c e i v e i t s e l f into believing r a c i s m a n d d i s c r i m i n a t i o n h a v e b e e n eliminated....This deceptive ve ne e r covers this country's natural predisposition of the attitude toward r ac is m in this c o u n tr y . ” Apparently, the veneer has som e thin spots. T his p a st w eek en d , a p p r o x im a te ly 150 Klan m em bers, some armed with axe handles, chains and baseball bats, taunted 1,500 demonstrators, mostly black, who marched peacefully to protest the case of Tommy Lee Hines. Last October an all-white jury con­ victed Hines, a 27-year-old retarded black man, of rap­ ing a white woman. The Southern Leadership Conference, which led Saturday’s march, says Hines does not have the mental capacity to make the confes­ sion attributed him by police. TH E HAUNTING s p e c ta c le of w h ite-robed Klansmen shouting obscenities and pointing pick handles and lead pipes at protesters should alarm anyone concerned with the elimination of racism. Martin Luther King had a dream about equality for blacks more than 10 years ago and many of his goals have been realized. But Americans cannot blindly accept the current status quo, believing that dis- Ford ends Continental crim ination no longer exists. The Klan has been highly visible and vocal in rec e n t years, sponsoring vigilante “B order P a tro ls’ to stop the flow of undocum ented w orkers along the M exican border and claim ing responsibility for violent a c ts ag ain st persons involved in “ m ix ed ’’ m arria g e s or relationships. Klan m em bers seem less afraid to voice publicly their ra c ist sta te m e n ts and to be film ed and photographed than ever before. the Five y ears ago, m ost A m ericans would only accept blatan t discrim ination likes of Archie from Bunker; it w as not popular to reveal racist views, even if a person secretly believed them . However, brazen cross-burnings and recent m arc h es indicate the Klan obviously feels less threatened in advocating racism now th e y e a r s w hen c iv il r ig h ts took place and equal opportunity dem onstrations legislation w as enacted. We a re in an era of social retren ch m en t. And th a t’s w hat is scary. th a n d u rin g A m ericans, especially those who work to elim inate racism and discrim ination, cannot dism iss the Ku Klux Klan as a bunch of fringe eccen trics without pop­ ular support. T heir m ovem ent could indicate a m uch larg e r problem Freedom s m ust be constantly fought for. Com placency inevitably resu lts in a slippage of social concern for the underprivileged and needy and results in the diminution of hum an dignity. Beth Frerking The last of the ‘dinosaurs’ It is said that history runs in cycles. Well, the ap­ proach of another “ ice a g e ” has marked the race of gas-guzzling dinosaurs for extinction, figuratively speaking, ice age did last just as the thousands of years ago. (actual) The “ dinosaur,” a Lincoln Continental Town Coupe,rolled off the Ford Motor Company’s production line on Friday and will be the last of its kind. The lux­ ury car weighed in at 4,800 pounds, measured 19 feet, 5 inches and has a retail list price of $11,467. The world environment does change cyclically for weather, styles, politics, econom ics and for cultures as a whole. The new “ ice age” will be a period of e n e r g y s c a r c i t y . Ga s s h o r t a g e s h a v e m a de anachronistic what once was considered the highest ideal of beauty, prestige and comfort on the open road. But the Ford Motor Company could not conscionably continue to produce a c a r which perform ed at 12 m iles to the gallon Ford built 168,539 Lincoln Continentals during the p a st year, though not all of them have been sold yet. Ju s t think how m uch gas would have been saved if the pu rch asers had not had the option to invest in such a “dinosaur,” but had been offered instead a luxury car which got a t least 20 m iles to the gallon. Figuring that the av erag e c a r is driven 10,000 m iles per y ear, 56,123,487 gallons of gas could have been saved in one y ear along had Continental d riv e rs purchased the m ore fuel efficient vehicles. Ford and the other A m erican autom obile m an u fac­ tu re rs should have had the good sense of discontinuing such c a rs long ago, or, b e tte r yet. never having m ade them . But history c a n 't be rew ritte n . B etter late than never. Harvey Neville Cambodia.: the real Watergate By Tom Wtckor toppled invasion NEW YORK - Before a North Viet­ namese the cruel Cambodian regime of Pol Pot, that regime had established itself as one of the most ruthless in history. And there was a rising chorus in this country to suggest that those who had opposed the war in Indochina were not only blind to the atrocities in Cambodia but respon­ sible for them. This inversion of history developed mostly from the fact that doves in and out of Congress opposed the Ford ad­ ministration’s final request for $222 million in military aid to the Lon Nol government then on its last legs in Phnom Penh. Soon after that request was defeated, Cambodia fell to the Khmer Rouge and the nightmare of the Pol Pot regime began. IF THAT $222 MILLION could have prevented such a result, there might be some justice in the charges against those who opposed it. But reports from Cambodia made it clear that nothing could save the weak Lon Nol regime; briefly propping it up would only have that prolonged to no good effect an excep­ tionally bloody and destructive war. Now a strongly researched new book the Americans most confirms directly responsible for the terrible fate of Cambodia were not doves but Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger They not only conceived the policy that spread the war across Cambodia; they carried it out in secrecy, with equal dis­ regard for the Cambodian people and for American constitutional processes. The tale is a squalid one. Cambodia, says William Shawcross, the young British journalist who worked for four years on his book. “ Sideshow’’ (New York Simon and Schuster), “ was not a m istake, it was a crim e.” And Michael Walzer of Harvard has suggested in a review for the New Republic that Cam­ bodia was “ the real W atergate” — not just because Kissinger as well as Nixon was implicated, but because their Cam­ bodian venture represented a more serious perversion of dem ocratic and constitutional processes than any of the im p re a c h m e n t c h a rg e s fo rm a lly recommended against Nixon. IN A HORRENDOUS first chapter, Shawcross details how the m ilitary, on The Academia Waltz H&iD J te z* m /A /* r H m / M ififí. A f HEU KDH M F // tN A ■ u -m L ChAi* m to/seutU trr - f&iOOk.. / f&L rn£ anf &/r / a/aít a&x/t Tb HAY M rtX A W A Ü O m n m m m c a u OAY..UAtr.„ H e& H e / / direct orders from the White House, falsified records to conceal the bom­ bing of neutral Cambodia that began in to or 1969. w ith o u t n o tific a tio n authorization from Congress The bom bing m ight have been justified, in the narrowest sense, by the undeniable presence of North Viet­ namese forces in Cambodia’s eastern border regions, in violation of its sup­ posed neutrality. The bombing was not justified, however, by its ineffective m ilitary results, or by the death and destruction it brought to the Cambo­ dian peasantry; in fact, it succeeded only in driving the North Vietnamese farther into Cambodia. Throughout. Henry Kissinger helped Nixon devise, then loyally supported this catastrophic — often mindless — policy Shawcross even makes a con­ vincing case that it was by doing so that Kissinger trium phed over Secretary of State William P Rogers and un­ derwrote his own future in the Nixon and Ford adm inistrations — but surely not. as “ Sideshow” may help to insure, in anv other, ever again C1I7I New York Times by Berke Breathed H t A & r A P/A/To. — if T h e Da il y T e x a n .......... Editor Beth Frerking Managing Editor .............................................. Melissa Segrest Assistant Managing Editor..................................... Mark Dooley Harvey Neville Assistant to the E ditor ...... News E d ito r................................. Charlie Rose Associate News E ditor......................................Mark McKinnon Sports E ditor............................. Jeff Latcham Arts and Entertainment Editor.................... ...Manon La Nasa Photo Editor..................................... «....................Keith Bardin Anne Telford Images Editor.................. Campus Activities Editor......................................Susy Lampert ................Alice Anderson, Marilyn Hauk, General Reporters Dianna Haet, Mary Ann Krept, Diane Morrison. Shonda Novak. Martha Sheridan Dick Reeve* Design Consultant................................... Issue Editor ...................... News Assistants ................ Editorial Assistant ...... Sports Assistant ............... Make-up Editor ................. Wire Editor .......... ............. ........... Copy E ditors Artist Photographer ..... ......................... . .......... ............... Clare Hagerty Mike O'Neal, Joe Tedino, Jenny Abdo Robert McDonough ............. David King ............. Deborah Swift ......................... Tom Baker Patricia Ymago. Robin King. Mark Pi tier. Jenny Abdo Scott Bteser Terry Gregston C o p y * H *9 T»km Sfedent Pubfecoftont floproducfcor o» any port o* * mw w p m i pw nw «aw of m t o*»y *•***• «no* puObcJiMn Oponons «*p<«í*«c **> ’ *w Q*»-> ar* eta ano a t* not -wtaasaMy «oaa of ma u*x*mn#r o* aonw'ajrai*.*' vm Boa*4 of of r>a aoao* Of f w <** <*• of a r of ifw Ta»«s SfuOo't Board of Oowaane Trvstw-s THE DAILY TEXAN Monday, June 11, 1979 Page 4 a» auxmAH ‘To be or not to be. Whoopee!’ By RumwII Baker NEW YORK — Noting my recent adventure in the musical theater, a Poughkeepsie woman writes to ask. “ Why didn’t Shakespeare ever write a musical, since th at’s where the big theater bucks seem to lie0 Wouldn’t ‘Ham let’ have run alm ost as long as it had been done as a ‘G rease’ m usical?’’ if The fact is that Shakespeare did con­ sider doing “ H am let” as a musical, but decided against it after three minutes of re fle c tio n . Som e of his c o n ­ siderations were as follows: 1) EVERYBODY would tell him that “ H am let” was a terrible title for a musical, and the producers would rein­ force the argum ent with a m arket sur­ vey showing that seven out of 10 people would rather see a show with the word “ happy” the title. The publicity agent would warn him that if he per­ s is te d it “ H a m le t.’’ Broadway wise guys would laugh him out of existence by knocking it in the gossip colum ns as “ H am let and Egglets." in c a llin g in 2» Instead of setting the opening on a dark castle parapet with three m ale ac­ tors waiting for a ghost, he would have to revise the script to open in a sunlit square with 30 dancers singing about the gaiety of Renaissance Italy. 3) The setting would have to be changed to Italy from D enm ark because musical audiences preferred shows with M editerranean settings to shows set in Scandinavia 4) THE ROLE OF OPHELIA would have to be beefed up to support at least four songs because the producer would never be able to persuade a female star to take the role unless she had as many songs as the leading man 5) The plot would have to be changed to eliminate the deaths of Polonius. Claudius. Rosencrantz, Guildenstern. Ophelia. Laertes and Hamlet because nobody would go to see a musical in which somebody dies. 6) All the soliloquies would have to be cut to three lines apiece to prevent the audience from falling asleep between musical numbers. In fact, as Shakespeare wrote in his memoirs, he had the ingenuity to make these necessary changes and might well have had a hit as successful as “ The Wiz." It was the little things that finally set his mind against the project. He knew, for example, that his best lines would be appropriated by the lyricist and set to music. This would produce feeling irritation and bad “ You cannot have Hamlet saying, To be or not to be.’ ” the lyricist would tell him. Shakespeare did not have to ask why. He knew the immutable law of the musical theater. If “ To be or not to be” was to be sung in “ Bare Bodkin,“ Hamlet’s big production number with the whole chorus, it could not be spoken in the dialogue. This meant Shakespeare would have to come up with another line to cue the song Something like. “ Suppose I my quietus m ake0'' This would cue the chorus to start singing G et out y o u r old bare b od k i n A n d s h o w it to y o u r od d k m A n d w e ' l l hi tch old D o bk i n to t he s h a y , e tc Whereupon H am let would respond with: M y f a r d e l s lie o v e r t he o c e a n M y f a r d e l s h e o v e r t he s ea T h a t ' s ivhy I ’m m s u c h a c o m m o t i o n To be or not to be. W h o o p e e ! Shakespeare did not object to losing “ To be or not to be” to the lyricist, but he knew that if he substituted “Suppose I my quietus m ake?” as the song cue it would lead to endless quibbling with the actor playing H am let. This fellow would corner him in the wings and ask questions like. “ Why do I say, ‘Suppose I my quietus m ake?’ instead of, ‘Why don't I just go ahead and make my quietus0’ ” SHAKESPEARE would have been willing to agree to this, but he knew that next day the actor would be after him again saying, “ Can’t you give me a better word than quietus’? I t’s not get­ ting a laugh.” Shakespeare knew he could change the lines to give his actor a laugh. For example; Laertes; Who was that wench I saw thee out with last night? Hamlet: That was no wench. That was my quietus. He also knew, however, that if he did so the critics would pan him for not being able to make a decent pun anym ore and urge the masses to stay away from the Globe Theater, which would probably end his writing career and send him back to acting in road-company tours of “ Gamm er Gurton’s Needle.” In any case, everybody had told him you couldn't have a successful musical unless you could explain in one sentence what it was about, and, as Shakespeare used to tell Ben Jonson over ale at the Mermaid Tavern, “ How do I know what Hamlet s ’ about? If I knew what it was about, I would have written it in a sentence instead of five acts.” ®1979 New York Times T r y a g a i n , M c K e t t a The June 6 Texan reported on a speech given by Dr. McKetta to a group of 500 high school students visiting the University last week. Dr. McKetta made a few statem ents that I think could use some clarification Dr McKetta says we can save 1.2 million barrels of oil a day if we would bum high sulfur West Virginia coal without sulfur removal. We can also save the sam e amount of oil bur­ ning coal with sulfur removal. Dr McKetta thinks that catalytic converters and unleaded gas were legislated by Congress. I'm afraid the professor has been misled. Congress mandated clean air standards; the American automotive engineers came up with catalytic converters. Honda and Volkswagen make cars that m eet these standards without ridiculous add-on equipment or un­ leaded gas. U.S. industry is to blame for catalytic con­ verters. Dr McKetta feels that environm entalists hurt this country opposing the Alaskan pipeline. When Congress was con­ sidering the Alaskan pipeline, the alternative was a Cana­ dian pipeline, which many environm entalists were suppor­ ting This would have sent the oil to the Midwest, where oil is needed. Instead we now have a crude oil glut of high sulfur Alaskan oil on the West Coast and we have a shortage in the Midwest. The oil companies now say that we should sell Alaskan oil to Japan and buy Middle E astern oil for the E ast and Midwest. Congress anticipated this and outlawed any Alaskan oil leaving the U.S. If the environm entalists who wanted a Canadian pipeline had won, the oil would be where it belongs, in the Midwest. Dr M cKetta's opinions on nuclear energy are. at best, a little strange. He wants the U.S to build 1,000 breeder reac­ tors in the next 20 years. So far there are no full scale breeders anywhere in the U.S There are not even a thousand coal plants, oil plants, or nuclear plants built at anytime presently in the U S. If one of these breeders cost what the South Texas Nuclear Project costs, about $2 billion, it would require $2 trillion to build this many plants (if we could). And rem em ber nobody has even built one yet In order to obtain the precious elem ents from Dr McKet­ ta ’s nuclear waste, the waste has to be reprocessed to separate the poisonous elem ents from the useful ones The only reprocessing plant ever built in the U.S. (in Barnwell, South Carolina) was closed down because it didn't work I'nseparated am ericium is worth no more than fool's gold, and probably a lot less Peter Christman Chemical Engineering ‘E n v i r o - p e a s a n t ’ u n h e l p f u l So "Enviro-peasant wants answers ( Reply to McKetta techno-god’,” June 8 Texan»0 Why so he I want answers, and his greedy, cowardly kind can attack them 0 As usual the “ enviro-peasants ' resort to the standard techniques: 1) Attack the man. not the idea; label him “ techno-god , 2) don’t suggest viable alternatives, merely tear down anything constructive viciously; 3) answer all reasonable, logical questions or assertions with dogmatic, unthinking. pet phrases such as “ No nukes’ or “ Hell no, we won’t glow.” If they persist, they merely yell “ No nukes” louder, until all other sane discussion is drowned out. 4) Greedily fill the 8 miles per gallon gas guzzler to the brim so that the latest rally can be attended hundreds of miles away. “ No nukes Who cares about the next generation0 So what if there won’t be any petroleum for fertilizers, synthetics and other necessities? Or why not try a different approach0 L et’s work hard to solve the nuclear waste problem Let’s try to make nuclear reactors as safe as possible. L et’s press for laws banning gas guzzlers altogether. Let's start using wind, solar and other passive technologies, where feasible. Let’s get rid of the myriad of red tape and regulations which shackle our energy production industries. Let's start a national program to properly insulate every home in the nation. Let s take the hard road and work together in suggesting positive solutions, not the easy road of simply criticizing each other s ideas without offering any alternatives of our own W. E. Patterson Chemical Engineering ‘V i s s t o r y ’ c a r t o o n i n a c c u r a t e I was interested in the Texan's June 8 cartoon history ac­ cording to Vissers — or shall we say “ Visstory?” Granted, Vissers attem pted some sort of humor; but we must assum e that his cartoon suggests a logic, one based on something resembling facts. If so, there is little to suggest in our history that a groundswell of opposition m et the develop­ ment of steam power and aerotechnology. In fact, both these engineering revolutions were met with as much “ rom antic" interest by the public as more pragm atic acceptance. (I must say. however, that his statem ent about airplanes was ill-timed ) I know my ancestors expressed no discem able opposition il don’t know about any Oogs; can’t rem em ber that far back i And I doubt that the ancestors of today’s op­ ponents of nuclear power (and there are millions) expressed much opposition to steam engines and airplanes. 1 would point out that the development of dynam ite in the latter 1800s was met with widespread horror that the world would be wracked with all-destroying wars. Well, our ancestors tried hard, but they didn’t quite pull it off When the machine gun was first used extensively in World War One many thought their installation in ..ah-hem airplanes would destroy the world Well our forefathers blew that, too And when the Third Reich s air forces were reviewed by U.S. aviation expert Lindbergh in the 1930s, he counselled against war with Germany because they would surely win. Thank God our elders were wrong then So surely, with that kind of track record these present-day lunatics and such who say that the world will end with another development in technology — nuclear weapons — are all full of sss strontium 90 Right? Aren’t these weapons * safe now” too0 By the way. despite her sinister grin and typically wild- eved appearance. Vissers anti-nuker s statem ent was right on target That part I agree with So do many, many more Stepkea W. McGaire Aastla. Tex. Nobel Prize-winner struggles to hold professorship Monday, June 11, 1979 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Page 5 Air Force to conduct study Vietnam veterans link illnesses to defoliant By JENNY ABDO An Austin man is still searching for a m edical explanation for physical d iso rd e rs he has en ­ countered since returning from Vietnam Dan Jordan returned in 1969 Since then he has suffered from a severe case of acne, rectal bleeding, psy­ chological disorders and numbness in his arm s and legs, he said Jordan said the Social Security Administration declared him 100 percent disabled in 1977, although the Veterans Administration has not. Now, Jordan sum m arizes his life after the war by saying “ I survived Vietnam I think” Jordan is one of thousands of v e te r a n s who c h a rg e s tr a n g e varieties of illnesses, particularly those unable to be diagnosed, were caused by their direct or indirect ex­ posure to Agent Orange, the code name of the herbicide used by the Air Force as a defoliant in Vietnam The VA rebuffs those charges Of approximately 500 veterans who fil­ ed claim s, none were classified by the VA as herbicide victims, and consequently none have been aw ard­ ed compensation the governm ent's VA officials, however, recently in­ disclosed vestigation of ‘Operation Ranch Hand" — U.S. troops directly expos­ ed to Agent Orange. The Air Force will conduct the detailed study to determ ine if there is any relationship between her­ long-term bicide ex p o su re and physical disorders. A veterans’ official said Friday “ no single clinical examination has been devised to indicate possible effects of Agent Orange But veterans who suspect they might be affected should contact their local VA hospital, he added The heart of the dispute is the sub­ stance 2,4,5-T, a component of Agent Orange The chem ical rem ains highly suspect because it contains varying amounts of a contaminant (com­ monly called TCDD or dioxin) c re a te d the m an u fa ctu rin g process in Noted scientists and physicians have researched the effects of diox­ in for more than 30 years As early as 1964, one year prior to the beginning of the U S spraying in V ietnam , the N ational C ancer th e I n s t i t u t e c o m m is s io n e d Bionetics Laboratory to test several substances for toxicity. The lab found that in small doses, 2.4.5-T caused birth defects in mice During the late 1960s South Viet­ namese newspapers began to report medical problems attributed to the herbicide In 1970 the U S govern­ ment halted the use of Agent Orange in Vietnam The Environm ental P rotection Agency issued an emergency ban on the use of 2.4.5 T on Feb 28, 1979 The EPA action continues to allow 2.4.5-T to be used on range and rice fields, although it is now prohibited in forests and pastures EPA spokesman Jim Sibbison said last spring Dow Chemical Com­ pany, the U S leading producer of 2.4.5-T, sought a court injunction against EPA action but was recently turned down ” U ntil th e p a r tia l ban, Dow manufactured 60 to 70 percent of the 2.4.5-T used in the United States Dow, one of the leading defenders of 2,4.5-T. insists that certain levels of the chemical present no hazard to humans Ur I'aui Haber, assistant chief medical director for professional serv ic es at the V eteran s Ad­ ministration, said “ the Veterans Administration wants to get to the bottom of this” The physican explained that if a veteran suspects disorders resulted from exposure to the herbicide, he m ay u n d erg o a s e r ie s of e x ­ aminations at a local VA hospital Although a veteran may have h er­ bicide sym ptom s, this does not necessarily indicate that they are to Agent Orange, Haber related said The single d iso rd e r the VA recognizes as a possible result of herbicide exposure is chloracne, a skin rash developing immediately after exposure Haber said he suspects another possible reaction is severe acne development within months of ex­ posure but added there is no con­ clusive evidence that exposure to these herbicides produces long-term effects after a long latent period Many veterans are unsatisfied with the Veterans Administration s investigation “ AH we are asking is for a single clinical test that will determ ine if our physical disorders are a result of exposure to Agent Orange,’ Jor­ dan said “ After my first child was born with deformities in his arm s aryl fingers, I asked a VA physician if fu tu re ch ild ren would be any affected and he said not unless mp wife took drugs during pregnancy. My wife did not take drugs during her second pregnancy, but our se­ cond child was bom with sim ilar deform ities,” he added Throughout the state, Houston a t­ torney Benson Musslewhite and twé affiliates are representing veterMH who allege that they were affected by Agent Orange The attorneys will file individtui lawsuits within the next seven or ten days against U S chemical con** panics that produced and sold 2 ,4 * T to the U S government during the war, Musslewhite said Friday “ We are alleging in the petition a* behalf of veterans or their survivor! that this chem ical was inherently dangerous The chemical companie* did not properly warn the govern­ It shouldn't have been die» ment t r i b u t e d a s a d e f o l i a n t , '* Musslewhite said We vs til be ablf to prove that there is a medical relationship betw een dioxin and birth defects and cancer “ The tragedy is that the VA Is taken g covering up They have defensive attitude igraa with the VA and they are not tba Suprem e Court of this n atio n ," Musslewhite said “ Their position it buried on earlier opinions” I do not An A ustin r e s id e n t, J a m t f Deloney, will be represented bjf Musslewhite and his colleagues, Deloney suspects that his impaired vision, evident after his return from Vietnam, could be a result of Agent Orange exposure “ I am not sure I was affected but I would like to see it investigated,? Deloney said should be re-examined and Martin reinstated in­ The dismissal dispute volves M artin’s publication record, his periodic returns to Sussex University in England and the UH grievance com­ m ittee system. M artin’s research paper on paper partition ch ro m ato ­ g ra p h y — a m e th o d of s e p a ra tin g c h e m ic al su b ­ stances — won him the che­ mistry Nobel Prize in 1952 ALTHOUGH MANY scien tists publish up to 200 papers in their careers, Martin has produced 76 papers — two at UH. the Michael J.S. Dew ar, Welch chair-holder at the U n iv ersity of T exas, has published 462 Martin said Saturday his is “ lo n g -ra n g e intervals re s e a r c h work,’ with between reports long Walker said Friday he ex­ pects faculty to publish two to five papers a year, adding he wants “ substantially m ore” from a chair- publication holder. Such publication goals are “ totally unacceptable to me 1 was certainly never told I had to produce or else,' Martin said WHILE ON THE UH facul­ ty, Martin published three papers at the University of S ussex, E ngland, visiting there 10 times a year “ UH provided me with a special fund Martin said to com m ute,’’ Walker said Martin was “ in effect having two jobs “ M artin’s document of ap pointment to the Welch chair sp ec ifie s the ch a ir-h o ld e r must be an active, productive faculty member. Walker said M artin’s absences from UH made it difficult for him “ to be active and productive,’’ Walker said, although Martin said his letter of acceptance to Walker stated that Martin would continue his involve­ ment with Sussex for four years. to On a visit the Welch Foundation, the independent institution that funds M artin’s chair, M artin said he dis­ covered p art-tim e members are Welch chairs faculty ineligible for UH HAD E D IT E D h is research reports and “ cut out all references to work at Sussex” he said Martin ^Iso said Welch of ficials told him reports were not to be altered UH research offices edited reports because Welch was not interested in work done at universities where the founda­ tion does not fund chairs, Walker said Whether Martin continues in the UH Welch chair is a question four different com ­ m ittees have pondered 'The University grievance committee concurred with an ea rlie r policy com m ittM , which found that M artin’ll case should be reevaluated. The original chem istry per* sonnel com m ittee previous^ ruled Martin should be fired. A new c h e m is try conl* m ittee, which Martin calls **• invented delaying exercise by Walker, is now deliberating the case, although none of the com m ittees can bind the ad­ ministration Martin has hired lawyer» and said he will sue UH if he cannot reach an agreem edt with the university over h|s retirem ent age “ I'm waiting for someone else in UH to make the nest move,” Martin said VARIETY means VARIETY IS more to us than hold the pickles. 2200 Guadalupe HAiRBIIRGERS Our food contains the sam e premium quality ingredients and generous portions that we b e g a n serving years a g o We assure you that the sam e standards prevail an d that we will continue to serve only 100% PURE US INSPECTED BEEF Our 1/4 POUND PATTIES (precooked weight) are ground daily especially for us and char-broiled for your enjoyment 1/4 POUND HAMBURGERS 1 Our own Hickory Smoke Sauce hamburger 2 Jalapeho Hamburger wtlh the best salad sauce, shredded lettuce, grated swlss ch eese and freshly ground laiapehos 3 Your choice of sauce hamburger with tomatoes and shredded lettuce, with hickory smoke sauce or mustard or m ayonnaise or salad sauce 4 Old Fashioned Hamburger with salad sauce, shredded lettuce, tomatoes, mustard a nd pickles 5 Our good chili and grated Cheddar cheese hamburger 6. Chill and grated Cheddar cheese hamburger plus hickory smoke sauce a n d salad sauce 1 The Works a great combination of #4 and #6 6. Half pound of knackwursi and hamburger with hickory smoke sauce, chili and grated Cheddar cheese 9. The Beefeater Hatf pound ham burger with salad sauce shredded lettuce an d tomatoes 10. Our famous bacon and cneddar cheese hamburger has salad sa u ce grated Cheddar cheese shredded leftoce and smoked b aco n strips tt Our famous bacon and crumbled blue cheese ham burger with salad sauce and shredded lettuce 12. Gourmet Hamburger Our really special secret* hom em ode mayonnaise sauce ca m e from the okl M uehieboch Hofei in Kansas City Generous amounts of this sauce with shredded lettuce m oke this ham burger a favorite 13 Flshburger with salad sauce, shredded lettuce and tomatoes ................................................ . — . . . . 14 Chargrilled 1/4 pound Knockwurst wtlh cNii and grated Cheddar c h e e s e ............... . .................. ............ 16 Schnrtzeiburger b rea d ed an d d e e p tned ground b ee t cutlet wrti special sa u ce marinated cucum bers an d omons, shredded lettoce and grated swiss cheese 16 Chili con Queso Hamburger a spicy com btnanan of g u ac am o te sour cream saisa ptquonte shredded lettuce an d grated swiu wtlh freshly ground loiapenos ONIONS ON REQUEST Addihonoi Meat Pa»y To odd any che ese different and delicious 100% pure beef ham burger» HBG SPECIALS DIET PLATE Two 1 '4 pound char broiled beef patties with choice of sauce, cotfoge cheese on b e d of lettuce tom ato w edges, hard boiled e g g LARGE CHEF SALAD to go ch a rg e on certain items EXTRAS French Fries Onion Rings (our own) Toco Peha Large Baked Potato with sour cream . Cheddar cheese and baco n BEVERAGES . . . . Root Beer Diet Sprite ................. . ........................... Coffee toed Tea. large Milk Hot Chocoiate* le m o n ad e ' ‘in season Beer - Pilsner Glass - Pttcner DESSERTS _____ Our special desserts We wont to always serve our customers the very best lood in a convenient, attractive atmosphere Please bring any tug gestión* or criticism to our attention (we also appreciate your compliments) ..................... , PLEASE ME PATIENT W f DO NOT WK-COOK YOUR FOOD Tim Wentworth, Daily Texan Staff A blanket of bronze With temperatures rising, a blanket of bodies stretches out on the banks of Bar­ ton Springs. The pool's cold waters offer refreshing relief to sunbathers seek­ ing to escape the heat of Saturday afternoon. By MIKE O’NEAL Daily Texan Staff Nobel Prize-winner Archer J.P . Martin of the University of Houston is struggling to k e e p p r e s t i g i o u s professorship in chem istry — a role that UH Dean Hugh Walker says Martin does not “ seem to fulfill.” h is M a r tin , a 6 9 -y e a r-o ld Briton, accepted the Robert A. Welch chair in chem istry at UH in 1974 In May of 1978, a com m ittee of six c h e m is try fa cu lty members recommended M ar­ tin be fired and Walker, dean of the College of N atural Sciences and Mathematics. dismissed him Martin “ did not do very m uch” at UH, Walker said Friday. MARTIN BEGAN a long appeals process, climaxing F rid ay when a university grievance com m ittee re a f­ firmed a previous ruling that the dism issal proceedings Texas companies seek immunity in workers By DAMOND BENNINGFIELD those m o st r e s is ta n t Though methods of screening workers to find to h a rm fu l chemicals are “ very prim itive,’’ some Texas companies are already doing just that, a University researcher says. le s s lik e ly to r e a c t D a m m e sa id “ In areas where the work is hazardous, it is tempting to employers to find workers who a r e to h a rm fu l chem icals,” said Dr. Catherine J. Damme, assistant professor of medical jurisprudence at the UT Health Science Center at Houston. th a t e v e ry o n e r e a c t s differently to exposure to certain chemicals. In some people, exposure can lead to splits in chromosomes. “ Sometimes repair themselves, sometimes they do not. When they do not, it can cause a carcinogenic process to cancer or other disorders, she said. the damaged cells irreversible,” leading that is There is no known safe dosage of any c a r­ cinogen (any potentially hazardous sub­ stance), Damme said, although that does not mean a safe dosage does not exist. Damage caused by exposure to different carcinogens varies from person to person, she said, and some companies are trying to test workers to find those most resistant to the dangerous chemicals they work with. “ It is not a widespread practice, and I don’t think it is being done in a malignant way by the industry. But it is more attractive than spending $2 billion to get the levels (of dangerous chemicals) down,” she said. The tests used now are not very accurate — “you’re not able to tell a lot ” But Damme thinks researchers should continue to develop new tests, although “ I’m just not sure I would want my employer to know the results.” Damme said the practice raises both legal and ethical questions for the companies ad­ m inistering them. “ Should the companies institute tests, or should the government ask for them for all workers? And what do you tell workers about the tests? Just because they have a lot of chromosome breaks doesn’t mean they’re go­ ing to get some terrible disease.” And there is the question of whether com ­ panies can deny jobs to people who, accor­ ding to the tests, might be more susceptible to damage. “ In some instances workers might be transferred to lower paying jobs as results of the tests What do you tell them 9” POPE.. (Continued from Page 1.) But Sunday was, indeed, special. Gone were his joking asides, his m asterful manipulation of crowds. He made no directly political statem ents but his whole homily challenged the ath eist credo of P olan d’s Communist state “ You must be strong, dear brothers and sisters,” said John Paul to all his people. “ YOU MUST BE strong with the strength of faith To­ day more than in any other age you need this strength” In worshipful silence that m assive throng heard the man they call “ our own pope” beg of them: “ Do not be defeated Do not lose be discouraged Never your spiritual freedom, with which Christ makes a human being free John P aul’s departure from the park seemed to snap an emotional spring The crowd surged forward, stumbling and falling on the u n e v e n g ro u n d , m a s h e d a g a in st steel barriers, sob­ bing. holding up rosaries or p i c t u r e s o r m e d a llio n s , a n y th in g and e v e ry th in g religious, for a last papal blessing. POPE JOHN PAUL made a p riv ate farew ell Saturday night, and the contrast could not have been greater. He slipped across the street from his residence — the archbishop’s palace where he lived as Cardinal Karol Wo- jtyla until seven months ago — to listen to a short concert at a Franciscan church which he once used for p riv a te prayer. He did not sit, however, on the splendid throne prepared for him. Instead he sat at the back, under the organ, with no ceremony and no pomp He knew, as Poles knew, that he might never come back again. This was the first visit by to a an y r e ig n in g p o p e Communist-ruled land, and return visits anywhere by a pope are unprecedented And t h e p o p e ’ s o p e n a f t e r to Com m m um st challenge atheism, it was doubtful that Polish authorities would ever allow a return trip EVEN LN DEATH the pope will not return. A space is reserved for his nam e on the to m b s to n e m a r k in g h is parents grave in Krakow, where he paid a poignant trib u te S a tu rd a y , but the church of Rome buries its pontiffs beneath St. P e te r’s Basilica at the Vatican. He had been saying good­ bye since Friday. As he was packing his bags in Krakow for his return to Rom e, a crow d g a th e re d beneath his bedroom window chanting, “ Give us a few words, we ask you for a few words.” T he p o n tiff, h is v o ice hoarse, popped his head out the window “ If I become dumb on my retu rn to Rom e, you’ll be blamed for it,” he shouted above the cheers. “ COME TO US again, come the crow d to us a g a in ,” chanted “ The people m Rome may not let me since they can say I lose my voice when I ’m here,” the pope joked The knowledge they probably would never see the pope again, at least in Poland, intensified the flood of adora­ tion and devotion from his Sunday m orning co ngrega­ tion that John Paul spoke to the con­ gregation simply, without the convoluted language popes m ust often use. even though his words were charged with in a p o litic a l o v e rto n e s tightly-controlled Communist state Page 6 □ THE D A ILY TEX A N □ Monday, June 11, 1979 Flight Instruction Private $20 HR Solo $31 HR Dual 1979 C essna Aerobat \ i W ' Also Instrument Instruction Sierra Sierra Aviation 443-8436 327 3202 KNOCK KNOCK Who's There? 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Parking w /1 5 .0 0 Purchaea 0 Hi O Z < 2E N O N O a F e e r >> V . e v i l e D NO JOKE, FREE COKE If you’re ever in the dark about which pizza place to call: Remember D om ino’s delivers continuously from 4-1:00 weekdays, and 4-2:00 weekends. We deliver our Pizza w ithin thirty minutes anywhere in our delivery area. At Dom ino’s you get a Pizza covered with fresh ingredients, a thick french-bread-like crust, combined with nature’s best buttery cheese Pizza and Coke! No Joke, we’ll give you two cups of ice cold Coke FREE. Just ask for your “ No Joke, Free Coke” when you order your D om ino’s Pizza. Campus Guadalupe 476-7181 • 474-7676 • 447-6681 • 458-9101 Riverside Enfield CO 6 5 < Z N O N Q Blind agency director quits after audit report In the wake of a recently released In the wake of a recently released r e p o r t c i t i n g s t a t e a u d i t o r ’ s ' significant'' financial weaknesses at the State Commission for the Blind, Burt L. R isley announced his i m ­ m ediate withdrawal from his Dost a s executive director Risley. 59, said Friday he decided to retire “for health reasons'' and that his decision the auditor's report is not connected with The report cites internal control w eaknesses, including control of cash receipts, inadequate mailroom secu ri­ ty inadequate division of duties and in­ consistent listings of cash receipts. Women’s classes The a u d ito r s re p o rt a lso sa id The au d ito r s re p o rt a lso said R isley's simultaneous service as ex­ ecutive director of the comm ission and treasurer of the Visual Research Foun­ dation r a is e s leg al and fin a n cial questions, lending to the possibility of a conflict of interest In a statem ent read bv R isley’s secretary. Sue Whited, because he is blind. Risley said he has been suffering from hepatitis and pneumonia and was urged by his doctor to take a long rest. Risley, scheduled to retire Feb. 6, 1980. will take extended sick leave and vacation time until that date but con­ tinue to serve in his post at the Visual tinue to serve in his post at the Visual Research Foundation. The Travis County district attorney's public integrity unit, nearing the end of a nine-month investigation of the com­ mission. cited two instances of a third party receiving paym ent from the com­ mission. but later donating portions of the payment to the Visual Research Foundation. The report's findings cover the fiscal years ending Aug. 31. 1978 and 1979. when the com m ission’s budget was listed as $9.6 and $9.9 million, respec­ tively. Center teaches ways to cope An assertiven ess training course, tentatively scheduled for 5 to 7 p.m. Monday, will start the second week of the A u stin W o m en ’ s C e n te r sum m er classes G oals for participants in­ clude learning to be honest, direct and positive in stating needs and wants, said Jan et M o rn s, who will lead the course, Morris plans to stress the differen ce between a s s e r ­ tiveness and aggression and to involve c la ss m em bers in dis­ cussions and role playing All courses will be at the Austin Women’s Center, 711 San Antonio St. Kim Geary, a first-degree black belt, will teach self- defense instruction based on Cha Yon Ryu techniques Tues­ day. The c la ss will m eet from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. and will f e a t u r e both p r a g m a t i c defense methods and ways to emotionally handle an attack. Wednesday, Dr. Kathleen Waddell, assistant professor of educational psychology, will suggest methods of cop­ ing with d e p re ssio n in a “Women and D ep ression ” sem inar, from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Maria Morales and Sophie Monreall will lead a rap ses­ sion from 6 to 7:30 p.m Thurs­ d a y , c o n c e rn in g C h ican a women’s needs. The session will later develop into a series of program s. The sam e night, from 7:30 to 9 p.m ., the first of a five- part series titled “ Coping with D iv o rc e,” taught by Dr.Cari Kahn-Hausmann, will address the emotional, finan­ le g a l a s p e c t s of c ia l and divorce. A w o rk sh o p fo r b la c k women will run from 9 a.m. to S a tu rd a y , Led by 4 p.m several Austin citizens, the workshop will focus on unique problems and community liv­ ing guidelines. West Berlin joins European elections BR U SSELS. Belgium (U PI) — West Berlin joined in the first elections by direct ballot to an international parliam ent Sunday despite a Soviet w ar­ ning that the city is not part of West Germany.fThis W e e k 's S p ecial Multicolored Gauze Plaid Shirts Reg. $12.95/Now 54.95 'i Hf i MOHAN'S INDIA IMPORTS 2 LOCATIONS ON THE DRAG • 2 2 0 0 GUADALUPE • 1906 GUADALUPE OPEN 10 -7 M O N .-SA T 4 7 8 - 1 4 5 6 J At a special session, the We s t B e r l i n H o u s e of Representatives elected two Christian D em ocrats and a Social Dem ocrat to the Euro­ pean Parliam ent. The Soviets had protested the election of three West Berlin deputies to the parlia­ m ent on grounds the 1972 the Berlin agreem ent say s city is not a constituent part of West Germany THE EA ST GERM AN news agency last week carried a Soviet warning that the inclu­ sion of West Berlin in the European P arliam en t w as directed again st detente and the Soviets might be forced “to take m easures to protect i t s ow n i n t e r e s t s a n d guarantee normal functioning of the agreem ent.” the th re e W estern powers approved the election, s a y i n g t he We s t B e r l i n d e le g a te s w ere not being elected directly a s in W'est Germany and this w as in line with the city ’s special status. It was the only assem bly to elect delegates. Previously, p a r l i a m e n t s n a t i o n a l nominated delegates to the European assem bly but this B u t week for the first time, the 180 m illion voters in the nine Common M arket countries got an opportunity to elect the other 407 m em bers of the parliam ent. in THE TURNOUT four countries that voted Thursday was disappointingly low. In Britain it was only 30 percent, in Denmark less than 50 per­ c e n t, whi l e H o llan d and Ireland registered about 58 percent each. Political leaders in the five remaining countries — West G erm an y , F r a n c e , Ita ly , Belgium and Luxembourg — urged their electorates to turn out in strength. French P resid en t Valery G iscard d ’Estain g told French voters Saturday if their par­ ‘ w as larger than ticipation elsewhere, it would show that F ren ch m en w ant to p a r ­ ticipate actively in the con­ struction of E u rope.” WEST GERM AN Foreign M i n i s t e r H a n s - D i e t r i c h Genscher said “every citizen should be aw are that the authority of the first directly elected European Parliam ent will be greater, the greater the vote.” CAREER & LIFE D ES IG N S Learn to: * SET GOALS & REACH THEM * IDENTIFY YOUR SKILLS & APTITUDES M A N A G E YOUR TIME (to it w o n 't control you) * FIND THE RIGHT JOB/CAREER * MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR APPEARANCE CALL 4 5 4 - 4 1 3 7 AFTERNOONS * IMPROVE GENERAL HEALTH & SELF-IMAGE * INCREASE CONFIDENCE * INTERVIEW; WRITE RESUME * MAKE YOUR ENVIRO NM EN T MORE SATISFYIN& Don’t forget to remember Father’s Day Sunday, June 17 We have many appropriate IDEAS f r*-. i hr I ' a r k m * * $;> i m> f u r , SPORTS T H E D A ILY T E X A N Bean’s 23-under-par good for Atlanta win Monday, June 11, 1979 Page 7 ATLANTA (U P I) — Record-setting Andy Bean, refusing to w ilt under a blazing Georgia sun, rolled up the biggest victory m argin on this y e ar’s PGA tour Sunday when he posted a 23-under-par 265 and won the $300,000 Atlanta C lassic by a runaway eight strokes. One of the longest drivers in the gam e. Bean, who set another C lassic record Satur­ day when he had a 61, built on the five-stroke lead he started the day with by shooting a 4- under-par 68 Sunday. His 23-under w as four strokes better than the previous tournament record Je rry Heard set while winning last year. It w as the first victory of the year for Bean, who won three tournaments in a five-week span in 1978. But he had already won more than $120,000 this year and the $54,000 he pick­ ed up Sunday vaulted him to fourth place on the 1979 money list. JO E INMAN, the C lassic leader before run­ ning afoul of B ean ’s third-round 61. wound up in second place at 70-273 and David Graham , with a 68, and G rier Jones, with a 70, tied for third at 276. M asters champion Fuzzy Zoeller, tied with Inman for second on Saturday and insisting Bean could be caught, settled for fifth with a 74-277 after bogeying the last two holes The $12,000 Zoeller earned enabled him to move ahead of Lanny Wadkins (75 295) into second place on the money list at $193,799 although still far behind absent Tom Watson ($354,000), who hasn’t played the past two weeks while preparing for this week's U.S. Open at Toledo The previous biggest victory margin on the tour this year was the six strokes by which Watson won the Tournament of Champions and the next best under-par margin was the 21-under Hubert Green rang up while winning the Hawaiian Open There were two other 265s on the tour this year but neither was on a par-72 course. Bean, 26-year-old G eorgia native and form er University of Florida All-America golfer, is in his fourth year on the tour but has won five tournaments and $580,000. He was third on last y e ar’s money list after winning the Kem per Open, Memphis C lassic and Western Open — all played last June. BEAN STARTED Sunday’s play five strokes ahead of Inman and Zoeller and pull­ ed further ahead of the field in a hurry by g et­ ting birdies at the first and third holes. T O D A Y is th. LAST D A Y lo DRO P an F, N, or W course and receive a refund. Office of the Registrar 3 LOCATIONS " I he Best Sandwich In Town” P H O N E O R D E R S W E L C O M E 32nd A G u a d a lu p e 4 5 2 -5 0 1 0 1608 Lavaca 478 3281 201 E ft.vert.de 441-5331 UPl Telephoto HIKING OR PACKING? Leave Your Aching Foot at H om e try on V a sq u e or Red W in g Andy Bean waves after winning Atlanta Golf Classic. New reasons emerging for Bid’s Belmont loss «1979 New York Times NEW YORK — Spectacular B id’s puzzling defeat in the 111th Belmont Stakes led to som e bizarre new questions Sunday when the colt’s trainer blamed the loss on a pre-race leg injury. According to trainer Bud Delp, the favorite tem porarily went lam e early Saturday morning after stepping on a large safety pin that had dropped from a leg bandage to the straw of his stall at Belmont Park. The 3-year-old Hawksworth F arm colt reportedly jam m ed the pin into his left front hoof to a depth of about an inch. Twelve hours later, Spectacular B id’s chances for a Triple Crown evaporated when he tired in the final quarter-m ile of the lto-m ile Belmont and finished third back of Coastal and Golden Act. Delp offered no excuses after the race, but the trainer had a different story Sunday at Pim lico in Baltim ore, where Spec­ tacular Bid arrived at noon after a five-hour van ride from Bel­ mont. “ WHEN I DROVE UP to his barn Saturday morning at 5:45 a.m . I soon discovered he w as lam e ,” Delp said .“ We cleaned and tubbed the wound, and he appeared to recover quickly.” Delp’s contention that the safety-pin wound was the reason for the colt’s unexpected loss left the racing fraternity wonder­ ing why the authorities had not been informed of the mishap Track veterinarians were not called in and the colt did not receive a tetanus shot after the race, a normal precaution in such cases. Drs. Manny Gilman and Ted Hill, examining veterinarians for the New York Racing Association, both said Sunday at B el­ mont that they had seen nothing wrong with Spectacular Bid’s condition before or after day’s race. Hill reported that he had conducted a "rou tin e” examination of Spectacular Bid and the other Belmont Stakes horses Satur­ day morning. He said he checked the favorite in his stall at Barn 13 around 8 a.m . ” 1 lifted up each foot and I found no heat or inflammation, Hill said. "T h e horse looked fine. Nobody said a word about anything.” THE VETERINARIAN explained that a sm all pinprick in the hoof would be im possible to detect, but that an “ infection process” could have started. He said it would take about 24 hours for the infection to m anifest itself. That tim etable appeared to support later developments at Pimlico, where hemorrhaging reportedly was discovered in Spectacular Bid’s left foot after a veterinarian, Dr Robert Valance had the shoe removed If the safety-pin puncture was a contributing factor in Spee tacular Bid’s first defeat since last August, it was hardly the only one. Other theories being mentioned included • Ron Franklin, the horse s 19 year-old jockey, rustusi him too much in the early stages of the race and failed to close off the rail at the top of the stretch, enabling Ruben Hernandez on Coastal to get through along the inside • The favorite’s run of 12 straight stakes victories, going back to last Septem ber, finally caught up with him is the wear and tear of many afternoon battles and strenuous morning workouts left him vulnerable • Coastal, a lightly raced colt owned by William Haggtn Perry, was not only a fresh horse tor the Belmont but also an outstanding one. • Spectacular Bid, kept well out from the rail in previous races, was doomed when the already fast inside surface nearest the rail was m ade even faster by additional scraping on Satur­ day morning. Experienced Fitting in Hiking and Back Packing Shoes for Men and Women Socks for Hot or Cold Weather r ,>nel An Taylor Colonel Taylor’s herd is scattered n< w. But bis brand of Old Taylor lives sour mash for real enjoyment A full 101 proot, t< *r hill flavor. O ld Taylor 101. that true Bourbon lovers are b o n d to take to. >n. It s a A real brand OLD TAYLOR 101 PRO O F 0 L 0 TAYLOR i o i P R O O F I O I P R O O F OLD TAYLO R * l'U->' —“ ** < ■ o *. o y a w i n T A Y L O R X A . - , I 10 C d -I W I SOU»M»SM W p STMI6W BOMBO* WWW1 .% t ft ■ é- I j i? ■■ Ite? — «■-—— — I i V, K en tu cky S tra ig h t B o u rb o n W h isk e y 101 P ro o f ts o lile d under U S G overnm ent S u p e rv isió n by The O ld Taylor D is tille ry C o Fra n kfo rt K entucky I ----- — ........ M lM A ------ —- I l-l >■ ' I m-m ,/ L ... . Hr I ■ ..III. ■■ — ...... . Page 8 □ TH E D A ILY T E X AN □ Monday, June 11, 1979 Rangers fall in ninth Reynolds’ hit keys Astro victory By United Press International B A L T IM O R E Terry Crowley singled home Lee May with two out in the bottom of the ninth inning, capping a three-run Baltimore rally and giving the Orioles a 5-4 victory over the Texas Rangers behind Dennis Martinez’s ninth straight win and a sixth inning triple play Eddie Murray doubled to right field to start the ninth for Baltimore, winner of five straight, and losing reliever Jim Kern, 7-1, came on to walk Gary Roenicke Lee May followed with a bunt that Kern threw into left field, allowing Murray to score and sending pinch runner A1 Bumbry to third. Pinch-hitter Pat Kelly knocked in a run with a double-play grounder before Crowley’s single to right. The Rangers took a 1-0 lead off Martinez. 9-2, in the second on Oscar Gamble s homer and Texas added a run in the third when A1 O liver’s sacrifice fly scored Larvell Blanks, Benny Ayala led off the fourth with his first homer to make the score 2-1. but Pat Putnam's sixth-inning R B I single gave the Rangers a 3-1 lead With runners on first and second, Buddy Bell lined a shot which third baseman Doug DeCinces caught DeCinces threw to second baseman Rich Dauer who relayed the ball to Murray at first for a triple play Ayala cut the margin to 3-2 in the sixth with his second homer of the game before the Rangers made it 4-2 in the eighth on O liver’s second sacrifice fly. ★ it ★ N E W Y O R K Craig Reynolds drilled a two-run single to spark a four run fourth inning Sunday, providing the Houston Astros with a 5-3 victory over the New York Mets. With one out in the fourth Art Howe doubled to left and Alan Ashby followed with a walk One out later, Terry Puhl walked to load the bases and '•■tarter and loser Kevin Kobel, 2-2, then balk­ ed home a run R- nolds delivered his two-run single, moved to second on t passed ball by catcher John Stearns and scored on Cesar Cedeno s single. ! -0, relieved George Throop tarter Randy Niemann in the third inning after Joel Youngblood and Erank Taveras had smgl**d. Throop struck out Lee Mazzilli and forced Stearns to hit into a double pi ay. Throop lasted through the sixth, surrendering two unearned runs in the fifth whit h scored on an R B I double by Mazzilli and a groundnut by Stearns Joe Sambito came on in the seventh to pick up his fifth save. Red Sox 5, Twin* 0 BOSTON Butch Hobson knocked in three runs with a homer and a sat rifice fly and Dwight Evans added a solo shot Sunday, backing the four tut pitching oí Dennis Eckersley and pacing «he Boston Red Sox to a 5 0 victory over the Minnesota Twins. Reds 3, Expos 2 Yankees 19, Royals 4 KANSAS C ITY , Mo. — Graig Nettles triggered a seven-run outburst with a seventh-inning homer Sunday and Willie Ran­ dolph and Lou Piniella drove in two runs apiece, lifting Luis Tiant and the New York Yankees to a 10-4 triumph over the Kansas City Royals. Giaat* 7, Pirate* 4 P IT T S B U R G H — Jack Clark drove in two runs with a double and a homer and Darrell Evans added a pair of R B I singles Sun­ day to pace the San Francisco Giants to a 7-4 triumph over the Pittsburgh Pirates. White Sox 13, Brewers 3 M IL W A U K E E — Chet Lemon rapped out four hits, including a two-run homer, and Claudell Washington scored three runs and drove in three others with a pair of doubles and a single Sun­ day, pacing a 21-hit attack that powered the Chicago White Sox to a 13-3 thrashing of the Milwaukee Brewers. Cardinal* 3, Padres 2 ST LO UIS — Ted Simmons belted a fifth-inning homer to provide the winning run and Silvio Martinez and Buddy Schultz combined on a five-hitter Sunday to lead the St Louis Cardinals to a 3-2 victory over the San Diego Padres. Mariners 5, Indians 2 S E A T T L E (U P I) — Bruce Bochte’s bloop pinch-hit double in the eighth inning drove in three runs Sunday and Odell Jones and Shane Hawley combined on a seven-hitter to lift the Seattle Mariners to a 5-2 triumph over the Cleveland Indians I Standings A M E R IC A N L E A G U E B y United Preee International Eaat L Pet. Q B W 37 21 35 21 638 — 1 .625 32 27 542 5ft Baltimore Boston .. ... New York ............ 32 28 Milwaukee 26 26 Detroit Cleveland 27 29 Toronto................... 16 43 ........ 533 6 500 6 482 9 .271 21 Weet W L Pet. O B C alifornia ................ 35 24 593 — 542 3 Kansas City 536 3ft Minnesota .534 3ft Texas Chicago 491 6 Seattle Oakland 32 27 30 28 31 27 28 29 24 19 36 400 11 Vi 40 322 16 . Su n d a y ’» Reeutta N A T IO N A L L E A G U E By United Praa* International Seat W 31 St Louis 30 Montreal 28 Pittsburgh 30 Philadelphia Chicago ...... 25 New Y o r k .............. 21 Weet - Pet Q B L 21 .596 1 22 577 3ft 25 528 3ft 27 .526 6 ¡ 28 472 32 .396 10ft W L Pet. Q B . 36 25 .590 — Houston Cincinnati.............. 33 29 San Francisco 28 Los Angeles 27 San Diego 22 Atlanta 1ft 25 569 6 . 31 .483 6 33 459 35 435 9ft 36 .379 12ft C IN C IN N ATI Dave Com epcion doubled home Ken Griffey in the seventh inning Sunday and Paul Moskau combined with two relievers on a six hitter to give the Cincinnati Reds a 3-2 victory and a sween of the three-game series with the Montreal Expos. Boston 5. Minnesota 0 Baltimore 5, Texas 4 New York 10, Kansas City 4 Chicago 13, Milwaukee 3 Detroit 10, California 7 Oakland 12, Toronto 1 Seattle 5, Cleveland 2 Su n d a y 1» Re» u lU San Francisco 7 Pittsburgh 4 Atlanta 10, Philadelphia 3 Houston 5, New York 3 Chicago 10. Los Angeles 3 St Louis 3 San Diego 2 Cincinnati 3, Montreal 2 in aerospace awaits you at A f / i l 7 r # A f A M I 7 / E T T i 4 tv; ", Our Denver Division has many new op portunities await mg recent college graduates Major facilities are located it Denver, CO; New Orleans, t A Santa Mnna, CA Currently there are 365 con tracts that involve work in such exciting areas as Space I aunch Systems, De­ tense Systems Command and Informa tion Systems, Payload Integration, Space Satellites, Solar Systems, Space Shuttle and the new generation Missile System O p p o r t u n i t i e s N o w Within these «reas are many entry- level growth positions that otter prac­ tical experience In the advanced state of the engineering art. Such fields as • Software • Test • Propulsion • Ther­ m ophysics • Structures • Mechanism s * Dynam ics • Stress • Materials • M is­ sion Analysis • Product Development • Industrial Engineering • Logistics • In­ tegration • System s • Guidance & C on­ trol • RF System s • Com munications • Data H andling * Power S y ste m s • Payloads & S en so rs • Quality • Safety and Manufacturing. C a r e e r s B e g i n H e r e If your© considering a career in aero­ space, you won i find the challenge greater nor the work more rewarding than at Martin Mar-etta In addmon to pb opportunity the com­ pany's comprehensive program of em­ ployee benefits has a financial value equivalent to approximately forty percent of the employee s income Included are; Company-paid insurance, performance sharing plan, retirement plan, vacation, education reimbursement and long term disability pian Interested graduates please contact Martin Marietta Aerospace Attn: College Relations, PO. Box 179(#D6310) Denver. C O 80201 Martin Marietta is an Affirmative Action Employer actively seeking the Handicap­ ped and Veterans National Security regu lations require United States Citizenship WE LOVE SUMMER STUDENTS • f • VEGETARIAN SUB 1.40 (SAVE 25') A fr«»h ty b o n e d w R o i* w h e a t b u n s ty H a u w it h e h * d d a r ch ««% « a lf a lf a sp id u ts t o m a to a n d u vo en d o N o w jw tt $ 4 0 w it h tb»» cou p on u n til J u n o 30 tu cw m b *» Tht» co u p o n n o! goo d in co n ju n c tio n w it h o th or tp o c ia U . O n * cou p on por vis it C o u p o n h a t no c c»h v a iu a 2 GIANT COOKIES JUST 25c (SAVE 25 ) C o u p o n h a s no cash v a lu e . E xp ire s Jun e 30, 1979 (O n ly one coupon per S a m W itc h visit.) SAM’S C H E F SALAD 1.75 (SAVE 50c) Ju m b o tossed s a la d w ith hum , turkey, e g g & cheetet C o u p o n h a s no cash value E*p «•••••••••J •••••••••*1 «•••••«I }*•*••••< _ I, ••••••«» «Y Texas Union Recreation Center I BOWLING I LEAGUES Monday N e o n B o w l fo r L u n c h B u n c h Lunch wtth (he bunch that bowl*! 6 :1 8 M o n d a y M ix e rs Mix with othar» turn art averring often. 8 :3 0 P tn e p ftn n e re Knock and %pm tho** p*m tor too acures. Tuesday N o o n T u e e d e y IW k t c r i For a dfeSmsfd twbt. try bowrifag ■ at lunch. 2.-00 lo n g h o r n Ja E t o r s . ForchAdran aga*6-I8 6 1 1 8 :3 0 T m eeú m y H itm F u n L e a g u e J ,Thtoiaaguf alwayshas abe efked Far near students, faculty, and tMV Wednesday N o a m Thursday Noon Double Trouble Bnrig a friend ami htx*4 to* lun 6 :IS Bowling Sports Club Btiwi with U T * best. 8:38 Sum m er Strikers iJ w searing those strike»? Then th » t» ym¡r league Friday S:1S T.G.I.F Begin your fame Hoc 1 Center * ttvMte» POOL LEAGUES Monday 7:00 S ík m X O ut Tu—day Ray 8 BaS, 9 Bad, and Sturigbt Fool m et weak Wark oft extra adanes white ■ir.míA|~Rn lié 7.-00 Teem 8 B ell For bodi mart and women who «nfciv a telexed nw at pool. 6 :1 8 “3 0 0 ” C h ib TNb a §¡tmt éwB Ask at tho clRsdk for M lj#i § f nrnrL* it wet Take a break to bow! during t he week Wednesday 7:00 Nine B e ll Play itw jante that made I alii famous m d g m ^ a e a W i f h r b f a w S s m n h k t e e wm eem ogr ia t- jw ■eatog torneas b s e |to m e || M i e M i HCALL 4 T Í-ÍS4 4 to * t o e . Page 10 □ THE DAILY TEXAN □ Monday. June 11, 1979 FU R N ISftlD HO USES ■ . F I N I S H E D APART M E N T S■ FURNISHED APARTM ENTS H FURNISHED APARTMENTS ■ FURNISHED APARTMENTS RO O M M A T E S TYPING S U M M E R S U B L E T , 2 bdrm , furnished, pets okay, near UT, *225 m onth 2310 D a n c y 472 5801, 476-5708 3 8 R P A R T I A L L Y fu rnishe d house S250 per m onth 5406 E v a n s After 5 pm 451 6754, d u rin g d a y 4/1-4780 S U M M E R R A T E S M a u n a Kai 405 E.31st W alk to r a m p u s shuttle and city bus Effic ie n cie s - *154 50 7br 2ba $235 472-2147 F A N T A S T I C l o c a t i o n - quief, targe 7 2 sh ag carpet C A -C H , cable sundeck. pool $325 E G re a t Oak, 2900 Sw ishe r 477 77*8 47? 7097 C L A S S I F I E D A D V E R T I S I N G R A T E S 15 w ord m in im u m I 14 E a c h w ord one lim e I 32 E a c h w ord 3 tim es $ 39 E a c h word 5 times S 64 E a c h w ord 10 time*. % 90 Student rate each time $4 39 1 col x 1 inch one tim e 1 col. x 1 inch 2 9 tim es S3 96 1 col x 1 inch 10 or m ore times S3 IS D f A D iIN f S C H fO U lt M andoy Texan Friday Tuesday Texan Monday Wednesday Texan Tuesday Thursday Texan Wednesday Friday Texan Thursday 7 00 p m It 00 a m It 00 a m I I 00 a m 11:00 a m ' In the e ven t at errors m a d e in a n a d v e rtise m e n t. im m ed iate n atire m u st be g iv e n a s the p ub lishe rs are re sp on sib le far o n ly O M m cerreO insertion A ll cla im s for ad ju stm en ts sh o uld be m a d e net later th a n JO d a y s after pub lication " S T U D E N T / F A C U L T Y / S T A F F R A T E S 15 word m inim u m , each day I 90 E a c h additional word each d a y s 06 1 col x 1 inch each d ay S3 15 "U n c la s s if ie d * " I linn I d ays SI 00 (Prepaid, No R efun d s) Students, faculty and staff m ust pm sent a cu rre nt i D and pay in ad vanee In T S P B w g 3 200 ( 25th A W h itis) fro m 8 a m to 4 30 p.m M o n d a y through F r id a y AUTOS FOR SALE 1972 C H E V R O L E T IM P A L A , 4 dr.. fully a u t o m a t i c , 4 5 ,0 0 0 m i l e s , g o o d m ech an ica l condition, body needs work. $600 or best otter, 4537617. Sandy, 1975 T O Y O T A C O R O L L A 1600 Coupe D elu xe T E 37, AT, AC, A M / F M stereo tape, new tape, new m a g s and tires E xcellent con- dlfion, 50, 000 m iles $2895 385 074! 1974 O L D S C U T L A S S Salon, com pletely loaded, regu lar gas, fair m pg, *1995, 459 6700 __________ 69 V W V A N , good condition New tire», *875 b attery Recent engine ove rh au l . 441-8201 1971 P L Y M O U T H D U S T E R , slant 6 stan dard, AC, good condition, $895 385-0741. *800 1973 A M B A S S A D O R A utom atic, AC, vinyl, re gu lar gas, great shape, huge trunk, no ru *t 474-9653 I9 tT m O N T Í C A R L O , less than 20,000 m il»*, pay off *4,616 17 W ill take S850 or best offer, C ontact D a v id at 442-6627 or 377 3596 1969 O L D S C U T L A S S , excellent condl tlon M e c h a n ic a lly sound L o o ks great. R e g u la r g a s 17 m p g SBOO 476 2416 C L A S S IC 1970 O ld s C utlass convertible. C om p letely rec onditioned m ech a n ically AT, P S, P B, A C bucket seats A sk in g 477- 13000 0073_______________________ __ Investm ent 452 9521, good 7 3 M U S T A N G V 8 fully equipped, low m ileage, exceptionally clean, s i 800 firm 472-987) after 5 7 2 C H E V Y W A G O N , AC, P B PS, new A M - F M , guaranteed rebuilt t ra n sm li slon, starter and watar p u m p R u n s great, *9*5 M u st sail, cau se d ep artu re P aolo 471 5430 < 10-4). 1970 P L Y M O U T H D U S T E R, autom atic m otor, 225, excellent condition, S750 441 6675 1977 BU IC .K S K Y l a r k convertible, AT, A C, good condition, run s on re gu lar g a s 1700 or best offer 443 4068 444-4122,458 7745. _________________ MotorcycU-For Sol* 1978 H O N D A H A W K , m u st sell, 4200 m iles, recently tuned, 474 * 79* H O N D A t R A i L B i K E 70, good conditlon, 8430, 443-7713 _______BJcycU-For Sol* 10 S P E E D S 23 Peugeot 1120, and 2 3" C laud e Butler S i 60 454-7542 Stereo-For Sal* P I O N E E R H P M 100 sp e a ke rs SA 7500 am p, m int condition, 2 y e a rs old W ill negotiate C all 477 9563 after 5 pm, T É A ( f R E E L to reel 1250, au to m ata re v e rsa , r e g u la r ly m a in ta in e d , go od condition, *250 C all M ic h e le 459 8028 D I R E C T D R I V E turntable, L u x m a n P D 121. K e ith M o n k s M e r c u r y contact tone arm , P ro m e th la n G ra d o c a rtrid g a List $800, now I49S, or will sail places 892 1130 n ig htj._____________________________ P I O N E E R P I 530 d irect” d r iv e tü íly au to m atic turntable, excellent condl tlon 8210 C all 444-9357 Phbtography-For Sal* M A M I Y A S E K O R 500 S L R P e n tax 50m m lens, V lv lt a r 35m m lens, good con Inquire, M ic h e le 459 80Í8 dltion N I K O N F M with 50 2 0 lens 6 m onths old. N e e d to sell 4*4-1167 after 9 pm H*m**>F*r Sol* N E A R U T . P r im e residential property, 3-2 w ith stu d y , C A C M b e a u t ifu lly low m a in te n a n c e y a r d lan dscaped, Covered patio la rge sto re ro om Parfect for professor who wants to live near cam pus. A ll brick, 17 y e a rs old P rice d in 80'S 451 6641 or 327 3782 2*1. C U T E H O M E ' C om p lete ly rebuilt. O ak hardw ood floors F iv e m inute d rive to ca m p u s 129 950 474-7776 Miacbilars4K>ut-For Sal* N E L S O N 'S G I F T S . E sta b lish e d 1945 In d ian La rge st selection jewelry 4502 South C o n g re ss 444-3814 Closed M o n d a y i. re se rva tio n S E A R S R O O M air conditioner m m *250^478 5230._____________________ L ik e K IN G S I Z E water bed, fram e, m attress, heater, sheets, lin ing, *300 478-5230 G A S D R Y E R *25. 12 black and white television *50. w ell clock *5 C all 474-1645 even i n g s ______________________ U P R IG H T P IA N O S300 T w in bed 115 each, good condition Thea 477-9259 R O O M S W A L K IN G D IS T A N C E UT. shau carpet, C A 'C H , k itc h e n p riv ile g e s S u m m e r rates, *100 S. up U n iv e rsity House, 2710 Nueces, 477 9388 7 B L K S UT, nicely fu rnishe d room s, #f ficienciet and apts S um m er rates, $90 & up The L y le H ouse 2800 W hitis, 477 7S58 l a w S C H O O L a c ro ss street L a rg e B R in 2 B R house-apt W hoie floor of house W ill sh a re floor w room m ate and law of­ fice *185 p rivate B R , or I I 15 w /room - m ate 474-1397 2 E X C E L L E N T single room s available, 1 block from cam p u s CooL quiet *110 and D 3 5 A B P 705 w 70th (opposite D obie G a ra ge ). 453 4082 E A S T F R O N T bedroom with p rivate en ­ trance, p a rk in g space, located 1 blocks west from G u ad alu pe R oo m c om pletely and attractively furnished wlfh bed linens, blankets, AC, gas heater, large p rivate tile bath with show er and tub, lots of closet space C le anin g and bed c h a n g in g on F r i d a y s b y r e li a b le housem aid No pets, stereo, sm o kin g $175 m o C all 476 3634 tor appointm ent S E B A S T I A N 'S H A S room s, A B P , S80 furnished, adjacent UT 105 W 20th, 478 5846 _______________ P R I V A T E R O O M , share bath, A B P , $95 306 F 30th, 47? 5134 R O O M S H O U S E will becom e co-op in fall. C ost $IOO-$135/month, s u m m e r 1919 R ob b in s Piare, 477 9307 singles Joe. John or Joan I N 3 7 - p e r s o n R O O M S c o o p e ra tiv e $217/6 w k s Shared $175 6 w ks 510 W 73rd P r iv a t e room , b oard l a l d b a c k W A L K UT, 3 great locations F u rn ishe d, carpeted, air conditioned, A B P $105 John Howell, ow ner-broker, 458 1201 D E U T S C H E S H A U S Co op C o-operative livin g two blo cks from ca m p u s G e rm a n and Sp a n ish spoken at dinner and on an Inform al b a sis 477 8865 W E S T C A M P U S h istorical V icto ria n m ansion, the H u rt House, has 3 excellent single ro o m s a v a ila b le b eginn in g I I June and I Ju ly $115/mo plus ’ « bills 478 1316 E l. C A M P O , 19)2 N uecei. large sleeping porch a d joinin g study room , kitchen privileges, 459-7436. 477- 8486 reason ab le FURNISHED APARTM ENTS E F F I C I E N C Y A P T . $ l6 5 / m o A ll utilities except electricity paid. Now accepting applications for s u m m e r and f a l l M a n a g e r, No. 1)1, 454 1416 V i l l a E s p e r a n i a s e m e s t e r W A L K U T 1-1 $149 Quiet, sm a ll c o m ­ plex N o pets, c h lid ie n Unexpected vac an cy 304 F 33rd 478 6928. 472 8648 W E S T A U S T IN I I *139 Shuttle UT No pets, ch ildre n 700 Hearn. 476 0953 E N F IE L D - M o p a c - L a k a A ustin, shuttle 1-1 $139 N o pets, ch ildre n 700 Hearn, 476 0953. _______________________ I M M E D I A T E O C C U P A N C Y 2 1 $200 7 2 $220 W ater, uas, cable, d isp osa l paid W alk UT N o cnlldren, pets 104 E 33rd 471-6928, 472 «648 W A L K U T 2-1 $200, 2 2 $220 Im m ed iate occu p ancy N o children, pets 304 E 33rd, 478 6928 472 8648 S P A C I O U S 2 B R R en ts slashed 2 1. $700 2-2, $220 W a lk U T No pels Children 304 E 33rd, 478 6928 472 8648 T H E P E P P E R T R L E cpts $185 m o 1 B R $230 m o A B P 476 8391 efficiency furnished studio P R I V A T E P R E T T Y H e m p h ill P a r k AC, kitchen, bath, s u m m e r or longer rent negotiable 477- 4475 E F F 1CI I N C IE S *I5 9 | p lu s E, 1 B R studio $185 plus E N ear shuttle Sunwest. 404 W 35th, 345 0772, 459 3493, 451-7986 O N L Y 1 B L O C K to cam pus, cool, quiet new ly decorated efficiency $175 A B P A lso sm a ll 2 B R apts, $725 A B P (O p ­ posite D ob ie G a ra ge ), 205 W 20th, 453- 408? S T U D E N T S E E F $110 and up A p ts 2 B R A B P $185 4 blo cks to UT 447 9767 E N F I E L D A R E A O ne b ed room a p a rt­ m ent Pool, c lose shuttle $195 plus elec­ tricity Sao P a u lo 459 7495 472 9159,476 4999 1 I S U I T E M A T E 1 blk from U T $110 1- 1 efficiency near UT. $160 2 1 house on shuttle. $2)0 F le m m in g N ic h o ls & Roley Inc 478 0029 4303 O U V A L , A ct V I I A p is , I B R neai Shopping and shuttle 345-8550, 453d)298 H M S P rop erties P L E A S E poolside efficiency until Septem ber $150 plus E IF shuttle Cell M a r k 476-3187 S U B L E A S E f u r n i s h e d T H R E E B L O C K S to c a m p u s B ra n d new extra ia*ge efficiency In restored t r i­ plex, $225 C A - C H water paid S u m m e r lease deposit N o pets 478-5230 B A R G A I N T O n e a t s h o r t h a i r e d gentlem an efficiency, in d ivid ual house c a r p o r t 4 5 3 -1 9 1 2 u t i l i t i e s p a id A v a ila b le until Sept. A I R C O N D IT IO N E D , fu rnishe d room, share baths. $110, A B P $310 R ed R iver, 476 3634. ______________ W A L K I N G 'U t , s p a c io u s , 3-2, pool, C A CH, carpeted, cable, la rge closets, laundry, ple asan t e n viron m e nt 472-5332, 452-0779 w a l k TO UT- lg. modern efficiencies. A C 'C H M u c h sto rage space I person only N o pets $160, rear JOtO F ru fh (I block east off G u ad alu p e at 30th) 476 •S7S _______________ E F F I C I E N C Y $145 plus E shuttle, 410 W 37th Call 451 8059 3 blks to S E P T F M f t C * 1 * * f L É A S I N O . ' 1-1 $159 E Shuttle, U T west Quiet No pets C hildren 700 Hearn, 476-0953 h a n g O L I O C R fo r s o t a T e w " t~9 foot stad ard Rogelio P n e e negotiable Roy. 458-6448 S E P T E M B E R 1 P R E L E A S I N G 11 $169 E W a lk U T q u ie t N o pets, children 304 E 33rd 478 6928 T R U N D L E B E D with Sealy Postu re Pedic m attresses Good condition *250 478-4210 C O U N T R Y C O U C H , chair, cottee fable Perfect tor unfurnished apt Sell cheep RlCk, 477 9841 days. 444 2935 nights E X C E L L E N T B E E G E E S tickets,’ floor an d a re n a seat*. 454 3139 Q U E E N S I Z E w a te rb e d still u nd er ’ w arran ty, «75. 471-0081 i e w e l r y , e s t a t e a n d old u y y , d ia m o n d s h g h e s t c a s h p r ic e s p aid I T O L D I A M O N D S H O P 4018 N L a m a r UNFURNISHED HOUSES S O U T H S H U T T L E , 3 2. C A -C H , carpet, 2 c a r ga ra ge , fireplace, fenced y a rd *435. 327-4095 _ ___________ ____ ifl W A L K T O UT, re sto re d i»20 s 3-1 home, stove, sm a ll re frig e ra to r, hardw ood, fenced yard, *375 L e a se deposit of *375 478-8811___________ _______________ _______ Ñ E A Í E N F I E L D shuttle b eautduify wooded w est A u s t in street S p a cio u s 3- o is - 4 B R h w esher *550 472-4032 2 6 A, C A - C H f ir e p la c e G L A S S E N T R Y H O U SE M o r * or i*ts A fun place to five, big enough for A no pets, $400 partially turn. 1101 W, tth 472-9922 G A R A G E A P T plus b ills 507 E 39th. rear 377 4085 11 M o ck shuttle $170 I b d rm for re sp o n si­ A B P $230 C H C A ble ad ults W a lk in g d istan ce U T P o ol no pets 3011 W hitis. T H E B R O W N L E E A P T Stu d en t e f­ ficiencies $125 per m onth *100 deposit A B P 2502 N u e ce s (2 M o c k s fro m ca m pus) L e a se fro m June l 'o A u g u st IS C a ll S t u d e n t p r e f e r r e d between 5 & 9 pm 472-9751 S A V E $100 per m onth W a lk U T R en ts stashed 2-1 *200 2 2 *220. short ieas# No children pets 304 E 33rd 47»-69 78 4 7? *648 1-1, W A L K U T *139 short lease N o pets Children 304 E 33rd 4 7|-69?8 472 S64S L A R G E L U X U R Y efficiency M o d e m , v e ry clean, s e p a ra te b e d ro o m s O n Speedw ay shuttle S u m m e r rates 4S4 L A R G E S U N N Y efficiency c a m p u s A B P 476 7440 4 7 **4 6 ! M a r y E lle n stove and refrigerato r 6 blocks $135 E F F I C I E N C Y SI IS plus E On shuttle C arpe* A v a n e b ia now HOC Sp eed w ai L o u ls-H in e s P ro p e rty M a n a g e m e n t 451 6757 Q U IE T , M A T U R E w alk to cam pus, Srn ad com plex, ease - gas- shuttle water pa»o 304 E 32nd 472 3663 O L D M A I N Apt now leasing efficiency and IB R 21th and P e a rl IQ am 4 pm. 47* 1971 B u ild e r R e a lty , G a lle r y of H o m e s D £ c M A R A p ts i bedroom fu rnishe d ef­ in ­ ficie ncies near shuttle route and tra m u ra l F ie ld s 4415 A v t 8 end 45th Sl3e m onth C a li 459 1411 or 457-5)44 F U R N I S H E D E F F C onvenient »© lewn- cirom af end shuttle 105 E 3*th *165 plus E 397 25*2 459 5*25 after 6 U N I V E R S I T Y C A R R E l S - g r e a t location} L a r g e clean I B R carpeted C A -C H . c a b le d is p o sa l stu d y desk Shuttle *1 *5 E 2*12 N ue ces 472-6497, 473-2W7 S U M M E R R A T E S ‘165 L a r g e IB R , fu lly carpeted, w a lk In closets, ra b ie TV. disposal, water & gas, sw im m in g pool, fu rnishe d W a lk in g d is ­ tance to U T No children, no pets F O U N T A I N T E R R A C E A PTS . 610 W 30th No 135 m a n a g e r 477 U S * 1600 W E ST A V E . A P T S . U niversity-D ow ntow n Area West Ave & 16th St. Luxurious furnished efts, for summ er lease, security gates, sw im ­ m ing pool, T V cable. Pounds Investm ents, 472-8380, 454 7584 M ARK XX - Summer Special - • 1 BR Furn. $170 • 2 BR Furn. $200 • Shuttle 2 Blk*. • Nice Pool - Patio • Fall Leasing Too 3815 G u adalu pe 451-2621 LA PAZ APTS. Sum mer Specials • 1 BR Furn. $170 • 2 BR Furn. $200 • Shuttle 1 Blk • Nice Pool, Patio • Fall Leafing Too 401 W. 39 452-5491 VILLA NORTH Summer Special • EH. Furn. $135-5140 • 1 BR Furn. $155-5165 • 2 BR Furn. $190-5200 • Fall Leasing Tool 4520 Duval 451-5641 ( • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a Free Service Parking Transportation HABITAT HUNTERS fr e e a p t A lo c a t o r s e r v ic e '¡p a cia htino m c o m p la n a s w ith a c c a s s to sh u ttle Summer and Fall Preleasing El Chaparral Apts. *50-3534 405 W. 34tf$ North Campos ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * SU M M E R -F A U * NEAR CAMPUS * i f f o n * •• a d o p u x a p t s (W ith AN The ( N w Um I, Tep M a n a g e m e n t - A jntosflv Cate* Prim * location 104 E. 32nd (Nock I pt Spoodwoy and 32nd) * jL. 2 M anager Apt 103 Phon# 4 7 6 -5 9 4 0 * 4 1 0 3 -J Speedw ay M gr No. 303 4 J | . f 4037 Í T " ^ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ # 2 m 4 jx J Í Hyde Park Apts. — Summer Rates — Eff. Furn. $135 1 BR Furn. $150 2 BR Furn. $175 Shuttle Front Door City Tennis Courts & Pool Across Street 4413 Speedw ay 458-2096 MARK V — Summer Rate — • 1 BR Furn. $170 • Nice Pool - Patio • Shuttle Corner • Fall Preleosing Too 3914 Ave. D 452-3511 2207 Leon Apts. - Sum mer Specials ■ • 1 BR Furn. $170 • 2 BR Furn. $250 • Walk to Campus • Nice Pool & Patio • Fall Leasing Too 2207 Leon 472-5974 N o w leasing for summer & fal 1 & 2 b e d r o o m s , furn. & u nf ur n. • 1 b e d r o o m loft • B a lc o n ie s & p a tio s • Frost-free r e frig e ra to rs • S w i m m i n g pool • L a u n d r y R o o m • O n UT sh u ttle starting at $205 plus electricity The Arrangement 2 1 2 4 B u r t o n Dr.____________ 4 4 4 - 7 8 8 0 d R B O R • All Bills Paid • Beautiful Pool • Shuttle Stop • O ff Riverside 1500 Royal Crest 444-7516 Continental Apts. Fantastic Summer Rate 2 bedroom furnished . . $200 • Shuttle Corner • Nice Pool Com e home to southern comfort. • E f f 1 , 2, & 4 B R s • S h u t t le b u s • G a s p a i d b y o w n e r • T w o p o o ls • C l u b & g a m e r o o m • C l e a n l a u n d r y r o o m s • P ro fe s sio n a l m a n a g e m e n t • East on R iv e r s id e to b o b ** M a ll Sait* IA 474-1532 ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a 910 E. 40 453-4262 S T U D E N T S W E L C O M E N ow ¡e as'o g for s u m m e r and fal* N ew carpet, new drapes, fresh ly painted on shuttle route 1 B R $220 fu rnishe d or u n ­ furnished 4504 Ave. A 458-5301 ( N ew M a n a g e m e n t) C A Y W O O O P R O P E R T I E S W E ' V E G O T ' E M Houses, duplexes and apts. Free - Cay wood Locators 458-5301, 345-5003 )+- * T 5 B L O C K S W E S T O F C A M P U S F u ll carcefed G a s (stove), water, cable included P anelled livin g room W alk in closet S u m m e r rates $150 and $155. A lso sm a ll efficiencies *132 2104 San G a b rie l R E D O A K A P T S . 477-5514 476-7916 T H U N D E R B IR D APTS. 4510 Duval L g fu rnishe d 1 B R s and efficiencies availa b le now 3 b lo cks from shuttle bus. N e a r p a r k 8. s h o p p in g f a c ilit ie s . M a n a g e r 453-4239, 478-7355. Jerald W inetroub Co. 2505 E N F I E L D (on shuttle) Efficiency & IB R , furnished or unfurnished, pool, laundry, courtyard, 478-2775. V E R Y L A R G E E F F . 32nd S T R E E T - $159 S h a g carpet, w a lk -ln closet, built-in k itche n a p p lia n c e s Q ueen s iie bed, C A C H Water, cable paid 474 6380 202 E 32nd 451-6533 C E N T R A L P R O P E R T I E S , IN C . S U M M E R R A T E S W alk to ca m p u s or shuttle bus. 1 B R & ef­ fic ie n c ie s t u r m s h e d . C A -C H , s h a g carpet A C T III, 4312 Speedw ay, $145 8. $175 plus E M a n a g e r 453-0540 A C T IV 3311 Red R iver, $165 plus E M a n a g e r 474-8125 A C T VI, 2801 H em phill, $165 p lu s E. M a n a g e r 476-0411 A C T V III, 2808 W hitis, $165 plus E. M a n a g e r 474-5650 A C T IX , 2803 H em ph ill $165 plus E M a n a g e r 476-0411 A C T X, 301 W 29th, $165 plus E M a n a g e r 474-5650 T H R E E O A K S , 409 W. 3*th, $160 plus E M a n a g e r 453 3383 P E C A N S Q U A R E 506 W 37th, $160 plus E M a n a g e r 459-1597 W E S T E R N E R , 2806 H em phill, $150 plus E M a n a g e r 472-0649 2711 & 2721 H E M P H I L L P A R K , F O U R P L E X 2808 H em phill, $175 plus E. $150 plus E M a n a g e r 472-0649 M a n a g e r 472 0649 Ed Padgett 454-4621 University Area A B P Sm all 2 B D R M . - $199. W alk or shuttle to campus, AC, 2211 Leon - Sum m er rates. University Area A B P Lg. 1 B D R M - $199, shuttle or w alk to cam p u s, AC, d is ­ hwasher, disposal. 2212 San Gabriel Sum m er rates ~ T l l M O N T H L O W R A T E S G reat cool fun, L e M a rq u e e Apt., M 2 W 38th, all sizes, turn., unfurn. 453-4002 910 W 26th efficiency 472-65*9 6607 G u ad alu p e 454-3414 32ND A T IH 35 A V A L O N Efficiency $150 plus E „ 1 B R $175 plus E. and G. 2-2 $225 plus E. and G. W alk to UT, pool, 472-7604. E N G L I S H A I R E A P T S . Special Short T erm S u m m e r L e a se s A v a ila b le 1 Efficiencies, 1, 2, and studio a p ts , f u r ­ nished and u n fu rnish ed W a*e r trash, sewer, cable T V provided on shuttle 2 sw im m in g pools, 2 h andball racquetbal! courts 2 central taundnes, lighted ten n is courts, near R iv e rsid e and Oltorf, of­ fice hou rs 9 6 M on-Sat, 12-6 Sunday. 1919 Burton Dr. 444-1846 S A V E E N E R G Y ! G E T O N S H U T T L E . R e se rv e d p ark ng, pool lau n drom at S u m m e r v a ca n cy all b ills paid except E $170 and up T H E S P A N I S H T R A I L 4520 B E N N E T T 451-3470 A B P E F F S , 1 from $ L e a sin g for M a y I su m m e r and fall. 5 blocks to c a m p u s shuttle C H A P A R R A L A P T S . 2408 Leon 476-3467 M A R K T W A I N 1106 W Quiet, m odern apt 22nd * « * k to c a m p u s Sum m er rates $175-1185 Jack - 452-9559 W E & Associates N O N S M O K IN G F E M A L E for sum m e r and or fal! P riv a te room, s u n n y house, $120 plus 4 C all Sue at 453-S395 T H IS N O N - S M O K IN G , «egetarian co-op would like to meet som e responsible, m atu re in d ivid uals interested ¡n living in a v ery congenial household 476-7905 R O O M S , P R I V A T E or shared in seven unique west ca m p u s co-ops. O ffice open 1-5 pm 510 W 23rd 476-1957 _ R O O M M A T E N E E D E D s h a r e n ice house great yard, trees. E n te rtain a n * relax, study-party. L ib e ra l creative, open person C all d a ys M a rk , 441-6454 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E wanted to sh a re 2 b d rm duplex, $125 plus z bills, 837- ____ 6731 F U N F E M A L E sh are 2 bdrm . furnished apartm ent. AC, carport, shuttle. $150, utilities N ice neighborhood 474-1625. M A T U R E F E M A L E - share 3 bdrm, 1 ba house. L a rg e sun ny room, w private en­ t ra n c e L ib e r a l a t­ m osphere $135 A B P 478-652! 3 b lk s c a m p u s S E E K I N G F E M A L E , upper d ivision stu­ dent, $90 plus bills, furnished, on shuttle route 477-9171. R O O M M A T E T O sh are 3 b d rm stone house a cro ss from law school, 472-7480 1 N E E D F E M A L E room m ate to share m y large duplex, will also co nsid er m o v ­ ing 441-2175 early or late $125 plus Dills S H A R E R E N T a n e M B R in c la ss y 2 B R apt S a v e ga s 1 blk to law school, c a m ­ pus, stadium , shopping AC, laundry, pool A B P , congenial room m ates, only $100 and all this, too. J a y 'B ill, 474-4281, keep tryin g in two R O O M M A T E , O W N bedroom bedroom apt. S m a ll com plex, relaxed, friendly, $115/electricity. P re fe r g rad w riter or film student C all 474-8714 T hree blocks from ca m p u s! G reat pool! N E E D Q U IE T , n o n -sm ok ing fem ale to s h a re nice 1-1 im m e d iately IF shuttle S90 Ñ O N - S M O K IN G F E M A L E room m ate, own 2 room s, bath H yd e P a rk , $100, utilities N a rd a 454-6965 after 6 p.m, E D a n a- 452-3224, 458-3777 S P A C I O U S , Q U I E T house, 4 b lo c k s north of law school M a le housem ate needed, $100/m o , 478-2165 N E E D T W O people to sh a re room in nice house. AC, kitchen, on shuttle route. $100 per m on th p lu s s h a r e u tilities. C all Jam e e at 474-4213 after 6 30 p.m. R O O M M A T E W A N T E D , liberal w om an to sh are 2-B R duplex off South L a m a r U nfurnished, $108 plus one-half bills. B a c k yard, lau n dry close 447-5166 after 5 00 pm. R O O M M A T E 3 B R house by St. Jo hn s A v e _ S 1 2 0 £ lu ^ ! 2 biü s 454-7542 F E M A L E F O R W est A u stin home, m a n y windows, remodeled, quiet, hardw ood floors, no sm o kin g pets After 5:30 472- 7365. 453-0352 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D fem ale,"non- sm oker, independent. $90 plus ¡/j bills. W est cam pus. Betsy, 477-9259 Keep try ­ ing. S U M M E R F E M A L E room m ate to s h a re 2 2 apartm ent. $130 A B P , shuttle 441- 9930 N O N - S M O K IN G S T U D E N T s h a r e 2 b d rm apartm ent, $120 N e a r ca m p u s Glen, 453-6406 after 8 p m . F E M A L E R O O M M A T E needed to look for 2 b d rm apt for fall N on-sm oker, prefer g ra d 474-0176 O W N R O O M in large house for su m m e r Fifteen m inute w alk to cam p us. $125 plu s bHIs. 452-6865 E A S Y - G O I N G fe m a le to s h a r e W C house M o v e in im m e d iately Deposit, rent $100 plus ’ 4 bills. C all 478 3407, keep try in g M A T U R E . R E S P O N S I B L E fem ale to s h a r e 2 B R , e xcelle nt house, T r a v is H eights. Leslie, 444-9420. L I B E R A L , M e x lc a n -A m e ric a n fem ale wanted to share great 2-2, fu rnishe d apartm ent. Shuttle $130, '/a E. Randi, 471-2300, keep tryin g L O O K IN G F O R room m ate to sh are their place in fall Studious, easygoing. 478- 1740 F E M A L E R O O M M A T E Stu d io a p a r i m ent South. $125 plus Vt bills. 443-4103 after 2 30 1^1 Z IV IÍY s # O i ?7th STRííT M B A ¿ 7 4 TYPING, PRINTING, B IN D IN G The Complete Professional FULL TIME T Y PIN G SERVICE 472-3210 472-7677 2707 HEMPHIU PK. Plenty of Parking e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e eionotype eionocopy Typing, Copying, Binding, Printing IBM Correcting Selectric Rental A Supplies N O R T H Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 Sat. 9-5 ¡ 453-5452' • 37th A Guadalupe s o u t h Mon.-Fri. 8:30-5:30 : • • • • E . Riverside I Lakeshore • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • a : • • • 4 4 3 4 4 f t * T Y P I N G E ft R Typing Transcribing Typesetting S E R V I C E 474-8333 121 E. 8th M o n .S M 472-8936 Dobie M all CREATIVE SERVICES REP O RTS, P A P E R S P roofread, typed S I 00 page Tutoring, Analysis, S5 00 up • R E S U M E S C om posed, typed S8 95 (Job Letters S2 95 ) P ro o fre ad typed $2.50 page D ow n the biock from Coop 22 0 0 G uadalupe • Suite 22 8 • 4 7 8-36 33 ■ ■ I H I W * W O RD S E R V IC E S , IN C. SpecialtHtH in: Scientific a n d Technical T y p in g Transcription Th etet a n d D itc e 'ta tio n t P roo fre a d in g A v a ila b le Q U A L IT Y WORK A T R E A S O N A 8 U R A T E S 15 0 3 G u a d a lu p e N o 2 0 2 4 7 4 - 7 5 2 6 L O O K IN G F O R fe m ale room m ate for fall. P refe r to look for a 2 B R apt/duplex near c a m p u s together Studious, fa irly quiet. 478-1740 W O O D S T Y P I N G S e rv ic e A H w o rk guaranteed, reasonable prices. T y p in g and typesetting 2200 G uadalupe, 472- 6302 N E A T E A S Y - G O I N G ve ge ta rian fem ale needs sam e Share fu rnishe d 2 B R g a r ­ age apt No AC. Sum m er-tall. $100/mo., ' i E . N o tobacco 474-7800 Keep trying T Y P I N G T H E S E S , dissertations, term papers, reports, etc Exp erienced , I B M Selectric. N e a r N orth cross M a ll. 458- 6465 H O U S E M A T E N E E D E D to sh a re large 4 B R house in west ca m p u s; private room P a rk in g , pets ok. 5140/month plus '-4 bills. Call 474-6282 or com e by 1908 N ue ces H O U S E M A T E T O sh a re co u n try living. F e m a le s only - com e see C all 443-7160, Keep tryin g $125 plu s bills. F E M A L E R O O M M A T E S : one tor fail only, one for entire school year. $105/mo. B eautiful house C all Leslie, 478-1316 N on -sm okers. R O O M M A T E W E S T L y n n -E n fle ld area 1404 W o o d la w n . 2-1 u n f u r n i s h e d fourplex Cail Brad, 478-8377 work, 476- 5736 home. H O U S E M A T E F E M A L E p re fe rred , 4505 Speedw ay a c ro ss fro m I F shuttle $80 R elaxed atm osphere, non-sm oking, neat 459-8907 H O U S E M A T E W A N T E D . *135 plus I b ills . L a r g e h o u se , t r e e s M a s t e r bedroom , own bath, u nfu rn ish e d 33rd near Sp eed w ay Dave, 474 2*37 W ANTED C L A S S R IN G S , gold jewelry, old pocket w atches, c u rre n c y , sta m p s w anted H ig h p rice s paid Pioneer C oin C o m ­ pany, 5555 N orth L a m a r, B ld g C-113 In C o m m e rc e P ark, 451-3607 B U Y I N G W O R L D gold, gold jewelry, scra p gold, old coins, antiques, pocket w a tch e s P a y in g fa ir m a rk e t p rice Capitol Coin Co 3004 G uadalupe, 472 1676 P h ilip N ohra, owner. S T A M P S W A N T E D . W e b u y U S 4 f o r e i g n s t a m p s , c o l l e c t i o n s , a c ­ cu m ulatio n*, old letters w p ostm arks. D e a to n 's Stam p Shop, 206 W 13th 474- 9525 R O O M A N D BO ARD W O M E N , L A R G E room s, good m eats, 1 block fro m cam p us. L a u re l H ouse Co-op 2612 G u ad alu pe 4 7 6 J1 54 478-0470 H O M E Y C O -O PS , sum m e r, fall, sh are work, expense*, decisions, friendship, fun lnter-Co-op C ouncil, 510 W 23rd, 476-1957________________________________ F R E E R O O M and b oard in e x ch a n ge for h ou se w ork and co okin g for handicapped student N orth Austin, own tra n sp o rta ­ tion Stable, references *37-2343, *37- 6 4 7 * ____________________ ____________ s m a l l ! P l e a s a n t cooperative has su m m e r and fail va ca n c es for wom en A rra k is, 2 7 U P e a rL 472 2292 D E U T S C H E S H A U S Co-op Co-operative livm a two b locks fro m c a m p u s G e rm a n and S p a n ish spoken at dinner and on an in fo rm al b a sis 477 H 5 R O Y A L C O -O P attractive house, qu>et ne gh b orho od excellent food, m em b er controlled, shared labor, 1*05 Pearl, 478- 0 8 *0_ M A T U R E F E M I N I S T w o m an wanted tor Sin gle room at Seneca H ouse Co-op, 2309 N ueces C eil 477 0225 or 474-4652 P le a sa n t livin g at a reason ab le price P R O F E S S I O N A L T Y P I s T ~ w l t h e l- perlence and know-how. D issertations, theses, p ro fe ssion al reports, etc. B a r ­ bara Tullos, 453-5124 T E R R Y 'S T Y P I N G Service. T yping, T h e se s, t r a n s c r ib in g , resum es, all busin ess and U n iv e rsity work. 605 B razos, 474-8333, or Doble M a il, 472-8936 ty p e s e t tin g tyurtb Arm ________________ M B A Q § Completa Typing Service TERM REPORTS, BRIEFS FRESHMAN THEMES 2 7 0 7 H e m p h i l l Jut» North at 37th at Guodolupo 472-3210 472-7677 D E E 'S T Y P I N G S ervice W h y pay high p rice s W e sa ve you m oney by typ ing at hom e office 4524312 S H E R R Y 'S ’T y p i n g Service ♦atlons, theses, p ap ers, and Dependable, vice 447-4455 after 6. dis’sel- letters. reasonable, q uality se r­ G O O D C H E A P t y p i n g , theses, reports, d i s s e r t a t i o n s r e a s o n a b l e , professional. Pe g gy, Susan, 451-3663 F a s t , P R O F E S S IO N A L Q U A L VTY typ in g . Sa m e d a y an d ove rn igh t se rvice IB C o rre ctin g Selectric II Helen, 836-3562 T Y P I N G b u sin e ss reports, etc 251-3551, 251-3690 R E S U M E S , m a n u s c r i p t ! RESUMES w i t h o r w i t h o u t p ic t u ro s 2 Day S«rvtc« 2 7 0 7 H«mphili Park Just North of 27th at Guadalup 4 7 2 - 3 2 1 0 4 7 2 - 7 8 7 M U S IC A L IN S T R U C T IO N T A K E P I A N O this su m m e r S u m m e r rate - *75 for 12 w eeks Alt age s end levels 452 7912 from U T d octor*! V O I C E L E S S O N S c a n d id a t e b e g in n in g to e d v e n c e d . easoneble retes end sch ed ulin g C a li «si 4 m . ______________ V IO L IN , V IO L A , E * : p orienced teecher A d ult* or ch ild re n w e lc o m e T ra n sp o rt a t io n n e c e s s a r y C all Joan. 926 6 3 1i lessons tioqi# E X P E R H E Ñ C E D P i A N O G U I T a R teacher Begrn ne rs-e dve nced U T m usic degree 471 75*3 m o rn in g s A fter 2 00 P m 459-40*2 476-4407 LOST & FOUND FO R REN T L O S T L A R G E m ate (neutered ) cat - b la c k w t m y w h ite sp o t on c h e s t «•xverd 45* 1049 458-66*5 4 Y R O l D floppy eared b lack white shepherd m i* Lost on D uvet M o n d a y 6- 4 me back 474 7733. 472-15*3 B E T W E E N 5, M / % M ic k , R a rd -b o d L 0 0 ^ - leaf rin g binder co ntain in g A C C c la ss notes P le ase notify 47T-I462 M i N i - S T O R A G E S O U T H C o n c r e t e Nocfc co nstruction S 12 50 up m onthly 4 4 4 - 2 4 ) 1 W o o d l a n d s A A A M i n i W are h o u se S T U D I O w o r k s h o p speces ev i u p sta irs Beau tifu l old burid’t g ne 5* F le x ib le a rra n g e m e n ts B u is F o r conscien tio us #na resp onsib le Or c r a ft s p e rso n U c e d in g *, f lo o r s A vertab le J u ly I * 5 0 * 1 2 5 M a r t h a , 474 C n q i i s l A i r e A p a r t m e n t s SPfCtAL SHORT T IR M S U M M iR L IA S IS AVAIlABUEi 1 2 A Studio Apts., F u rn ish e d E ft or U n fu rn t*h *a W a t a r , T ra s h , S a w 4 N , C a b ia TV Sarvka Provided • On S k .H k § * * tma M M M 2 3 0 4 P le a s a n t V a l l e y Rd. 4 4 2 - 1 2 9 8 P a r k P la c e 4306 Avanua A 2 BR Furn Apta — *185 & E. 4 5 1 - 3 5 1 8 V o y a g e u r s 311 East 31 st Straat ALL BILLS PAID Furn. Privata Room — *115 1 BR — *215 2 BR/2 Bath — >325 Pool & Laundry 4 7 8 - 6 7 7 6 h n * atf U v a r a ld * A O h a rt a n t a r t a n O r iv e O ffice H r * — M o n thru Set 9-6. Sun t i e I t l t tartan 0*. 444-1844 T h e KlUott S y ste m s 451-8178 $130-5140 Plus E. Sum m er rates. W e are lo oking tor qu-e’ conscientious students interested >n a i » r f t efficiency 3 locat ons near c a m p u s C A CH, laun­ d ry deadtfo ’s d isp o sa l 47e-2*l2 Monday, June HELP WANTED P A R T T IM E E M P L O Y M E N T W ith c h a rita b le n o n -p ro fit re search o rg a n iz a ­ tio n In ­ to r v ig o ro u s p u b lic s p ir ite d d iv id u a l D uties include co n ta ctin g co m ­ m u n ity m ind e d people in southwestern tow ns by phone S alary s S3 50 per hour w ith M onday th ro u gh F rid a y e m p lo y ­ m e nt needed For a p p o intm en t c a ll 451 6459 G R O W IN G N E W c o m p a n y n e e d s in re s p o n s ib le m a tu r e sa• ** f i t s b i t (Cab - eeo. • ed P IZ Z A R F S T a u R a n T p a n t,m e day o r evenm g s h ift some weekend hours re q u ire d A p p ly m person M onday F (ida y 9 11 * m or 2 5 pm Scam pi % O rg a n P a'ace 555$ n I a m ar P a r t T i m e Bex bie hours expe rie nce p re fe rre d S3 00 hr H ollow ay s Texaco 19th & G uadalupe w a n t e d s o lic it S hort hours good pay c an 47» iv$« to te lep h o ne fr o m our c o m fo rta b le o ffic e 10 stu d e n ts M E N T A L H E A L T H w orke r B row n School ra nch u n it W ork w ith e m o tio n a l­ ly d istu rb e d boys in a ra nch se ttin g both d ay and e v e n in g » h ,H * a v a ila b le S3 00 hr w ith benefits 444 4135 4 ’ « EOE DOOR t o OOOR d a l'v o ry p a rt tu n # help w a n ttd in A u stin fo r o u ts id e w o rk T ra n s p o rta tio n h e lp fu l C all 454 5244 !L C H A R L IE 5 needs n ig h ttlm * M IK E dishw asher and d a y tim e bus help 451 9S9B i n n o u i i i r i n e e d e d P A R T T i M E A p p lica n ts should have broa d ca st a* tape and parlance Do not , a l i Sent i M AM resum e to Dave West K O M PO 8o« 1708 A u stin TX f qua I O p p o rtu n ity E m p lo y tt ’ *767 L A G U N A G L O R IA A r t M useum needs fu ll tim e v ie rk ty p is t in p ro g ra m s o f f u t S3 50 hr M ust be CE t a T itle v i <*r tilla b le A p p ly TEC 1215 G uadalupe EO F This ad paid fo r by e m plo ye r W l ST A U S T IN fa m ily needs b a b y s itte r to r o c c a s io n a l w eekday or w ee ke n d afternoons end evenings 458 /070 UNFURNISHED DUPLEXES N O R T H E A S T 2 2, fire p la c e new , a rp e t S295 327 4095 t m m to c am pus L a rg e fenced ya rd L A R G E D U P L E X 7 1U CA CH WD con, B a rto n H ills , near Ziiker $325 plus bills, deposit John 47! 1901 444 5293 SHARE GAS to O I H ave van le a vin g around June 13th 185 »50 Any tim e, late best NE E D RIDE. R fo r t r ip fo E l Peso leav , gas 47R 1740 ing around June 25 29 UNCLASSIFIED Len and the money was on a desk in th< office, the assistant manager said The burglar put her in a walk in freezer, where she remained Campus News in B rief N o n-cred it classes still open RASSL Learning Services is having late enrollment Mon day and Tuesday for fm* two- to four week, non-credit classes ( lasses are offered m study techniques, reading comprehension skills, faster text reading, conversational Knglish, basic writing skills, I,SAT basic math review, preparation and (IR K verbal and math review Workshops are offered tn writing and writing anxiety reduction Enrollment is from 9 a m to noon and 1 to 5 p.m in Jester Center A332 AMMO U N C I M IN T 8 IT U O IN T V O L U N T IIR I I R V I C I I •«-)« volunteer» Vw • phone tn aervtc# giving to n iu m a tnformeXon. j#fat cOuneeUhE, contum az com plaint mediation «na telenet* * cx information, contact Student Vo*cn**#, Service* m Union BuHdmg 4 302 or oaH 471-3066 O C R A R T M IM T 0 9 81 A VIC L A N Q U A Q IS •nil pr##*ra »hown Wadna* day T IX A S UNION N IC M A T IO M C t N T I R will Rangani ,ani­ •pnnaor a trip tu Aii„^tu«- n, see tba a«„ ' York YankMMl va lla* ‘itgn up by 5 |3 tfl MonrSMy « Building 4 UK) tig* mora inlgrmaBun can „ <> hour mtm-cown# «■ 4 7 ! *,<>5 I A wrH Iw Ortara l «t rnjon and aT ’ pm Monday m th# lece e e or oonlér Bnw*ing cuata 2k • anix par parvo*1 {*»« gama b#ginrwng at 10 30 p m Mundly Ibrrmyb Wadnwx lay TBXAB U N IO N »i«v*a<» a trip IS lb# ih# D t'iaa Muaau-*, I 'attaa M iinum nl * ,na Aria. IB# 11 *4 ," Health *nd $ct|nc# M vtlum i ,;anat»,ig,’ i Natural Htantry tha ttaiiaa Aam rkm i ,*,• in# Danaa ianian C*ntar on Satunlay intiyrmgl on *a avanaWa « Untar» Butk* 5g 4 TOO Tn# **gn up Cta#0lina # Tu#ad«y lit T E X A S U N IO N « U M M IR RN OO NAM •opratortng • | «ftnrmanc* by Bata* la *,oti, •<*»»» h, 12 10 p m Mtjrtday ■»< f * j T#*a» 7«v#rr< T 8 X A • U N IO N ,jr> 'Jumrtar vyat#r l O I A A A N O > § § V * C O M M I T T I I wtH xponaor a xOndw *am«i«, ,#faty n- :*<„> i Qot < augnt t #«• I *#t Undan ' *ro»n noon to I pm M< >nday tn unton Butiiiyig fubing Down ma Ouadai«aa I 116 H*v#r win ne tiorn 8 a m t o t p m da* tn N#w BraunfaN 'taatlima 4 K30 G»v cow ta 15 50 the ragwiraOon - Monday m Union EutMng T lX A a U N IO N FILM C O M M IT T E E wtH , , '! * • Bya H-r : a at aundoarr* Mnr ,n tn# patut tn tba TawM Ur ay* wh i lay Building Adnuaamn a ‘r#a • IM I N A R * T H I O KN C R A L U M A N t f lS «.H , y # . - • S(4vir / v t ,, S A T . 1 0 - 4 m u jL iiiV ja a i B«!;ju;vm rc n m i SPECIAL CONSTRUCTION RATES AND STUDENT LEASES flPflRTfTlENTS h n H n u j AN ALL ADULT, OWNER MANAGED APARTMENT COMPLEX IN BEAUTIFUL NORTHWEST HILLS. EASILY LOCATED ACCESSIBLE TO DOWNTOWN. CONVENIENT TO ALL OF INCLUDING NORTH AUSTIN'S MAJOR SHOPPING AREAS, TWO LARGE MALLS. ALSO AVAILABLE TENNIS COURTS CLUB ROOM WASHER/DRYER CONNECTION LARGE BALCONIES & PATIOS WITH STORAGE CIO) ETS • FIREPLACES • SWIMMING POOL i m t$ « dr 7 snoammc I come W O O D M O LLO w i i « m c o N i s or m o p A C t nm you sea* aw CAUFOK- NtAHSier? TO STflT! C ftP lT O l 4 DOWNTOWN I lU R N fT tD M Q O t M C K C S S r z - * J r ...... .............1 J y t u f t c i t k O N X ) £ ... 1 j CA | Z | a ft 6 8 0 5 W o o d h o l l o w 3 4 5 - 9 3 1 5 54 55 * 48 71 1 57 . h~ ... Ski m feage 12 □ T H E D A IL Y T E X A N □ Monday, June 11, 1979 Blood purification made easy Professor develóos kidney machine alternative ; B y MARK PIT2ER 3IT2ER A University professor of engineering has developed a blood purification process that may soon rid patients of unpleasant sessions on kidney machines. * Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis, a process of blood purification for kidney patients, has been the project of Drs, Robert P. Popovich, associate professor of chemical and biomedical engineering, and Jack Moncrief, a nephrologist with the Austin Diagnostic Center The process involves cutting a small permanent opening just below the navel, then attaching a .’sm all plastic iube through the peritoneal (ab­ dominal) membrane and into the cavity THE TUBE is attached to a small plastic bag containing two liters of dialysate fluid, a solution sim ilar to that used in kidney machines. The patient elevates the bag, allowing the fluid to drain into the abdomen After clamping the tube, the patient folds up the empty bag which can be conveniently placed un­ der clothing. The complex chemical process takes p lacd f hside the abdominal cavity as the dialysate p la c e l hside the abdominal cavity as the fluid éteanses the blood. This process is allowed to contiflUe for approximately five hours dialysate Thai the patient unwraps the empty plastic bag. lowctft it to the ground and releases the clamp giv ing the fluid a chance to drain Subsequently, a new bag of fluid is attached and the procedure is repeated three more times at four to eight hour intervals each day CURRENTLY, CAPD reaches approximately 300 out of 45,000 dialysis patients in the country Popovich said those figures could increase once the technique already developed. technology meotv with the concept** He said major problems involving the connec tion of tubes and bags still exist where bacteria can contaminate the system and cause peritonitis (an inflammation of the peritoneal cavity) Researchers have two viable solutions to the problOn One involves re-sterilization after each coflilpbon, and the other utilizes a micro­ biological filter between the opening and the con nection to elim inate bacteria entering the system On»- of the mamr «a»*..».. One of the m a jo r advantages of CAPD is its simplicity P atients would be able to perform the pror ess alone, and wherever convenient — a car. a restroom, etc. A SECOND MAJOR advantage of CAPD is its potentially lower cost A y e a r s dialysis at a kidney ( enter ranges between $25.000 to $30,000 while the total amount for a CAPD patient is ap­ proximately $10,000 U n d e r t h e c o n v e n t i o n a l p r o c e s s of hemodialysis, patients must m ake three weekly ?rips to a medical r e n te r and be hooked up to a 1 his process is known to have negative side effects such as muscle cramps, vomiting and a general feeling of being “ washed out,” he said. - ' ' " However, Popovich said the CAPD has no physical limitations t hat he is aw are of. Several of the ( APD patients a re presently involved in jogg­ ing programs. Popovich said he hopes that “ state legislators will take note of the good things that come out of the U niversity.“ If Skylab hits, NASA will pay WASHINGTON (U PI) - “ Infla­ tion, gas shortages. DC-10s ground­ ed ... What next"'” the widely c i r ­ culated cartoon asked, depicting A m erica's wayward space station Skylab hurtling straight for a distant home. But fear not. earthlings. Officials estim ate there is only that a one chance in 800 billion specific individual will be hit by a chunk of Skylab. And even if you should be unlucky, Uncle Sarn will pay. Neil Hosenball, general counsel of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, said in an interview that since 1958 NASA has had a “ m eritorious claims provision.” He said it stipulated that “ we can pay for any d am age caused by the conduct of our activities.” To date, the provision has never been used The only claim Hosenball knows of as a rarnM of space ac­ tivities Is t h t caa» j p nada is press­ ing ag j j >pi . thq J g f c t Union for debris from the t B p n o s 949 that went down populated area la.4 y e a r in an on The claim concerns clean-up cost* for radioactive debris. Hosenball said. Skylab is not radioactive, just heavy. “ We have publicly stated that we will in fact pay, both domestically and foreign, for injury or d am age caused by Skylab, under our Space Act, Hosenball said. But he cautioned that proper proof a n d d o c u m e n t a t i o n m i g h t be necessary for anyone to press a suc< i ssful claim We have metallurgy experts who can prove that it senball said any Skylab victim whose property was damaged could probably collect money under a standard homeowner or automobile insurant e policy, and individuals hit by Skylab could seek to settle their claim s through hospital and medical plans Part-Time Job Placement Office Part-tim e job listings a r e posted, as a service to in the Office of Student F in a n cia l Aid students, Build ing R o o m 130. L O N G H A IR W E L C O M E ! N«w $umm«r hours Won-Sot 1?4 footurinf Morj on Mon. A Toos. Shampoo, , MastofChcrgo a m m ' m l L=, books ^ So Second Level 1 Hr. Parking § w /$ 5 .0 0 PwrchaM BLIMPIE BASE SPECIAL O F F E R ! Spiced Ham, Cooked Salam i & Cheese Sandwich With Small D rin k 99* Only With (O H a r t x p k m Sunday, Juna I0J 2 1 2 0 G u a d a l u p * 4t+m4 ■mo 11 y i B f Complete yo u r look with Cherokee and B y Karen el at '¿.l t d (iw u la lu p e. Slipper, b \ Cherokee, is $40. 4tollable in natural. I I S i and M aster! harge at < epied See this style at the 2.148 Guadalupe, Westgate Mall and Sorthiro.%* Mall K aravet location*. Oimmmmmm............. '..■■■■■n.,- .... That’s no bull! Tim Wentworth, Daily Texan Staff Imitating a bullfight, Mike Head (I) and Gary Schroller (r) clown around before their act at Fiesta G ardens for the Austin Folk Festival. Both are mem bers of the M e n of Houston, Morris Dancers, specializing in fertility dances. Leasing for Summer W e would like to introduce you to M l A M IG O A P A R T M E N T S , located at the corner of 45th and Duval — within walking distance of the Hancock Shopping Center; Shipe Park, with its public tennis courts and pool; and, the U.T. shuttle is just one block east or west. It's easy a cce ss to the IH -35 freeway, and to the H an­ cock Recreation Center and Golf Course. And d o w n to w n and the airport are just minutes away. Sou nd s like a great location doesn't it???? It i s M I I • • a a I Our project is for adults only. W e have a spacious clubhouse, saunas, gym nasium s, and a lovely outdoor pool. Included in our lovely, spacious apartments (Ef­ ficiency, One Bedroom, One Bedroom Studio, Tw o Bedroom, Tw o Bedroom Studio) are these special features. All Electric Kitchen Refrigerator Dishwasher Disposal Accent Wall Central Heat and Air Shag Carpeting Drapes Beautiful Laundry Rooms Cable T.V. Outlet P a tio * Balcony* Nightly Security Ml AMIGO APARTMENTS 4505 Duval Austin, TX 78751 451-4119 451-4037 O f f i c e H o u r s : 9 t o 5 M o n d a y - F r i d a y , a n d 9 t o N o o n S a t u r d a y . *S«(« purpose Not in this life My only companions a re the Pina Colada who rom es here a lot, and a red globe table candle who s b* »n crying ever since 1 cam e in Everything is w icker for a s far as I can see The tables the chairs the plant hangers the pic­ ture frames There's a sizeable flock of tropical plants lounging up against the walls and railings in an a sso rt­ ment of provocative poses and thev try to mak< me think they don’t know I ’m watching I catch intrigue in the eye this could of a stranger Except for the Lone Star clock all be Istanbul This is no longer a gam e In less tim e than my ¡garette will have to surrender its fire I will be put fa< e to face with my own past 1 have com e here to talk with Wally and the Beave (“ Leave It to Beaver is not just another packaged serial It relayed the torch of The N uclear F am ily all the way from Ozzie and H arriet right up through Tr e Bever ly Hillbillies thought they wanted to hear people w hat they want to hear is an a rt som eplace between politics and prostitution. ■ it prom ised only w hat the folks e ar as I can tell, telling that falls And The room goes suddenly silent The clock sc re a m s and clutches at its face The fan slices wildlv in defense And there they a re framt-d in the portico Mr Tony Dow and of course Mr Je rry M athers .14 and 31 respectively — coming tow ard my table They a re the perfect im age of th e ir form er selves, my eyes lock onto them in a fam iliar p a tte rn w ith each step, im a g e d i s t o r t s , m u t a t e s , e x p o n e n tia lly , transm ogrifies into something genetically grotesque they a re growing n a l ano destroying these im ages my m em ory serves m e t h a t WASTELAND: We a " interested in how y< i viewed your series, in the larger role you thought it pla .e,a|o by Jan '.Ofmenmair manded a hush Their countenances rippled the crowd And the first seven questions w ere bridled with the for­ mula W hatever happened to Je rry was never killed in Vietnam He wasn t a fighter pilot, he won no m edals He was a general s aide Eddie Haskell is not Alice Cooper. That is from the Rolling Stone interview when Cooper answ ered the question What kind of child w ere you?’ with ' I was either like B eaver or I was like E ddie Haskell Eddie is n either John Holmes aor any ov.^r porno sta r He is a m otorcycle traffic cop tn LA (jus the F irem an died Judy becam e a h a ird resser Larry Mundeiio sells stocks and bonds and Lumpy was a jew eler until he disappeared from New York about 10 y ears ago. Ward and June have both retired And then the questions thu-kened and then they dried, and the attention waned and soon th eir talk was over WASTELAND; Why do you suppose so m any rum ors get started about your show but never about any other shows'* TONY: They get started about ail shows, don't they? WASTELAND: It's not this pervasive TONY: I don’t know I never really think about it. WASTELAND: Do yus think it s a cult show*1 JERRY: I’d say it’d just about bave to be. You taw ail the people who showed up at the Union. If it wasn't, they wouldn’t have been there. is it** And my mind w afts back to th a t night at Country Dinner Playhouse when I saw them in a play called So Long Stanley which a as w ritten by Bob Schiller and h >b Weiskopf, tw • of the four original the w riters, the prim ary w rite rs for All in the Fam ily, originators of Maude and All’s F a ir.'* m ultiple Em m y winners And I try to get past Tony Dow as an un­ fiend or Je rry M athers as a m anic m itigated sex depressive, hyper kinetic schizoid neurotic who is im ­ i think of ail the innuendo and shrieky potent iy su e rdai I Love Lucy Notes on the Wasteland By Paul Cullum stage business and banana c ream pies I saw these gentlem en involve them selves with. (I try’ not to think of this as d ram atic ju stice. I try’ not to prove th a t God deals severely with perfection ) WASTELAND: We would think you would like to get in­ volved back in television TONY: Yeah, well, you never know ... WASTELAND: I)o you think you could survive on TV in a color set up" It seem s a m ajo r point of your series was that it was produced in black and white. It was a tim e capsule of sorts TONY: Are you saying could we, or are you saying could “ Leave It to Beaver?” WASTELAND: No, you The form at you get back into. We think thin ail ties in together — the stylized innocence, the reductionist film style, this cult sta tu s you seem to have m et with — TONY: Well, all the shows were in black and white in 1957. WASTELAND: Yeah we guess you’re right. Do you still m ake anv money off the show? BOTH: No. WASTELAND: Are you b itter about th a t0 JERRY: We wouldn’t be here if we were. If they had to pay us, they probably wouldn’t run it as much. Their voices have left ¡heir bodies They have gone to perch on the fan, who is now tolerating them . Their words will not reconcile them selves with these faces. These a re faces which, a re stiu , ghng against the tw isting cu rren ts of age, who a rc sw im m ing upstream to p erp etuate their own kind There is a tension w Inch sta rts to su rface in their faces, criss crossing patchv >rks which form in little pools on the foreheads and up under the eyes. I see it echoed in the w eaves of the w icker tables and the fixtures It dominos back into the carp et mid the tile and the wall p atterns. the ou find it interesting that WASTELAND: - > ( leavers as a far uiv never w atched television? ticv watched television. They had a TONY: They did. television in the den WASTELAND: Bui they never w atched it. TONY: Weil they didn t spend their evenings sitting down at the TV and - etching it, but then th at wouldn’t have m ade a p articu larly exciting show, watching peop! ; watch TV. I can show no em< tion \11 of m y em otions a re caught up. netted together just behind my eyes, lodged and in­ tertw ined. clouding up around all of my perceptions My thoughts a re charging .it the inside of my face, trying to force their; way put I wan U p ask Je rry how he felt aboyt a c h a ra c ier nam e like Heaver C ieaver, and the obvious sexual m anifestations it c a rrie s, but I don t think eith er one of us is strong enough for it WASTELAND I can t re m em b er a tim e on that show when your c h a ra c te rs w ere ever punished Can you ? TONY They w ere sent to their room They w ere never beaten or — actuated rooms" WASTELAND: It was always im plied but it was never TONY: You don’t rem em b er them being sent to their WASTELAND: But it was alw ays in anticipation of what was going to be done to them , and then there would be a m oral, and no one would ever get punished, TONY: Well I don’t know. 1 c a n ’t focus my attention I keep seeing a vision rise out of the candle. It sw im s before me, m ocking It is a lit­ tle girl with pigtails and freckles. It is Buffy. She has a jagged tram of needle tra c k s all up and down one arm , and her eyes a re glazed over with about 30 cents of sw eet brown happiness She trie s to sm ile I can t look aw ay from her I try, but she is m agnetism I can t cry I c a n 't cry like the candle WASTELAND: Okay you didn’t think you played a very big p art in the way A m erica raised its children I don t guess you’d like to claim any responsibility for how those children turned out? iBotn of these men look long and hesitantly at me. It becom es clear to me that there is a strong possibility they m ay think that I am silly.) W ASTELAND: No. I don’t guess you would. My fu id of vision is shrinking The edge of the room by now is only a green haze. The plants I think a re coming for m e Everything is w icker, it is all a m utual series of crosses, an interlocking m echanism of m uscles being tightened and flexed beyond any b a rrie r th a t pain could possibly erect. WASTELAND: Well, you re happy, I guess? JE R R Y : E x trem ely so. WASTELAND: Y ou're happy about the way your c a re e rs turned out? TONY: Well, you can ’t do much about that. WASTELAND: For a long tim e, it seem s like A m erica thought of vou as its children. You w ere everything that probat v anyone could w ant their children to be. Only the very best was expected for you. Do you — m aybe in your darkest m om ents — do you ever feel like you let A m erica down TONY: i And th ere is a t long last a pause.) I don’t think so. ‘Cause I don’t think that much about it. If you thought too m a h about it, you wouldn’t be able to get out the front door. it is finished. They walk away. The w icker settles; the jungle i t cedes. The fan is calm , the candle collects itself. Ar I the p< ml I think is clear to m ost ot us These men have nothing to say. T hat is not their fault. T heir only wish is to wade back out into the wavebands, to bask in the w arm th of electrons one m ore tim e Their life h - been filled with real esta te and com m ercials and m ilitary enlistm ent and m igrant w andering. They want th e ir p a s t As do we all. And they will never get it, because they both cam e from the C aesarian incision which television allowed them - they w ere nurtured and reared, and finally abandoned, by som ething which they tragically believed could care about them- They arp m onum ents, standing tarnished and barren To a w asteland. Triple bill at ’Dillo Leon Redbone, Steve Goodman headline for the Roches by scott bowlet F riday night s A rm adillo bill of the Roches Steve Goodman and Leon R ed­ bone, seem ed to be an intelligent one bnngm e together th ree different styles of a c ts th at largely play w him sical so rts of m usic The problem is they w ere paraded out on the stage m precisely the opposite order in which they should have been presented A dmittedly, the Roches aren t that big an act. vet despite the release of a highly praised debut album well, debut as a th re e -siste r a c t >, they probably don't have enough clout to grab top billing away from Redbone and Goodman On the other hand neither Redbone nor Goodman has ever been the type whose records go platinum on shipm ent enjoying the following of loyal fans and few others F or the sake of developing a rising level of excitem ent, it would have been easy enough to let R ed­ bone com e out first and the Roches wind things up. ra th e r than vice versa The only obstacle would be Redbone s ego which, by the looks of things F riday night, is pretty lorm idable E ven as peo­ ple w ere leaving in droves during his set. he refused to do anything to entice them to sta> which isn't necessarily reason to condem n him . S trictly pandering to the audience can lead to the sort of cruddy m usic that kiddies w ere puking to up in D allas this weekend Redbone s alw ays been a good one a t forcing the public to accept his non-m ainstream m usic on his te r m s ra th e r than bending to popular pressure and com prom ising his stvle B IT HE SHOILD REALIZE his ap proach is going to work a lot b e tte r when the crowd is in the mood to listen. A fter rousing sets by the Roches and Goodman, the audience was bound to be restless, and Redbone s delib erate laid-back presence, sitting down cross-legged throughout, low. head wide-brim m ed fedora pulled bent over guitar, w asn’t going to help things much. Though his stage p a tte r tried to jokingly shrug off the m ass audience defections — “ Is the firetruck here y e t”" or, when he cam e out for his encore, “ That w as very nice of you Thank you. I thought you all had le ft." — he could not disguise the b itterness in his voice But in a way, it w as probably best that about half the 1,200 or so people a t the concert left in the m iddle of Redbone’s set; a good por­ tion of those who remained used Redbone for background m usic for their conver­ sations. For what it is w orth, Redbone was p re t­ ty good w hen you c o u ld h e a r h im , * Steve Goodman Kwong Hui Dai!> Texan Staff dem onstrating both g re a te r vocal subtlety and g u itar virtuosity than his album s in­ dicate Throughout the set, Redbone teas­ ed the audience, tossing out lead-ins to num bers that went nowhere, stopping itself w ent a the song abruptly when different direction However, on som e of his faster-paced num bers, his deep growl b e c a m e th e in d e c ip h e ra b le , audience slip fu rth er away. le ttin g The basic problem with R edbone's set m ight not be eith er the line-up of ac ts or R edbone him self, but r a th e r th e A r­ madillo. R edbone's act is ju st not suited for an auditorium as large as the Dillo. His precise renditions of old songs from the ‘40s, his carefully groom ed m ystique of a throw back to another e ra , his sm all, acoustic sound, a re best suited for a club setting ra th e r than an auditorium . G O O D M A N , T H E O T H E R C O ­ HEADLINER, got a much b e tte r recep­ tion — the bulk of the audience showed up for his set His set was cheerfully botched up, showing a com plete lack of organiza tion Jethro Burns w asn't sure when he was supposed to com e out onstage. Jim Rothermel and Goodman got confused as to which woodwind break ¿0 do next on “ Mama D on't Allow.' a hillbilly number was added as a whim and ‘ White Christ­ m as” — improvised as Goodman changed a guitar string — was so much fun. it would have suffered if it had been played any other wav Goodman mostly concentrated on his older songs, performing only What Have You Done for Me Lately" and “ Men Who Love Women Who Love Men ’ from his current “ High and Outside" LP From his older songs, Goodman mainly played his crowd-pleasing, funny numbers (which, generally, are better than his serious ones anyway), tunes such as “Chicken Cordon editor anne telford associate editors paul cullum ellen walley production consultant marión la nasa cover drawing of Esther’s Follies by bruce genrity masthead design by nchard bartholomew Blues Twentieth Century Is Almost Over ” “ This Hotel R oom " and “The Vn infectious p e rfo rm e r, Goodman seem ed to hop up and down with each movement of his hand across his guitar The approach gave the set a lot of good- tim e feeling, bu? gave a lot of individual numbers such a breakneck pace that pum h irony w e re o f te n obliterated, especially with You Never Even Call Me by My Name ” lin e s and FOR MOST OF THE SET, Goodman w a s b a c k e d up by R o th e r m e l on woodwinds and Burns tof Homer and Je th ro fam e one of the finest mandolin players around Goodman who possesses a pleasant unegotistical stage presence has alw ays, in the studio, been one to give his session men the opportunity to shine Not surprisingly his concert approach is the same But his choice of material didn’t always mesh with his a rray of musicians For instance he went ahead and per­ formed e sse n tia lly a bluegrass number and on record, a show caso for Yussar d em en ts* violin work And Rothermel s clarinet didn’t sound right i.ikmg the Clements part J e ssie s Jig, W hereas Redbone s set was aesthetical- h st rd\ and Goodman s crowd-pleasing, it was ,»nlv the Roches, the opening act. who were able to accomplish both. The Roches were am u/m g I cam e prepared to hear selections from their current * The Roches LP but two thirds of their set was from other sources, and it would have been even less had they not com e out and done Mr Sellack” and as encores For an opening, basically unknown act to take such a chance as to not even play up to the expectations of the gaggle of fans familiar with their work, shows either a lot of guts, a lot of confidence or a lot of screwmess With the Roches, it's likely to be a bit of all three. The M am ed Men Though the siste rs \ocal precision was somewhat muddled by the Armadillo’s sound system (the sound's a lot sharper with Robert F rip p 's “ audio verite” album production», the audience s reaction was great if, at times a bit misplaced The Roches rendition of “The Hallelujah Chorus ' drew a standing ovation midway through the set and they w ere dragged back out for two encores, unusual for a warm-up act The response was great enough that the 'Ditto em cee hinted they might be brought back a s heabliners We can only hope so T h a t's w here they should have been in the first place contributing «ditort bruce gemty eteabeth ogan kwong hu* scott bowies left wbiltington debt moen fim tyons john cantu ttm wentworth touts black chns walker 0 cy marshall joei williams DSui cultum tan sonrtersmair ko th bardm M A R K W. S W E E N E Y D.D.S. announces the opening of his office at 2906 R E D R I V E R G E N E R A L D E N T I S T R Y 1 Block North Of The Law School 474-5625 H O U R S B Y A P P O I N T M E N T V C A BA RE T presents T H E F A N T A S T I C K S JULY 15 17, 21 24 all performances 8 00 p.m. Cabaret opens 7:3 0 p.m. drinks served Fo r reservations call 4 7 1 -1 4 4 4 C ab aret T h e a tre . U T D ra m a Bldg. De B rocas Crowning Triumph! , 4 MORE DAYS A L A N B A T E S V . r W P IER R E B R A S S E U R j e a n - C l a u d e b r i a l y G E N E V IE V E B U J O L D A D O L F O C E í l F R A N C O IS E C H R IS T O P H E JU L IE N G U lO M A R M lC H E l. INE P R E S L E M IC H Í L S E R R A U L T . THAT MAN FROM RIO Kmg *10 Mon * 00 10 03 VARSITY 2*02 GUADALUPE • 474-4M 1 DIRT BREAK FREE P C T4M4A4TLS M W M U M rw _ BUCK P C MS-41 WUS f c t * * I V I * t 3 tm mms N O R T H C R O S S 6 GEORGE HAMILTON v V E A ^ 4S Í-s 147 ... JOH VOtOHT FA YE D U N A W A Y .. f CHAMP Ti PC MKTU SISM4SWIS * PC lJAMSTIU M M ilS N t P I JAAMMTU S JW JJM -Ja DIRT BREAK FREE UMJKW AWHHHinl THE cJuice factory ^Restaurant 454-8349 *b, A u '.tin 's C 4 j f WIDEST SELECTION of Na,ural Food Dinners COMPLETE NATURAL FOODS MENU \ l l ENTRIES MADE WITH Tl« (,RI \ T IS I C \R I W D H K . H IM pt M ITS \ * T I R \l ISCR I D I I M S } «II \C O f - * j ? \ \ \ * j) \ ' ^ 'i \ r 4 / y / ¥ \ \ - the J U I C E FA CTO R Y \ah Kit K>< <.Koi <>oi> s IliAITH TOOti PROM ( IS A C O M P L E T E - FOR A l I. N ( ) l S H O P P IN G E A C H IT Y R HEALTH NEEDS / > th A \ t v n u * ' I. n f f o f ( f U i i d n l u f M * I f t t l . m t o 9 f, rrj , f i f t y ft a u 454-NA4*) BIKINI TIME! Summer is here. Be ready with permanent hair removal. Bette Pritchett. Owner For Complimentary Consultation Day or Evening Call 4 7 7 -4 0 7 0 i V7S4 UNIVERSITY ELECTROLYSIS 1201 W. 24th, Suite 105 5:45 8:00 6:30 7:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 9:30 10:00 10:30 10:50 10:56 11:00 MORNING O (Ü) SACRED HEART O (Tt) PTL CLUB O ® NEWSWATCH PRESENTS Q © LIGHT OF THE WORLD CD S® CONSUMER BUYLINE O © © ® CARTOONS O ® PTL CLUB © ® MISTER MAGOO IQ (T® ROBERT SCHULLER f f i ® TH IS IS THE LIFE O © CARRASCOLENDAS O (1) DAY OF DISCOVERY (D ® CLUE CLUB f f l 3 REBOP f f i ® REX HUMBARD O © DAY OF DISCOVERY O © O © 0 ® SUNDAY MORNING O ® JAMES ROBISON O CDMI8TER ROGERS (R) CD ® RELIGIOUS TOWN HALL IB ® REX HUMBARD QD ©THREE STOOGES / ABBOTT AND COSTELLO O © THIS IS THE LIFE Q ® REX HUMBARD O (©ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) 0 ® d a y o f d is c o v e r y f f l 3 JAMES ROBISON 09 ® IT IS WRITTEN 9:00 O © MOVIE A A H “ The Siege A t Red R iver" (1954) Van Johnson, Joanne Dru Indians atta ck a to rt w ith the help o t a G atling gun stolen fro m C onfederate soldiers O ©8TUO IO SEE V isits a ballerina, cam pers in Nova S cotia, sea tu r­ tles and D onny and Jim m y O sm ond ba ckstage (R) (D ® DIVINE PLAN IB 5® ORAL ROBERT8 €D ©PEOPLE VUE ID ® CAPITAL EYE 0 © CAPTAIN GU8 O ® JERRY FALWELL O © ORAL ROBERTS O ©ZO O M (R) 0 ® DAY OF DISCOVERY 01 ® LET THE BIBLE 8PEAK B ® CASTLE HILLS f f i © K I0 8 ARE PEOPLE TOO 09 ® THE WORLD TOMORROW CD © LA VIDA ABUNOANTE CD © FUTBOL-SOCCER 12:45 1.-00 O © POPE JOHN PAUL II IN POLAND H ighlights of the historic p il­ grim age of Pope John Paul II to his native land, in cluding cove rage of a papal m ass in C racow , will be presented O ® MOVIE A A "D -D a y On M a rs " (1966) D ennis M oore, Linda S tirl­ ing. The Purple M onster ba ttle s alien forces over c o n tro l of Earth O ©GREAT PERFORMANCES "B ra h m s ’ Lieder R ecita l" Mezzo- sop rano C hrista Ludwtg is accom panied by Leonard B ernstein on piano fo r a p e rform ance of B rahm s' "L ie d e r" fro m the Tel A viv M useum (R) CD © GREATEST SPORTS LEGENOS ® ® WALLACE WILDLIFE ® © INSIGHT ® © P O P I GOES THE COUNTRY Guests Hoyt A xton. Rex Allen Jr . Susie A llanson © ® WILD KINGOOM “ Chase Of The O n a g e r" W ild Iranian donkeys are caught and tra n sp o rte d to w ildlife preserves w here they have a b e tte r chance to m u ltiply 1:30 2 3 0 © ® © G® 0 © U .8 . OPEN Live coverage of final ro und of play in this golf tou rna m ent fro m the Inverness C lub in Toledo. Ohio ® ® JUKEBOX G uests Bay City Rollers. The Babys, Paul Nicholas. Rod S tew art. 0 ® SUMMER OLYMPICS 1976 the 18-hole O © TRACK ANO FIELD "L ite Invitatio nal Meet O © IN CONCERT The Four Freshm en pe rform som e of the ir m ost w ell-know n classics (R) O ® MOVIE A A "B lo n d ie 's S ecre t” (1948) Penny S ingleton. A rth u r Lake C oun terfeit m oney and an atte m p te d luggage ro b b e ry stall the B um steads' vacation 2:30 4 MOVIE "L o v e rs Like U s" (1977) C atherine Deneuve, Yves M o n ta n d A m ysterious, handsom e Frenchm an com es to the assistance of a lovely w om an fleeing fro m her scheduled m a rriage (PG-1 hr , 43 mtn ) O © MOVIE A A A H "T h e W o m e n " (1939) N orm a S hearer. Joan C raw fo rd Females wage w ar am ong them selves over gossip and m arriage. 3 3 0 O © MOVIE A A A H “ The House On 92nd S tre e t” (1945) Lloyd Nolan, Signe Hasso D uring W orld W ar II, the FBI a tte m p ts to invade a Nazi spy ring in New Y ork City. O © MOVIE A A A "B ro th e r O f The W in d ” (1975) Dick R obinson. A m o unta in m an ad o p ts fo u r orphaned w olf pups and deeply cherishes the ir com panionship. O © 0 ® 8PORT8W ORLD C overage of the U nited S tates G ym ­ nastics Federation C ham pionships, fea turing M e n's C om p e titio n , from D ayton, Ohio; O aks H orse Race fro m Epsom , E nglsnd; N A SC AR D og­ w ood Classic fro m M a rtinsville. Va. 0 ©EC O N O M IC ALLY SPEAKING "E n tre p re n e u r Risk A nd R ew ard" The c ritic a l ro le o f ris k -ta k in g and ven ture cap ita l in the success o f the U nited S tates Is illustrated . O © KNOCKOUT 6 D © EN E L MUNDO ® ® KINO O FTHE TEXA8 RANGERS (C hapter 6) 3:16 3:46 4 3 0 6 3 0 O © REFLECTIONS O © AUSTIN PRESENTA O © Q U E PASA, U S JL? "T V In te rvie w " A fter Joe insults his fam ily in a TV interview , the re p o rte r offe rs to m ake am ends by airing “ a day in the life of the Pena fam ily " (R) CD © JIMMY SWAGGART Ok ® rr IS WRITTEN CD ® CHRIST FOR THE WORLD CD © PTL CLUB (Spanish) O © F IR IN G LINE "R ea l M u s ic " Guest Rosalyn Tureck 0 ® LOST IN SPACE ® © MEXICO, M AGIA Y ENCUENTRO Host Raul Velasco 4 3 0 4 RACE FOR THE PENNANT: THE ROOKIES As the baseball season sw ings in to full force, veteran stars o f the sport — including W illie Mays, Rod Carew and Jackie R obinson — are profile d 0 © TRACK AkK) FIELD " L ite Invitatio nal M e e t" Q © FACE THE NATION O ® ROBERT SCHULLER O ©TU R N ABO U T "H a n d le W ith C a re ” New m edical exp lo red, including nurse p ra ctitio n e rs and ph ysicians' assistants (R) 03 ® FILM FEATURE CD ® HERALD OF TRUTH (B © CHRISTOPHER CLOSEUP 2D ©ANIM ALS ANIMALS ANIMALS “ The K a n g a ro o " (R) CD © JIMMY SWAGGART roles are O © O © NEW8 o © TO BE ANNOUNCED 4 M OV® "G ra y Lady D o w n " (1976) C harfton H eston. David C arra- dine W hen a nuclear subm arine carrying 41 men a b oard is ram m ed by a w ayw ard fre ig hter, it sinks to a d e pth of 1,400 feel and becom es precariou sly perched on a sea shelf (P G -1 hr , 51 m in ) O ® C 88N E W 8 O © T H E ADVOCATES "S h o u ld W e S upp ort The S ALT Treaty? 0 ® DAKTAW CD © COLUMBUS AVENUE BAPTI8T CHURCH O © WASHINGTON WIRE Q © CONVERSATION Q © ROY ROGERS O x FACE THE NATION O © NO VA "C a sh in g In On The O cea n” M ine ral-rich m anganese nodules are the valuable prize tn an internation al stru ggle to tap the natural resources of the sea (R) O ® FIRST METHODIST CHURCH FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ® QD® ® BAPTIST CHURCH CD © LA REV18TA INCREIBLE DE SILVIA PINAL O © O © MEET THE PRE88 0 ® DIALOGUE 11:30 AFTERNOON 1230 O © MEET THE PROFESSOR Q © SURVIVAL Q © f B © NBC REUGKXJ8 SPECIAL Dr Ph.lip A P otte r, the gen­ eral secretary of th e W orld C ouncil o f Churches, is interview ed by Rich­ ard H unt 0 © MOVIE A A A H N orthw est P a s s a g e ' (1940) S pencer Tracy, R obert Young A g roup of e xp lo rers searches fo r the legendary N o rth ­ west Passage O © W ASHING TO N WEEK M REVIEW (R) ® © NFL: (M E A T TEAMS, GREAT YEAR8 0 ® POINT OF VIEW H ost John W hitson B 3® NEWSMAKERS 0 © IN TER -VU E 1 2 3 0 Q © TV 4 JOBS Q © MOVIE A A A A "T h e Best Years O f Our L ive s" (1946) Fredric M arch, M ym a Loy Three veterans and the ir wives struggle to cope w ith p o st-w a r ad ju stm en t O © W A L L STREET WEEK "S ta g fla tio n A nd In ve s tm e n t" Guest: G ary W engiow ski. pa rtn e r and d ire c to r o f econom ic research, G oldm an. Sachs Co. (R) 0 3 ® 8PO RT8 MAGAZINE 0 © FUN OF FISHING 0 S$ f f i © IS S U E S AND AN8W ER8 © ® TONY BROWN’8 JO U R N AL, v ! 4 D ® 6 3 0 i ® © N 8 C N E W 8 CSS NEWS O © NEWS 0 © THE PARTRIOGE FAMILY © © A B C NEWS EVENING 9 3 0 O © O ® © ® WORLD OF DISNEY "G o o fy s S alute To Father G oofy tra des his carefree bachelorh ood fo r a w ife and baby and soon learns he is no m atch fo r his pe ace-w recking son. (R) 0 © o © ® s 60 MINUTES O © P R E V W AND THE PITTSBURGH "C o n c e rt O f T ch aikovsky A nd S tra v in s k y " Tch aikovsky's Piano C on ce rto No 1 in B Flat M inor, w ith sokxst H ora tio G utierrez, and S tra vin sky’s su its fro m “ The F ire b ird ” arm p e rform ed. (R) ® © M O V® A A H "S la y R ide" (1972) Glenn Ford, E dgar Buchanan A n A pache w ho confesses to alm ost every crim e is investiga ted by a she riff m the m o d e m West. 0 ® ® © T H E MAN WHO LOVED BEARS H enry Fonda na rrates this tru e story of a young na tura list and the orph a n e d grizzly cu b he raised and taught to survive in the C olora do w ilderness O © 8CM PRE EN DOM MQO H ost Raul V elasco 7 3 0 0 © Q © 0 © N B C M O V® A A A H "W hat’s Up. D ocT" (1972) Barbra Streisand, Ryan O 'Neal Two o ff-b e a t individuals atte n ding a convention are caught up In a com edy o t e rro rs when th e ir suitcases becom e m ixed up w ith tw o other identical suitcases whh «Mueble contents O © 0 © O © ALL IN THE FAIRLY Whan an e lderly aunt dies atone and unloved. Edith is the only ene who oeMMS te pay final respects. (R) 6 M O V® “ An U nm arried W om an” (1976) JM C ieyburgft. Alan Batea A dedicated w ife and m other finds a new asSI-awereneas a lte r her hus­ band o f 16 years confesses that ha s in Iowa wMh earwaone etas. (R-2 Iks .. 5 m in.) O © T H E JAPANESE "B lin d Swordsm a n " A p e rtrs ft o f one o f Japan 's m ost fam ous character actors. Shintaru Katsu, is presented 0 ® 0 (©SALVAG E 1 H arry and his erew discover a treasure map hidden in a classic oid car (R) 7 3 0 O © O © 0 © ONE DAY AT A TIM E Ann panics when she learns exactly how Barbara plans to win her boyfriend back from her m ore experienced sister. (P art 9 n f 2) (R) W '. Sunday, June 17, 1979 •3 0 O © O © ALICE Mel learns Alice has been m o on lig h tin g as a sing­ ing telegram deliverer and fires her (R) o ! | MASTERPIECE THEATRE I, C laudius Fam ily A ffa irs " Tiberius angers A ugustus when he m eets secretly w ith Vispama, who he was forced to divorce so that he could m a rry A ugustus da ughter Julia (R) 0 (3D 0 ® 0 (©ABC MOVIE A A A H arry A nd T o n to ” (1974) A rt C arney. Ellen B urstyn An old gentlem an and his cat ta ke o ff on an a d ventu re-filled cross co u n try trip 0 ® GOLF Shernl P ro Am T o u rn a m e n t" 9:30 O © O ® JUST FRIENDS Susan and Leonard try to prevent V icto ­ ria fro m re kin d lin g an old ro m ance w hile her husband is out of tow n 9:00 O © O © 0 © NBC NEWS SPECIAL John C han cello r re p o rts on the history and ra m ifica tio ns of the Sait II tre aty fro m Vienna, w here the tre aty will be signed the follow ing day O © O © MOBE8 - THE LAWGIVER B urt Lancaster po rtra ys M oses in this epic account of the b irth o f the Jewish people, ee based on the B iblical Book of Exodus (P art 1 of 6)(R ) In On The O cean' M in e ra l-rich m anganese © © N O V A nodules are the valuable prize in an In te rn a tio n a l stru ggle to ta p the na tura l resources of the sea (R) 0 © MOVIE A A C harlie Chen In Shanghai ‘ (1935) W arner Otand, Irene H arvey C harlie becom es involved in a bo otlegg in g ra cke t and gang wars, C hinese-style "Cashing 4 MOVIE "T h e C hosen (19781 K irk Douglas. S im on W ard A d e m o n i­ cally possessed young man proves to be the key to Im p end in g nuclear disaster and ecological d e s tru ctio n (R-1 hr . 45 m in ) 0 © O © O © I © © A U S T IN CITY S crivenor" (R) I © © © NEW S LIMITS "D o c And M erle W atson / Gove 9 3 0 10:00 10:18 S3) NEW8 « © © © n e w s 1030 © © FRANKLIN B U 8M E 88 REPORT 1036 © © S P O R T S T IM E 1030 O © O © NBC LATE M O V® A A H "The C harge Of The Light (1968) John Gielgud, Vanessa R edgrave A lfred. Lord Tenny­ B rigad e son 's classic poem re countin g the B ritish involvem ent m the C rim ean W ar is dram atize d THE FIRST TIME DOLLY Guests M ariiyn M cCoo and BHIy Davis Jr M O V® A H "Cynthia (1947) Elizabeth Taylor. M ary Astor O vercautious parents are too pro te ctive of their sp irite d young daugh­ ter, who wants to pursue her m usical interests ® © DRAGNET A woman and her son-in-law agree to keep the G yp- (© A B C NEWS acom m unity under c o n tro l it Friday w ill give them some illegal help 10 45 0 © M O V® A A A "T h e B allad Of Jo ste " (1966) D oris Dey. Peter G raves A widow begins raising sheep, causing her cettle-rancher n e ighbors to fum e 0 1 $ M O V® A A A "K in g ’s R ow " (1941) Ronald Reagan. Ann Sheri­ dan A fter re tu rn in g to his ho m e tow n to practice, s young doctor becom es involved in the personal lives erf his patients ® (© M O V ® A A A "M c C a b e A nd M rs M H ier" (1971) W arren Beefty. Juke C hristie P artners set up s business in a sm all m ining town, only to have larger business interests m ove in on them 10:60 0 © M O V® A A A H "T h e Halleluiah T ra il" (1965) B urt Lancaster. Lee Remick The Lad»e*' Tem perance League attem pts to stop the ship­ m ent of w hiskey w anted by bo th m iners and Indians 1130 O © M O V® A A A H " T h e Robe " (1953) Richard B urton, Jean S im m ons A physically and e m otiona lly d e te rio ra te d Roman trib u n a fa ord e re d to execute three crim ináis in Jerusalem ® ® NEWS 0 ® REX HUMBARD ® © HENRY 8 GONZALEZ 1130 4 M OV® "W h e re D oes ft H u rt? " (1972) Peter Seilers, Jo Ann Pflug. A w acky surgeon p a rtic ip a te s m an unintentional butchering o f the m edi­ cal profession at a hopelessly inep t Los Angeles hospital (R-1 hr , 30 m in ) I ® i © C A N O » CAMERA PTL CLUB NEWS 0 © P T L CLUB O ® PTL CLUB SUNDAY'S SPORTS ® © NFL: GREAT TEAMS. GREAT YEARS I © FUN OF FISHING 0 © FUTBOL-SOCCER 11:10 11:13 12:10 1230 1230 1 30 1230 1230 12:46 1 3 0 S 3 0 0 © GREATEST SPORTS LEGSMPS 1 3 0 0 © 0 < 9 0 © U S . OPEN Uve coverage of the 13-hoIa fin a l round of piay in th is go lf tournam ent from the Inverness CM> In Toledo. Ohio. O © SUMMER OLYMPICS 3 7 0 O © TR ACK ANO FIELD Lite invitational M eet" 0 ® O © SPORT8W ORLD Coverage of the United States Gym­ nastics Fadaratioo Championships, featuring Men s Com petition, from Dayton, Ohio, Oaks Horaa Race from Epsom, England; NASCAR Dog­ wood Ciaasic fro m MarttnsvMie, Va. ® 0 KNOCKOUT 4 3 0 4 RACE FOR THE PENNANT: THE RO O KVS As the beaebaM season swings Into fu ll force, veteran stars of the sport -- including WMMe Mays. Rod Carew and Jackie Robinson - are p rofile d . O © TRACK ANO FIELD "Lite in vitatio n a l M eet" sat un lav television lis tin g MOANING CD 1 ) EMSAJAOORO DC LA M USCA C O LO M B IN A 20 Saturday, June 16. 1979 Q U A BETTER WAY O U CARTOONS O ® AGRICULTURE U S A © 3 2 0 ® BAY c it y r o l l e r s Q $ NEWSWATCH PRESENT 8 ® 10 NEWSMAKERS 5 30 6:00 6 30 7:00 7:30 1000 10*15 10:30 11O0 11:15 11:30 O 12 O 4 © 4 ALVIN AND THE CHIPM UNKS O (ED O U D : p o p e y e ® *0 f f i 2 RANGE ACE O Q Q ( ¡ ¡ 8 4 FANTASTIC FOUP © 10 f f i JSCOOBY’S ALL-3TAR8 8:00 32 O X © £ GODZILLA SUPER 90 © O X CD 5 BUGS BUNNY / ROAD RUNNER o | MISTER ROGERS (R) )0 AU8TIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE The J S ConsMui**» 8 30 O 'X ONCE UPON A CLASSIC C o lte r KkH The *nree » • d re r of a helicopter captain organize a vn NEWS i 9*00 © f f „ EXTENSION ’79 m © 09 1 SUPERE RIEN08 10 AUSTIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE 9 3 0 ’ n# Amendment Proc. -v. 1 | 9 © i TARZAN / 8UPER SEVEN O 12 O X © 4 d a f f y d u c k | © i THE RACE FOR THE YELLOW JERSEY The story of ’our young Americans who travel to Canada for a grueling four-day t x , » race t told (R) © F HOSAB M © X © ® FRED ANO BARNEY CONGRESSMAN COLUNS RE PORT 8 © (X t o s TIEMPOS M © X © X th e j e t s o n s BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL Tfe Sleuth Of Ox lore A Conversa tion With Hugh Trevor-Roper The im portance of historical s’ >dy in the understanding of contemporary society is discussed (R) © d j WHAT ABOUT PEOPLE? © 10 © 3FMGFOOT ANO WILOBOY 11 O X © X BUFORO AND THE GALLOPtNG OHOS" (0) O X 8PACE ACADEMY © 3 ® 0D X jPINK PANTHER CONGRESSMAN MARTIN FRC8T © ® TIME OUT WITH SCOTT U MATCH GAME 8 0 X f a t a lb e r t © ® FABULOUS FUNNIES I XDCROCKETT8 VICTORY GARDEN I X ANIMALS ANIMALS ANIMALS The C ow ' (R) ® p a r e n t s in a c t io n 3® © rjjAM ERICAN BANDSTAND AFTERNOON 12:00 © CD A R K * PEMOOICO B U IE MARBLE MINORITY FORUM SIGNS OF THE TIMES SOUL TRAIN 12:30 O 1 2 LONESTAR SPORTSMAN © ID GARDEN TALK C X ) WITHOUT WARNINQ O GD FILM FESTIVAL “ Death Of A G andy D ance r" A young hoy puts aside Na pain at the death of his grandfathe r to ap precia te the spirit and heritage he lefl him (JDMAGIC METHOO OF OH. PAINTING TENNIS "A IA W W om en s To urn am en t” POINT OF VIEW MOVIE ♦ * "S tag ecoach W a r" (1940) W illiam Boyd Russell Hayden H oppy gets Into tro u b le when he gets in the m idd le of tw o stagecoach o p e ra to rs' interests © G D W R E 8TU N G 8 O X © ® PRE-GAME 8H 0W MOVIE 4 * ' 4 "T he Lone R anger" (1956) C layton M oore, Jay Silverheeis A w ealthy ranching fam ily interferes when the L o rn Ranger and Tonto try to settle an Indian dispute 6 MOVIE "H e rb ie Rides A g a in " (1974) Helen Hayes. Ken B erry The car w ith a m ind of its own helps its new ow ners to o u tw it a sinister fellow out to spoil their good inte ntions (G -l h r , 37 m in ) © (® BLACK SCENE © iJGAROEN SPOT F) MOVIE ♦ A "T a rza n 's New A d v e n tu re " (1936) Bruce B ennett. Ula Holt Tarzan brings sm ugglers to justice and finds a priceless relic con taining a fo rtu n e in gems l © ® BASEBALL Kansas C ity Royals at M ilw aukee Brewers BASEBALL Regional coverage of Kansas City Royals at M ilw aukee Brewers; B altim ore O rioles at M innesota Twins © (X QUNSMOKE © (DGROW ING TOGETHER ) ( X f f l 3® f f i GDU.8. OPEN Live coverage of the 18-hole th ird ro und o f play In this g o lf tou rna m ent fro m the Inverness C lub In Toledo. O hio © (ED SAL Y PIMIENTA 200 O (XBY-LINE Host Gene M oore E.J. Kahn. j r . of "T h e New Y o rke r" discusses his new book A b o u t The New Y orker A nd M e " 1.00 1:18 1:30 2:30 2 45 3 4 0 3:30 4 0 0 4:30 5 DO © f THE MYSTEFbOUS DR. 8 A 'r AN-COPPERMEAD C <■*«- t *9 7 t ‘Gar, 7he Buddy **fr y S*o*y © 11 LASSfE 4 MOV® young man fro<~ ’ he m ? **< .' be com e* a ro c* mus*c «egend «• i960» wxfih fwt son g* in clud ing Peggy Sue and ft s S c Easy hr 39 m m ) © 2 JIM THOMAS OUTDOORS o * ON NATURE 9 TRA . © 4 FIESTA MEXICANA CD Ü FU TBO L-SOCCER sey Don S-i © H LASSfE O 1 SPORTS SPECTACULAR C overage mrte NASCAR event. Iron* C ha rlo tte M o to r R8A Nat «one* C ham p*cn*r»p bowfm g to n Nevada © to d iscus* N orm a Rae h»s m o st re cent m oSQB p ic tu re © 4 VARIEDADES MUSICALES of the Wc Speedway rn jm * n ’ '< I C IN E M A SHOWCASE D*rec* - * M a rtin Flrtl (C»n* Host Jkm W* 1 600. No I ofcna egas O H t a r z a n © I Q SOT M ili* O N DOLLAR MAN a m ercal g«anf whan O S ’ d e v e lo p * a m e thod o* transfer» from co m p u te rs to the hum an b ra * O 6 NEW SW ATCH PRESENTS © © ? WESTERN HOUR © 4 STUNTS H Sp e c ial r Mects I A L L ABOUT TV The Sooner»» frie nd of S teve S becorr«f ng m form at ion i B iL l DANCE OUTDOORS O © § EOOT8TEPS tas*es are no cause fo r concer»* © 4 OUR L A 8 T FRONTIER U ndersea cre atures shipw recks spectacular ph otog rap hy and underw ater exp lo ra tio n are com b in e d m this ad ventu re special j# S u e p a»«m*s Warn tha t m o v itdren s fan- The Sea © H O T ! NEWS O X JIM THOMAS OUTDOORS 4 MOVIE EM (1978 M«chae< B randon. E>tear. B rennan The disc rockeys o f an a lb u m -ro c k-o rie n te d Los Angeles ra dio station, band together to p rotest the m anagem ent s decision to cut dow n on the rrnjuc end add m ore com m ercials (P G -1 hr 50 m m ) © x WORLD OF SURVIVAL © 0 SESSION Fanny an 8ii-g»r rock group pe rform s © F LAWRENCE WELK f f i 4 WILD KING DO* 4 Leopards Of Sowai M a dhopur A fam ily of leo parda kve< m an ancient deserted cast i. GD T I LUCHA LIBRE 5:30 f f i X NBC NEWS t © X CD 5 CBS NEWS | HAMMERMAN IN WILUAMS8URG The blacksm ith of colonial O Q Q I © i © A m erican is seen m a nufa cturing and re pairin g com m on item s © 1$. M O V ® A ’h D estroy All Planets (1969) K o |iro Hongo. Toro Takasuka An alien crew takes advantage o f the m o nster G am m era’s one weakness in an atte m p t to conquer Earth f f i JJTME PARTRIOGE FAMILY EVENING 6.-00 © H CAPITAL C rriE 8 FAMILY SPECIAL © T ] f f i ® HEE HAW G uests Tennessee Ernie Ford. Jod y M iller O ® BATMAN O CL NEWS © ( ¡SOCCER MADE IN GERMANY © X HEE HAW © Fj DRAGNET Friday and G annon uncover a p a tte rn tha t leads them to a daring d a y lig h t-b u rg la r f f i JjLA W R E N C E W ELK "L a k e Tahoe S how " © O TELE-REVI8TA DEPORTIVA 7:00 O H O ® f f i ® CHIP8 Sindy. hospitalized in c ritic a l con d itio n , is suspected of being the cause o l a highw ay accide nt in w hich 11 people died (R) O d i O CD BAD NEW 8 BEARS C oach B utte rm ake r s dream o f a cha m pion ship playo ff for the Bears depends on his a b ility to change Lupus' negative self im age 6 ROAD TO YUCCA LUNA A sm all TV statio n in a C alifornia desert tow n provides the settin g fo r a w iid spo of of talk shows featuring John Byner and Karen Black © ® Q U E PASA, U B JL7 "T V In te rvie w " A fte r Joe insults his fam ily in a TV interview , the re p o rte r offers to make am ends by airing " a day in the life of the Pena fam ily " (R) © ® © ® f f i GDBATTLESTAR GALACTICA A fte r cra sh-lan ding on a stra nge planet. S tarb uck is rescued by a band o f children w ho decide to ransom him to the C ylons (R) f f i ® POPI GOES THE COUNTRY © learns tha t he hes a term rnel disease and sets ab out find ng ♦ace fus -mpending death w ith a c e n a ** a m o u r’ o ’ chgrvty R- A mar- © I THE P fiiM E OF M¡SS JEAN BROCHE Ma Brodi#* * stude»*;* are surprised and confused unpooc-'ar g»r' under her e ng The H onkers ton A ro deo cow bo y tr es to regam n»s w»fe and son O X NEXT STEP BEYONO © I'te of the w o rld s greatest escape artist s fictionalized © 10 M O V ® * * * t The M ecom ber A fla c < 1947) G regory Pec»* R obert P reston Based ext a story by Ernest Hem ingw ay M u rder strikes a safan in A frica 's bon cou ntry f f i 3 M O V® * * # % The Heart Is A Lonely H unter M 968¡ Alan Artun S ondra Locke A m ute tries to give help and con solation to those a round him. .or* N ettle- he 11*00 Boom Town 0 3 MOVIE ♦ * * (1939) Clark Gable Spencer Tracy A pair of w ild ca tte rs find s the excite m ent they re seeking when they strike it rich m the oil fields 11:30 © X IROWSI0E O fficer Fran Beiding becom es the heroine of a d o c u ­ m e ntary and a target for m urder 11:45 4 M O V ® “ I W anna Hold Your Hand (1978) Susan K endall Newman M arc M cC lure A group of 1960s teen-agers is com pletely caught up in the mass hysteria caused by the m usical and cultu ral success of The Beatles fPG-1 hr . 44 min ) lawyer 12:00 © d i MOVIE R A W “ Incident On A Dark S tre e t" (1972) Jam es Olson, W illiam Shatner A governm ent tries to find a connection betw een organized crim e and cro o ke d local officials O X M OV® ♦ * ’ » Curse Of The F ly" (1965) Brian Don levy. C arole G ray A fem ale escapee fro m a m ental in s titu tio n discovers tha t her husband and father-in-law are plagued by a very peculiar a fflictio n f f i ® MOVIE ♦ "Ju n g le C aptive (1945) O tto K ruger, Jerom e Cowan. A m ad scientist, an ape w om an and a scared secretary are all involved in ¡ungí# h o rro r 6D 11 Ml DULCE CHARITYN 12:30 "T hese Three © QX M O V® 4 4 4 (1936) Joel M cC rea M iriam H opkins The lives and re p u ta tio n s of a man and tw o wom en are nearly de stroye d by a child s vicious lie © X NEWS © (J® MOVIE A V i "C hin a C lip p e r" (1936) Pat O 'B nen . M ane W ilson A determ in ed man overcom es endless obstacles in developing T rans­ p a cific A irlines 1:10 2:10 1:00 1:15 2:30 3:00 SATURDAY S SPORTS AFTERNOON 12:30 © 3 2 LONESTAR SPORTSMAN © ( X TENNIS “ AIAW W om e n's T o u rn a m e n t" f f l (I)W RESTUNG O 3 2 0 ® f f i ® PRE-GAME 8HOW O 3 2 O ® BASEBALL Kansas C ity Royals at M ilw aukee Brewers f f i ® BASEBALL R egional coverage of Kansas C ity Royals at M ilw aukee Brewers: B altim ore O rioles at M innesota Twins 1:30 I D ® © 3® f f i GDU.S. OPEN Live coverage of the 18-hole th ird ro und of play in this g o lf tou rn a m e n t fro m the Inverness C lub in Toledo, Ohio. O GD NFL: GREAT TEAMS. GREAT YEAR8 O GD JIM THOMAS OUTDOORS CD IX FUTBOL-80CCER 3:30 O GD 8PORT8 SPECTACULAR C overage of the "W o rld 60 0.” a 600- m ile NASCAR event, fro m C ha rlo tte M o to r S peedw ay in No C arolina; PBA N ational C ham pionship bow ling tou rna m ent fro m Las Vegas, Nevada. © ® BILL DANCE OUTDOOR8 © ® JIM THOMAS OUTDOORS © 3® LUCHA UBRE 4:30 • 5*00 EVENING 8:00 © QDSOCCER MADE IN GERMANY © 33) TELE-REVI8TA DEPORTIVA B e n • ® 6:30 A rctic A d v e n tu re " M arlin cap ture s a young O GD QUNSMOKE O d ) NEWS O H IN 8EARCH OF... © ® WILD KINGDOM w alrus O GD DATING GAME © (F3 RAT PATROL © 3 ® EYESOFTEXA8 fO R B A TTlA M B . ORBAT VBARB i MARTY ROBBINS \ pwr5 INSIDE JENNIFER l i i i l i i U H E I - L E S # prmmmrtmm *»/ « m$nm0 «W < ■cn-fk» mí 9 iltmm*., srti»*ht .ir f i t s i q í q T h I a T p e s ^ PETER SE LLE R S Q V T H E P H IS Q .V C J I ( iF IF .S Q A J | m l r wsurrs Austin C K ic Theatre p m t’fjfe T ? n n f s s « p W illia m s CAT ON A H O T T IN R O O F V f c r A HELD OVER TIL JLN E 16 p lu s R fM n niHHM S n f tn tf d 474-O M I 1 SUPERMAN A C H A R V SCOTT THEATRE C l NTI R A H O l'SF O F STRANGE LNGE AND HIDDEN P E S I R E S V % 4D HIDDEN DES S a lo n d A n w tir A im THI V*»>ST 1ROTK HI H SI IS THt W t*L O Stw na| ( (X ETTl M ARIV I I • L X M S t F f V l i t IS M A R lf l , • PI I WRIT R43 M ONO MMIT\ • * * 1 8 > v i 4M 2224 SUAO* . u n c u t u n c e n to re d plus color ^ ® I R 5 ! jW & P w i "FANTASY IN BLUE” starring Georgina Spolvin Parking Available 2130 S Confirms 442-5719 O P t N t í A V M a tin e e s Daily No O ne Under 18 A d m itted Late Shows Friday & Saturday. Sundays Open Noon Please Bring I D s Regardless Of Age < $150FWST MATVdE SHOWING ONIY C A P IT A L P L A Z A 452-X M 6 IH35NOKTH MINEME' »EJS " BaltlestaR G A IA G TII H I G H L A N D M A L L I M 35 AT NOMO IN 454-7326 I 1*.» ?* 4 J* ’ «§.» 4» "Hanover Street" *. btuA “SPTCIAl DTLIVEBY I » ) * 4 J4’ » « » A love story beyond word» v i Ó / í t H O C N g P A L ______ T H E A T W g S TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD CALL 471-5244 r * m Mivt'tN V Show t o w n USA I s (h e w o rd I W W L A K E H I L L S 1 241SSIHWHITf.444.0SS2 VILLAGE 4 2700 AMCXftSON* 45) 6352 '2 » 2 S S S20>4‘ «o <0 M 1 ’ 5 J «'• 5 15 4 00 10 *5 M U N M T O 4 , * B < w * L « 2 k..... . ~ * * .... ... . t m irn im m t ‘ Y u H ...... •_ j . I X 1 D O LB Y STER EO 12 * 5 2 4 5 5 1 6 2 5 6 1 6 » ~ HELD OVER! Ih f n , ¡ K ,H« JAWS 2 2 6 4 40 2 0 6 * 2 0 RIVERSIDE ItM K IV IH S ID i • «41 M l * | REPUCEP PRICES UNTIL 6 00 • MON THRU FRI ‘""“I Bo*-OHict Open 8.15 C lint la s t wood "IVIRY WHICH WAY BUT LOOS!" plus GREASED LIGHTNING" S h o w to w n East S o u th tid e N o rth THE ORIGINAL SPACE MAN "BUCK ROGERS" plus "AIRPORT *77" C I N I H A T C X A S S IH H E C fT? S E A S C N - a ^ * O 1 3 7 9 First Session Tuesdays JUNE 12 Am erican Studio Animation of the "M iss G lo ry,” ” 1 1930s including Love To Singa,” ” 1 H eard ” with the Pon Redman Orchestra, "P o rk y in W ackyland,” "B e tty Boop, M D "Sunshine M ak ers” and more! 19 Am erican Studio Animation of the including: "O ne 1940s and 1950s Froggy E ven in g," "W hat's Opera. Doc," Plane D a ffy ," Superman in "T he M u m m y Strikes,” "F a llin g H a re ,” and much more! 26 K L U T E (1971) d Alan J. Pakula Jane Fonda, Donald Sutherland. (1968) d George A Romero Judith O 'Dea. 10 Recent Am erican Animation with B R A V E R M A N 'S C O N D E N S E D C R E A M OF B E A TL E S , Whitney's P E R M U T A T IO N S , Caroline Leaf's $A ND, Breer's 69, F R A N K F IL M by F rank M orris, An All-New Quasi Cartoon by Sally C ruikshank — M A K E M E PYSCH IC , plus much m o re 1 JULY 3 N IG H T OF T H E L IV IN G D E A D JULY Thursdays JUNE 14 TH E Q U IE T M A N (1952) d John Ford. John W ayn e, M a u re e n O 'H a r a , B arry F itig e ra ld 21 T H E 7TH VO Y A G E OF SINBA O (1956) d Nathan Juran. Kerw in M athews, K athryn Grant. Animation by Ray Harryhausen Plus "Popeye the Sailor Meets Sin- bad the Sailor” 28 T ex A v e ry C a rto o n P ro g r a m "Screw ball S q u irrel," "U n cle Tom's Cabana," and many more 5 H O LLY W O O D OR BUST (1956) d Frank Tashlin Dean M artin , Jerry Lewis Plus P ig " and Porky's Rom ance.” "T he Case of the Stuttering . 0 All Films in BURDINE AUD. at 7 & 9 p.m. NONSTOP FUN Pool, foosball, shuffleboard, a six foot Advent TV, and more! Come listen to the best rock n roll over an excellent stereo system and enjoy double mixed drinks for the price of singles during Happy Hour 4-7 weekdays G IR LS - 2 drinks for the price of one all day Mon. & Tues. Open 3:30 p.m -2:00 a m. 1903 e. riverside dr. 444-5816 UT COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS SUMMER E N T E R T A IN M E N T F IL M SERIES TONIGHT AT 7 & 9 P.M. BATTS AUDITORIUM THE LAST PICTURE SHOW STARRING EL L EN BURSTYN CLORIS LEACHMAN JE F F BR ID G ES ADMISSION FREE TO SEASON T ICKET HOLDERS St GENERAL PUBLIC ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ * ★ ★ * * ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ M TEX AS UNION TEXAS TAVERN CINEMA UND ER THE STARS. Sundown SALSA. 8:30 p.m. DISCO. 8:30 pm. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thurs. Fri. BEACH PARTY DISCO. 8:30 p.m. ALVIN CROW. 9 30 pm $1.30 UT; $2 Others. (Php'- t Cut it $ 6 W w - one line three days one dollar Texan Unclassifieds 471-5244 m rn ^Q a Q B a a m m - .f e f e rf e l THE U N IV ER SIT Y OF TEXAS CO LLEGE OF FINE ARTS 1979 SUMMER ENTERTAINM ENT S E R IE S KJÚJGG Ota UBQJffle 3 OUTDOOR BAND CONCERTS 19 MOVIES 2 MUSICALS - THE FANTAST/CKS and THE ROBBER BRIDEGROOM 1 DRAMA PRODUCTION - TROUBLE IN MIND A LL FOR $8.00 Season tickets available at registration and at Drama Building Box Office. 23rd & San Jacinto, 10 a.m. 4 p.m., Monday - Friday, 471 1444, or P.O. Box 7398, Austin 78712. ART EXH IBIT May 20 August 26 MADE IN TEXAS Huntington Gallery, University Art Museum Paintings and sculptures by 67 contemporary Texas artists CONCERTS June 13, 20, 27 Summer Longhorn Band, conducted by T homas Lee LBJ Library Plaza, 8:30 p m. Admission: $1 adults, children under 6 and season ticketholders free MUSICALS, DRAMA June 15 17, 21 24 THE FANTASTICKS June 29 & 30, July 1, 5-8 THE RO BBER BRIDEGROOM July 13 15, 19 22 TRO UBLE IN MIND Ail productions in Theatre Room UT Drama Building - 8 p.m. Admission: $4 students, $5 general public, free to season ticketholders FILM S Mondays & Wednesdays 7 & 9 p.m. Batts Auditorium Admission: $1 general public, free to season ticketholders June 11 THE LAST PICTURE SHOW 13 THE GETAWAY 18* DUEL IN THE SUN 20 V IV A MAX 25 BONNIE & CLYDE 27 - A BIG HAND FOR THE LITT LE LADY July 2 - GIANT 9 - THE SUGARLAND EXPRESS 11 - JA N IS 16 - THE ALAMO 18- MIDNIGHT COWBOY 23 RED R IV ER 25 - FOUR FOR TEXAS 30 BREW STER McCLOUD Aug. 1 STATE FAIR 6 - THE G REAT WALDO PEPPER 8- FLAMING STAR 13-HUD 15 BIG BAD MOMMA Íri(lay television 1istings DAYTIME C H ILDREN’S SHOW ( D ® ALIAS SMITH ANO JONES CD dD VIVIANA 10 AUSTIN CITY COUNCIL 5:00 O (D S T U D K ) SEE Visits two young Russians in Iowa who compare American and Russian lifestyles, two young figure-skating champions and a kite contest. (R) 12:30 1:00 4:30 EVENING 8:00 8.30 O (D S P O R T S UNLIM ITED DAYTIME SPORTS DAYTIME MOVIES * ★ * "The Real Glory" (1939) Gary Cooper, David Niven A f f l ® military doctor aids in medical and political areas in the Philippines following the Spanish-American War. Lovers Like Us” (1977) Catherine Deneuve, Yves Montand A 6 mysterious, handsome Frenchman comes to the assistance of a lovely woman fleeing from her scheduled marriage (PG-1 hr., 43 min.) O S O (ED 0 3 0 X © CD © GDNe w s Q 3 )L 0 W E L L THOM AS REMEMBERS . 0 3 ® BEWITCHED Endora casts a truth spell on a gift from Darrin to Samantha £ 0 ® NEWLYW ED GAM E 0 3 D NBC NEWS O <33 O CD DATING GAME O S CD 0 © 3 € 3 4 NEWS 6 MOVIE "Coming Home" (1978) Jane Fonda Jon Voight A Marine captain’s wife falls in love with an em bitteied disabled Vietnam veteran while her husband is fighting abroad (R-2 hrs 7 mm ) o ® D IC K CAVETT Guest E L D octoro* Q ) (S i 24 HORAS © ® MOVIE (CONT’ D) 10:15 10:30 O 12) © ® 0 3 ® TO NIGHT Host Johnny Carson Guests Steve Martin, Bud Greenspan, Doug Henning © I X © ® THE NIGHT STALKER While investigating a string of burglaries. Kolchak turns up evidence which links the crimes with sever­ © K M O L ( N B C ) San Antonio © K E N S ( CBS) San Antonio O K C E N ( N B C ) T e mp l e O K T B C ( CBS) Austin O K L R N ( P B S ) Austin-San Antonio © K W T X ( CBS) Waco Cabl e 12 Cabl e (fl) Cabl e 6 Cabl e X Cabl e € Cabl e ® © K T V T ( I N D . ) F or t Wort h © KS AT ( A B C ; San An t on¡ o( wi t h A C T V ) Cabl e 1® Cabl e CD ffi K V U E ( A B C ) Austin f f i K T V V ( N B C ) Austin Cabl e ® 6 H B O (subscri bers onl y) Cabl e ® ( wi t h 12) Cabl e ® to A C T V ( c o m m u n i t y T V ) Cabl e ® SUPER SUMMER SPECIAL H s w i r f t 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I |C ¿j BUY 2 LAPS FREE GET 2 with thh ad and UT ID Rare ser H scaled fórmela cars m i ' t mile frock. Most have a valid driver's license. Offer expires 4-18-79 Limit one per custom er 7417 1-35 NORTH 4 5 4 -3 8 9 8 upper level d o b ie mall 1918 B d S t R iv e rs id e • » * *v. v m m M '■ ' <* > * * * 4 4 # # # * • » « > ' r* /nriM Svu^a'/r^Ta r/.*. . r J. ]19 Friday, June 15, 1879 al bizarre murders O O C A P TtO N E D ABC NEWS © ® ® QPU.8. OPEN Highlight* of second-round play m this presti­ gious goH tournament from the Inverness Club in Toledo. Ohio © (I® A D A M -12 A lonely boy frighten* the neighborhood with hi* antics on a mini-bike CD James Cagney. Ann Dvorak O 2 NEWS 1:00 1:30 3:00 FRlOAY’S SPORTS JUNE 18. 1979 AFTERNOON 12.-30 EVENING Q I jBPORTS u n l i m i t e d 6:30 6 RACE FOR THE PENNANT THE ROOKME8 As the baseball season swings into full force, veteran start of the sport -• including WMie Mays, Rod Carew and Jackie Robinson ~ are profiled 10:30 © ® © IMS OPEN Highlights of second-round play in this preeli­ gióos golf tournament from the Inverness Club in Toledo. Ohio AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOT' Open Around The Clock On Weekends The Only Mexican Restaurant 5 ! j j j ■1500 East 1st (5 Blocks East of IH 35) 474-711$! m ■ Plenty ef Era# PnHdnf ■MOORS: Open W -T lm r. I f AM-12 Mldni|M Frl-Sm Opw M H r* I B Gosed Msodoysl Bring Yuar Coasts 4 Enjoy Doily Nooa Noor 5 l 1 BUY ON8, | | GET ONE FREil ON OUR MEXICAN DINNER ONLY ■ f l INCLUDtNG: I l l I Ii » faffeas * Cam* SeHeds Ewtoftalnmaat ■ » Oddhsrsasi B ^ l l l in as w ATT A YAC >** O N I WAV • C h *e t Tec* • Owecemet# Solei i M h | (xjHree Avftnt 30, >9/9 I ¿Aire» TOW N LAKE (Um it 1 ceepen par peri saj I J 18 Thursday, June 14, 1979 OAVTMiMOVNES 1 U » 1 1 » O D From the piay by George Barnard Shaw A n ch to o e fy g*n yo*n* the Salvation Army (1941) W endy Hitter « •« H *rrt% nr M ajor B arbara * ♦ ' * "Tha G e n tle Bam ( 1 9 6 6 ) Chnetophwr G a o Lynda ® GD D ay Tha to v* aha*' betw een a m u le erch* com pteiety caught up m tha mass h y tta n a causad by tha m u u c» and cu ltu ra l tucceee o f r b* Beatles (P G -1 hr , 44 rmn ) 4 0 0 (1978; Suean K end w N ew ” an M i " EVENING M O o n e U O l O X © (3D ® J H€WS 6 THE OLYMPIAD: THE INCREDIBLE FIVE - e *** O-vem hosts a pro file of five athletes who mada hm tory through the*r ramarfcabw achieve m ants in various O lym pic Gamas © l Q ® BEW ITCHED Sam antha falls pray to a r a n a e n t concoction that w ards o ft witches M NEWLYW ED GAME NBC NEWS A O W E LL THOM AB REMEMBERS § 3 0 Q U O d DATING g a m e e © §29.000 PYRAMIO o H PETTICOAT JUNCTION O f jM ACM ElL / LEHRER REPORT Admifti/liiwio) 8108 Mesa S picew ood C e n te r 345-1670 TYPING AND COPYING N O R T H W E S T A U S T IN Also Leasing Cfhce Space Receptionist Teiephortü Answering Service Coffee Bar and U tilities Inc uded Also Available IBM Sei» ctric Rent®! • B lueprints • Ar -.wer ng Services Typesetting • Personnel Consultar ts • Advertising Phon. - f ’a» on • Ten i )rar / h i p Serv e INVESTMENT 489. thursdav television listings g X *100,000 NAME TMAT TU N * T I DREAM OF JEAMNtC Jwanr-e « cauaee Chao* trying to gat away from har s**ter Tony a © B T BEWITCHED Gladys Krevrtz •* OOr nnosd of tomm, jomge-on a‘ tha Stephen* houeehctd DANCE FEVER G u « i Jot - Taytor M NEW8 ROSALIA 7-00 ’’be O 12 FALL OF EAGUES Bro*e- Bssmarc» * pow a broken by V«c*y * tor: K.wsar Wiiherm ¡it who succeed* * 0 tha tr*-one O TJ. « 2 THE WALTONS Jim -B oc fat*s 'or a pre**y Cathoac g*r who -s staying • ' Wafton • Mount am wh4 a trywg 10 decade whether or nc t to >0*0 a com e” • * b«r mat ha has haw ordered te leave aarth (R) © $ ALIAS SMÍTW ANO JONES © Q VIVIANA 10 AUSTIN C O M M U N I T Y C O L L E G E 7 3 0 T h # Living Cons* t ution Q ' i 0 I a young 'COMEDf T«EATER M o th a r a -o M* m ' doctor tg a t ig n t o to work m tha same hosprtai and 00 tha sama floor as h#r mothar tha h«ad nurse © 5 © 19 f f l T A N G iE Anga and Brad dac-da to w " *> a<- tha *am jy h c h ti ovar whara to hoW tha*r wadd ng recaption by eiopmg (P. CD TJ LA CARABIN A DE AM BROSIO 10 AUSTIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE Tha Amendment Process 8-00 © 12 o * m 4 OLANCY Quincy tries to ciear a retaran ponce offtcar of charges that ha k !Wd a d ru g -cru e d tean-agar iR) © TT o 2 © 5 HAWAII FTVE-O McGarrett suspects tha assassi­ nation attempt made o r an evangelist's irte was done for publicity purposes iR) © I VIEWS OF ASIA ~ o rg Kong Singapore Fragrant Harbor Lion City John Templa comparas Asia % two diverse city-states © f MARY TYLER MOORE Lou Grant is fired wher he news show ratings drop © X f f i 3 BARNEY MILLER The pnme suspect m a rash o< burgla­ ries turns oul to be a three- rear-oid corpse (R) © T3 NOCHES TAPATIAS 10 NATIONAL FEDERATION OF THE BUND 8:30 BOB NEWHART jerry decides to give up ms dental practice to © I follow his dream of romance and adventure © T ! © JjCARTER COUNTRY When Cha» Roy s m,- ther ¡earns »ra» Roy tired his deputy Harley on an impulse she sets into action a scheme to get Harley rehireó 1R) © TJ PECADO D€ AMOR 9 00 © 12 O 3 f f l 2 THE INNOCENT ANO THE DAMNED Tom Keating takes a fob w th another !aw firm and begms the long process of treeing Lee Bishop from Death Row (Part 3 of 5)(R) © 13 © X BARNABY JONES Barnaby blames htmsoff when a plaryt security executive takes h«s place m a ransom payoff and disappears in a blinding explosion (R) 6 MOVIE Damien Omer II le e Gram A wealthy industrialist and his second wife adopt his deceased brother s son, a mysterious youngster who is actually the child of the Devil (R-1 h r 50 mm ) o 6 THE RACE FOR THE YELLOW JERSEY Tne story of four young (1978) W iliam Holden Am ericana wNo travel to C anada to r a gruekwg lo ur-da y b *c y a * n e w m to *d © I © I f ® X 3 0 / » G erakto Rrvera K’ v e s t^ a te s *ne s tru g p e bwfwewr me U S Navy end the ' N d * " i 0» • cantotoeen tsiarto bemg je e d by tha Navy lo r bo m pm g praefsoa ( 1 9 7 2 ) G e o r g e S t a r t o r d B r o w r © £ M O V * * * v W ild to T h a S k y B randon de W«de A ction and suspense m the w * s «men. thrwe htgb »-ves hyyeck a p j v © TJ MARLA JOBE 10 EXTRAVAGANZA . O S t H O i S d C l O © TJ 2 4 H O R A S i 0*CK CAVEAT G >••■-* G en u a c x v - " a - 2 1 8 1 8 I © 2 n e w s © f M O V * (CONT DJ 3w *st C a rd Johrvr, C arson © i } O 4 © 2 ” 0N*GHT MCS- N e b H tti O - 5 © 3 M * A * S * H Rader tr ^ s to ge some om ato ■ < e fnr Co* P otlar by re q u isitio n bargem m g end w in d s j p m .-ofvmg the Genera» at C orps H eadquarters R) o © g-Kxis god tou rna m ent from the invernees C u b m Toledo. Ohio • m s b- © T8 AO A M -12 a c jr x e n won-an a K -'-a rd ■ ar- a *-c o n f>« the office rs day f f i J U . 8 OPEN H ig h ig m s of firs t-ro u n d pi ay m th « presu- i C A PTIO N ED ABC NEWS I - - e ' a n - 10-45 © 5 © I f iT A R S l O 8 HUTCH H utch s e* w *e visits and «a ves him with a m illion donar uncut diam ond end a m urder w arrant fo r his arrest K M » l 10-18 10-30 © U R E P O R T E R 4 1 10:50 1 1 0 0 f M O V * * * r 4 MOVIE FM ¡1978; M ic a e - B randon E *een Brennar The disc jockeys o f an a lb u m -ro ck-o n e n te d Los Angeles radio statio n band •ogether to p ro te st the m anagem ent s decision to cut dow n on the m usic and add m ore com m ercials ( P G - 1 hr 50 mtn 1 © ’ 968 To n , Pranciosa A n¡anette Com er A French Intelligence agent d u rin g W orld W ar I t «s assigned to sabotage a Nazi torped o plant ® Ti> 8 T k *E T S OF SAN FRANCISCO Stone suspec*s that a parole office r is responsib le tor tryin g to m ake c rm m a ts out of reform ed con victs © TJ M O V IE M i D esconocova Esposa n Enemy C oon*-. 11.06 Q f ] Q J C B S L A T E M O V IE * * M cCtood The Disposa¡ Man ( 1971¡ Dennis W eaver. P atrick O'NeaJ M cC loud is assigned to pro te ct a co rp o ra te executive who has becom e a target to ' m u rder bu t fetuses to beiieve it f f i "3 MANMIX An old fne nd asks M a nr ;* to re* © 5 to his hom e­ tow n to investig ate a m urder w hich left the prim e suspect n an iron lung (R) f f l á TOMORROW nterviev. from past shows w ith © ^2 O 4 bo unty hu nter Tiny Boyles, devil w orshipper S olom on W etr. Joey the hit man and Chuck the rock group e w ill be presented © TÓ IR O N S ID E A folk -smg 1 ng trio nto drugs eads search fo r a rrnssmg girl and a m urderer ronside to a 11:52 12:00 12:42 1 0 0 © ü PTL CLUB O 1 N E W S © 3 N E W S © QD J PTL CLUB R E U T E R S N E W S V IE W O KM O L N BC ; • 1 ' A ntonio © K E N S CBS) San A n 'o n io O K C E N 'N B C Tem ple 0 KTBC (C BS; A ustin O K L R N (PBS Austin-S an A ntonio © K WT X ¡ CBS' Waco Cable X Cable H Cable 6 Cable 5 Cable 11 Cable 5 ff i K T V T (IN D ) F o rt W orth f f i KSAT (ABC San A n to n io íw ith A C T V ) Cable 10 03 K V U E (A B C ) A ustin Cable X Cable I f f l K T V V (N B C ) A u stin 6 HBO (su b scrib e rs o n ly ) Cable (B to A C TV (c o m m u n ity T V ) (w ith 12) C able ® Cable Í The Yamaha CR-220 receiver The Yamaha YP 82 loudspeakers. An un­ turntable Advent Model 3 beatable combination o f sound and value The extrem ely low distortion ratio o f a Yamaha re ­ ceiver, combined w ith the light tracking YP-B2 sem i­ autom atic turntable and the superior sounding Advent 3 loudspeakers make the $ 4 8 9 system a truly sound investment For budget system or super system, at Audio Con­ cepts we hold the same basic philosophy-The equip­ m ent we sell is the very best we know o f Above the rest. Dohie M a ll Northcm ss M a ll 478-7421 459-3321 PAT PAINTER’S HAIRSTYLING CENTER MEN WOMEN CHILDREN DKEN 3 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 454-0484 6009 Burnet 258-9533 13216-B Pond Springs Rd 454-3676 1011 E. 41st ACROSS FROM SEARS AUTO PARTS — W IT H THIS C O U P O N — 1 for $9 or 2 for *16 (S o brin g a fr ie n d ) S h am p oo , C o n d itio n , H aircu t B low Dry or Set I I I I I ^5 O F F ON PERMANENTS, FROSTING, OR STRAIGHTENER 1 f t mmmmm l a p j ^ i V,SA OFFER G O O D T H R O U G H 6 / 2 9 7 9 CPEN MCN.-SAT lo n g ham suohtly hiohii> S u m m e r Sale! v w < *?rK..... ... cut-offs, camisoles, shorts, skirts, blouses, jew elry, jeans, etc. ... 30-70% OFF Once More With Feeling M onday-F riday 11-6 17th 2k San A n to n io H u r r y — L i m i t e d S u p p l y ! . i m m ViSA* ..reverb ... rrb mill has E J writ mg songs wi t h T om R o b i m a a . Reportedly Robinson got into hot water with some of his more orthodox leftist contem poraries for allow­ ing a rich rock star like Elton to share the stage w ith him a t a re c e n t British gig Bands to watch for you may or may not have heard of Pink Lady, but chances are you will in the near future PL is a Japanese duo. singing in English with a sound that supposed­ ly is quite reminiscent of early Abba Their sales figures have read like Ab­ ba’s as well the group has had nine co n secu tiv e No 1 singles in Japan, and several more that didn’t make it to the top but sold a million copies anyway. They are currently poised for an a s s a u lt on the (T hey W e ste rn w orld appeared on a Leif Garrett TV special a while back, but please don t hold it against them* John Prine appears to be. like Arthur C. Clarke, obsessed with time Not only is he co-author of a song with the sobering title “ The Twentieth Century is Almost Over” ( performed bv other co-writer Steve Goodman at the Dillo last Friday); he recently wrote a song called “Living in the F uture” : We re liv in g th e in fu tu r e I'll (gil you how I know I read it in the pa pe r F ifte en y e a rs ago. Makes ya think, doesn't it0 Let’s hear it for Timothy B. Schmit, rock star with th ree platinum album s! The re a so n you n e v e r heard of him is that none of th em a r e h is ; S ch m it played on R andy N ew ­ m an’s Little Crim inals,” Joe Walsh's But Seriously Folks,” and various Eagles d isc s. M ean w h ile, the Am erican F ederation of by }«rff Whittington to Cruisin The VIBage People have been found out Yes. the United States Navy finally ¿at around to listening to and Macho Man. and didn't like what ¡t heard Earlier, the USN vo lunteered the group use a Navy ship as the setting for a short film based on the VP’s hit In the Navv " Now. the group has reportedly fallen from the Navy’s good graces, and plans to use the song in recruiting com m ercials have been dropped let D onna S o m m e r h a s scored another coup, her nevt 45. * Hot Stuff, made an astonishing 17-position jump from No. 20 to No 3 on its way to No. 1 on the Billboard charts It is her third chart-topping seven- mcher Thefollowup. “ Bad G irls.’’ is already in the top 40 Speaking of Donna and her associates, producer Giorgio Moroder has taken on the Sylvers as his next project Another recent Moroder production was “ Number One In Heaven,” the new LP by Sparks, of all people — featuring the would-be hit, Tryouts For the Human Race " “ L odger” is out The third album in the trilogy that began with Low” and '"H eroes,” David Bowie’s new studio record com­ pletes his first round of collaboration with Brian Eno — the f irs t clo se Bowie associate in years to actually i nf luence Bowie without being swallowed up in the Bowie mystique. (Eno is currently recor­ ding his own new album in New York). Blondie are back in the studio — Power Station in New York, to be precise. Mike Chapman is produc­ ing; he s half of the sem i­ legendary Chapman and Chinn songwriting team of the early ‘70s that gave us such phenom ena as the m u sic of th e o rig in a l Sweet. Chapman produced B lo n d ie ’s la s t a lb u m , “ Parallel Lines,” which yielded the No. 1 single “ H e a r t o f G l a s s . ’ ’ is “ P a r a l l e l L i n e s ’ ’ currently No. 13 on the B illboard c h a rts , nine months after its release. One hundred thousand copies of Elton John’s “ A Single M an” have been pressed by Melodiya, a Soviet recording concern. No Elton LPs have been of­ ficially available in the U.S.S.R up to now, though Russian rock fans with 50 or more rubles could find black-market Elton wax- ings. The release of “ A Single Man” comes hot on the heels of Elton’s Soviet tour, widely billed as the first tour of the U.S.S.R. by a m ajor rock act. M e a n w h ile , b a c k in tfie rum or capitalistlaad. Survival Lessons on coping In suburbia by debl moan Just g u e m e the wild p o w er of the w ind w ood/ire sun . G ive m e the c o m fo rt an d glow o f a G ive m e the .«pint o f living th in g s J u s t g ive m e the w a rm p o w er o f the B ut plea se ta ke yo u r a to m ic poison p ow ers a w a y This song called "P ow er” expresses the purpose and spirit of thought behind the first annual Urban Survival F air that took place Saturday and Sunday from 10 a m until dusk in Waterloo Park Jim Brown of the Red Ryder Preservation Society said he cam e up with the idea of a fair while noticing an Austin museum for the first time after walking by it many times Useful ideas and inventions hiding in the museum would never be noticed unless they were pointed out. he said The survival fair was designed as a tem ­ porary outdoor museum — a warehouse of human and natural resources — to acquaint tools to surv ive Austin area citizens with the in the city.” By meeting the faces behind in­ stitutions. Brown said, people will feel more comfortable asking for help from a service organization, whether it be the Rape Crisis Center or the ACLU. AN ESTIMATED 50 tables were set up among inf or trees and trails, displaying m ative brochures on community services From the Austin Lay Midwives Association Planned Parenthood, solar energy projects. Middle-Earth Help. Save Historic Clarksville from Developers. The Center for Battered Women. The Farm and many others, one could learn to feed a vegetarian baby; grow soybeans make a variety of home-made wines of dewberry, elderberry; apricot and wild honey mead, invest in a self-sufficient follow Lamaze com m unity-cooperative; n a tu ra l c h ild b irth m ethods; sp iritu a l m idw ifery, end the w orld's starvation problem in 18 years by creating your own Hunger Project of fasting; learn to use “ lost hand tools and listen to quick sem inars on car repair Or one could relax and enjoy the breezes of the afternoon as many did, with beer, iced tea and wheat-pocket sandwiches herbal (¡roups of people strum m ed guitars under shade trees joggers sunbathed after runs in the grass bicyclists pedalled in lazy slow- motion down winding pebbled paths Austin-area musicians provided live music during the afternoon Bill Oliver sang about the penis of too much technology and too lit­ tle environmental concern "We have a macho relationship with the planets,” he says. The Fred Arger Band played songs like We re Survivors ” and other musicians len­ ding their talents for the days were Graham Hall, the Fleshtooes, the Southside Band and Nick Swift and Reality When dusk fell, the crowds drifted home, hopefully with new ideas and an enriched a t­ titude about survival in our urban environ­ ment. th a t M usicians re p o rts wages to session musicians in the United States totall­ ed MO 369 296. up 19 per­ cent from the previous year So you want to be a rock and roll s ta r’ Willie Neisoa is recor­ In Nashville ding again Why? Winner of last m onth’s award for best title cover concept Rem ote Con­ trol." by the Tabes. N ew S t a r s on t h e H o r iz o n R a p h a e l Ravenscroft has the best name since Dwight Twilley and a pretty good album as well, entitled Her Father Didn't Like Me Anyway ' You may not have heard of Raphael but you’ve heard him play that’s him on sax playing 1978 s nff-of-the- year in Gerry Rafferty's G R himself has a new album out n o w a d a y s , c a lle d “ Night Owl.” B ak er S tr e e t God-help-us dept the Bee Gees are going to be producing Barbra S trei­ sand. O M Tow n G IF! SHOP GRAÜD 0PEN1N6 Bkufc This Ab ahd fecx me 10% off U L L PuftHASf: ! THIS IMCiUDtS DISH ü«?OtN\LÍ Kfimt. " o tte rt 6HMT\ And ojRooPotous selection of PLAN TV. S i |#fwi vwi DuX nKCtutíxañiu. Co**, ia W. O-nsor ■forth» -me pLAnt to lot- q ¡ u e n .litk iq ax tív ftx o4 .tore C ÜLDltVfW OifT SHOP üA*w‘ -» QAiu MUrr hn • <*«vrracj>*tu« i vita mtm H H .H C rm A C M r * s a i i > > •,u A < o CH6UC IT CSUT" * MONEY BO O K * — is — * T h e best d is c o u n t book e v e r offered in Au st in . F e a t u r i n g h un d re ds of d o l l a r s in s a v i n g s at A u s t i n ' s finest Night Clubs ( hoe cover) Mother Earth (2) Crazy Sob's (3) The Greenhouse Stars (4) Eli's (4) After Ours (2) Steam boat 1874 (Mi price) Record Stores Disc Records Record Town Sound Warehouse. Zebra Records Clothing Stores Mohan «i Indta Import» King of Jeans longhorn General Store Altitudes Jean Store Vogue Shoes Christines Ragowitz T-Shirt Express Al's Formal Wear Hair Fashion Boutiques Sheer Madness Combs-N-Shears The Haircut Store Mane Event Rick's Hairstyling Hair Corner Boutique and m any more of A u stin ’s m ost respected m erchants: Her Gear, Jock Shop, Steamboat Springs, Strait Music Co., World Wide Stereo, Plant-lt Earth, Audio Concepts, Russell's Uniquity Jewelry and Gifts, M am a's Pizza, New York Subway, Taste Alternative, Merle Norman Cosmetics, M alibu Grand Prix, etc., etc. ... (coupons are guaranteed) Supply is limited, so don't dolay. C o m e b y 2 2 0 0 G uadalupe, Suite 2 2 5 (corner of 22nd A G u a d a lu p o — upstairs) or colt 476*3939 *or more information. listen for our cd on KLflJ-FM and Disco l'8-FM. ___________ ________ 200 Academy DOUG KERSHAW and Cattail Wabb JUN£ 15 HOYT AXTO N and Tha Michaal Jam at Band J U N E 1 8 Presentad by KO KI & Austin Opry House MICKEY GILLEY and The G eezintlaw Bro«. J U N i 2 9 Presented by KOKI S Austin Opry House Tickets Available at: Backitage TNT, Zebra Records, Flipside Records ( Northerns» I Son Marcos), Inner S a n c tu m . 4 4 3 - 1 5 9 7 4 4 3 - 1 5 8 0 Presented by Creedence Sound Co., Inc. 4 4 1 - 3 4 7 3 80,000 fan s boogie in Dallas at Texxas J a m DALLAS (U P I) — The second annual Texxas Jam music festival went a bit more smoothly than the first, as more than 80,000 people braved the city’s hottest weekend of the year Saturday to hear rock music in the Cotton Bowl. While listening to such groups as Boston and Heart, the crowd fought off the mid-90 degree temperatures — which went to over 100 degrees on the floor of the stadium — with periodic sprayings from nearby water hoses. Jesse Bean, in charge of a large crew of paramedics, said the estimated 1,500 people treated for heat and drug- related problems were minimal compared to last year’s 2,200. Although about 40 of those treated Saturday had to be taken to area hospitals. Bean said there were no critical cases. “ It is a combination of the heat and the crowd,’’ Bean said during the concert. “ They are taking their toll ” The crowd was relatively quiet, with police reporting about 30 arrests at Fair Park on charges ranging from public intoxication and marijuana possession to bathing in the park’s fountains. Police said two violent incidents — a shooting and a stabbing — occurred on the fairgrounds outside the Cotton Bowl. The greatest security problem was the 4.000 or so peo­ ple who came without tickets and tried to get in. “ It's like a game,' said one yellow-shirted security guard. They try to crash the gate, we catch them and send them back ’ Louis Messina of Pace Concerts Inc of Houston, promoter of the event, said the total attendance would be over 80,000. He said 78.000 tickets were sold for $15.50 each. Last year’s festival was held during the Ju ly 4 weekend in conjunction with the W illie Nelson Fourth of Ju ly P ic­ nic Messina said this jear s jam had been moved up a month in hopes of cooler weather. Above, crowa members exhibit signs of rock ’n’ roll ecstasy; left, one participant succumbs to heat, upper ieft, crowd is hosed down. P*x>*os t>, ''' '*-• Lyon* n DAYTIME M O V IES 1:00 5:00 EVEN ING 6:00 6*30 CD ® * * vi "In Search Of G regory" (1970) Julie Christie, Michael Sarrazin When a young w om an's father remarries, she attends the wed­ ding because of her attraction to one of the house guests. 6 Herbie Rides Again” (1974) Helen Hayes, Ken Berry The car with a mind of its own helps its new owners to outwit a sinister fellow out to spoil their good intentions. (G-1 hr.. 37 min ) Q © G © Q ® G ® G ® G ® n e w s O D L O W E L l T H O M A S REM EM BERS... CD ® BEW ITCH ED Samantha and Darrin argue over the use of witch­ craft in an ad campaign © 5$ NEW LYW ED G A M E f f l CD N B C N EW S O @ Q CD DATING G A M E G © © ® THE PR ICE IS RIGHT Q ® PETTICOAT JUNCTION O QDM ACNEIL / LEH RER REPO RT (D ® I D R E A M OF JEANNIE Jeannie s cold sends the astronauts orbiting in all directions. f f i and courageously swim upstream to spawn QD IJBEW IT C H ED Samantha gives a dinner party to impress one of Darrin’s clients 03 ® N E W S CD © R O S A L IA W ILD KIN G D O M "Return Of The Sa lm o n " Salm on instinctively 7:00 O S > O ® f f i ® LAU G H -IN A madcap repertory com pany with members including Robin Williams and Bill Raffer'v present satiric and topicai humor in the second editor, of this seríes (Rj G )J O ® TH E j E F F E R S O N S G eorge's attempts to make points with a local banker are frustrated by Allan's designs on the banker s daughter |R) 6 M O V IE The Buddy Holly story" (1978) Gary Busey, Don Stroud. A young man from the Midwest becomes a rock music legend in the late 1950s with hit songs including ‘ Peggy S u e " and "It ’s S o Easy." (PG-1 hr., 39 min.) 0 8 THE LO N G S E A R C H "3 3 0 Million G o d s’ Ronald Eyre travels to Benares and Bh» alm ost fynchad t j a dmr*t>r m o b (PG-1 hr 44 mm.) 1 4» 4 4 » E V B flN O • 4 » I (2 ) © X ® J > « W 8 O n * of Amarteate matt fam ilias including Donny and M aria p a rfo rm * at tha O h o S tate Fair O q p u C W tL L TH O M AS REMEMBERS ___ Imwmm mtanakmmM | BEW ITCHED E ndors tu rn * Tabatha o t o a g#rw/« © Í 0 N K N B M NEWLYWED GAME 9 * 0 i ® © ( D DATING GAME 11100.000 N AM E TH AT TUNE I «ETT1COAT JUNCTION X M A C N B L / UEHBER REPORT x H O U .VW O O O SQUARES I ( f ) I DREAM O f JEANNIE Jaanma H usen a schaduted m oon trip to com e between T ony and Jaanme © fffi BRÉNOA 8TARR 0 ' l AEWTTCHEO Endora •* disgusted when * * * iearns that Samar, tha retusas to use her supernatural powars f ® ® 1 3 > R 0 B A U A NEWS Fourth 4 Brazos 474-4175 N o n , J u n a 11 M U S T Y W H O 'S T I N N I S S I 1 N A T B A N D p lu s T M M I K I D A V I S B A N D T e q u ila N its — AH Taq D rin x 2 fa r 1 7was. J u n a 12 J U S D I M A I N I 'S L A D U S M T I la d les n a ca va r W ad, J u n e 13 c o o e s a a a e w N i ’ s a n a b u s t $3 AH yo u can d r in k | p .m .-2 a .m . Thun, Junm 14 C O O M B B B O W N I 'S L A D K S N IT S L a d le * n a ca va r Friday, Juna IS C O O O S B M O W N ! So», Juna 16 T O B l A N N O U M C K D C r a iy H our 2 -7 p .m . (2 fa r 1) p lu s N e w S at. Loco H o u r 5 -9 p .m . (3 fa r 1) Sun, Juna 17 — ^ J U S D I M A I N I 'S S I M B U S T $ 3 AH yo u eon d r in k I p .m .-2 a m . j — i n i | L I | — 4 * i X ll I I I I I | i W i l i d a k e Get M°° OH On an y of our Mexican dinners G o o d M o n . W e d . Thur». O N LY 11 a . m . - 1 0 p .m . re g price Deluxe D in n e r...................... $3.95 CM# (on O v c i o Tato Tamaio C*ito fnthttoda Boon» and B e wtth oof Guatamolo Sofod Too or Co^«« B Do»»ort _ Number 1 Dinner................. $3.65 Gvotomoh Salod fate t*r^iode I m . i o . f l m t» m o i.w C M .< M O i.ii f» o 01 C o f l x . and 0. i i . i f ! | Regular D in ner.....................$3.35 f o t o tP H ifcflooa Bte Robm aon — are pr oteed O 1 PREVIN AN D THE PITTSBURGH C one#'" Of Tcha*ovsfcy And t «n 8 fla t M*nor wrth Stravfnsfcy Tcha»kov*k, s Piano C once rto No sofore* HoraOo Gu’ w rr «7 and • tra w fo k y 's e u R e fr o m ’’ he Fw«to*'d' are pa rtorm ad (P © $ © T9 f f i "J H A PPY D A Y * M a rlon tria s tc ravfva tha tru e apmrt o f Tf a n **g .a n g by tra n s fe r’’ '«ng th e gang »ntO P4gr>r-HS for th a annua* feast (R) M A U A 8 SMITH AMO JONES VTWAMA t« AUSTIN COMMUNTTV COLLEGE T^e U S C o r* - "u* .o r 7 * 0 © 1I O 2 C 8 8 B O V E a * * Tha u la Ano T m w Of ju d g e Roy B e a r í *972 Paut N a m - a r Ays G ardner A m n o r ou t'aw takes over s smak Yrastam town by dispensetg tvs ow n fo rm o f ,fust*ce and c o n fisca t­ ing tha p ro p e rty for court coats (1977) M e B rooks D o r n ta a c h m a r Tha * M O V E High A n x ie ty new d ire cto r of an asy*um for The Vary very N arvoua inadvertently discovers s savstar plot activate d by several other staff m em bers to con vin ce neafthy and wealthy p a te n ts that they are go sw n a ly n s a n a (PG-1 hr 34 mm ) © 5 © 1$ f f i 1 « - A VERNE 4 SHIRLEY M ilwaukee s Man of the Tear crusr> MOVtE * * * Ottey < 1969) Tom C ourtenay Romy Schneider © I An easy-going loafe r's con tente d existence is sha ttere d when he w it­ nesses a m urder 1956s D ons D a, Louts © H O 3 CBS LATE MOVIE Jour dar. A young wife teams, to her ho rror tha t her husband m urdered his previous wife > Juúe © 13 © 4 © * TOMORROW nterview s from past shows with Elton jo.hn, Steve Rubell of S tudio 54. P atti S m ith and rock groupie C herry V anilla will be presented © 15 IRONSIDE A gangland enforcer testing center to force Ironside to reveal the hidm g place of an inform er tries to use a psychological 9 * 0 9 45 1 0 4 » 10-1S 10 50 11:30 11:40 1 2 4 » 12:30 14» 1:32 f f l x t »t l c l u b © £ NEWS © 19 REUTERS NEWS VIEW © U PTL CLUB O I new s O K M O L ( N B C ) San A n t o n i o © K E N S ( C B S ) San A n t o n i o O K C E N ( N B C ) T e m p l e O K T B C ( C B S ) A u s t i n O K L R N P B S A u s t m - S a n A n t o n i o © K W T X ( C B S ) W a c o C a b l e 12 C a b l e ji C a b l e 6 C a b l e 2 C a b l e » C a b l e 5 © K T V T ( I N D ) F o r t W o r t h © K S A T ( A B C ) San A n t o n i o í w i t h A C T V ) C a b l e »o C a b l e X C a b l e t ® K V U E ( A B C ) A u s t i n S3 K T V V ( N B C ) A u s t i n 6 H B O ( s u b s c r i b e r s o n l y ) to A C T V ( c o m m u n i t y T V ) ( w i t h 12) C a b l e ® C a b l e 4 C a b l e (6 FATHER'S DAY GIFTS a t EARTHSEA A Unique Shell Shop Elegant Gifts from the earth and sea ★ Austin's largest selection of specimen and de corator q u a lity shells • coral • feathers ★ A n a t u r a l c h o i c e f o r w e d d i n g g i f t s N O W OPEN 11-5 M-F, 10-5 Sat. THE HOTTEST THING IN AUSTIN SINCE THE JALAPEftO PEPPER! &IU* LAREDO TELLS? NO LIES, AMP H £ t? A V S F A /V P A N & 0 ‘¿> FAVOFirEF* C A N 'T SEAT- N A LF P coN D A M P U O H T Ai£XI¿A*J SPea A U T / e s > . 2 ■ C ? U ia ^L N O £ R \Je t> /AJ AUTf(QUT(C- F?aJTA \jj£PT€J^AJ THLE. - 2 .■7 ^ A J D /M 3 i U N F D R H -A&PV M O O ÍL , 4 - 7 PM. FoR~ Af ON. 2 fa z I M I TFO A ^ - S , u é e u TOST A C ^ S a n o F a r BAOOBJ 'M?8 I r.E 1^i . 1 W ¡iP b l//*rA M-O, i>upei2s¿?(Li fiA 2 A N oí w. i n«t O pon T u r n U n 1 1 4 ! Two Reels and a crank... B y Louis B l a c k It is just not that good a week for films. The most ex­ citing theatrical opening of the week is Disney’s reissue of the early ‘60s “ 101 D alm atians,” though “ Silent P artn er” and “ Rocky II” are promised for next weekend. All the campus film series have prepared unusually strong schedules for this summer, but the theatrical m arket is just painfully dull. Which makes it a good tim e to go off on a rant and rave, to present less of a column and more of a monologue, an introspective essay, a review er’s notebook. It is best read as a confused, polemical and impassioned letter that I am writing to myself. It is about critics and criticism and it results from too many arguments at parties, too many in­ sults shouted in elevators and across courtyards, and far too many people getting violently angry and upset with what one critic or another has written. ".. .the e rr or that m a n y people in the c o m m e r c i a l f i l m business m a k e : t hey eq ua t e t echnical ability wi th an ability to e nt er tai n people. T he re is no c o r ­ relation at all. N o n e . " There is no definitive standard of quality by which to judge movies. They are not mechanical devices that can be judged against operative standards. When all is said and done, it is a question of personal taste. t echni cal quality THERE IS CERTAINLY a to movies, but the effectiveness and power of a film has almost nothing to do with this. Herbert Ross’ “ The Tur­ ning Point,” was the worst edited big-budget film to come out of Hollywood in years, yet it was still an effective and compelling movie. The fact that Louis Malle’s “ P retty Baby” had a slightly-out-of-sync, badly looped soundtrack did not make that film any more uninteresting than it already was. The technical problems of such films as “ The Harder They Come” and “ Rocky Horror Picture Show” don’t detract, in any way, from an audience enjoy­ ing the film The technical aspect of a film is secondary to its effectiveness as a narrative or entertainm ent vehicle. Sometimes the ineptness can be so overwhelming that it hurts the film, but this kind of incompetence is just not that common anymore. So what we are left with is the fact that all verbiage to the contrary, whether a film works for you or not is simp­ ly a question of personal taste. If you don’t like what is generally regarded as a m asterpiece or if you love what others think is hopeless trash you may be out of your mind, iconoclastic or a privileged m em ber of the avant- garde. After all. John Ford’s “ The Searchers" was a pop­ ular success and a critical failure when it was released in the late '50s; yet it has steadily risen in critical regard over the years and its new considered one of the m aster­ pieces of American cinema. It is by no means alone in works that were scorned by one generation and adored by another On the flip side of this coin are the many films that were praised and loved by their contem poraries and have, with the passing of time, had their status con­ siderably lowered. This will undoubtedly happen to cer­ tain films that currently are critically and commercially in vogue. But all of the above is not im portant because despite ream s of critical and theoretical writing on all sides of the issue, hours of audience research, days of discussion and argument among film makers, what finally counts is what takes place between you and what is happening on the screen. the THE REST details the culture, the importance, the relevance, interior workings of film. The rest chronicles the audience, the times, the society. The rest talks about past movies and influences future ones The rest articulates man and how he relates to his fellow man, how he relates to his society, how he entertains himself The rest is exciting and valuable and important, but, when the lights go down and that picture comes on the screen, it is the ultim ate moment of solipism. It is you and the image. It is the cumulative experience of who you are interacting with what some other people think will entertain or educate or challenge you, and the chem istry that occurs during that experience can never be simply “ right" or “ wrong.” Yet film critics not only exist, they proliferate. There is a certain demand for them that stem s from having an audience that is obviously interested. Qualitative stan­ dards are possible, but they are self-created. All movies are not the same, some are clearly better than others, but the nature of those kinds of judgements is based on essen­ tially arbitrary standards that must be articulated by the reviewer. I see the reviewer as performing two main functions. The first is to establish a personal taste that is readily identifiable and transcends just one review. The critic is not there to lead the m asses out of the wilderness or make pronouncements from on high as to what is good cinema and what isn’t. Unlike a news story, or a Con­ sum er Reports' product analysis, there is no absolute for a reviewer to rely on But there are arm ies of new movies regularly released and legions of old ones shown and most film-going people like to have a rough idea of what they are going to see before they walk into the theater. By establishing what their tastes are, the critics themselves become a known element to readers. By reading a review it is possible to gain a rough idea about what you may think of the movie. This is based as much on what the critic says about the film as on your past ex­ periences with that critic. If you know what the critic likes and doesn’t like, then regardless of whether or not you agree with him you can understand where he is coming from in a review. The second function seems to be to get the audience to think. To irritate them, to soothe them, to challenge them, to upset them, to stim ulate them, but in one way or another, through love or hate, to get them thinking about the movie All else is secondary. A good reviewer does nothing more than explain why he thinks what he does Taste has very little to do with it, clearly articulated standards have everything to do with it The big news on the theatrical release front is that “ Alien" in its first few days of release has been more successful than “ Star W ars.” This is actually not that suprising as “ Star W ars" was something of a sleeper and the promotion campaign for “ Alien began last year. It will be interesting to see if this new film has anywhere near the economic staying power of the older one. Austin won't get its chance to decide that until mid-June, which is when “ Alien" opens here. STUDENT NIGNTl NORTH TUESDAY 9102 Burnet 24 Hour info. Schodulo 8 3 7 -1 8 2 4 STUOCNT NIGHT SOUTH THURSDAY 5337 Hwy. 290 W. (Hwy. 71 W.) N orth TUESDAY A UTTLE BIT O f TEXAS Fitchen $1,73 Student Night Student* adm itted ( t m w ith Spring «r S v m n w I.D. WEDNESDAY JESS D IM AN E Dollar Niaht $1.00 ndmi—ian $1.00 Hi-balts THURSDAY $2.00 Cover FRIDAY ★ BARBARA FAIRCHILD $3.00 Adv. $4.00 Dm t SAYUOOAY í m í é S ou th TUESOAY $ 1.00 tovot SI Mi-bolh TNI COUNTRY COITION WEDNESDAY A U T T il BIT OF TIXA9 lodie* Night — ladies Admitted Free THURSDAY SU.VBR CRUX Fltchor* $1.73 Student Night Student* adm itted free w ith Spring or Summer I.D. FRIDAY JOHNNYLYONS SATURDAY ■ M M T C O M U N A n O N ■ ^ ■ d é m h m o m é i é THE KEG 725 West 23rd 4 7 7 -5 5 0 5 “A College Tradition” W ith in w a lk in g d is ta n c e of U T . 3 Hours Free Parking in Tri-Towers Garage MONDAY Get Acquainted Night $1.75 Pitchers & $1.00 Highballs (No Cover) THURSDAY Rock and Roll Night. $1.75 Pitchers & $1.00 Highballs (No Cover) T uesday "Two for Tuesday" All Mixed Drinks and Pitchers of Beer two for the price of ono all night (No Cover) The Keg i f FRI. and SAT. No Covor til 9:00 Aftar 9:00, ladies $1.00 WEDNESDAY College Night The traditional 15* beer 33rd Rio Grand* 23rd 2 4 th Guadolup* DAYTIME CHILDREN’S SHOW 5:00 O 6 (STUDIO SEE G o e s rock clim bin g, for a ride in the G o o d y e a r b lim p and listen s to b lu eg rass m usic. (R) DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 ‘C a llin g Dr. K ild a re ’ ( D GD AAVfc (1939) Lio nel B arrym ore, Lana T urner Dr G ille sp ie w o rk s to e x tricate his co llea g ue. Dr Kild are, from a m urder ca se involving a lovely redhead 6 "H e rb ie R id e s A g a in ” (1974) H elen Hayes, K en B erry The car with a m ind of its own helps its new ow ners to outwit a siniste r fellow out to sp o il their g o o d inten tion s (G-1 hr , 37 min ) 5:00 EVENING 6:00 O 32 Q (D) O X) Q CD © iD ffi GDn ew s O I LOW ELL THOM AS REM EM BERS . ( D (5) BEW ITCHED G e o rg e and M a rth a W a sh in g to n Step h en s, th an ks to E sm e ra ld a (Part 2) 03 ® NEW LYW ED G AM E f f i GD NBC NEWS visit the 8*30 O 32 DATING G AM E O 33) HOLLYW OOD SQ UAR ES O (3D PETTICOAT JUNCTION O GD EYES OF TEXAS O (BM ACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT QQ CD MATCH G AM E 0D 3 D I DREAM OF JEANNIE Tony is railro ad ed to jail as a hit-and-run driver. © ® W ORLD WAR II Gl DIARY f f i (DBEW ITCHED D arrin m arries Sam an th a, not know ing sh e ’s a witch. S3 3 ) NEWS CD 33) ROSALIA 7:00 O 32 O ® CD ® LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE M ary a cce p ts A d a m 's m arriag e p ro p o sa l but b eg ins to have d o u b ts about her d e c i­ sion as her w edding day ap p roa ch e s. (R) G 11 O CD THE WHITE SHADOW A talented transfer stu den t with a sen sitive and highly co n fid en tial perso nal p rob lem joins C o a c h R eeves team (R) 6 M O V IE ‘ W h a t's Up, D o c ? ” (1972) B a rb ra Stre isa n d , Ryan O 'N e a l Four id entical su itca se s cau se co n fu sio n and total b ed lam am ong sev eral g ro u p s of p eo p le during a m usic co n ven tio n in a lu xu riou s S a n F ra n cisco hotel (G-1 hr., 34 min.) O I BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL The S leuth O f O xford A C o n v e rs a ­ tion W ith Hugh T re v o r-R o p e r” The im p o rtan ce of h isto rical study in the un d erstand ing of co n tem p o ra ry so cie ty is d iscu sse d © 2 © 3 1 f f l CljBASEBALL R eg ion al c o ve ra g e of B o sto n R ed S o x at K a n sa s C ity Royals. H ou sto n A stro s at P h ila d e lp h ia P h illies © X ALIAS SMITH AND JO N ES CD ® VIVIANA 10 A U S T IN C O M M U N IT Y C O L L E G E C L A S S E S CD 13) E S T A N O C H E S O L G A 7:30 8:00 O Í2 O X 0 3 4 M O V IE + + A Fine P a ir ” (1969) R ock H udson C la u d ia C ard in al* A n A m e rican d etective b e co m e s the unw itting a c co m p lic e of a fem ale thief planning the heist of valu ab le gem s from a su p p o se d ly b u rg lar-p ro o f A u stria n villa G 33) O CD M*A*8*H In the m id d le of a reco rd c o ld snap, C h a rle s rece iv e s an exp en sive p olar suit from his paren ts and im m ed iately flau nts it. (R) O O D T H E PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE M ary M a c G re g o r M iss B ro d ie s stu d en ts are su rp rised and co n fu sed when she ta ke s a dum py, un p op u la r girl un der her wing © ® MARY TYLER MOORE Lou and his wife sep a ra te and M ary b e co m e s involved CD 32 SUPER ESTELAR MUSICAL 10 THE BOTTOM UNE 8:30 G (ED O (3D WKRP IN CINCINNATI A m b itio u s young A n d y T ravis Is hired by the inept m an ag er of a flo un d erin g ra d io sta tio n to be its new p rog ram d ire cto r (R) 6 MOVIE The G reek T y c o o n ” (1978) A n tho ny Q uinn, Ja c q u e lin e B isset. A wealthy G reek sh ip p in g m agn ate m arries the wife of a d e ce ased A m e rica n P resid en t, laun chin g a sto rm y relatio n sh ip (R 1 hr 46 m in ) © ( X BOB NEWHART B o b is reluctan t to join a co nven tio n of psy ch o lo g ists when his first literary ven tu re is a failure © 32 PECADO DE AMOR 10 BLACKSHEAR ELEMENTARY PRESENTS The A B C s of B lack H is to ry ” 9:00 G 33) O GD LOU GRANT The Rev Je sse Ja c k s o n and a w om an co u n se lo r in a ghetto high sch o o l try to m ake Lou u n d erstan d how v io len ce has b e co m e a fact of life (R) O ® C L 0 8 E TO HOME A sm all town caught in the c ro ssc u rre n ts gen era ted by a te ach ers' strike, a sch o o l b oa rd recall ele ctio n and P ro p o s i­ tion 13 fever is exam ine d © ® MOVIE A A A M a y lim e ” (1937) Je an e tte M a cD o n a ld , N elso n E d d y A n opera sing er fo rsa k e s her true love to m arry the teacher who helped in her caree r © 32 m a ria j o s e 10 MAYFAIR *79 9:30 10:00 10:15 10 CAPITAL EYE 0 3 2 G 3 I ) 0 X ) 0 C D © ® © (X © 31 ffi Dffi r4, n ew s O (D O C K CAVETT G u e st B ern a rd K n o x (Part 1 of 2) © 32 24 HORAS © ® MOVIE (CONTD) 10:30 O 32 O GD 03 4 TONIGHT G u e st host B ill C o s b y G u e sts Jo an Baez, Ch eryl Tiegs, Dick Shaw n, Teddy P e n d e rg ra ss B erna de tte P eters G l i O C X ROCKFORD FILES A fam ous author h ires R o c k fo rd to investiga te a series of th reats against her life 6 THE OLYMPIAD: JESSE OWENS RETURNS TO BERLIN The Olym pic great returns to the site of his 1936 victo ry to relive the m om ent that m ad e him a part of sp o rts history O 6 CAPTIONED ABC NEW8 © GD CD XjPOLICE STORY P ro fe ssio n a l p rob lem s, co m b in e d with tro u b les at hom e, send a d esp e ra te young p o licem a n over the brink (R¡ © 1® ADAM-12 The cra sh of a light plane nterru pts R eed s teasing of M alloy © HI REPORTER 41 10:50 11:00 f fi 10 STREET8 OF SAN FRANCISCO A jewel stu d d ed d o g co llar turns out to be m ore than just a d e co ra tiv e p iece for a can in e © 13 CURRO JIMENEZ 11:30 6 MOVIE "L o v e rs L ik e U s (1977) C a th e rin e Deneuve Yves M o ntand A m ysterious, ha n d so m e F ren chm an co m e s to the a ssista n c e of a lovety w om arf fleeing from her sch e d u led m arriag e IP G -1 hr 43 m in ) O K M O L ( N B C ) San Ant oni o O K E N S ( C B S ) San Ant oni o O K C E N ( N B C ) T e mpl e O K T B C ( C B S ) Austi n O K L R N ( P B S ) Austi n-San Ant oni o © K W T X ( C B S ) Waco Cabl e 32 C ab l e in Cabl e 6 C a b l e I Cabl e f. Cabl e s © K T V T (IND ) Fort Worth Cable d) © K S A T ( A B C ) San A n t o n i o í w i t h A C T V ) Cable ® ffi K V U E ( A B C ) Austin Cable GD ffi K T V V ( N B C ) Austin Cable ® Cable (3D 6 H B O (subscribers only) (with 12) Cable ® to A C T V (community T V ) B00KBUYING ■ ■■ »i - i a— % % m THE BRANDING IRON Fri. & Sat. 6 p .m . on ... Beef & Beach Buffet Prim e Rib & Y our Favo rite S ea fo o ds ALL YOU CA N EAT s g » s Prime Rib Boiled Shrimp Pried Shrimp Stuffed Shrimp Stuffed Crab Baked Pish Catfish Alaskan King Crab Oysters Scallops Shrimp Creole Frog Legs Baked Potatoes Salad Bar NOW SERVING COCKTAILS/ 6 Ki miles post Oak HIM On Hwy. 71 West 263-2827 q/km Monday, June 11, 1979 (1938) L ew is Stone. © (33 M O V IE A A ’ , "Y o u re Only You ng O nce M ic k e y R ooney A n d y H ardy and his sister meet new frien d s while on a fam ily vacatio n 11:37 © G D M O V IE A A Mi Hit L a d y (1974) Yvette M im ieu x, Deck R am b o A cultured and so p h istica te d artist is, in reality, a professional kilter f f i CDPTL CLU B 11:40 O 32 O (3D C B S LATE MOVIE A A A ’ E xe cu tiv e Surte” (1954) Wil­ liam H olden. Ju n e Altyson W hen the presid en t of a targe firm u n e x p e ct­ edly dies the live vice -p re sid e n ts begin a d irty stru g g le for pow er 12 00 O 32 O 4 03 4 TOMORROW Former Ziegfetd Foiliee girts dtscuea how they w ere sele cted so m e of their e x p e rie n ce s end what they are d oin g now (R) © 3 1 IR O N SID E Ironside investiga te s a teen age faith healer who he su sp e c ts is the d u p e of his m anager O X NEW 8W ATCH PRESENTS © i f j NEWS © 3$ REUTERS NEW8 VIEW 1:00 1:38 © 3J) PTL CLU B ■ Ü J U S E S * ...................................................................... M O N D A Y ’ S SPORTS JUNE 11. 187S EVENING 7 M © 5 © 31 f f i GDBASEBALL Regional coverage of Boston Red Sox at K a n sa s C ity R oyals H ou sto n Astros at P h ila d e lp h ia PtwHies 10 30 6 THE OLYM PI AO: JE SS E OW ENS RETURNS TO BERLIN The O lym ­ p ic great return s to the s ile of his 1936 victory to ralive the m o m en t that m ad e him a part of sp o rts history WEDNESDAY M E N S NIGHT Vl PRICE DRINKS ALL NIGHT NO C O V E R ELI’S 6528 N. LA M A R 453-9205 14 mo m m a 800 CARTOONS NEW ZOO REVUE RR>8(TUE) DAYBREAK (MON. WED. FW) INVOLVEMENT (THU) TUESDAY MORNING (TUE) WEONEBOAY MORN04G (WED) THURSDAY MORPRNO (THU) FRIDAY MORNING (FRfi MONDAY MORNINO (MON) 6 19 REUTERS NEWS VIEW (TUS-FRt) e IX GOOD DAY. SAN ANTONK>' O 11 TOOAY m SAN ANTONIO O (THU) 9 JUUA CHILD AN© COMPANY (FRQ I THE ORKBNALi WOMEN «N ART MON 5 0 I f 0 3 CAVERNE i SHIRLEY fR) 4 ym£ FBI i W HEEL OF FORTUNE 0 13 0 O | CONSUMER SURVTVAL K7T (TUE) O < C R O C K ETT’S VICTORY GAROCN (FRT) O 9 T H E OFPGINAi..S THE W RITER in AMERICA MON © 5 © 19 © 3 f a m ily f e u o i! © 2 THE TO U N G A N O T H f (« S ^ L E S S f 1 p a s s w o r d p lu s ■ S O l o Q ( G R E A T P E R F O R M A N C E S T U C O 9 O V E R E A S Y < M O N W E D -F R CD 5 0 J S2C.OOC p y ra m io CD 0 IRONSlOE © 10: ALL MY CHILDREN 1130 : h FOR TOMORRO W O 2 o e NEWS e u. © i © 5 i I N O V A nwED O ft MOVIE (THU) Q ft Th e LONG SEJ o O ft PEOPLE ANO I ÍZ 3 RYAN t HOPE © 4 HOLLYWOOD AFTERNOON 12:00 O 12 0 ¿ 0 4 DAYS OF OUR UVES 0 :: NEWS MAGAZINE © 2 NOON Q © 5 TEN ACRES CD 4 © ’-O NEWS f f i 3 ALL MY CHILDREN ft THE RACE FOP THE YELLOW JERSEY MON 12 30 0 © 2 AS THE WORLD TURNS G « B'LL MOYERS JOURNAL (WED) G ft SPORTS UNUMfTEOiFRU © 5 © T9 RYAN'8 HOPE © 4 CARTOONS 100 THE DOCTORS 0 92 0 £ ) 0 O I TO BE ANNOUNCED (TUE) o 9 VIEWS OF ASIA (MON) © 5 © T9 © 3.0NE LIFE TO LIVE 0 f MOVIE CD (Q EN SAN ANTONIO l © 2 GUIDING LIGHT 0 12 O X O 1 ANOTHER WORLD O i O 9 3648 (TUE) G I TEXAS WEEKLY (WED) O XjAUSTIN CITY LIMITS (FRI) 10 AUSTIN COMMUNITY COLLEGE (TUE) o I;TH E CONCERT (THU) O I LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU (R) 1:30 1:46 200 TORNEO OE ESTRELLAS (TUE, THU) M S 18 0 3 GENERAL HOBPTAl 0 TJ COMPUGMXWMO fWKH 0 Q BASTA (FW) 0 T3 CARAS Y GESTOS (MON* >0 AUSTIN COMMUNTTY COLLEGE (TUE. THU) 2 3 0 300 3:30 4 00 4 30 0 9 1 0 3 M *A *8*H iR> 0 1 VILLA ALBONEfR* 0 12 CEP1LUN o 12 HOLLYWOOO SQUARES 0 T! 0 2 LOVE OF LIFE 0 « THE BRADY BUNCH o f ««SAME STREET (R) © 2 © ‘ 2 ® 3 EDGE OF NK3HT © F POPTYE AND FIMEM36 ffi 4 CARTOONS CD 3 a l e j a n d r a O 12 MIGHTY MOUSE ANO FRCNOS 0 f’f THE FUWTSTONES o ¿ ¡.EAVf IT TO BEAVER © 3 MARY TYLER MOORE © I BUGS BUNNY ANO FRIENDS © $ HANNA BARBERA CARTOONS © 6 SP GERMAN / SUPER HEROES 0 3 LUCY SHOW o 2 MY THREE SONS - HOVE LUCY o O « 0 1 '3 *L DOAN'S ISLAND 6 MOVIE rruE. THU) © 2 GUNSMOKE O « MISTER ROGERS (R) © J BEVERL 1 HILLBILLIES © 9 SANANA SPLITS © '5 FAMILY AFFAIR © ; STAR TREK rp 13 LOS HERMANOS CORAJE P ! 2 GILL GAN’S ISLAND SANFORD AND SON 0 O 6 MY THREE SON8 6 MOVIE (FRI) o 9 ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) © 5 ANDY GRIFFITH © 4 SUPERMAN ® :0 MARY TYLER MOORE ffi 4 MCHALE’S NAVY 5:00 0 2 © 10 NEWS 0 2 0 o £ BEWITCHED 6 MOVIE (WED) O £STUDOSEE © 5 f f i 3 ABC NEWS © 4 LEAVE IT TO BEAVER f f i 4 EMERGENCY ONE! CD U ENRKXIE EL POLIVOZ (TUE) CD 13 Ml SECRETARIA (WED) CD tJ EL CHAVO (THU) CD O LA CRIADA BIEN CRIADA (FRI) CD 13 EL CHAPULIN COLORADO (MON) © i FRANKUN BUSINESS REPORT (MON) 5:25 5:30 O 3 O X NBC NEWS 0 11 © 2 © 5 CBS NEWS 6 MOVIE (MON) o (BOVER EASY © X OtCK VAN DYKE © 10 ABC NEW3 f f i DANDY GRIFFITH 0 1 3 REPORTER 41 \ ! SteamLoat Springs] presents M •v e ry M o n d a y in Juno th u n -fri tuos-w od AUSTIN ALL-STARS TOO SMOOTH JOHNNY DEC ROCKRT 88'S I . GOSNEY THORNTON MON-THURS NIGHTS f f .10 BAR DRINKS La Promenade ANDTHE t a t SB I I I - ★ THURSDAY, JUNE 14th ★ AVERAGE WHITE BAND LE ROUX ★ FRIDAY, JUNE 15th ★ MOSE ALLISON PASSENGER ★ SATURDAY, JUNE 16th ★ PROFESSOR LONGHAIR NEW ORLEANS RHYTHM & BLUES ALL-STARS M |% BARTON SPRIN G S 8 8 •v a ry T u t d a y in J u n s LEWIS AND TNK LKGKNDS w * d PASSKNGER t h u n CASSELL WEBB fri-$ a t EXTREME HEAT RESTAURANT-BAR 403 E. SIXTH 4 7 8 - 2 9 1 2 « y Diverse styles exhibited by Texas artists by John c a n tu When entering a museum or gallen the artwork creates a clim ate that gives a genera] impression of what will be found on the wall This is not the case at the ex hibit of Contemporary Painting ami Sculp- ture being displayed through Aug. 26 in the Art Building s Huntington G a lle n The range of the exhibition may initially con­ fuse the view er's eye and leave the patron’s attention riveted to a m uted pmk neon sign hanging almost casually from a suspension beam to the right upon entering the g a lle n The soft shade of the neon in­ d ic a te s ten o r of the exhibition s general theme with its subt e insistence the The tempo of the display calm ly ■— almost mockingly confident — reminds the patron that the exhibit is after all, not only produced, but more importantly, made in Texas The encouraging aspect is that the ex­ hibition exists at all. Not long ago such an exhibit would have been either ignored or considered provincial. This exhibit, as well as exhibitions held recently at Dallas' Museum of Fine Arts, Houston's Contem­ porary Arts Museum and Austin's own Laguna Gloria ( "A Survey of Naive Texas Artists from 1840 to the Present" running through July 22) indicates that not only is art in Texas neither self-conscious nor regional but that it exem plifies the range and talent capable of being produced within a state’s borders. The paintings and sculpture are so diverse in style and content as to make Portrait Head (Donald Anderson) 1978, Luis Jimenez Photo by Tim Wentworth any attempt to classify them almost an ex­ ercise in futility. Still, subtle distinctions allow for this They also serve to dis­ tinguish vital elem ents that make the pieces aesthetic statem ents. The major divisions of painting and sculpture are represented and have in many instances blended together to create 3 5 0 0 G u a d a lu p e Í É O ^ S c O T H g Q ^ E j 4 5 3 * 9 8 3 1 « 5 BURGERS V j? ^ & b e e r Sun. & Mon. 6:30-8:30 All you can cat and drink Guv’s $3 G als $2 «— • \ ¿ y v v f ' U N E S C O R T E D L A D I E S s e a t e d a t t h e b a r 75' highballs / $1.00 shake drinks H A P P Y HOU R 2:00-8:30 Double* for th e p r u r of onizlr*. T RE T h o r ' d ’o e m r e daiU > 7 10 Iflo n d c iu ¡Ja d n e u ia y ■ y ' ^ x j-cL S e tu u fa y ■ y ’ 5509 ' Cemteat \ * yyrREE dk'nks SEXIEST > j f i g u r r Content ( •- J *50 f.üJ DU 1 . 5 CAS« mat \/ \ CoupltA cootest *59 CA6M f’P'Zl LADIES ^ CN> i j CONTEST rHEJt BtlR' *CO CASH rerm MiNNtn i ^-iiu ji . ------— .... .................... . NEW YORK S1YLE WITH A TOUCH Of D I S C O V i U W MEW YORK STYLE WITH A TOUCH OF # 1^. K H m h i GAME ROOM - Poo!, pinball & electric pames • * • * w I I § 4 t t / I* d fr m m m m m m i ^ $ m m m ii» » ► «A V , - r e labeled “ m ix­ n multi dimensional effect ed media These divisions painting, sculpture ami mixed media — form the backbone of the exhibition's diversity, a diversity that often appears m the most in­ ventive of places For example, the work on canvas is not only represented by acrylics and oils, but by furniture and other elem ents that once would have been considered as sculpture Sculpture has also expanded, as the exihibiton shows, to include the traditional elem ents of stone, metal and clay as well as paper, plastic and wood tow ard in d e p e n d e n c e This diversity oí materials used by the artist shows a redefinition of style and content in the individual works and also a v ib ra n t the philosophy of art itself No longer is the cattle drive the quintessential statement of Texas art. instead, today's typical Tex­ an style ranges from stereotypic, tongue- in-cheek humor to personal statements about the condition of man and his percep­ tion of the world around him. This year s exhibit of contemporary painting and sculpture shows that the traditional concept of “Texas" art is not only an anachronism but a definition that no longer applies to art produced in the state The art on exhibit in the University Art Museum pays homage to the scope of the artist in Texas and stands as a testa­ ment to the inability of aesthetic criticism to conveniently pigeonhole art as a whole today In fact, about the only sure descrip­ tion of the art on exhibit in the Huntington Gallery is ... it was made in Texas. Open 2 p m - 2 am daily 12 13 IN BETWEEN, were firey torch singers, debauched TV com ­ m ercials. “ country-punk” by Dolly Rotten and the Tex Pistols and four hours more of the eccentric esotérica that has gained E sther s its rabidly loyal Follies following Two hours before the perform ance, the front rows had begun to fill with devotees. An hour later, Liberty Lunch’s outdoor theater became a large party with minglers wandering in the face of a large m ural, small children throwing sm aller rocks at a hastily enlarged stage and cast and crew m em bers alternate­ ly greeting old friends and new converts. By show time, Liberty Lunch had sold too many $3 ad­ missions, giving nearly 100 of the 700-plus crowd no place to either sit or stand. But despite the sardine ambience, the audience helped to multiply the intense energy of the perfor­ mance. ‘DAAAAOOO!” a line from the “ Banana Boat Song” in the show’s second act, was still spontaneously emanating from different rows through the third act and finale. Throughout the celebration, w riter George Wilkerson’s gift for compact, sardonic scripts of social and sexual satire was enhanced by the show’s tight pace ami the ca st’s fam iliarity with the m aterial ami each other. Wilkerson’s “ The Beer Hunter,” an irreverent desecration of “ this year’s deep m ovie,” airily revised such scenes as the Rus­ sian roulette sequence (done here with the captives being sub­ jected to a six-pack of Miller with one agitated can). Other skits, however, did not approach such portentious sub­ jects Taking on the mundane subject of “ Headache,” Cass Chabboneaux, a marvelously physical comedienne, illustrated her headache m isery a la Excedrin. With increasing contor­ tions, she moaned the pain goes, “ .. into mah eyes, through mah cheeks, down mah neck, around mah shoulders, down mah arm s and into mah haw ert,” and then collapsed. THE MUSICAL SURPRISE of the show was “ Eine Kleine Nachtmusik: a Little Chamber Pot P ourri,” in which William Dente replaced Mozart s classic first violin with a whistle solo. Not all the show’s musical interludes showed such buf­ tight harmonies sailing foonery. The Blandscrew Sisters’ through a medley of ‘40s traveling music and Linda Wetherby’s hard hitting solo of “ Hard Hearted Hanna” proved the Follies’ have musical as well as comedic strengths. As a group, Austin’s foremost comedy troupe is looking forw ard to m any m ore birthdays. Shannon Sedwick.a Blandscrew Sister and Follies veteran, sees the group’s form at of a completely new show every other week and at E sth er’s Pool downtown and exposure increasingly diverse audience as a foundation that could give the show a “ perpetual life.” to an Such im m ortality may be unlikely, but the near future, at least, contains several projects to keep the troupe’s heads above w ater Sedwick m entioned a com edy conference planned for September in Dallas in which the three principal comedy com­ panies of Texas will combine their energies. Participating in the conference with the Follies will be Houston’s Comedy Workshop troupe and Random Scam from Dallas. Also in the wings are a possible HBO video taping in July as well as a Fourth of July show at Liberty Lunch of more of their favorite m aterial. Sedwick also spoke of the split in January when half the group left to form the now defunct Hugh Beaumont players. Although the break was traum atic for the Follies, she views it as a necessary step in the company’s evolution. "W e’re now in a much more flexible situation. Before, we were a closed shop, ” Sedwick said. “ The only trouble we had after January was lack of m aterial. (Two of E sther’s chief w riters departed with the Beaumont P lay ers.) “ Now, different people can submit scripts. It’s like a new breeze th ere,” she said. The Follies has weathered legal problems also. After a crusade by the Alchoholic Beverage Commission resulted in E sther’s Pool losing its liquor license, the Follies' fate seemed dim. The Pool’s owner, Michael Shelton, solved the problem by using Buffalo Grill to cater mixed drinks as well as beer and wine during the perform ances But shakeups aside, E sthers go*- on appealing to an audience that includes North Austin mutant m atrons, former street freaks, students just discovering downtown and, as Michael Shelton says in his Ruth-Carter-Stapleton-drag monologue, “ up­ tight whites drinkm' R C. Cola, eatin’ moon pies and barkin’ at the moon.” Happy birthday, for Esther Follies freaks make splash at Esther’s 2nd birthday by gary marshall and Joel williams Full moons have long been blamed for lunacy, and the bright sphere brought all the crazies to E sther’s Follies second annual Birthday Bash Friday and Saturday Night. The Fatal Heart M urmurs ripped open the show with Jam es Wagner hammering the piano through a red hot Jerry Lee Lewis set. And then the Follies hit the stage after an exhortation to “ Get down and then get back up.” And get back up they did, with a show that covered ground from a lewd magic show (do you know what an Alka Seltzer does to a prophylactic’’ ) to The Caliente Review, a scarlet tale of passion and missing teeth. Esther’s Follies in rehearsal for the birthday bash Photos by Tim Wentworth